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[music]
>> Shalom friends, welcome to the Prophets
of Israel daily. This is the book of 2
[music] Samuel chapter 4. My name is
Jeremy Gimpel. I'm here with my dear
friend, my chavruta, my study partner,
Ari Abramowitz. This series is brought
to you by the Land of Israel Network at
the landofisrael.com.
By the way, I want to thank everyone who
clicks like, leaves a comment. I mean, I
can't do this for all of our content,
but I try to read every single comment
that's posted for the book of Samuel.
And you can see I started liking the
comments back. So, thank you for
engaging and making this more of an
interactive conversation because the
more you engage, actually, it really
helps the algorithm to get the words of
the prophets out to more and more
people.
>> And it also helps us, Jeremy. I have to
say it really helps me, too, because I
read the We put out a lot of content,
but when it comes to this series, I
really do read so many of the comments
because I find it helps me and it
intrigues me and it challenges me. It's
just sort of like an ongoing study
session together. Anyways, I agree with
you.
>> If you comment in the comment section,
Ari, I'm going to comment back. Just
click like so I can see that you're
actually engaging cuz I always feel like
I'm doing it by myself.
>> Okay, you got it, Jeremy.
>> All right, very good. All right, guys.
Yesterday, chapter 3, we watched the
great general Abner murdered at the gate
of Hebron, struck down by one of Joab's
daggers at the exact moment the nation
was one handshake away from becoming
united under David. And so, chapter 4
begins and the house of Saul has just
lost the one man who is really holding
it together and the whole northern
kingdom
is like holding its breath. Look at
verse 1.
Uh Vaishma ben Shaul ki met Abner. And
when Saul's son heard that Abner was
dead in Hebron, his hands grew weak
and all Israel was dismayed.
Ish-bosheth, Saul's surviving son,
really the puppet king of the north, the
moment he hears Abner is gone, the
strength drains out of him. The northern
tribes of Israel, they feel exposed and
vulnerable. There's no leader now. I
mean, he was just called Ben Shaul,
Saul's son. He's defined entirely by his
father. He's propped up entirely by
Abner. Take the general away and there's
nothing really there. And then into that
vacuum steps two men from Shaul's own
tribe, from the tribe of Benjamin,
Baanah and Rechab, captains in the house
of Shaul.
>> Yeah, Jeremy, before we even get into
what these two men do, I want to talk
for a second about those two words,
"Vayiru yadov." His hands grew weak.
Because the Tanakh has been building
this exact contrast for two chapters
now. And I think here it's like reaching
its breaking point. Right? Think about
the two kings standing on either side of
this story. We open the second book of
Samuel David in Hebron, and the first
verb of his kingdom is "Vayishal." And
he asked, he inquired of Hashem. He
acted with strength rooted in trust.
That's where his strength came from. And
here is the rival king. And his defining
verb is "Vayiru." His hands fell limp.
Right? The contrast there is clear. One
king is "Holech v'chazek."
Going and growing stronger and stronger.
And the other is growing weak weaker.
And And Jeremy, I want to tell you why
that struck me. You see, Ish-bosheth's
collapse isn't really about losing a
general. It's about a man who never had
his own foundation. He was placed on a
throne by someone else's ambition, and
he stood on someone else's strength. So,
the instant that prop is gone, he
crumbles. And I think that the lesson
there is that when you have a kingdom or
anything else for that matter which is
built on someone else's strength instead
of your own roots, well, it will
collapse the moment the prop is removed.
Right? David rooted himself in Hebron,
in Hebron in the graves of the
patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
and Hashem. Ishbosheth rooted himself in
Abner.
Right? It's pretty clear who's going to
stand firm when that inevitable storm
comes.
>> You know, and that's exactly it, Ari.
And watch how fast the storm comes.
Because these two captains, Rechab and
Baanah, they just do the math. The king
is weak, Abner is dead, the kingdom is
leaderless, David is rising. They see a
political opportunity. So, in the heat
of the day, while Ishbosheth is lying on
his bed taking his afternoon rest, they
slip into the house under the pretense
of fetching wheat. They stab him in the
stomach and they kill him in his own
bed. Then they cut off his head and they
carry it all night through the Aravah
all the way down to Hebron.
And so, it's like this defenseless man,
asleep in his own bed, murdered by his
own tribesmen. It's not the battlefield,
it's not against an enemy defending the
nation. There's nothing noble here. This
is the lowest kind of killing. It's
murder.
And they march that severed head over to
David with the confidence that they're
going to get a reward. Verse 8. Vayisu
et rosh Ishbosheth el David Hevron.
And they brought the head of Ishbosheth
to David in Hebron.
And said to the king, "Behold, the head
of Ishbosheth, son of Saul, your enemy,
who sought your life."
Listen how they frame it. It's like,
"Your enemy who sought your life." Like
they've packaged this murder as a favor
to David. They've convinced themselves
that they're doing God's work. They even
add that Hashem has avenged the king
against Saul and his offspring and they
think they're handing David his crown.
They think they're going to be heroes
and they don't realize David's not down
with this.
>> Yeah, Jeremy, I just want to cut in for
a second here and focus on one word
these two men used because it really
reveals I think the essence of what's
really going on here. They march in and
call Ish-bosheth, "Your enemy who sought
your life."
"Your enemy." That's the word. They were
so sure, like you said, Jeremy, that
they knew what was in David's heart, but
they didn't. They didn't really know
David's heart at all. They knew their
own.
Right? Our sages teach kol ha posel be
mumo posel. We've been best friends for
30 years now. Whenever you accuse me of
anything, Jeremy, I always say that to
you. You're It's your seeing your
>> [laughter]
>> The one who disqualifies another is
broadcasting his own blemish.
