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From: 2 Samuel 5:1-7, 10
David is Anointed King of Israel at Hebron
Capture of Jerusalem
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Commentary:
5:1-5. David’s consecration as king of Israel is told quite simply but the account
emphasizes details of primary importance in salvation history: the tribes of the
North and the South are all brothers: “we are your flesh and bone” (v. 1); the ima-
ges of the shepherd (v. 2), David’s original profession, conveys the notion of a ru-
ler and king who governs not for his own advantage but for the welfare of his sub-
jects; David’s covenant with the leaders (v. 3) is in line with the general doctrine
of covenant which is the basis of God’s relations with his people, and of those be-
tween Israelite and Israelite; the figures given for David’s reigns (seven as king of
Judah, forty as king of Judah and Israel) are symbols of plenitude. Even in the
New Testament the numbers seven and forty have the same connotation (cf. Mt
4:2; 18:22; Rev 1:11; Acts 4:22; etc.). Hebron, the place where David was also
anointed king of Judah, was the main city of the South; within it was the cave of
Mach-pelah (cf. Gen 25:9) and close to it was the sacred oak of Mamre. Howe-
ver, it was replaced by Jerusalem perhaps to show that a new kingdom warran-
ted a new royal base.
David is a figure of Jesus Christ on many counts, but they all derive from the fact
that he is king: Jesus Christ, too will be acclaimed King of Israel. “But what did
it mean for the Lord to be acclaimed the King of Israel? What did it mean to the
King of all ages to be recognized as the king of men? Christ did not become the
King of Israel in order to demand tributes or to raise armies and make war a-
gainst the enemies [of Israel]; he became the King of Israel to reign over souls,
to give counsel that leads to eternal life, to bring those who were filled with faith,
hope and Love to the Kingdom of heaven” (St Augustine, “In loannis Evangelium”,
51, 4).
The liturgy of the Church uses this passage from the book of Samuel for the so-
lemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, Universal King, together with the passage a-
bout the crucifixion (Lk 23:35-43). Jesus won his kingdom through his obedience,
which has its climax in death on the cross, bringing about the definitive salvation
of all mankind.
5:6-8:18. After being consecrated and acknowledged as king of all the tribes of
Israel, David devotes himself to building up a true kingdom with institutions, capi-
tal and frontiers. In these chapters we are told first of how he won Jerusalem and
chose it to be the political capital (5:6-12). The account goes on to deal with the
setting-up of the ark in Jerusalem (which makes it the religious capital: 6:1-23),
the institution of dynastic succession, to ensure the permanence of the monar-
chy (7:1-29), and, finally, the pushing out of frontiers thanks to territory taken
from the Philistines, thereby bolstering the countrys security (8:1-18).
In addition to dealing with social and political matters, this section is imbued with
religious teaching: Jerusalem, now established as the capital, becomes the sign
of divine protection (chap. 6); Nathans prophecy guarantees that dynastic suc-
cession is part of Gods salvific plan (chap. 7); and victory over the Philistines
means that God will ensure that peace reigns within the new frontiers.
5:6-12. Jerusalem was to be the capital, the center of national life, and also the
religious and doctrinal center up to New Testament times. In that city the Church
will be born, and from there its message will radiate.
As regards contemporary extra-biblical sources, the city is mentioned in Egyptian
texts of the nineteenth to eighteenth century BC as being a place hostile to Egypt
and letters from the fourteenth century BC found in El-Aniama, in northern Egypt,
mention it along with Gezer, Ashkelon and Lachish all Canannite cities but of no
great importance.
The Jebusites considered the fortress unassailable (cf. Josh 10:1-15; 15:63; Judg
1:21) so much so that they thought it could be defended even by the blind and the
lame (vv. 6 and 8). But David somehow managed to take it (see the RSVCE note).
He developed it (vv. 9-10), built his palace there, and declared it the city of David,
that is, the capital of the kingdom.
Its geographical position on the border between the north and south meant that
Jerusalem was strategically well situated, and it showed David was lord of all the
land, as God willed. To take Jerusalem he had first to overcome the Philistines (vv.
17-25), but the sacred writer, by bringing forward his account of the conquest of
Zion and putting it in here, is using literary license to emphasize that Davids main
military achievement was the taking of Jerusalem and the establishment there of
his court.
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Source: “The Navarre Bible: Text and Commentaries”. Biblical text from the
Revised Standard Version and New Vulgate. Commentaries by members of
the Faculty of Theology, University of Navarre, Spain.
Published by Four Courts Press, Kill Lane, Blackrock, Co. Dublin, Ireland, and
by Scepter Publishers in the United States.