a28:3-14
bLev 20:27
cDeut 18:9-11
d28:3
e28:4
fJosh 19:18
g28:6
h14:36-42
i14:37
jLam 2:9
kEzek 7:26
lAmos 8:11-12
mMic 3:6-7
n28:7
o28:3
p28:9
q28:12
r28:13

‏ 1 Samuel 28:3-14

Summary for 1Sam 28:3-14: 28:3-14  a Saul consulted the dead, a practice forbidden by God’s law (see Lev 20:27  b; Deut 18:9-11  c). 28:3  d 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  e Shunem, a border town in the territory of Issachar (Josh 19:18  f), 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  g refused to answer: Earlier, Saul had consulted the Lord by sacred lots with mixed results (14:36-42  h). God’s refusal to speak was a sign of his judgment (14:37  i; Lam 2:9  j; Ezek 7:26  k; Amos 8:11-12  l; Mic 3:6-7  m).
28:7  n 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  o).

• 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  p outlawed: Literally cut off, suggesting that Saul might have had most of the mediums executed.
28:12  q It is not clear why seeing Samuel caused the woman to recognize Saul.
28:13  r 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.
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