These men assumed David hated his rival
because they would have hated their
rival. They assumed David would be
grateful for the killing and reward them
handsomely because that's the only kind
of king their imaginations could
produce. They couldn't conceive of a
king who looked at the man blocking his
throne and felt no enmity at all.
So, they didn't just misjudge a
situation, they really revealed
themselves. Every word they speak about
David is actually a confession about who
they are and that's um that's a scary
truth that we can learn, too. You know,
that you can stand in front of the most
righteous man of his generation and
still see nothing but a mirror of your
own smallness or inadequacies. You know,
they they came expecting a reward from a
man like themselves and they had new no
idea
who they were standing in front of, that
they were standing in front of a man who
would call their victim a tzaddik, a
righteous man.
>> Exactly. Righteous is exactly the word
David is about to use. Look at the
showdown between these captains and King
David. This is verse 9 and 11.
By Hashem as I have put out my shame in
cold sorrow, as the Lord lives who has
redeemed my life from all trouble. When
someone told me saying, "Look, Saul is
dead." thinking to have brought good
news, I arrested him and had him
executed in Ziklag. The one who thought
I would give him a reward for his news.
How much more when wicked men have
killed a righteous person in his own
house on his bed. Therefore, shall I not
require his blood at your hand and
remove you from the earth?" I mean, he
reminds them of who he is, how he lives
today, and what he's already lived
through, and he gives all the credit to
God. And in that way swears to do
justice. He tells them about the man who
once came to him at Ziklag announcing he
had killed Saul expecting good news, and
how David had that man executed. David
calls Ish-bosheth, like what Ari pointed
out, an Ish-tsaddiq, a righteous man,
his rival, his adversary, the puppet
king of the opposing kingdom, the very
obstacle between David and the United
Kingdom, David calls him righteous.
An innocent man murdered in his bed.
David refuses
to let the politics rewrite his
morality. It's like a defenseless man
was slaughtered in his sleep. David is
not going to call it anything other than
what it was. And so he commands it. And
the young men
execute Rechab and Baanah.
He sees evil for what evil is and he
calls it out. And what the job of the
king of Israel is, he's going to remove
the evil from the world. And then verse
12, he takes the head of Ish-bosheth and
buries it honorably in the tomb of Abner
in Hebron. The rival king of Israel is
laid to rest with dignity alongside the
general David wept over just a chapter
ago.
>> Yeah, and Jeremy, you know, there it is,
right? The burial is the seal on the
whole thing. But, notice where he buries
it. David doesn't just decline to
display the head as a trophy, obviously.
He carries it to Abner's grave in Hebron
and lays it there. Consider that for a
second, right? Hebron is Ma'arat
Hamachpelah, the cave of the patriarchs,
the ground where Abraham and Sarah and
the whole family of Israel lie together.
And David takes the head of the rival
king
and the bones of the rival general and
the
I mean, these are the two pillars of the
house that fought against him to bring
down his kingdom, to take his life. And
he takes the the head and the bones and
he folds them back into that family
parcel, into that family burial place,
into that family ground. He's not
erasing the house of Saul. He is
regrafting it onto the body of Israel.
And the one place on Earth that means
we're all one family. And that's the
move that builds something eternal.
Anyone can win a throne by subtraction,
by cutting off whatever stands in the
way. David wins it by addition, by
gathering even his rivals back into the
nation in the city of the Avot. And
friends, I believe with all my heart
that this is the work Hashem is asking
of us in this generation. Back on these
same Judean hills, we are we're rising
again. And the temptation in a rising
nation is to define ourselves by who we
cut off. And David is showing us that
kingship really defines itself, true
malchut, true kingship defines itself by
who we can bring home.
>> I really agree with that. Like, there's
so many forces right now in Israel that
are trying to cut these people out, not
accept those people. Oh, those people,
they're totally off. And the goal is to
just walk everyone home together. That's
the ultimate king that's going to do it.
And I feel like that's really the frame
for the whole chapter. All right, that's
just, you know, that's the way it is.
Because when you first read chapter 4,
it reads a little bit like a political
drama that could have come from some
other pagan nation like Rome and their
emperors. Like a weak king collapses,
the opportunists commit murder trying to
win favor with the new potential king.
But underneath that story, the Tanakh is
laying down the moral foundation
of the entire Messianic kingdom, just
brick by brick. King David's mission as
king of Israel is to remove evil from
the world.
And after that, he actually brings the
family together in Hebron. And so,
inside Israel today, there just so many
divisions. There's so much to learn from
here. Literally, there are tribes that
are in conflict. This group wants to
import and raise pigs for slaughter
because they don't believe Israel should
be a Jewish state. This This tribe, they
don't want to serve in the army while
the rest of the country is giving their
lives to serve and protect the nation.
And here David sets the bar for all of
us.
Ish-bosheth, Abner, they were literally
at war with King David. The assassins
come and call Ish-bosheth, Saul's son,
the enemy, and David refuses to see him
that way, even after all of that. Or he
treat him that way. He honors him. He
buries him in his capital where he's
reigning. Right near the tomb of the
patriarchs and matriarchs of Israel. His
kingdom
is the one that brings all the tribes
together because Mashiach is ultimately
going to unify all of Israel and then
bring the whole world together. And so,
may the son of David come soon and bring
us all together in Jerusalem. Hazak
u'barukh, my friends.
Either way, if this journey through the
life of King David is a blessing in your
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Bezrat [music] Hashem, we will see you
tomorrow for chapter 5, the day all
[music] Israel comes to Hebron to make
David king over the nation.
>> [music]
>> Shalom from the mountains of Judea.