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[music]
>> Hello friends and welcome to the
Prophets of Israel daily. This is the
first book of Samuel chapter 30. We're
approaching the end of Samuel 1. My name
is Ari Abramowitz. I'm here with Jeremy
Gimpel, my rebbe, my friend, my
commander in the IDF. And
it's great to be here, Jeremy. Your
camera just went off.
>> You know, the farm electricity's just
out. I had to get on the road. I'm
broadcasting from a random place. That's
why the scenery behind me is blurred.
But this is good practice because soon
I'm going to be on the road in the
United States and I am not going to miss
a chapter a day every day for the
Prophets of Israel daily. And so this is
just good practice of what it's like
broadcasting the Torah on the road.
>> That's good to be here. He is right. It
is good practice, but it is also
important to say God willing you're not
going to miss because it is not fully in
your hands whether you're going to miss
or not. And if you do miss, we're going
to do it anyways. We're going a chapter
a day whether you're here or not,
whether I'm here or not. This is bigger
than me or you, Jeremy. Anyways, shalom
everybody. I want you all to picture
this moment with me. Right, David and
his 600 men have been marching for 3
days. They've just been rejected by the
Philistine commanders, sent away from a
battle they never wanted to fight in the
first place. They're exhausted, they're
raw, and all they want, all any soldier
wants, is to come home. And as they
ascend the final hill on the way back to
their families,
they see smoke.
Ziklag, Ziklag, their refuge, the one
place on earth that was theirs, is
burned to the ground and the ashes are
still smoldering. Their wives are gone,
their sons and daughters gone. I mean,
for us in Israel, this is hitting closer
to home than we would want we would want
to believe. But but that's what they're
facing. The Amalekites raided while they
were away and they took everything.
David's own two wives among the
captives. And we get to a a
heartbreaking verse. And it's hard not
to visualize this as you read it. I'm a
visual thinker, so I'm like I'm
visualizing verse four.
Vayichazek David And David and the
people with him lifted up their voices
and wept until they had no more strength
to weep.
Until they had no more strength to weep.
Have you ever cried like that?
Jeremy, have you ever cried like that?
>> I haven't actually where my body just
gives out where I just don't even have
the strength to weep anymore. I actually
haven't cried. I've cried quite a lot
and pretty powerfully, but that's
unbelievable.
>> Yeah. Well, I actually think that there
was maybe a time or two after October
7th that that's actually what happened
to me. Um even when my father passed
away, you know, he was Anyways,
that I
the two tragedies are paralleled and it
is that in which I've expe- until the
body just gives out. You know, if you if
you haven't cried like that, my friends,
I bless you that you should never have
to. But, it gets worse because the men
broken, grieving, desperate for someone
to blame turned to David.
The the the
what They even spoke about stoning
David. His own men. His
brothers-in-arms. At the lowest moment
of his entire life, David stands utterly
alone. And then, in that very same
breath, comes the verse that I believe
is the beating heart of this entire
chapter and in some ways the entire
essence of David himself. Verse six.
Vayichazek David b'Hashem Elohav. But,
David strengthened himself in the Lord
his God.
>> You know, Ari, I just want to pause here
cuz this is one of my favorite verses in
all of King David's life. I mean, now
he's facing the unbridled darkness of
Amalek, an encounter with pure evil.
And now he has no one. I mean, David's
lost everything. His city is burned, his
family's taken captive, he's been
betrayed before, you know, by Saul, he
you know, tried to heal him with his
music, was so loving and loyal by the
people of Keilah who he risked his life
to try to save, and now his only
friends, his mighty men, his own people
are turning against him and actually
want to kill him. I mean, his own men
were talking about stoning him, and
there was just no
earthly source of comfort anywhere
around him. And the verse doesn't say
David strengthened himself. It says that
David strengthened himself
in his God. Not in the Lord, not in It's
like in his God, Hashem Elohav. In the
midst of that chaos, David turns to the
master of the universe in his own
personal relationship. It's like God is
still my God, even when everything else
is falling apart. And you know, the
contrast is just so stark. The night
before Saul's final battle, he's
terrified, abandoned, his soldiers are
leaving him, heaven's silent. You know,
he's like,
"What is he going to do?" And he's like
searching in the dark for a medium in
Ain Dor, he reached down into
necromancy, into despair, and here
David,
in a pit just as deep, I think deeper,
and he reaches up. And that right there,
that is the dividing line between the
kingship that crumbles and the kingship
that's eternal. And it was never about
how David fell, it's how he rose up. And
it's when you're at the bottom,
always remembering to aim up. And that's
exactly what David did when he hit rock
bottom here.
>> Yeah, that's exactly it. You know,
because look at what David does next. He
doesn't launch a blind revenge raid from
an emotional, visceral, reactive place.
He He doesn't let the rage drive the
wheel. He calls for Evyatar the priest
and for the ephod, right, the priestly
garment that was used to seek Hashem's
guidance. And he asks, in in verse
eight, "Vayishal David Bashem."
"Vayomer lo, radaf." And David inquired
of the Lord, and he answered him,
"Pursue, for you shall surely overtake,
and you shall surely rescue."
"Pursue.
