1 Samuel 16:1-13 · Samuel Anoints David
One Stone Faith
1 Sam. Chapters 16-19
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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The story of David is the story of a Shepherd defending the holy flock of the Lord. But it is the Lord who saves them. For God is the true Shepherd of Israel.

The boomer generation may well be the last generation that has significant memories of growing up on a farm. Anyone here a farmer? Anyone lived either on a farm, or a ranch, or know someone who does? If you live on the land, particularly in undeveloped areas or frontier regions, one of your major concerns are predators. Today, your threat may be as benign as a rabbit or a rat climbing under your fence to consume your lettuce, carrots, or tulips in your carefully cultivated garden. It may be the ways you defend your corn from maggots, moles or rootworms. Or your grains and fruit trees from parasites, aphids, or pesticides.

Or you may have other kinds of concerns if you raise sheep, chickens, or goats. If you live in the mid-west, you may have fears of coyotes, foxes, or even bear. I know a woman whose pet goat was recently attacked by a neighbor’s pitbull.

In our world, there are predators that threaten our land and our livelihood, and there are those who protect the flocks and crops from the predators. They are our farmers, our ranchers, our gardeners, our shepherds.

As Paul Harvey notes in his rather famous poem about farmers, a farmer has a sacred duty to serve and to protect. Listen to the excerpt of his soliloquy here:

And on the 8th day, God looked down on his planned paradise and said, "I need a caretaker." So God made a farmer.

God said, "I need somebody willing to get up before dawn, milk cows, work all day in the fields, milk cows again, eat supper and then go to town and stay past midnight at a meeting of the school board." So God made a farmer.

"I need somebody with arms strong enough to rustle a calf and yet gentle enough to deliver his own grandchild. Somebody to call hogs, tame cantankerous machinery, come home hungry, have to wait lunch until his wife's done feeding visiting ladies and tell the ladies to be sure and come back real soon -- and mean it." So God made a farmer.

God said, "I need somebody willing to sit up all night with a newborn colt. And watch it die. Then dry his eyes and say, 'Maybe next year.' I need somebody who can shape an ax handle from a persimmon sprout, shoe a horse with a hunk of car tire, who can make harness out of haywire, feed sacks and shoe scraps. And who, planting time and harvest season, will finish his forty-hour week by Tuesday noon, then, pain'n from 'tractor back,' put in another seventy-two hours." So God made a farmer.

God had to have somebody willing to ride the ruts at double speed to get the hay in ahead of the rain clouds and yet stop in mid-field and race to help when he sees the first smoke from a neighbor's place. So God made a farmer.

God said, "I need somebody strong enough to clear trees and heave bails, yet gentle enough to tame lambs and wean pigs and tend the pink-combed pullets, who will stop his mower for an hour to splint the broken leg of a meadow lark. It had to be somebody who'd plow deep and straight and not cut corners. Somebody to seed, weed, feed, breed and rake and disc and plow and plant and tie the fleece and strain the milk and replenish the self-feeder and finish a hard week's work with a five-mile drive to church.

"Somebody who'd bale a family together with the soft strong bonds of sharing, who would laugh and then sigh, and then reply, with smiling eyes, when his son says he wants to spend his life 'doing what dad does.'" So God made a farmer.*

[Optional: show the link: https://youtu.be/QuzhwkaNC40 or the link to the Superbowl ad: https://youtu.be/AMpZ0TGjbWE on screen.]

Farming and shepherding in biblical days were the primary livelihoods of God’s people –the flock of Israel. In the days of young David, the job of shepherd was just as dangerous as today, in fact, more so. Sheep could be preyed upon not only by wild dogs, fox, wild boar, or birds of prey; but by lions and bear. A shepherd had to be alert, strong and hardy, quick to act, loyal to the flock.

Sheep were raised on the green, lush hills of Bethlehem. In Jesus’ day, those sheep and lambs would be designated as God’s holy flock –those dedicated for the sacred purpose of Temple sacrifice in Jerusalem. Those who tended these holy flocks were professional descendants of David the Shepherd, God’s holy servants.

