Running from Saul

Running from Saul

David made his way to Nob, the city of priests, and Ahimelech came to meet him and asked why he was there. David quickly told Ahimelech what he needed to hear and asked for food to sustain him on his journey. He asked for a sword and Ahimelech gifted him the sword of Goliath that he had used so many years ago. After this, David fled quickly to Gath knowing that Saul would be hot on his tail. But Gath wasn’t safe for him either and so he fled again to a cave in Adullam where he would praise God and write Psalms in the midst of his suffering.

<iframe id="embedPlayer" src="https://embed.podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/running-from-saul-the-book-of-1-samuel/id1646273281?i=1000597245807&amp;itsct=podcast_box_player&amp;itscg=30200&amp;ls=1&amp;theme=dark" height="175px" frameborder="0" sandbox="allow-forms allow-popups allow-same-origin allow-scripts allow-top-navigation-by-user-activation" allow="autoplay *; encrypted-media *; clipboard-write" style="width: 100%; max-width: 660px; overflow: hidden; border-radius: 10px; transform: translateZ(0px); animation: 2s ease 0s 6 normal none running loading-indicator; background-color: rgb(228, 228, 228);"></iframe>
1 Samuel 21:5
In yesterday’s story, we heard how Jonathan helped David evade Saul and how the two made an oath to each other to always seek each other’s best interests. It was a touching picture of friendship that is stronger than even familial bonds. We saw how David fled from an increasingly angry and irrational king Saul. Today we’ll continue this story with David on the run. He’ll lie and use clever deception to protect himself. His intentions are noble, and soon other outcasts will gather around him, further angering Saul. But his lie will have a high cost and it will weigh heavily on David.
Share this devotional:

More Bible in a Year Episodes

Saul to Paul

The Church in Antioch continued to grow under the direction of God.

Death and Escape

As men and women ran from burning buildings to escape death, they were captured by King Herod and imprisoned.

Little Christs

As more men and women came to faith in Jerusalem, more were beaten and thrown into jail.

Unclean

In Caesarea, there was a centurion named Cornelius. He was a good man and a God-fearing man, but he was also a Roman gentile.