You will overtake. You will rescue. Not
maybe, surely." So, David does it. He
runs. 600 men race to the Brook Besor,
and 200 of them are simply just too
spent by the time they get there to
cross. If I was one of his men at this
stage of my life, if I'm going to be
honest, I probably would have been out
of gas right there. But, um, they just
have nothing left in the tank. So, David
says, "Stay back with the gear." And 400
men press on. And here the story does
something really beautiful. Out in the
open field, they find a man collapsed in
the dirt. An Egyptian, right, a slave
who hasn't had bread or water in three
days and three nights.
And before he's of any use to anyone,
before they even know who he is, they
give him bread, they give him water,
figs and raisin cakes, and they revive
him.
And he turns out to be a servant of the
Amalekites, abandoned by his own master
the moment he fell sick. And, uh, he was
just left there in the field to die. And
this discarded, thrown-away man becomes
the exact key that leads David straight
into the enemy camp.
>> Can you just hold on? I just don't want
to rush by that Ari because I think that
that seemingly little event, it's the
turning point of the chapter. I mean,
look at the contrast. Amalek had this
man, tossed him aside the second he
stopped being useful. I mean, that's the
entire philosophy of Amalek compressed
into one image. The weak, they're
disposable. And David's men find the
same men while they're in the middle of
pursuing their enemy. They feed him
before he's worth anything to them and
before they knew that he was going to be
valuable. I mean, that's the contrast of
Israel and Amalek in one image. I mean,
what do you do with the broken person
lying in the field? It's like love and
compassion first. Israel stops for him.
Amalek steps over him. It's like
precisely that mercy, not the military
genius, that's what unlocks the entire
victory for Israel.
>> Yeah, totally. And and the mercy opens
the door to everything because the man
tells him everything that they need to
know. David attacks at twilight and
fights through the night into the next
evening. And what does he recover?
Listen to this.
Everything.
Every captive, every child, both his
wives, all the flocks and the herds. The
text says plainly, "Nothing was missing
from the smallest to the greatest. He
brought it all back." But then comes the
test that reveals what kind of King
David is going to be. Because as the
victorious 400 men return to the 200
who'd stayed at the Brook Besor, some of
the men, who the text calls "wicked and
worthless men" from David's own ranks,
they say, "These men didn't fight. So,
they get nothing back except for their
wives and their children. Send them
off."
And David will not hear of it. First, he
re- reframes the whole thing. This
spoil, he says, is what Hashem gave us.
It was never ours to hoard. And then he
lays down the law, verse 24.
For the share of him who goes down to
the battle, so shall be the share of him
who stays by the baggage. Together they
shall share.
Right, the one who guards the gear and
the one who swings the sword alike. And
the text tells us that David made his
this a chok u'mishpat, a statute and an
ordinance for all Israel for all time
from that day forward.
>> You know, Ari, I really think this is
one of those moments where David, on his
journey, stops being a fugitive and
starts really being a king. I mean,
because look what he does with the
spoils right after. He sends portions of
it to the elders of Yehudah, to town
after town across the south with a note,
"It's a gift from the spoils of the
enemies of the Lord." I mean, he's not
enriching himself, he's building a
nation slowly but surely. He's planting
the seeds of the kingdom of Judea and
ultimately the kingdom of David, the
Messianic dynasty. And how's all through
generosity and appreciation. And the
founding principle he sets in stone is
unity. I mean, in Israel, the soldier
and the supply guard, the front line and
the home front, they're one people with
one reward. No one is whole when the
other's left out.
>> Yeah, I really love that, Jeremy,
because we're living in that principle
to a large degree, I think, right now.
Right, think about this past war, the
soldier in Gaza and the family running
to the shelter in the north, the
reservist at the front and the volunteer
packing the supplies. Right, the the
praying throughout the night. right,
David's law codified 3,000 years ago in
the dust of Ziklag declares that they
all share in the victory.
You know, we were in combat unit. You're
my commander in the army. There are
those that worked in an office on a
typewriter or on communications. We
didn't get paid more than them. We don't
get more credit than them. We are all
each doing our job. They're We're all
Israel. And maybe the deepest message of
this chapter is for
for for anyone that's listening who
feels like they're standing in the ashes
of their own Ziklag right now
because here's David betrayed, grieving,
alone, his own men ready to stone him,
and the turning point wasn't a strategy
or an army. It was four Hebrew words.
Vayithazeik David b'Hashem
Elohav. Vayithazeik David, he
strengthened himself in Hashem his God.
He refused to let the lowest moment of
his life have the final word. That is
teshuvah.
That is what it means to return. Not
that we never fall. David fell hard in
this chapter, but that when we hit
bottom, we reach up instead of down. And
from that pit, he didn't just survive,
he recovered everything and walked
straight towards the throne stronger
than he was before.
And I really think the same is true for
us and for the nation of Israel. You
know, we returned to this land after our
own long exile in the ashes and we rose
out of the smoke. We strengthen our
shell ourselves in Hashem and and we
keep walking home.
So, friends, if you are moved by this
journey, by what we're experiencing, if
it strengthens you like it strengthens
me, then come and consider joining our
global family in the Land of Israel
Fellowship. Whatever tier it is, come to
the network and see where you find that
you connect. It's like nothing else on
Earth. You can find out more at the
landofisrael.com.
Chazak u'matz my friends. Be'ezrat
Hashem we'll see you tomorrow as we
close out the first book of Samuel
chapter 31 alongside Jeremy. [music]
It's a big chapter Jeremy. Don't let us
down.