Fool’s Gold

Then Abigail quickly arose, and rode on a donkey, with her five maidens who attended her; and she followed the messengers of David and became his wifeDavid had also taken Ahinoam of Jezreel, and they both became his wives. 1 Samuel 25:42-43 NASB

Wife – Number 2 and Number 3. Of course, we all know the story of Abigail and Nabal. We know that Abigail intervenes in David’s plan of revenge and saves her husband, Nabal. We know that Nabal dies a few days later and subsequently David takes Abigail to be his second wife. And then there’s that little extra verse. “David had also taken Ahinoam.” If you have two, why not three? Or eight, as it will eventually turn out. Plus at least ten concubines. And nineteen children (or more). But it all starts here—or maybe not. Maybe it starts with Saul’s double-dealing with Merab. Maybe it starts with the treatment of these women as trophies, exchange collateral or desire-fulfillment. It is interesting that after a rather full description of Abigail’s sense of propriety and a clear demonstration of her management abilities, David praises her for doing YHVH’s work. He blesses her for preventing him from committing evil by killing Nabal. Then he decides she would make an excellent wife. She accepts his proposal with honor. What does David do? He finds another woman to add to the collection. In a single sentence we discover that Abigail isn’t quite enough (apparently) and that Ahinoam is just an after-thought supplement.

Oh, yes, then there’s the next verse where Saul gives Michal to Palti, the son of Laish. Saul gives David’s wife to another man! What? The soap opera of the kingdom is just getting started and already we see David with three women, one who is forced into adultery by her father. Is it any wonder that, years later, a famous son of the king after Saul thinks very little of collecting a few hundred women? Family precedence prevails. Just do what your father did. Or what the king before him did.

We might chalk this up to twisted royal ethics except for the explicit command of YHVH about the obligation of a king. Don’t multiply horses or women. It seems that men are missing a particular “remembrance” gene when it comes to these two categories. Or maybe they just like the results so much that they assume more is better. What is most interesting about this progression is that the secondary players (the women) are barely mentioned by name. They are for all intents and purposes, chattel. Yes, David is involved enough with each one that he fathers a son, but until we get to the next step on the downward spiral (Bathsheba), it seems as though David’s serial monogamy doesn’t raise even an eyebrow. At the moment, both Abigail and Ahinoam become David’s wives. The construction is vattehilo leishshah. It’s interesting that the “accident” that opens these sagas (remember vayhi) is connected to vattehi-lo (literally, “and it came to pass toward him [David]”). We might translate this with an eye toward vayhi. “And it just happened that the two women became his wives” as if this is also an “accident” of history.

But it isn’t an accident, is it? David chooses—and he chooses to take a bit more, and more, and more. He chooses to flaunt Saul’s insult by multiplying his own female possessions. If Saul is going to treat his own daughter as a piece of property to be handed off to another man as a demonstration of power, then David will double the ante.

Ah, the games we play in the name of the Lord. If God gives one, we take two. After all, we are called by His name, right? And He wants us to be satisfied, right? And we should exhibit His power, right? What better way than to outdo the competition. Or is it really fool’s gold; this pursuit of proving how important I really am?

Perhaps we should note that this Hebrew story, like so many Hebrew stories, should really be read from back to front. In other words, we don’t see what is really happening, nor are we shown the consequences, until we reach the end of the line. All along the way it appears as if things are “just happening.” But once we know the end of the story, we can go back and read it properly. The choices of men and the hand of God are often opposed to each other in spite of God’s hidden sovereignty. For us the lesson is crucial. We don’t know the end of our stories yet. Perhaps we never will. But someone, some day will see what just happened and read it backwards to discover where God offered alternatives but we went the other way. Life isn’t accidental after its over, but it surely might appear to be accidental all along the way. Unless, of course, you realize that what looks like an accident is really an opportunity to choose.

Topical Index: Abigail, Ahinoam, wife, Michal, ishshah, 1 Samuel 25:42-43

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Brett Weiner B.B.( brother Brett)

We could very easily start at the beginning with Adam and Eve keeping it simple . Eve came after Adam she was a part of him yet he trusted her too much or was it that he didn’t watch over what belong to him, so it goes with any bad marriage the wife thinks for herself unchecked desires turn into downfall YouTube a lifestyle of sin which leads to death.

Brett Weiner B.B.( brother Brett)

Restating last line unchecked desires turn into a lifestyle of sin which leads to death

Brett Weiner B.B.( brother Brett)

Thanks skip with that relate to: the members of the body not trusting each other? To put it plainly.

Brother Brett, are you suggesting that a wife is incapable of thinking for herself and that is the reason marriages go bad???

Brett Weiner B.B.( brother Brett)

Sandy for clearer understanding the man presumes responsibility for the two completing the tasks together as equal parts. I usually share Isaiah chapter 11 first 5 vs this explaining what Messiah’s anointing can do in a marriage two equal partners.( Hallelujah.)

