CHAPTER 31CHAPTER SUMMARY--THE
DEATH OF SHAUL
I sometimes feel guilty about my willingness to see flaws in
characters in Tanakh, both because I make no claims to any
greater level of righteousness than they, and because I am not
sure that I am as adept at picking up on their many good
qualities. In particular, we have found Shaul lacking in many
ways in our study of the first part of the Book of Shmuel. As we
study this last chapter, our recognition of how he has brought
much if not all of this upon himself might lead us to adopt a
harsh pose towards Shaul, and ignore the tragedy of his death.
David haMelekh does not see the issue that way. In the
beginning of II Shmuel, he composes a beautiful and heartfelt
elegy for Shaul and Yonatan upon hearing of their deaths (you
could look it up). I wanted to pause here to insure that I not
be less sensitive to the tragic in our chapter than was David,
who clearly was as aware of Shaul’s flaws as are we. A harsher
person might think to say this was just a sinner getting
punished for his sins. That may be true, but we should be
careful to realize that that in and of itself is a tragic event
(as the navi Yehezkel says in the name of God, that God does not
want sinners to be punished, but to repent their ways and live).
This week’s lesson is, therefore, a lesson in tragedy.
The literal events are fairly simple: the war goes badly for
the Jews, who begin to flee and to lose. The archers’ arrows
start coming close to Shaul, who realizes he is going to die,
and decides to commit suicide rather than be slowly tortured to
death by the Plishtim. He tries to convince his arms-bearer to
kill him, but he refuses. He then falls on his sword, as does
the arms-bearer. When the people hear of his death, they
completely fall apart, abandoning whole cities to the Plishtim.
The next morning, when the Plishtim are going through the
battlefield, they find Shaul’s corpse, and mistreat it horribly,
cutting off the head, removing the clothing, and then sending it
throughout their country to let everyone know of their victory.
Afterwards, they put Shaul’s arms in their house of idol worship
and hung his body on a public wall.
The people of Yavesh Gilead (remember Yavesh Gilead—there’s a
story about Yavesh Gilead) hear of what has happened, and go on
a daring raid to retrieve Shaul’s body, which they burn and then
bury the bones. They then fast seven days for Shaul. And that is
how the book ends.
THE PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF WAR
The Talmud (Sotah 44b) cites the opening verse of this
chapter as part of its proof that fleeing is the first step in
getting killed in war, meaning that flight is itself a
contributing factor to loss of life, not just a symptom of a
heavy military defeat. That contributes to an explanation for
the Torah’s reasoning that one who is afraid should be excused
from the battlefield, since not only is he more likely to be
killed, but his fear will lead to his flight, which will lead to
general defeat and death. Taking the Talmud’s reading at face
value, the opening verse of our chapter means to say that the
Jews were psychologically outmatched in the present battle at
least as much as physically.
For Shaul, of course, the distinction is too subtle to have
mattered, since either way the people have been badly defeated
and he finds himself under fire from Plishti archers, with every
reason to expect that they will soon find him and kill him,
slowly and mockingly, to underline their victory. To avoid this
eventuality, he calls on his arms-bearer to kill him. The boy
refuses, at least according to the verse because of fear.
Shaul then falls on his own sword. Interestingly, the Talmud
(Sotah, 10a) includes Shaul in a group of five people who had a
particular physical characteristic of extraordinary beauty—the
Talmudic phrase is that five had a body part that was created
according to the form in Heaven. That probably means that that
body part was perfectly formed in these people. The Talmud goes
on to point out, however, that for each of the five, the body
part in question eventually became their downfall. For a clearer
example, David’s son Abshalom is seen as having hair of that
sort, and it was his hair that got caught on a tree and stopped
him from fleeing Yoav at the end of his rebellion against his
father.
For Shaul, his neck was the outstanding characteristic, and
Hazal assume that it was his neck that his sword pierced. The
merits of the Midrash as exegesis aside (it seems physically
difficult to fall on your sword on your neck, for one thing),
Hazal’s point in this comment is unclear. We might think that
they meant to show that people misuse extraordinary gifts, but
there is little evidence that Shaul misused his neck or his
height for that matter (but see Tsits Eliezer 15:4, who
struggles to find a sin that would make this middah ke-neged
middah).
Perhaps instead of Hazal saying that these five were punished
for their use of their gifts, they were only saying that these
Heavenly gifts became the vehicle for punishment when things
went wrong in their lives. If so, we might not need to claim
that Shaul’s height, Abshalom’s hair, or Tsidkiyah’s eyes were
part of their owner’s life failures, but it was still through
these Heavenly aspects that their punishment came. Perhaps since
they were more connected to Heaven it was "easier" for
Providence to use those for punishment. Either way, the
statement hints that even extraordinarily good gifts might not
be solely a blessing in someone’s life.
WAS SUICIDE ACCEPTABLE FOR SHAUL?
Shaul here clearly commits suicide, or at least tries to.
Radak accepts the possibility that he had not actually killed
himself because in the beginning of II Shmuel, an Amaleki tells
David that he had killed Shaul (which was a mistake, since David
puts him to death). Radak is unsure as to whether that Amaleki
was telling the truth or was falsely trying to curry favor with
David. If the first was true, then Shaul only tried to kill
himself, but did not actually do so.
