David anointed and brought to Saul
The Lord publicly rejects Saul in principle and secretly selects David in his place, showing that true kingship rests on divine choice rather than outward appearance. David is anointed, endowed with the Spirit, and then brought providentially into Saul’s household, where the contrast between Saul’s
Commentary
16:1 The Lord said to Samuel, “How long do you intend to mourn for Saul? I have rejected him as king over Israel. Fill your horn with olive oil and go! I am sending you to Jesse in Bethlehem, for I have selected a king for myself from among his sons.”
16:2 Samuel replied, “How can I go? Saul will hear about it and kill me!” But the Lord said, “Take a heifer with you and say, ‘I have come to sacrifice to the Lord.’
16:3 Then invite Jesse to the sacrifice, and I will show you what you should do. You will anoint for me the one I point out to you.”
16:4 Samuel did what the Lord told him. When he arrived in Bethlehem, the elders of the city were afraid to meet him. They said, “Do you come in peace?”
16:5 He replied, “Yes, in peace. I have come to sacrifice to the Lord. Consecrate yourselves and come with me to the sacrifice.” So he consecrated Jesse and his sons and invited them to the sacrifice.
16:6 When they arrived, Samuel noticed Eliab and said to himself, “Surely, here before the Lord stands his chosen king!”
16:7 But the Lord said to Samuel, “Don’t be impressed by his appearance or his height, for I have rejected him. God does not view things the way men do. People look on the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart.”
16:8 Then Jesse called Abinadab and presented him to Samuel. But Samuel said, “The Lord has not chosen this one, either.”
16:9 Then Jesse presented Shammah. But Samuel said, “The Lord has not chosen this one either.”
16:10 Jesse presented seven of his sons to Samuel. But Samuel said to Jesse, “The Lord has not chosen any of these.”
16:11 Then Samuel said to Jesse, “Is that all of the young men?” Jesse replied, “There is still the youngest one, but he’s taking care of the flock.” Samuel said to Jesse, “Send and get him, for we cannot turn our attention to other things until he comes here.”
16:12 So Jesse had him brought in. Now he was ruddy, with attractive eyes and a handsome appearance. The Lord said, “Go and anoint him. This is the one!”
16:13 So Samuel took the horn full of olive oil and anointed him in the presence of his brothers. The Spirit of the Lord rushed upon David from that day onward. Then Samuel got up and went to Ramah.
16:14 Now the Spirit of the Lord had turned away from Saul, and an evil spirit from the Lord tormented him.
16:15 Then Saul’s servants said to him, “Look, an evil spirit from God is tormenting you!”
16:16 Let our lord instruct his servants who are here before you to look for a man who knows how to play the lyre. Then whenever the evil spirit from God comes upon you, he can play the lyre and you will feel better.”
16:17 So Saul said to his servants, “Find me a man who plays well and bring him to me.”
16:18 One of his attendants replied, “I have seen a son of Jesse in Bethlehem who knows how to play the lyre. He is a brave warrior and is articulate and handsome, for the Lord is with him.”
16:19 So Saul sent messengers to Jesse and said, “Send me your son David, who is out with the sheep.
16:20 So Jesse took a donkey loaded with bread, a container of wine, and a young goat and sent them to Saul with his son David.
16:21 David came to Saul and stood before him. Saul liked him a great deal, and he became his armor bearer.
16:22 Then Saul sent word to Jesse saying, “Let David be my servant, for I really like him.”
16:23 So whenever the spirit from God would come upon Saul, David would take his lyre and play it. This would bring relief to Saul and make him feel better. Then the evil spirit would leave him alone.
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Historical setting and dynamics
The passage is set during the early monarchy in Israel, when Saul still occupies the throne but has been rejected by the Lord. Samuel’s prophetic authority remains significant, yet his movement must be handled carefully because Saul’s hostility makes open succession politically dangerous. Bethlehem is a small Judean town, so Samuel’s arrival naturally arouses concern among its elders. Anointing with oil marks divine appointment to office, and the Spirit’s coming and going signal that kingship in Israel depends on Yahweh’s empowering presence, not merely bloodline or stature.
