1 and 2 Samuel - Slides
1 and 2 Samuel - Slides
1 and 2 Samuel - Slides
1. Primeval Period Gen. 1-11 2. Patriarchal Period (~2187-1800 BC) Gen. 12-50 3. Egyptian Sojourn/Bondage (1800-1446 BC) Gap between end of Genesis and beginning of Exodus 4. Exodus and Conquest (1446-1350 BC) Key period in OT history. Exodus-Joshua 5. Period of Judges (1350-1050) Judges, Ruth
6. United Monarchy (1050-930) Saul-40 yrs, David-40 yrs, Solomon-40 yrs. 1&2 Samuel-1 Kings
7. Divided Monarchy (930-586) 10 tribes of Israel in north with Samaria as the capital and 2 tribes of Judah in south with Jerusalem as the capital. 1 Kings-2 Kings 8. Exile and Post-Exile Period (586-400) 722BC northern kingdom falls to the Assyrians and 586 BC southern kingdom falls to Babylonians. Then after Persian government replaces Babylonian government, the people are allowed to return to the land and do so in 3 returns- 538-37 BC under Zerubbabel, 458 BC under Ezra, and 435 BC under Nehemiah.
I,II Samuel
The history of Israel in Samuel centers around three personalities which divide the book: I Samuel 1-7- Samuel
The last judge and first official prophet. He also served as priest. God s answer to the moral plight of Israel in those dark days
I,II Samuel
I Samuel highlights two major events:
the establishment of the monarchy in Israel the preparation of David to take the throne
Theocracy God
People
Monarchy
God
King
People
I,II Samuel
I Samuel is a book about transitions:
from a theocracy to a monarchy from liturgical worship from Shiloh to Jerusalem from a tribal league to a unified kingdom capable of exercising imperial power over neighboring states
Israel s King
responsible for
Israel s Prophet
responsible for
Civil Authority
Spiritual Authority
Israel s King
responsible for
Answers to
Israel s Prophet
responsible for
Civil Authority
Spiritual Authority
He failed to realize that obedience was essential in the sacred and unique trust afforded him by God. David s was characterized by humility, obedience, and a repentant heart Ps. 51;
1 Kings 15:3 He committed all the sins his father had done before him; his heart was not fully devoted to the Lord his God, as the heart of David his forefather had been.
2 Samuel
Book is distinctively the book of David s reign. It begins with the death of Saul and ends just before David s death, covering a period of 40 years. 2 Samuel describes David s triumphs (1-10) and his troubles (11-24). Two themes are: Davidic Covenant Messianic Promise
Davidic Covenant
An unconditional, Royal Grant Covenant 2 Sam 7:1-16 After the king was settled in his palace and the Lord had given him rest from all his enemies around him, 2 he said to Nathan the prophet, "Here I am, living in a palace of cedar, while the ark of God remains in a tent. Nathan replied to the king, "Whatever you have in mind, go ahead and do it, for the Lord is with you 11 The Lord declares to you that the Lord himself will establish a house for you 16 Your house and your kingdom will endure forever before me; your throne will be established forever.'" David wanted to build God a house , the temple, but God promised to make David a house , not a residence but a dynasty (Gen. 7:1) vs.11b This dynasty would endure forever vs. 16