So over
the next several years, God’s “punishment” to David plays out. It starts with
one of David’s sons, Amnon, raping Tamar, who is the sister of one of David’s
other sons Absalom. The Bible isn’t exactly clear on the relationships, but I
assume Tamar is described as Absalom’s sister and not Amnon’s sister because
they had different mothers. Which still leaves us with Amnon raping his own
half-sister. David hears about it and gets angry, but apparently didn’t do shit
to punish Amnon. So about two years later, Absalom murders Amnon in retaliation
and then flees into exile.
Skipping
a lot of details because it’s just pure politics and family drama, David
eventually invites Absalom to return to Jerusalem. Once back home, Absalom
dedicates himself to conspiring to take the throne from his dad and eventually
manages to stage a successful coup. David flees Jerusalem, leaving behind ten
of his concubines “to keep the house.” As decreed by God, Absalom ends up
publicly raping all of those concubines to show all of Israel that he’s
defeated David.
After a
short exile, David’s loyalists eventually defeat Absalom’s army in battle and
Absalom is killed against David’s orders. David then makes such a huge show of
mourning for Absalom that the commander of his army Joab had to take him aside
and say “Hey, there’s a bunch of people out there who just fucking died in
battle for you, and a bunch more who risked dying on your behalf. And now
they’re all starting to think that you’d be just as happy if they’d all died so
long as the guy they were fighting for you against got to live. How about you
show them some gratitude, you fuck, before they abandon you completely?” So
David made a half-hearted show of listening to his people for a bit, but fired
Joab anyway.
But
don’t worry about Joab. He eventually got his job back after murdering his
replacement for not carrying out David’s orders quickly enough.
Oh, you
remember those concubines that David abandoned to get raped? He locked them up
in a house by themselves, and other than providing them with food and shelter
he basically ignored them for the rest of their lives.
Ninety
percent of the rest of the Second Book of Samuel is just more politics and war.
David forgave a bunch of the guys who’d rebelled against him under Absalom.
Some dude named Sheba exploited arguments between the tribe of Judah and the
rest of Israel to try and declare himself king, but his people eventually sold
him out to save their own asses.
Later,
there’s a short bit about how there was a three year famine in Israel. And only
after people have been starving for three years does God mention to David that
he’s causing it because Saul once attacked a bunch of Gibeonites (if you
recall, the Gibeonites were the people who sold themselves into slavery to the
Israelites under Joshua in order to avoid genocide). So David has to go make
peace with the Gibeonites in order to end the famine. And the Gibeonites
demanded that to make up for the deaths amongst them at Saul’s hand, David
needed to give them seven of Saul’s descendants to kill. This seemed totally
reasonable to David, apparently, so he did it. And totally reasonable to God,
apparently, since he ended the famine.
Let’s
see… then there’s another war with the Philistines, in which the Israelites
killed four giants (one of who was named Goliath – what a coincidence!). David
came so close to getting killed in that war that his commanders refused to let
him go into battle anymore. This is followed by David composing a really long
song that mixes a lot of sucking up to God with a lot of blowing his own… horn.
This is
immediately followed by a passage that is attributed as being David’s final
words. Which is kind of weird, because David isn’t dying anywhere in Second
Samuel. His last words are just randomly thrown into the middle of stories
about stuff that isn’t even happening near the time of his death. What
excellent narrative structure!
This is
followed by listing all the heroic dudes who served David, and some of their
exaggerated accomplishments.
All of
that before we finally come to something that includes God being an active
participant in the story.
“2 Sam 24:1 Again the anger of Yahweh was kindled against Israel,
and he incited David to go against them, saying ‘Go, number Israel and Judah.’”
There is
no reason given, either before this passage or after, for why God is angry at
Israel. Nor is it explained exactly why ordering David to count them is somehow
a punishment for them. Now, there’s a rule way back in Numbers about how the
priests are supposed to collect a tax whenever they take a census and no
mention is made of David collecting that tax, but whatever. It’s never
explicitly referenced as the reason for what happens next after David has the
census performed (and for the record, the result is 800,000 men of fighting age
in Israel and 500,000 in Judah, which can only be hilariously overblown numbers
for the population at that time).
“2 Sam 24:10 But David’s heart struck him after he had numbered the
people. And David said teo Yahweh, ‘I have sinned greatly in what I have done.
But no, O Lord, please take away the iniquity of your servant, for I have done
very foolishly.’ 11 And when David
arose in the morning, the word of Yahweh came to the prophet Gad, David’s seer,
saying 12 ‘Go and say to David “Thus
says Yahweh, three things I offer you. Choose one of them, that I may do it to
you.”’ 13 So Gad came to David and
told him, and said to him, ‘Shall three years of famine come to you in your
land? Or will you flee three months before your foes while they pursue you? Or
shall there be three days of pestilence in your land? Now consider, and decide
what answer I shall return to him who sent me.’”
So
consider what we’re being told here. God is pissed at Israel for no stated
reason. So he orders David to perform a census in order to manufacture a bullshit reason to punish them. But of
course, God’s manufactured reason for punishing Israel is because David did what God ordered him to do! This
passage could have dispensed with all of that story and just said “God pretty
much just wants to fuck you up, whether you obey him or not, but sometimes he
likes to put a thin veneer of reason on it just so the true dumbasses among you
can think there’s a justification for it.”
Now,
David’s response was that he’d take either of the punishments that doesn’t
involve him being defeated by other men (basically, the famine or the
pestilence), and he’ll leave it to God to decide which it will be. Which I kind
of like to think of as David just throwing his hands up and saying “Fuck it!
You’re gonna do what you’re gonna do, so just get it over with! All I ask is
that you do your own dirty work, so everyone can see that it’s you being a douchebag!”
So God
picks the pestilence, and kills 70,000 people.
God acts
through an angel, who’s dispensing death from by the threshing floor owned by
some guy named Araunah. The prophet Gad tells David that he can end the plague
by building an altar at the threshing floor. So David buys the threshing floor
and some oxen to use as a burnt offering from Araunah for fifty shekels of
silver. Then he builds the altar and sacrifices the oxen, and the plague ends.
And with it, so does the misnamed Second Book of Samuel.
The Book
was longer than the number of posts on it would suggest, but most of it is pure
politics and I kind of skipped over it in the retelling. Maybe an extreme
obsessive might be able to construct theological meaning out of all that stuff,
but it just didn’t seem worth it to me.
Take
care until next post!
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