Central idea
The Lord publicly rejects Saul in principle and secretly selects David in his place, showing that true kingship rests on divine choice rather than outward appearance. David is anointed, endowed with the Spirit, and then brought providentially into Saul’s household, where the contrast between Saul’s decline and David’s rising favor becomes visible.
Context and flow
This chapter begins the David cycle after Saul’s rejection in 1 Samuel 15. The first half moves from Samuel’s commissioning to David’s anointing in Bethlehem; the second half shows David entering Saul’s service through ordinary means, setting up the tension that will continue into the Goliath account and beyond. The unit therefore functions as both transition and introduction: David is chosen by God, yet his public accession remains delayed.
Exegetical analysis
The chapter is carefully structured around two linked movements: David’s private anointing (vv. 1-13) and David’s introduction into Saul’s court (vv. 14-23). The opening command is a divine rebuke to Samuel’s prolonged mourning for Saul. The Lord has already rejected Saul, so Samuel must stop grieving as though the matter were still open. Yet the Lord does not leave Israel without a king; he directs Samuel to Bethlehem and identifies one of Jesse’s sons as the chosen ruler.
Samuel’s fear in verse 2 is realistic. If Saul learns that Samuel is anointing a rival, Samuel’s life is endangered. The Lord therefore instructs him to take a sacrificial animal and invite Jesse to the sacrifice, which provides a truthful cover for the mission without requiring Samuel to lie. The text presents this as divinely authorized prudence, not deception for its own sake. When Samuel arrives, the elders’ fear shows how a prophet’s visit could signal either judgment or political trouble. Samuel’s assurance of peace and his call to consecration frame the event as sacred, not merely political.
The selection scene centers on the repeated refusal of Jesse’s sons. Samuel is first impressed by Eliab’s appearance and height, but the Lord corrects him: outward impressiveness is not the divine criterion. This is not a denial that appearance matters at all in human perception; rather, it exposes the limits of human evaluation when set against God’s omniscient judgment. The repeated formula, “the Lord has not chosen this one,” reinforces that kingship belongs to God’s free and sovereign election. Even seven sons pass before Samuel before the youngest is summoned from the flock. The detail that he is tending sheep is fitting: David is introduced as a shepherd, a role that will later function as a strong royal image in his career.
Verse 12 presents David with a restrained physical description: ruddy, attractive eyes, handsome appearance. The narrator does not claim that David’s looks prove anything about his suitability; in fact, the earlier warning against relying on appearance still governs the scene. The decisive word is the Lord’s command: “This is the one.” Samuel anoints David publicly in the presence of his brothers, but the kingship is not yet publicly installed. The Spirit of the Lord then rushes upon David from that day onward, marking him out as the Lord’s empowered servant.
The second half sharpens the contrast by narrating Saul’s disqualification. The Spirit of the Lord departs from Saul, and an evil spirit from the Lord torments him. The text teaches divine sovereignty over even Saul’s affliction; it does not portray God as morally evil, but as justly sending a harmful spirit as judgment and discipline. Saul’s servants, recognizing the problem, recommend music as a means of relief. Their proposal is practical, not theological. The irony is significant: the chosen future king is brought into the rejected king’s service to soothe him.
David’s introduction at Saul’s court is also providentially shaped. An attendant describes him as skilled with the lyre, a brave warrior, articulate, handsome, and one with whom the Lord is. That last phrase is the deepest qualification. Saul’s favorable response leads David to become his armor bearer, a position of trust and proximity. The narrative thus places David both inside and beneath Saul, preparing for future conflict while showing that God can advance his purposes through ordinary court service. The repeated reference to relief from the evil spirit highlights David’s role as a temporary bringer of peace, even before he is publicly recognized as king.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands at a decisive point in the unfolding of the monarchy under the Mosaic economy. Saul’s rejection shows that Israel’s king is accountable to the Lord’s covenant standards, while David’s anointing begins the transition toward the Davidic line that will become central to the kingdom promise. The unit does not yet announce the Davidic covenant formally, but it establishes David as the Lord’s chosen king and therefore as the one through whom later royal promise, messianic expectation, and kingdom hope will move forward. It is an important step in the history of redemption from tribal judgeship to enduring royal rule.
