II Samuel 15:14

Berean Standard Bible · deep dive

And David said to all the servants with him in Jerusalem, “Arise and let us flee, or we will not escape from Absalom! We must leave quickly, or he will soon overtake us, heap disaster on us, and put the city to the sword.”

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What it means

Picture the scene: a messenger has just burst into the palace with the words from verse 13 ringing in the air — "the hearts of the men of Israel are with Absalom." And David — the giant-killer, the warrior who never blinked at Goliath or the Philistines — says, "Run."

Look closely at what he says. He doesn't say, "Let's barricade the gates." He doesn't say, "Call out the army." He says flee. And notice who he's worried about: not a foreign invader, not a rival tribe — his own son. The Hebrew literally has him saying "we will have no escape from the face of Absalom." The face he once kissed (2 Samuel 14:33) has become the face he runs from.

Then notice his reason for fleeing. It isn't only fear for himself. He says Absalom will "put the city to the sword" — literally, strike the city with the mouth of the sword. David flees Jerusalem to spare Jerusalem. He empties the capital so Absalom won't burn it down trying to take it. That's still the shepherd-king instinct in him, even in collapse.

Where does this sit in the bigger story? This is the moment Nathan's prophecy from 2 Samuel 12:11 — "I will raise up evil against you out of your own house" — stops being a warning and starts being the weather. David's sin with Bathsheba, and his refusal to discipline his sons (Amnon's rape of Tamar, Absalom's murder of Amnon), comes home to roost in this one verse.

Christians have read David's flight in different ways. Some emphasize his cowardice or his weakened spine — a man whose guilt has hollowed out his courage. Others (the older devotional tradition especially) see real wisdom and even faith here: he's saving lives, accepting God's chastening, and refusing to fight his own son. Both can be true at once.

Historical Context

We're in roughly 975 BC, near the end of David's roughly 40-year reign over a united Israel. Jerusalem at this point isn't the sprawling holy city of later centuries — it's a small, fortified hilltop city David himself captured from the Jebusites maybe twenty-five or thirty years earlier (2 Samuel 5). The royal palace, the ark of the covenant, and a few thousand residents sat on a ridge you could walk across in fifteen minutes.

So when David says "flee," he means: out the gate, down into the Kidron Valley, up over the Mount of Olives, and into the wilderness toward the Jordan. It's not a long march to safety; it's an immediate, undignified scramble.

Politically, David is an aging king. Absalom has spent four years (verse 7) — long, patient, careful years — standing at the city gate flattering people, kissing their hands, whispering, "If only I were judge in the land, I'd give you justice." He's built a personal following the way modern populists do: by convincing ordinary people that the establishment doesn't hear them. Then he goes to Hebron — David's old capital before Jerusalem, a city that probably still nursed some resentment about being demoted — and launches his coup there.

The "servants" in this verse aren't household help; the Hebrew word covers the royal court, officials, bodyguards, the king's inner circle. David is talking to his cabinet.

One more piece of context: a king fleeing his own capital was, in the ancient world, almost the definition of a fallen king. Crowns were lost the moment you ran. David knows that. He runs anyway — and the next chapters will show him barefoot, weeping, head covered, being cursed and pelted with stones by a man named Shimei. The mighty have fallen, and he knows why.

Original Language

קוּמוּ וְנִבְרָחָה (qumu venivracha) — "Arise, and let us flee." Qum is the same verb God uses when he tells prophets to get up and go (Jonah 1:2, for instance). It's the verb of urgent action. But here it's not for mission — it's for retreat. The warrior-king's "arise" has become a refugee's "arise."

פְלֵיטָה (peleitah) — "escape, deliverance, survival." David says we will have no peleitah. This is a striking word: it's the same word used for the remnant who survive disaster (Genesis 45:7, Ezra 9:8). David, the anointed one, is talking about himself the way later writers will talk about the survivors of catastrophe.

מַהֵר (maher) — "quickly, hurry." Twice in the verse there's this pressure of speed. No time to pack, no time to plan, no time for ceremony.

לְפִי־חָרֶב (lefi-cherev) — literally "to the mouth of the sword." Hebrew imagines a sword as having a mouth that devours. David fears Absalom will feed Jerusalem to the sword's mouth. It's a chilling image — and it tells you David believes his own son is capable of slaughtering civilians to secure a throne. He's not wrong about him.

How it points to Christ

Here's what's quietly extraordinary about this verse: the rightful king is forced out of Jerusalem by the betrayal of one of his own, crosses the Kidron Valley, and climbs the Mount of Olives in tears, with a small band of faithful followers around him.

Now read John 18:1 and Luke 22:39–44. "Jesus went out with his disciples across the Kidron Valley… he came out and went, as was his custom, to the Mount of Olives… and being in agony he prayed more earnestly." Jesus walks the exact same path David walked — betrayed by one of his own (Ahithophel for David, Judas for Jesus; both, by the way, end by hanging themselves: 2 Samuel 17:23, Matthew 27:5).

But notice the difference, because that's where the gospel sits. David flees Jerusalem to save his own life and to spare the city. Jesus walks that same road to lose his life and save not just a city but a world. David says, "Let's go, or he'll put the city to the sword." Jesus goes precisely so the sword can fall on him instead of the city.

David is a picture — a real, broken, true picture — of a king rejected by the very people he loves. And every time you see that picture in the Old Testament, your eye is being trained to recognize Jesus when he finally walks onto the stage. The rejected king is not a failure of the story. The rejected king is the story.

So when you read David weeping on the Mount of Olives in the next chapter, hear the echo of another King weeping over the same city centuries later (Luke 19:41) — and going down into the valley not to escape death, but to swallow it.

Application

There's a temptation, reading this verse, to feel a kind of distant pity for David. Poor old king. What a mess. But stay with it longer.

David is reaping what he sowed. Years earlier, he covered up his sin with Bathsheba and murdered her husband. Then he failed to discipline Amnon when Amnon raped Tamar. Then he half-forgave Absalom — let him come home but wouldn't see him — for two years. Every small refusal of hard, faithful action came due in this single verse. Arise, let us flee.

Here's the uncomfortable question: what are you not addressing right now that is going to come due later? What sin are you managing instead of repenting of? What conflict in your family are you letting drift because confronting it would cost too much? What's the conversation you keep putting off — with your spouse, your kid, your boss, your friend, your own soul?

David's tragedy is not that he was a terrible man. He was, in many ways, a deeply godly one. His tragedy is that he was a passive one with the people closest to him. And passivity, given enough time, will eventually force you to flee your own life in your bare feet.

But there's also gospel here, even before Christ shows up by name. Because David, in his flight, still does the next right thing. He spares the city. He weeps. He keeps walking. He prays. He doesn't curse God; he submits to God's hand even when it's heavy. That is the part of David worth imitating: not the cover-up years, but the long, humble walk uphill in tears, accepting what his choices have cost him without trying to dodge the bill.

What would it look like for you to stop running and start walking uphill — honestly — today?

Prayer Points

Reflections

Sources

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