A parallel passage is 1 Chronicles 12 (particularly verses 19-20). I haven’t been referencing the Chronicles to this point. I may return to previous posts and cross-reference them at a later date.
David is now caught in his deception but not revealed. 1 Samuel 28.1 presents David’s promotion to the bodyguard of Achish. Here David is called to war against the Israelites. God gives him an out when the commanders other than Achish doubt David’s loyalty to Achish and against Saul. They remind Achish of who David is in the eyes of the Israelites. This does not cause doubt in Achish but gives him reason to send David back to Ziklag (chapter 30).
Achish praises David for his loyalty to him. David feigns disappointment, makes an attempt to go to battle, but, then, goes home to Ziklag.
When we read this and the previous chapters, we know that David appeared to have lied to Achish and was being duplicitous. David was not attacking Philistine encampments but other enemies of Israel. This is why Achish would call David an honest man. He used terminology that David would know and appreciate when he compared David to “an angel of the Lord” (this phrase is used of David in 2 Samuel 14.17 and 19.27).
The song that turned Saul against David was well known (1 Samuel 18.7 and 21.11).
Aphek is an important location for the Philistines. Eli’s sons died there (1 Samuel 4), Saul and his sons died as-well (1 Samuel 31), and where the Ark was captured (1 Samuel 4).
This is a problem chapter to most people. Because David was not being honest with Achish in telling him that he was destroying Israelite towns instead of the enemies of Israel, many believe that David was behaving like Saul. A question I would ask: Did David lie when he withheld truth? Some would say those who are in the wrong don’t deserve all the truth. Do you agree with this?
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