Theological significance
The passage reveals God’s sovereignty in appointing rulers, his refusal to be governed by human appearances, and his freedom to give or withdraw his Spirit. It also shows that divine judgment is real and consequential: Saul’s disobedience leads to rejection and torment. At the same time, God’s purpose for Israel is not abandoned; he raises up another king according to his own choice. The text also highlights the distinction between outward status and inward reality, a theme that reaches beyond leadership into the moral evaluation of all people before God.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
There is no direct prophecy in the narrow sense, but the passage is foundational for Davidic typology. David is the anointed shepherd from Bethlehem who receives the Spirit and is set over against a rejected king; that pattern will later become central to messianic expectation. The oil, the horn, the Spirit’s coming, and the shepherd-to-king movement are all meaningful symbols, but they must be read first in their historical function as signs of David’s appointment, not as free-floating allegories.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The unit reflects honor-and-shame dynamics, especially in the elders’ fear of Samuel and in the importance of public consecration before a meal or sacrifice. The heart is treated as the center of thought, will, and character, not merely emotion. The narrative also assumes a courtly world in which a skilled musician can serve as a trusted attendant and armor bearer, and where a private anointing can have real political significance even before public enthronement.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
Within the Old Testament, this passage launches the Davidic line that will dominate Israel’s royal hope. David is chosen in Bethlehem, anointed by the Spirit, and opposed by the existing ruler, which later Scripture develops into the expectation of a righteous son of David. The passage is not itself a direct prophecy of Christ, but it sets a canonical pattern that reaches fulfillment in the Messiah: the true king is chosen by God, empowered by the Spirit, and established not by outward impressiveness but by divine favor and inward righteousness. Care must be taken not to flatten David into a simple one-to-one portrait of Christ, since David remains a fallen king who prefigures rather than exhausts the royal ideal.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God’s choice of leaders cannot be reduced to visible stature, charisma, or social advantage. The Lord evaluates the heart, so external gifts must be joined to inward integrity. The Spirit’s empowering presence is essential for faithful service, and withdrawal of divine favor is a serious judgment. The passage also encourages trust in God’s providence during transitions: what looks hidden or delayed may already be under divine appointment. Finally, it warns against grieving over what God has rejected and against assuming that present appearances define ultimate reality.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive crux is the phrase “an evil spirit from the Lord.” The best reading is that the spirit is harmful in effect and sent under God’s sovereign judgment, not that evil belongs to God’s moral character. A secondary issue is the strong contrast between outward appearance and the heart; this should be read as a critique of human misjudgment, not as a claim that visible qualities are irrelevant in all evaluation.
Application boundary note
Do not turn “the Lord looks at the heart” into a slogan that disregards observable fruit, wisdom, or accountability. Do not collapse David’s private anointing into a universal pattern for all ministry calling, and do not read the royal office here as if it were directly equivalent to church office. The passage belongs first to Israel’s monarchy and must be applied from that covenantal setting.
Key Hebrew terms
māšaḥ
Gloss: to anoint, consecrate
The oil-anointing signifies God’s selection and consecration of David for kingship; it is not a mere ceremony but an official designation by divine authority.
lēb
Gloss: heart, inner person
“The heart” names the inner person, moral will, and true disposition. The Lord’s evaluation reaches beyond appearance to the actual character and orientation of the man.
rûaḥ
Gloss: spirit, breath, wind
The Spirit’s coming upon David and departure from Saul marks the transfer of divine enablement for kingship and explains the contrasting trajectories of the two men.
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