Her name means: "Who Is Like God?"
Her character: A woman of strong emotions, she was unable to
control the important circumstances of her life. Forcibly separated from two
husbands, she lost her father and her brother, who were savaged by their
enemies.
Her sorrow: That she was ensnared in the drawn-out
battle between Saul and David.
Her joy: Though short-lived,
she enjoyed a passionate love for David.
Key Scriptures: 1 Samuel 18:20-29; 19:11-17; 2 Samuel 6:16-23
Her Story
Scene One
Michal stretched herself across the window's edge. Leaning out as far as she
dared, she could see her husband running through the night shadows, his
movements swift and lithe, like a young stag evading its predators. Even if her
father, the king, pursued with an army, she was confident he would not catch her
David.
She had loved the shepherd boy since the day he had calmed Saul's troubled
soul with his harp playing. After he defeated the hideous Goliath with only a
sling and a stone, all Israel fell in love with him. But it was for her alone
that David had slain two hundred Philistines—to prove his worth.
She turned from the window, grateful for the chance to have aided her
husband's escape. Quickly she dressed one of the household idols, placing it in
their bed and topping it with goat's hair to make it look like a sleeping David.
She was ready for her father's men when they came pounding on her door.
"David is ill," she told them.
So they returned to King Saul, who immediately ordered them back, saying,
"Bring him up to me in his bed so that I may kill him."
Discovering the ruse, Saul confronted his daughter: "Why did you deceive me
like this and send my enemy away so that he escaped?"
Michal lowered her eyes and replied, "He said to me, 'Let me get away. Why
should I kill you?' " She held her breath, certain her father would never
swallow so bold a lie.
Scene Two
Nine years or more have passed. Michal glanced out the window, arms folded
tightly against her breast, observing the scene below. David, now the king, had
entered Jerusalem, leaping and dancing as the ark of the covenant was carried
into Jerusalem. He looked ridiculous to Michal, more like a romping goat than a
great king.
David offered the sacrifices and blessed the people. Then he entered his own
house to bless it. But Saul's daughter met him with scornful eyes: "How the king
of Israel has distinguished himself today, disrobing in the sight of the slave
girls of his servants as any vulgar fellow would!"
"It was before the Lord, who chose me," he replied, "rather than your father
or anyone from his house when he appointed me ruler over the Lord's people
Israel—I will celebrate before the Lord. I will become even more undignified
than this, and I will be humiliated in my own eyes. But by these slave girls you
spoke of, I will be held in honor."
Her Story
Twice, Michal stood at a window observing David. In the first scene,
Scripture paints her as David's wife, in the second as Saul's daughter. In fact,
her attitude is so changed that we feel perplexed, watching her as she watches
David. To understand what may have shaped Michal's heart in the intervening
years, we need to find a corridor connecting the two windows, a passageway that
somehow led from love to scorn.
Michal may have expected her separation from David to be a short one, her
idealism forging a happy ending to their fairy-tale love. Perhaps she believed
David would find a way to protect her from her father's wrath. Was she shocked
when real life intervened and her father punished her by marrying her to another
man? Did her bitterness grow during David's long absence? Had she finally made
peace with her new marriage only to be torn from her husband when David demanded
her back after Saul's death? Did she question God's judgments, identifying more
with the dead than the living after her father perished in a desperate battle
with the Philistines?
Perhaps Michal's bitterness swelled to rage when she realized she had always
been someone else's pawn, a mere woman manipulated by powerful men. Her own
father used her, promising her to David in hopes she would prove a snare to him.
And, finally, one of her brothers handed her back to David after Saul's death,
further legitimizing David's claim to the throne. A princess, then a queen, she
was still a slave.
Michal's story is tragic. Throughout the difficult circumstances of her life,
we see little evidence of a faith to sustain her. Instead, she is tossed back
and forth, her heart left to draw its own bitter conclusions. In the last scene
with David, we see a woman blind with scorn, making the very mistake God
cautioned the prophet Samuel against in his search for a king to succeed the
wayward Saul: "Do not consider his appearance or his height, for I have rejected
him. The Lord does not look at the things human beings look at. People look at
the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart."
The truth is, God is the only one who can see into the depths of anyone's
heart, including Michal's. He knew everything that had happened, both good and
bad. Still the story of Michal seems to indicate that she grew to be more like
Saul than like David. As such, she reminds us that even victims have choices. No
matter how much we've been sinned against, we still have the power to choose the
attitude of our heart. If we cast ourselves on God's mercy, asking him to help
us, he cannot refuse. Even in difficulty, he will dwell in us, shaping our own
wayward hearts into the likeness of his own.
Her Promise
Michal's contempt for true worship can be contrasted with David's love of
worship. He worshiped God with abandon, with a true heart. His devotion was so
deep, so real, it had to be expressed in the most extravagant praise and in
dancing "with all his might." That's the sort of worship God is looking for from
his people, and he responds with a promise to bless.