Brett Weiner B.B.( brother Brett)

Regarding initial firstpost with skips correction

Well…I sure wish I was better able to express how comments like yours make me feel as a woman married 40 years to a wonderful man…excuse my Missouri vernacular…bulls*** I don’t need my wonderful man to be responsible for the things I do. I am very able to stand before God on my own two feet. My faithful, wonderful husband won’t be there when I give an account to the Father of how I lived this life He gave me. I live in partnership with my husband because I choose to not because in some mystical religious way he somehow “completes” me.

Richard

?

Sandy Smail

Richard, what does the sad emoji mean?

Sandy Smail

I’m sure there is a way to talk about this subject without being offensive but so far I haven’t figured that out…pardon my passion.

Seeker

Guardian Angel by Skip Moen may be a good beginning. One sets boundaries while the other directs to a fuller godly intent…

Sandy Smail

Yes. That’s why I will be hosting Skip in August next year in Kansas City…www.ezerkenegdo.net

Seeker

May it be a blessed session.

Liesbeth Haasnoot-Spaanderman

Brett, Eve was not created after Adam. They are both formed by Yahweh Elohim out of the ha’adam: the man and the woman are both a side of ha’adam which recieved the breath of life twice.
In Hebrew the breath of life that is given to the ha’adam is written in plural: nishmat chayim, breathS of lifeS!
They were formed simultaneously.
I find that breathtakingly beautiful…

All this wisdom is not my own, it is to be found (and more) in an excellent study by House of David Fellowship named ‘Marriage’.

Laurita Hayes

The choices of life are the question “what would love do in this place?” We are hardwired for love; the problem being that we are all looking for it in the wrong places. David had a big heart and he needed love (power) to fill it. (Um, that would be connections.) None of us are unaware of the benefits of love. We all desire the freedom to exercise the power of choice, and love is the choice that empowers. The yetzer ha’ra is hardwired for this POTENTIAL of love, and the world is perfectly well aware that all real power lies in your connections. Witness the good-ol-boy power alliances of this planet. The Bible calls these “confederacies”, by the way, in Isaiah 8:12, and warns us not to participate in man’s attempt to garner the fruits of love without the exercise thereof.

I think I would call David’s attempts to self serve love, worldly style, “confederacies”. The marriages of the world that do not place themselves under authority of the Third Person are all, at the end of the day, confederacies; but attempts to get the fruit of satisfaction that only love can provide without allying with the Source of love only leave you feeling empty, and always needing more. David never, to my knowledge, conducted a single ‘alliance’ with another woman in front of everybody and invited that Third Person in and swore in front of witnesses to forsake the practices of his parents (repent and forgive) and start completely over with his one and only til death do them part.

I made that mistake, too, and I found that I had lost my position to bargain for power in the process: this would be the power to require Love to preside, and no attempt to make it happen afterwards worked. Some things have to be done right from the top, and if they are not, they may, like the marriages in Nehemiah 12, have to start over. In Nehemiah 6 we get a clue as to WHY those marriages occurred: they were alliances with the neighbors. But because they had the example of Solomon to learn from, they were convinced, once they were reminded of that fact, that alliance (worldly confederacy, which is the imitation of true love) was the wrong basis for marriage, and they agreed to dissolve those marriages and start over on the correct basis. (I finally figured that one out, too.) We CAN live and learn! Halleluah!

Rich Pease

At the fall, the world took center stage as God’s presence and goodness
slipped out of man’s periphery. That myopia still lingers today.
For us on this blog, the good Lord has called us back, and as we
“about-faced’, we chose to receive that call.
Now our stories of grace get to daily play out amidst the chaotic episodes
that happen all around us. As God continues to draw men to Himself,
may He use our stories to play out their roles in His on-going plan of redemption.

Gabe

Is it possible King David may not have had large sections of Torah? It seems Josiah didn’t have access to large portions until 8 years into his reign – 2nd Chronicles 34:9 – “When the king heard the words of the law, he tore his clothes.”

2 Kings 23 – “Surely such a Passover had not been celebrated from the days of the judges who judged Israel [from BEFORE David’s time up to Josiah’s], nor in all the days of the kings of Israel and of the kings of Judah. ” This would suggest that at least elements of Passover were missing during David’s time, not to mention Josiah’s “biblical reforms” include tearing down idols, and expelling mediums and spiritists.

Before the scroll was discovered , was Josiah unaware that these were bad? Were these portions of scripture suppressed by false prophets? Did these false prophets believe that Israel had progressed past it’s early barbaric, tribal, and intolerant days? I’m just asking.

Maybe David did meditate on the law daily, but he didn’t have all of it.

Brett Weiner B.B.( brother Brett)

Thank you skip what a team organized by the leading of God before I could comment about Genesis 1 & 2 it was already done .. Where there are two or more witnesses God is among them.

brother Brett I apologize for snarling at you this morning. much of the time a sharp response reveals a wounded heart, I still have a long way to go. blessings to you.