The story of David and Goliath is a story about predator and prey. Israel is the flock. The Philistines are the predators. And the worst of the predators is Goliath of Gath –who personally has threatened Israel for 40 days straight.

Goliath may be a man, a large and powerful man (think of the HBO special “The Vikings”), but in the story, Goliath is clearly metaphorized as predator –someone whose heart has been corrupted, whose humanity has been driven out. He is vicious, violent, a boor, and a beast. He is not merely uncircumcised, but dedicated to killing Israel’s entire “flock” and subjugating them to Philistia, the “pig-eating, aggressive sea people,” who had settled on the shores of today’s Palestine, bringing with them their pagan worship and barbarian ways.

Saul’s entire army of Israelites clearly feared the aggressive brute, whom David equates to both lion and bear in his past experience. Interested only in killing and consuming, Goliath is donned in heavy armor with spear, sword, and javelin, the weapons of aggression, the weapons of the world.

David however refuses to enter that world. Instead he uses his skills as a shepherd to create a new battlefield for God to defeat the enemy.

David does not even see Goliath as a menace, but a mere hindrance –a fleck in the eye of the One True God who has the power to crush mountains and raise valleys. With the power of God behind him, David slays the aggressor with one smooth stone.

One smooth stone. One of five chosen by the shepherd from the nearby flowing brook. Oh, the power in that one smooth stone! A future built on a rock: The mighty “WORD” of God.

Gath was one of 5 city states representing Philistia, and Goliath was its one representative. Likewise, David’s chosen stone was one of five books of Torah –representing the Holy Spirit of God (the WORD of God), the Ruach HaKodesh. And David is the Lord’s representative and servant.

The word for stone, eben, is created from two Hebrew words, “av” and “ben” –father and son. When Father and Son unite, nothing is stronger. For the son is the cornerstone of the family, the one who will continue the familial line. Those who serve God in faith are God’s “sons”(and daughters) –representatives “on the ground” of Holy Spirit power that saves and triumphs, the great Elohim. The Great Shepherd of Israel is represented by the human shepherds of Israel. Such is the way the Hebrew scriptures depict those who serve YHWH in faith. And David is the shepherd to beat all shepherds –with more faith in God than an entire army of Israel!

For it is God who defeats the Goliath, who puts an end to the predator, just as David explains, it is God who saves the flocks from the claw of the lion and the paw of the bear.

God is undefeatable.

For the Hebrew people, the presence of God is inherent in the words of the Torah, the Hebrew language full of story, metaphor, image, and multiple layers of meaning. Through reading and learning the Torah, one enters into relationship with the One True God, one’s faith grows, and one’s trust ensues. You might even say that to learn to read the Torah well is to learn to live well.

The holy scriptures are for us like stones from a mighty, rushing river, stream, or brook. Steeped in the Living Waters of the Holy Spirit, they exude the power of God’s holy WORD. When we focus our mind and heart on the scriptures, we too become like stones, dipped, soaked, and anointed with the Spirit’s power as God’s representatives. Through years of formation –in which that Living Water flows over and through us, our lives are smoothed and rounded into the image of God. Our rough edges are removed, our coarseness tamed, our image smoothed, until we become living stones in God’s eternal kingdom. And the SON is God’s cornerstone, the stone of the Father, as Jesus tells us in John’s gospel. Jesus is the foundation.

David had no doubt in the power of God. So much so that he declined the weapons of this world. He faced the predator of God’s flock with no armor, no spear, no face-guard, no army. He faced the enemy with the tools of the shepherd –a sling, five stones of the Torah out of which only one was needed, and an attitude of deep and abiding faith in the strength of God that triumphs.

David’s passion is of the Shepherd defending the sheep, not of the Invader looking for spoils. He is the protector and defender of God’s honor, and Israel’s young son, the “Shepherd” of Israel, born of Bethlehem. He comes to the battle front with shepherd’s staff, shepherd’s bag, stones, and one sling.

David told Saul of his ability to overcome both lion and bear-–the fiercest predators in the land, natural predators who attack without mercy, predators who know nothing but brutal hunger. If you research those predators, you learn something huge: The shepherd rarely wins! Anyone see the movie, “The Revenant”? That’s what a bear attack looks like. Anyone watch any shows on TV about giraffes and lions? Trust me. The lion always wins!!

