Read 1 Samuel 8.
Now,
What prompted this?
Samuel was elderly and his two sons who would have succeeded him were corrupt. Unlike the Elders in Eli's day, the national Elders here came to Samuel to make a change in leadership. Instead of another Judge, the people wanted a king. Samuel took it as a personal rejection.
What was the real problem?
The LORD established them as a unique nation. Under His authority, He raised up the leadership the nation needed at the time. Moses served as a prophet leader. Joshua was a military man. The Judges made spiritual and ultimate decisions for Israel.
The people did not want to be different any longer. They wanted to be “like all the nations” around them. The root issue was they were rejecting God Himself (v.7). A change was needed but the timing and spirit of the people was wrong.
What did it cost them?
The request for a king was not out of the will of God. In fact, God told the people back in Moses' day that once they settled into the land that He would establish a king for them (Deuteronomy 17:14-15). According to Jacob’s prophesy in Genesis 49:10, out of the tribe of Judah would come Israel’s royalty.
In the ESV, six
times in verses 10-17 the phrase "he will take" appears.
Someone once
said, "Be careful what you ask for.
You might just get it."
There are never any regrets when we trust in God's timing to unfold His
plan for us.
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