Homily for January 17th, 2018: 1 Samuel 17:32-33,
37, 40-51.
Samuel’s anointing of the teen-aged David as Israel ’s king,
which we heard about yesterday, was private. Afterwards David returns to
looking after his father’s sheep. Saul, though rejected by the Lord for
disobedience, remains king of Israel .
But he falls into what we would call today a deep depression. The Bible says
that “he was tormented by an evil spirit sent by the Lord” (16:14). His
servants suggest that listening to harp music will soothe him. One of them
reports that the youngest son of Jesse plays the harp. So they send for David,
whose music cheers the old king so much that Saul becomes very fond of him and
makes him his armor bearer (16:21). As we shall hear later, it is, on Saul’s
side, a love-hate relationship
This is the
prelude to the story of the encounter between David and the Philistine giant,
Goliath, described in today’s first reading. For forty days, the text says,
Goliath taunts the Israelites to send him a warrior to settle their differences
in single combat.
Young David,
still tending his father’s sheep, hears about Goliath’s challenge when David’s
father sends him to the Israelite army with provisions for his older brothers,
who have volunteered for service under Saul. “I’ll fight this giant
Philistine,” David says. Saul and those with him say that is impossible: David
won’t last five minutes against such a mighty opponent. David tells the king
that he has personally killed lions and bears who threatened his father’s sheep.
“The Lord, who delivered me from the claws of the lion and the bear, will also
keep me safe from the clutches of this Philistine.”
After Goliath
has taunted David, saying he will make him mince meat “for the birds of the air
and the beasts of the field,” David responds: “You come against me with sword
and spear, but I come against you in the name of the Lord of hosts.” In minutes
the conflict is over. David launches a stone from his sling shot, hitting
Goliath on the forehead, knocking him unconscious, and allowing David to finish
off the giant with the latter’s own huge sword.
The story
contrasts human power with the power of God. In reliance on Him, the story
tells us, we can do all things, even the humanly impossible.
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