And what’s left of the prey –and the shepherd-- is not pretty.

Yet, here is David, victor over both lion and bear, with no doubt of his victory over this new Bull and Bear predator–this Goliath. For the triumph is God’s.

We do not reign victorious on our own, or by our own devices. Amen?

Only the raw power of the God can defeat the brute force of evil in this world and beyond.

Lion killer? Bear slayer? Sheep rescuer? These are titles for God, not for David, and David fully recognizes that.

So, who are the monsters in your closet?

Who are the goliaths in your lives and in your world? The predators of God’s flock? Those who mock the power of God in your life?

The message for us today is that the power to overcome life’s evil still comes from the One True God, and Jesus His Son, cornerstone of God’s kingdom, and Lord of Life, found and known through the scriptures, formed in our lives, until we become living stones in His image for God’s eternal house.

Paul calls us “sons and daughters” of God. All of us enjoy the divine anointing that comes with formation in faith. We are all living stones plucked from the Living Waters of God’s Holy Spirit. With other living stones, together we form a powerful Church in this world, one that can never be overcome.

We are the Shepherds of the Great Shepherd of All, the One Shepherd, the Good Shepherd.

We are the stones of Israel (see Gen 49:24), the slayers of evil, the servants of the Rock of Ages.

We are the stones formed in the image of the Rock of Salvation.

And it takes Only One. It only takes only One sweep of God’s mighty hand to rescue and to save.

Only One WORD, One God, One Truth, One Way, One Life, One Son, One Shepherd, One Jesus.

One stone. One person. And God is victorious. Do you hear that?

Close your eyes for a moment. Think of the forces in your life that threaten you, taunt you, weaken you, instill fear in you.

Then, I want you to come forward to the altar, and to retrieve a stone from the waters, take it with you to your seat, hold it in your hand, feel the power of God around and within you.

You are that living stone. You are God’s anointed.

May you be filled with God’s strength and the faith of David.

May your fears leave you.

May your doubts abandon you.

May God’s Spirit lift you.

May your faith carry you back to the world in assurance, and in peace.

Now, hold your hands high, with God’s holy WORD in your fists. You are God’s spiritual house. May you carry that anointing into the world, to be saviors of all that is good, and shepherds of all who are faithful. Amen.


*The Atlantic. Article by Garance Franke-Ruta regarding Paul Harvey’s 1978 ad for Ram Trucks, “So God Made a Farmer.”

Based on the Story Lectionary

Major Text

The Story of David, Goliath, and Saul’s Vendetta (1 Samuel 16-19)

Minor Text

The Egyptians Do Not Heed Moses’ and Aaron’s Miracles (Exodus 7-11)

The Story of Ahaziah’s Bid to Baalzebub in Samaria (2 Kings 1)

Psalm 1: Do Not Follow the Wicked

Psalm 37: Do Not Fret About the Wicked

Psalm 151 (Septuagint): David’s Deed

Psalm 9: God’s Justice

Psalm 115: Glory to God

Psalms 11, 96, 97: The Lord’s Righteousness

The Root of Jesse and the Coming Restoration (Isaiah 11)

The Lord’s Servant in Whom God’s Spirit Dwells (Isaiah 42)

Jesus is Accused of being Beelzebul (Matthew 9:27-9:38 and 12:15-12:50; Mark 3:20-3:35; Luke 11:14-11:36 and 8:19-21)

Jesus is Lord (John 5:18-5:47)

Stephen’s Speech About Loyalty to Jesus and His Subsequent Stoning (Acts 7)

Image Exegesis: “One Ring to rule them all.” One Stone to fell them.

You probably recognize the first part of the title of this exegesis from J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings Trilogy. In the story, a “Ring of Power” is crafted by an evil lord. And whenever anyone (even a good person at heart) wears the “ring of power,” that power will corrupt him until he or she is no longer recognizable.