Either way, was this another error of Shaul’s? The Midrash
Rabbah (in Bereshit 34:5) derives the prohibition against
suicide from God’s command to Noah in the aftermath of the
flood, where the Lord informs Noah that akh et dimkhem le-nafshoteikhem
edrosh, I will inquire after your blood for your souls,
meaning that God will expect us to take proper care of
ourselves. The Midrash Rabbah notes, however, that akh
means to exclude a certain case, and points to Shaul (and to
Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah, but that's another story) as one
such exception.
Radak suggests that since Shaul knew he was going to die
anyway, and that the Plishtim would make it significantly more
painful and drawn out, that then it was ok. Whether or not he
was right about the Midrash's reason for making an exception for
Shaul, we would not apply that reasoning to people nowadays
(and, indeed, in the Middle Ages, when people applied that
reason to allow themselves to commit suicide rather than be
caught by Crusaders, it was only accepted as a way not to have
to point to those who killed themselves as sinners). Shaul seems
to simply be an exception to the ordinarily stringent rules
against suicide.
THE DEATH OF SHAUL’S SONS
Some point out that while we know, from other events in the
book, why Shaul was going to die, we have no understanding of
why his sons have to die, especially Yonatan (who was, after
all, a study in goodness in all of the incidents where we have
seen him). The Midrash sees the death of Shaul's kids as an
expression of the middat hadin, the Attribute of Strict
Justice, and sees it as Shaul's punishment for having had
improper mercy for Agag and improper harshness with Nov, the
city of priests he put to the sword for helping David.
That suggests that the middat hadin would hold us
responsible for the actions of those close to us-- it is not
that Yonatan and his brothers committed a sin, but that the
middat hadin being applied to their father caught them up in
his death. Possibly, the Midrash is assuming that sons can
legitimately be punished for sins of the father; but other
verses in Tanakh see the death of sons for sins of the father as
a problem, as an example of lack of justice.
I suspect that here the middat hadin is noting that
Shaul blamed an entire town for the actions of one priest. That
sense of corporate responsibility blames the others for failing
to effectively stop the one sinner in their midst (by Shaul's
standards). So, too, the middat hadin will take a harsh
stance towards those around Shaul who might, with some effort,
have more effectively stopped Shaul from his various failings.
Yonatan one time managed to turn Shaul away from his chase of
David; the pure middat hadin-- and ordinarily we don't
experience the pure middat hadin, since humans need their
justice administered with mercy--could fault him and his
brothers for not having continued on that path.
THE STORY IN SHMUEL AND IN DIVREI HAYAMIM
Radak notes that there is a slight difference between how the
story of the Plishtim taking Shaul's body is told here and in
Divre haYamim (I:10). There, the verse mentions that the
Plishtim put his head in Beit Dagon, whereas here it says they
nailed his body on a public wall. Radak says both are true. I
note that here, because Beit Dagon should remind us of the
incident with the Aron when it was taken captive and taken to
Beit Dagon, back in Chapter 5. It almost seems like at the end
of Shaul's life, having been victorious over the Jews once
again, the Plishtim forget the lessons they once learned about
God's power, and resume giving their booty to Dagon.
ALL MY LIFE’S A CIRCLE--YAVESH GILEAD REMEMBER SHAUL
Another part of this story that hearkens back to earlier
parts of the book is the people of Yavesh Gilead coming to save
Shaul. You may recall that Shaul's first kingly act was rescuing
the people of Yavesh Gilead from Nahash, who had threatened to
remove their right eyes. That was the one war where the verse
specifically notes that the spirit of God came upon Shaul, as if
that was an example of his pure action that was sadly all too
rare in his life. This incident seems to be a repayment for his
actions then; indeed, Radak sees their seven-day fast as a
memory of the 7 days that Nahash allowed them to seek help.
The Yavesh Gileadites' having a chance to repay that kindness
now brings this story to a kind of closure-- Shaul, king of
Israel, had fought the Plishtim all his life, after making his
name first with a victory over Nahash on behalf of Yavesh
Gilead. The Plishtim part of his efforts seems to end in
failure, as he loses his last war against them horribly, so much
so that they get a chance to resume their service of Dagon as
the god who helps them win wars.
BURNING A KING’S BODY
The last issue to raise--briefly-- is what they were doing
when they burned Shaul's body. Hazal assumed they did not
actually burn the body, but they burned his various
accoutrements, as a sign of respect (that no one else could use
them now that he is dead). Radak thinks they might have actually
burned him because his flesh already had contracted worms or
maggots, so that burning off the meat was actually more
respectful than putting him in the ground like that. The problem
with Radak's view is that it would suggest that we burn
everybody before putting them in the ground; I recognize that
Radak could mean that we rarely come across corpses when the
decay and bug infestation are in progress, and that the rules
change at that point, but I think the problems with that view
are also clear.
Which really brings us to the end of Sefer Shmuel I. I have
enjoyed working through the various themes of the sefer--
Shmuel's role, the anointing of Shaul, his success and failure,
David's selection, rise to fame and power, troubles with Shaul,
relationship with Shaul, Shmuel, and Yonatan, Shaul's descent
into sin, obsession, and madness, and so on.
At this point, however, I need to discontinue this weekly
e-mail. Other projects, that cannot be finished in a week,
demand by time and attention until they are done. I will,
however, continue writing on various topics, as the mood and
opportunity strike. If you would like to be on that e-mail
list-- to receive random pieces I write, and to offer feedback
on them--please e-mail me to that effect. Shabbat Shalom and
thank you for giving me the opportunity to write this piece thus
far.