Loading…

I Samuel: A New Translation with Introduction, Notes and Commentary is unavailable, but you can change that!

The two books of Samuel narrate the establishment and expansion of the Kingdom of Israel. From Samuel’s providential birth, to his appointment of Saul as Israel’s first king, to the demise of Saul and the rise of David as his successor, I and II Samuel are filled with the stuff of Israel’s everyday experience. Religious, political, economic, military, agricultural, and many other features of the...

correct, late enough to have inherited a legacy of bitter experience with the institution of monarchy. Our sources suggest that the prophetic perspective flourished in some circles throughout the independent history of the northern kingdom, but in seeking to understand this particular prophetic writer we must also account for a certain southern orientation as exhibited in his explicit acknowledgment of David’s right to succeed Saul. This is a northern writer who is prepared to acknowledge the legitimacy
Pages 22–23