1 Samuel 23:28

28 So Saul called off his pursuit of David and went back to deal with the Philistines. That's how that place got the name Narrow Escape.

1 Samuel 23:28 Meaning and Commentary

1 Samuel 23:28

Therefore Saul returned from pursuing after David
Stopped short at once, as soon as ever he received the message:

and went against the Philistines;
to stop them in their progress, and drive them out of his country:

therefore they called that place Selahammahlekoth,
which signifies the rock of divisions. David and his men, very probably, gave it this name, not only because it divided between Saul and his men, and David and his men, when they were one on one side of it, and the other on the other side of it; but because Saul was, by the providence of God, divided and separated from David here, whereby he escaped falling into his hands. The Targum is,

``therefore they called that place the rock of division, the place where the heart of the king was divided to go here and there:''

he was divided in his own mind, and at a loss what to do; he was in two minds, as Jarchi says, and did not know which to follow, whether to return and deliver his country from the hands of the Philistines, or to pursue and take David; and others represent the soldiers of Saul as divided, some saying that since the son of Jesse was just falling into their hands, they should not leave him; others, that the war of Israel should be regarded before him, who might be found at any time F21.


FOOTNOTES:

F21 Midrash apud Yalkut in loc.

1 Samuel 23:28 In-Context

26 Saul was on one side of the mountain, David and his men on the other. David was in full retreat, running, with Saul and his men closing in, about to get him.
27 Just then a messenger came to Saul and said, "Hurry! Come back! The Philistines have just attacked the country!"
28 So Saul called off his pursuit of David and went back to deal with the Philistines. That's how that place got the name Narrow Escape.
29 David left there and camped out in the caves and canyons of En Gedi. "I'm No Rebel"
Published by permission. Originally published by NavPress in English as THE MESSAGE: The Bible in Contemporary Language copyright 2002 by Eugene Peterson. All rights reserved.