That person becomes in essence a “beast,” a “predator,” a “goliath” if you will. In fact, “Goliath” means “revealed” according to Strong’s Hebrew dictionary. Although Goliath is a man, his true identity as a predator is revealed in his aggression against the Hebrews.

Emil Hirsch believes in fact that “the name "Goliath" is probably connected with the Assyro-Babylonian "Guzali" = "running, ravaging spirits," "destroyers."* Goliath is from Gath, one of the 5 cities known as belonging to the Philistines. Strongs reveals that the root galah means to be revealed or uncovered, to be naked perhaps in one’s true nature. Though Goliath may look like a man, in truth, in the story, he is a beast, likened to a predator like the lion or bear David slew as a shepherd in the past. And he has been threatening the Israelites already for 40 days.

The story then is of shepherd (David) and predator (Goliath). David, defender, and Goliath, aggressor.

But these are only a few of the many metaphors in this story, metaphors such as living water (brook/stream), stones (5 of them), one stone David chooses, 5 cities of Philistine of which 1 Goliath is the representative, the shepherd’s staff and pouch, the spear, javelin, and sword, the sling, the WORD of God (The Torah), which is a hidden metaphor.

Living water, as we mentioned in prior exegeses, is moving, running water, particularly water that runs below the earth’s surface, although brooks and streams also comply with the definition. Moving water or living water is always a metaphor for the Holy Spirit, the Ruach HaKodesh.

Just as the “seed” planted within the garden is a metaphor for the seed of YHWH planted within the heart in Genesis, so too are stones representative of the WORD of YHWH in scripture, which also reflect upon one’s loyalty, faith, and “sonship/daughtership” of God.

God’s flock (sheep) in this story is Israel. And God is the primal Shepherd. However, the word stone in Hebrew, eben, is made of “av” and “ben” --Father and Son. The command to till and keep the covenant throughout all generations is reflected in the strength of relationship between father and son. This relationship is reflected in the Father and Son relationship of the Godhead itself, and in Jesus’ role in John’s gospel as the Good Shepherd. We see an echo of David’s act with Goliath in Jesus’ 40-day wilderness temptation, in which he ends the ordeal with a quote from Deuteronomy (the 5th Book of the Torah) –one smooth stone.

The Holy Spirit (water) is also seen as anointing the scriptures, as well as those of faith (God’s sons and daughters who act/speak on God’s behalf). Imbued with the Holy Spirit’s power, God acts within, and God’s power is unleashed.

The power of scripture then is in the incarnation, and in its ability to bring readers/speakers into relationship with God through them as “living stones” of God. As Paul put it, we become then “adopted sons and daughters” of the Father.

The stone as metaphor also has a pilgrimage note to it. When rocks are found in water –particularly flowing water, they are smooth and rounded. Over a long period of time of immersion, they are changed in form, smoothed, made beautiful and powerful as weapons against evil. Fortified stones if you will. Beautiful stones. This is the type of stone we see as David –and using one smooth stone (only that one act of faith), God slays evil.**

In 1 Peter 2:5, we are said to form living stones in God’s Temple (Jesus’ spiritual Temple). Discipleship then is a process of immersing oneself in scripture and in relationship with Jesus until we become those stones built upon the foundation of Jesus, the cornerstone.

David’s act is defensive, not offensive. God prevails against the forces of evil. But God never seeks to destroy, but to love. Yet no brute force, not even the King of Beasts, can prevail against God’s power when God defends the flock.

The Philistine is depicted as a “natural predator.” Like the lion or bear, his heart is that of predator, monster, that which has been corrupted from nephesh (or human).

Only faith can restore humanness. “Not by sword or spear that the Lord saves” says David. But God saves through restoration. Those who cannot be restored invite their own destruction.

The stone is a symbol then of holiness, of steadfast faith that does not waver but takes aim at evil. The “armor of God” is in the WORD of God, our relationship with God in faith. We need nothing more.

Just one stone.

*Jastrow, "Religion of Assyria and Babylon," p. 500; Muss-Arnolt, "Concise Dictionary," s.v. "The Throne-Carriers"; Delitzsch, "Assyrisches Handwörterb." s.v.

**See graceintorah.net for more information on David and Jesus in relationship to stones.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner