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Editor’s Entries: Martinis and a Villa in Capri Samson and Delilah The Lion of Judah: King Saul Last of the Hebrews: Jeremiah I shall not be forgotten: Sappho of Lesbos The Cosmopolitan: Euripides (by Theodor Mommsen) The Characters (by Theophrastus) The Making of Judaism Not to all People but onto Chosen Witnesses Only the Naughty Bits: Petronius Tell them the Great Pan is Dead: Plutarch Hoax or History? The Annals of Tacitus The Wizard’s Niece Dispensation of the One: Plotinus Homoousion, Homoiousion, or Houyhnhnms? Arius and Nicene Keeping the Faith: Quintus Aurelius Symmachus and his Time Indian Summer: the 5th Century The Worm in Eve's Apple: Sex and Christianity The Innovation of Childhood The Ape that Talks Memory is like Writing on Water Bondage of Common Sense: Martin Luther The Magnificent People: the Inca Empire Let there be Light: Michel de Montaigne Was he for real? Descartes My Great-Great-Great Grandmother’s Letter A hot Chestnut in the open Fly: Laurence Sterne All in the Mind: Immanuel Kant The Manufacture of Ideas as we speak (by Heinrich von Kleist) From the Memoirs of Mr. Schnabelewopski, Esq. (by Heinrich Heine) My Kind of Saint: Antonin Chekhov A Catholic Upbringing: James Joyce The Shame: Franz Kafka A Sellout with Conviction: Gottfried Benn The Unknown Russian: Vladimir Sirin At the Pictures The Terminus About Me Books I enjoy Brief Notes on English and American Style (by Raymond Chandler) How to stop Worrying and Learn to Love the Internet (by Douglas Adams) Elements of Style (by William Strunk) If E.T. is out there, why doesn’t he visit us? Where does the Lake go, when the Geese fly to Canada? A Case of Game Theory: the Origin of Morals The Simple Art of Murder (by Raymond Chandler) A Directory to Afterlife

The Lion of Judah King Saul

 

And when the woman saw Samuel, she cried with a loud voice and spoke to Saul, saying, why have you deceived me? For you are Saul. And the king said to her, be not afraid: what did you see? And the woman said, I saw gods ascending out of the earth.

I Sam. 28: 12-13





to Dawn


David, the man "after the heart of God," made his enemies pass “under saws and harrows of iron, and under axes,” before sending them to “the brick-kilns (II Sam. 12: 31). He was a serial philanderer who went after the skirts of other people’s wives and had their husbands murdered (II Sam. 11: 1-15). He betrayed his king and reaped the rewards. He also was a king and had a whole staff of court historians to do the whitewash for posterity. I am a child of the cold war; propaganda was the air we were breathing. My sympathies have always lain with King Saul.

Over time the judges over Israel had begun developing a habit of passing on their privileges only to club members. So, when it was Samuel’s turn, he too “made his sons judges over Israel.” And they “turned aside after lucre, took bribes, and perverted the law. So all the elders of Israel gathered and came to Samuel and said, behold, you are old, and your sons walk not in your ways: now make us a king to judge us like all the nations. The thing displeased Samuel(I Sam. 8: 1-6). Reluctantly he grabbed from his wife’s larder a vial of olive oil and in 1025 BC he anointed Saul as the people’s prince.

Old Shmul had little choice in this matter. There was still no Hebrew nation, only a loose confederacy of half domesticated tribes, roaming the mountains and keeping a jealous eye on each other, while bowing to the Philistine overlord. They were not even allowed to have their own blacksmiths “lest they make the Hebrew swords or spears” and had to trade their supply of nails, hoes and plows from the Philistines (I Sam. 13: 19). Inevitably this became the cause for a growing resentment against the Philistine protectorate. Resentments are the forge of nation building. All it takes is a William of Orange or a George Washington and a new nation is born out of the resentment against the Spanish Inquisition or taxation without representation. King Saul was the George Washington of the Hebrews. The Bible introduces him as the nation-builder (I Sam. 11: 7) a charismatic leader, who was a bit of a shaman himself (I Sam. 19: 24). He was chosen and appointed by a shortsighted and envious politician because Saul’s tribe was the smallest and least likely to dominate the confederacy. He was the anointed, the Messiah, the last of the judges and the first of the kings, the rock against the Philistines.

