All through the reign of Saul, there
was constant war with the Philistines, who lived upon
the lowlands west of Israel. At one time, when
David was still with his sheep, a few years after he
had been anointed by Samuel, the camps of the Philistines
and the Israelites were set against each other on
opposite sides of the valley of Elah. In the
army of Israel were the three oldest brothers of David.
Every day a giant came out of the
camp of the Philistines, and dared some one to come
from the Israelites’ camp and fight with him.
The giant’s name was Goliath. He was nine
feet high; and he wore armor from head to foot, and
carried a spear twice as long and as heavy as any
other man could hold; and his shield bearer walked
before him. He came every day and called out
across the little valley:
“I am a Philistine, and you
are servants of Saul. Now choose one of your
men, and let him come out and fight with me. If
I kill him; then you shall submit to us; and if he
kills me, then we will give up to you. Come,
now, send out your man!”
But no man in the army, not even King
Saul, dared to go out and fight with the giant.
Forty days the camps stood against each other, and
the Philistine giant continued his call.
One day, old Jesse, the father of
David, sent David from Bethlehem to visit his three
brothers in the army. David came, and spoke to
his brothers; and while he was talking with them,
Goliath the giant came out as before in front of the
camp calling for some one to fight with him.
They said one to another:
“If any man will go out and
kill this Philistine, the king will give him a great
reward and a high rank; and the king’s daughter
shall be his wife.”
And David said:
“Who is this man that speaks
in this proud manner against the armies of the living
God? Why does not some one go out and kill him?”
David’s brother Eliab said to him:
“What are you doing here, leaving
your sheep in the field? I know that you have
come down just to see the battle.”
But David did not care for his brother’s
words. He thought he saw a way to kill this boasting
giant; and he said:
“If no one else will go, I will
go out and fight with this enemy of the Lord’s
people.”
They brought David before King Saul.
Some years had passed since Saul had met David, and
he had grown from a boy to a man, so that Saul did
not know him as the shepherd who had played on the
harp before him in other days.
Saul said to David:
“You cannot fight with this
great giant. You are very young; and he is a
man of war, trained from his youth.”
And David answered King Saul:
“I am only a shepherd, but I
have fought with lions and bears, when they have tried
to steal my sheep. And I am not afraid to fight
with this Philistine.”
Then Saul put his own armor on David a
helmet on his head, and a coat of mail on his body,
and a sword at his waist. But Saul was almost
a giant, and his armor was far too large for David.
David said:
“I am not used to fighting with
such weapons as these. Let me fight in my own
way.”
So David took off Saul’s armor.
While everybody in the army had been looking on the
giant with fear, David had been thinking out the best
way for fighting him; and God had given to David a
plan. It was to throw the giant off his guard,
by appearing weak and helpless; and while so far away
that the giant could not reach him with sword or spear,
to strike him down with a weapon which the giant would
not expect and would not be prepared for.
David took his shepherd’s staff
in his hand, as though that were to be his weapon.
But out of sight, in a bag under his mantle, he had
five smooth stones carefully chosen, and a sling, the
weapon that he knew how to use. Then he came
out to meet the Philistine.
The giant looked down on the youth
and despised him, and laughed.
“Am I a dog?” he said,
“that this boy comes to me with a staff?
I will give his body to the birds of the air, and
the beasts of the field.”
And the Philistine cursed David by
the gods of his people. And David answered him:
“You come against me with a
sword, and a spear, and a dart; but I come to you
in the name of the Lord of hosts, the God of the armies
of Israel. This day will the Lord give you into
my hand. I will strike you down, and take off
your head, and the host of the Philistines shall be
dead bodies, to be eaten by the birds and the beasts;
so that all may know that there is a God in Israel,
and that He can save in other ways besides with sword
and spear.”
And David ran toward the Philistine,
as if to fight him with his shepherd’s staff.
But when he was just near enough for a good aim, he
took out his sling, and hurled a stone aimed at the
giant’s forehead. David’s aim was
good; the stone struck the Philistine in his forehead.
It stunned him, and he fell to the ground.
While the two armies stood wondering,
and scarcely knowing what had caused the giant to
fall so suddenly, David ran forward, drew out the
giant’s own sword, and cut off his head.
Then the Philistines knew that their great warrior
in whom they trusted was dead. They turned to
flee to their own land; and the Israelites followed
after them, and killed them by the hundred and the
thousand, even to the gates of their own city of Gath.
So in that day David won a great victory
and stood before all the land as the one who had saved
his people from their enemies.