After an unknown period of time, the Philistines again started a military action against Israel, assembling their army near Sochoh, a strategic passage between the Philistine and Israel territories. Saul assembled the Israel army at the opposite side of the Elah valley, anticipating a battle. However, this time, a gigantic man, Goliath, stepped up out of the Philistines, a seasoned veteran, wearing the most advanced weapons, challenging anyone among the Israel army for one-on-one combat, instead of thousands soldiers battling, to decide the outcome – winner takes all. In his challenge, Goliath explicitly called for Saul ("are you not the servants of Saul"; verse 8) perhaps in reference to Saul being the tallest among the Israelites (1 Samuel 10:23), but Saul and all Israel soldiers were too afraid to accept the challenge.
Verse 1 :
Now the Philistines gathered their armies together to battle, and were gathered at Sochoh, which belongs to Judah; they encamped between Sochoh and Azekah, in Ephes Dammim. The verse detailed the scene of David's memorable battle with Goliath with great exactness. The Philistines and Israel army camped on opposite sides of the wide valley of Elah (verse 2) to their rendezvous at Sochoh, and the Philistines pitched their camp in Ephes-dammim. • "
Sochoh" (also written as "Shochoh, Sokho"): identified with the modern "Shuweikeh", about 16 miles southwest of Jerusalem on the road to Gaza. The name was probably given as the scene of frequent battles between the Israelites and the Philistines. • "Valley of Elah": now
Wady-es-Sunt, running in a northwest direction from the hills of Judah near Hebron passing Gath (cf. 1 Samuel 5:8) to the sea near Ashdod. The ancient name "Elah" was taken from the Terebinth, the largest tree specimen in Palestine still standing in the vicinity, whereas the modern name "es-Sunt" is from the acacias which are scattered in the valley.
Verse 4 :
And there came out from the camp of the Philistines a champion named Goliath of Gath, whose height was six cubits and a span. • "
Goliath": a Philistine warrior from
Gath. During excavations by Israel's
Bar-Ilan University in the location of ancient Gath (now
Tell es-Safi) a
potsherd was discovered, reliably dated to between the tenth to mid ninth centuries BC, with inscription of two names
LWT and
WLT, which were etymologically related to the name Goliath (,
GLYT), so demonstrating that Goliath's name fits with the context of late tenth/early ninth century BCE Philistine culture, as well as could be linked with the
Lydian king
Alyattes, which also fits the Philistine context. A similar name, Uliat, is also attested in
Carian inscriptions. • "Six
cubits and a
span" following
Masoretic Text, approximately 9 ft. 9 in., but some manuscripts including 4QSam and
Septuagint have 'four cubits and a span' (about 6 ft. 9 in.), as in the table below. A "
cubit" (Hebrew:
ʼammah) is about 18 inches or 45 centimeters, (in the ancient world usually varies from seventeen to eighteen inches), but there were longer and shorter cubits, as in Babylon and Egypt, measured 20.65 and 17.6 inches, respectively. Most of the extant Hebrew manuscripts are based on
Masoretic Text (MT), but older manuscripts, such as from
Symmachus, a Jewish translator of Hebrew texts to Greek in 200s CE for the Jewish community in
Caesarea, cited by Origen in the fourth column of
Hexapla and assumed to be "proto-MT" (
Vorlage to the MT), as well as Greek version of Origen in the fifth column of Hexapla have "6 cubits and a span". Billington suggests that the "4 cubits and a span" in the Septuagint and 4QSam could be a conversion from MT's data of common cubits (1 cubit ≈ 18 inches) into a measurement using royal Egyptian cubits (1 cubit ≈ 20.65 inches). Average height of men at the end of first century BCE in the Middle East and Mediterranean area was estimated based on the skeletons in some tombs to be about 3.5 cubits (about 150 cm or 5 ft.) to about 175 cm. Whether it was 2 or 3 meters, the mention of Goliath's height certainly played a role for the Israelites to fear him, although in the whole chapter Goliath was never referred to as a "giant". However, Saul, being a tall person himself (about 6 feet or 6 feet 6 inches), was more concerned about Goliath's extensive military training (verse 33: "he [Goliath] has been a fighting man since his youth"; Saul never mentioned about Goliath's height). Therefore, the emphasis of mentioning Goliath's height in the narrative is that Saul, possessing unique height, weapons and armor among the Israelites, should be the logical choice to fight Goliath, but he was cowering in fear instead of delivering Israel.
Verse 5 :
And he had an helmet of brass upon his head, and he was armed with a coat of mail; and the weight of the coat was five thousand shekels of brass. • "Armed": that is, "clothed with scaled body armor". The Hebrew terms for "helmet" (), "armed" ("clothed", "put on"; ) and "coat" ("breastplate"; ) are also found in
Isaiah 59:17. • "Coat of mail": or "breastplate of scales", a kind of shirt, protecting the back as well as the breast, made of
bronze scales arranged like those of a fish, probably similar to the
corselet of
Ramesses III (now in the
British Museum). or probably 157 pounds avoirdupois (cf. ). ==David's entrance into the battleground (17:12–30)==