Not surprisingly, the old establishment of tribal elders developed a dim view of the man cutting into their privileges: “He will take our sons, and appoint them for his horsemen; and some shall run before his chariots. And he will take our daughters, our fields, and our vineyards, and give them to his servants(I Sam. 8: 11-18). The wily Samuel’s idea was of course to use Saul as a puppet with him pulling the strings – I wouldn’t say he’d set him up to fail – but the prince soon began following his own counsel instead of playing the game of a bygone age and commit senseless slaughter to no purpose (I Sam. 15: 14).

So, Samuel resorted to scare tactics against the brave but superstitious prince, proclaiming the “will of God” in “oracles” from his shrine at Shiloh (I Sam. 9: 9; 14: 35-46, 15: 11, 23). Still not satisfied, he then approached in secret what seemed an inexperienced but willing young man, carefully chosen for his handsome looks (I Sam. 16: 2-4; 12). Under Samuel’s approving eye the young man was introduced to Saul as a harp player (I Sam. 16: 23) and soon advanced to the office of the king's armor bearer. The king's oldest son, Prince Jonathan, immediately fell under the spell of David's handsome looks and stripped himself bare the very first time he laid eyes on him (I Sam. 18: 4). Thus the infatuated prince became the unwitting accessory to Samuel and David's conspiracy against King Saul. Old Shmul must have been a particularly poor judge of character. As it turned out, this David, too, had ideas of his own.

David was a shrewd propagandist of his own, admittedly courageous, exploits (I Sam. 17, 18: 7) and began to command a following in Saul’s army. Yet the plot was discovered and David had to run for dear life. He became the leader of a band of malcontents and mercenaries (I Sam. 25: 10 27: 5) even appeared on the Philistines' – the archenemy’s – payroll (I Sam. 27: 1-7). Betrayed and without allies, King Saul and his son were left to fight an overwhelming force against hopeless odds.



The priestly narrator, writing in a later and very different period, alleges that in his heydays King Saul had been prosecuting sorcery and witchcraft, which is not likely in a period when witchcraft was the common mode of religious operation and the term “prophet” was just another name for a sorcerer casting spells on the enemy (Numbers 22: 21-38). Whatever the case, the prince was now reduced to seeking help from a sorceress. Her vision confirms his impending doom; she has no comfort to offer, only a meal. So King Saul, sore in his soul but unflinching, rises and goes into the long night (I Sam. 28), a true aristocrat all the way. Yet the Good Book doesn’t approve of nobility and tragedy. What seems to annoy the rabbinical editor is the fact that an aristocrat lives by his own honor and chooses his own destiny. Tragedy is neither a sob story, nor the story of a man getting himself inadvertently into deep waters. Tragedy is the story of a choice in the face of unfavorable odds and knowing these odds. In 1011 BC, Saul and Jonathan were slain in the final showdown against the Philistines. The narrator claims that David took no part in it. Not a likely scenario if indeed the Philistines had their suspicions (I Sam. 29: 3-7). With their main forces engaged, they would rather have kept an eye on this treacherous ally (I Sam. 27: 11). Wishing to maintain an appearance of legitimacy for his own claim to the vacant throne, David then collected King Saul’s body for a decent burial.

David assumed his rule as a puppet of the Philistines. Foreign mercenaries held key positions in his army (II Sam. 11: 3 etc.). The new king consolidated his power with ruthless efficiency, eventually shaking off the yoke of the Philistines. There was rebellion in his own house (II Sam. 13-18), but surprisingly the records never mention the omnipresence of Egypt, the biggest player in the region, who would have allowed neither David nor the Philistines even to sneeze without asking permission (II Sam. 12). When in 969 BC "the days of David drew nigh that he should die,” the prophet Nathan and Solomon, the son of a concubine, plotted against the legitimate contender. In a last minute coup Solomon became the designated successor and received the dying king’s final instructions. By his own life, David had sworn clemency to his defeated adversaries, but now all bets were off: “You know what Joab the son of Zeruiah did to me, show yourself a man and let not his hoar head go to the grave in peace. And, you have with you Shimei the son of Gera, which cursed me with a grievous curse: hold him not guiltless: bring his hoar head down with blood. So David slept with his fathers, and the kingdom was established in the hand of Solomon" (I Kings 2).

The scene has inspired Mario Puzo’s Godfather.

© – 3/10/2009 – by michael sympson, 1,350 words, all rights reserved

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Proprietary Notice: © – 04/10/2003 – by michael sympson. Text may be downloaded for personal use, provided all copies retain the copyright and proprietary notices. No material may be modified, edited or taken out of context. Quotes are limited to ten lines and never without retaining the author’s name. Any commercial use in advertising or publicity requires permission in writing by the author's estate.
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