a28:1
b28:3-14
cLev 20:27
dDeut 18:9-11
e28:3
f28:4
gJosh 19:18
h28:6
i14:36-42
j14:37
kLam 2:9
lEzek 7:26
mAmos 8:11-12
nMic 3:6-7
o28:7
p28:3
q28:9
r28:12
s28:13
t28:15
u16:14
vJudg 16:20
w1 Sam 28:6
x28:16
y28:17
z15:28
aa28:18
ab15:19
ac28:19
aeNum 16:30-33
afJob 17:1-16
agPs 49:11
ahRev 1:18
ai28:24
ajGen 18:5-7
ak1 Sam 9:22-24

‏ 1 Samuel 28

28:1  a another war: Hostilities between Israel and the Philistines were now routine. In exchange for providing refuge, Achish expected David’s military involvement and cooperation.
Summary for 1Sam 28:3-14: 28:3-14  b Saul consulted the dead, a practice forbidden by God’s law (see Lev 20:27  c; Deut 18:9-11  d). 28:3  e banned from the land: Saul had either expelled or killed most mediums, or he had merely outlawed the practice of necromancy (see study note on 28:9).
28:4  f Shunem, a border town in the territory of Issachar (Josh 19:18  g), overlooked the valley of Jezreel.

• Mount Gilboa is at the east end of the valley of Jezreel. The mountain took its name from a nearby village.
28:6  h refused to answer: Earlier, Saul had consulted the Lord by sacred lots with mixed results (14:36-42  i). God’s refusal to speak was a sign of his judgment (14:37  j; Lam 2:9  k; Ezek 7:26  l; Amos 8:11-12  m; Mic 3:6-7  n).
28:7  o Excluded from God’s counsel, Saul resorted to illegitimate methods for finding God’s will. Saul had earlier prohibited the occult practice that he now engaged in himself (28:3  p).

• Endor was on the boundary between Israel and Philistia; the area near Israel’s border was probably a safer location for a banned practice.
28:9  q outlawed: Literally cut off, suggesting that Saul might have had most of the mediums executed.
28:12  r It is not clear why seeing Samuel caused the woman to recognize Saul.
28:13  s Saul asked the medium to describe what she saw that caused her to scream. She described a divine being, a god (Hebrew ’elohim) coming up. Perhaps she observed a human figure with a godlike or angelic appearance, or her use of the term god might reflect a pagan belief that a person becomes a god—a spirit possessing supernatural abilities—after death.
28:15  t God has left me: The same Hebrew term is used in 16:14  u and Judg 16:20  v.

• won’t reply by prophets or dreams: Cp. 1 Sam 28:6  w.
28:16  x Saul’s enemy was not David but the Lord himself.
28:17  y torn the kingdom from you: See 15:28  z.
28:18  aa you refused: Samuel’s message to Saul had not changed (cp. 15:19  ab).
28:19  ac here with me: In Sheol, the abode of the dead (cp. 2:6  ad, “the grave”; see also Num 16:30-33  ae; Job 17:1-16  af; Ps 49:11  ag; Rev 1:18  ah).
28:24  ai fattening a calf ... dough ... bread: This meal was a major undertaking, a model of hospitality (cp. Gen 18:5-7  aj). This meal the medium shared with Saul recalls the fine meal Samuel had shared with Saul (1 Sam 9:22-24  ak) before he anointed Saul as king. That meal with God’s prophet marked the beginning of Saul’s kingship. This meal with a condemned spiritist came shortly before his death.
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