When Bad Advice Becomes God’s Protection
What’s 2 Samuel 17 about?
This chapter captures a pivotal moment where two advisors give King Absalom completely opposite battle plans – and the “worse” advice ends up saving David’s life. It’s a masterclass in how God works through human decisions, even rebellious ones, to protect His people.
The Full Context
Second Samuel 17 sits right in the heart of one of the most dramatic political thrillers in Scripture – Absalom’s coup against his father David. We’re witnessing the aftermath of 2 Samuel 15-16, where Absalom has successfully driven David from Jerusalem and claimed the throne. But this isn’t just palace intrigue; it’s a family torn apart by sin, poor parenting, and the consequences of David’s moral failures catching up with him. The tension is unbearable – will the son actually succeed in killing his father?
The chapter revolves around a crucial war council where Absalom must decide between two radically different military strategies. Ahithophel, David’s former trusted advisor who defected to Absalom, gives brilliant tactical advice that would likely succeed. But Hushai, David’s loyal friend operating as a double agent, offers a counter-proposal that sounds more appealing but would actually give David time to escape and regroup. What unfolds is a study in divine providence working through very human political maneuvering, showing us how God can protect His anointed even when everything seems to be falling apart.
What the Ancient Words Tell Us
The Hebrew language in this chapter is doing some heavy lifting that English translations sometimes miss. When Ahithophel speaks in verse 1, the text uses yaʿaṣ for “counsel” – this isn’t casual advice, but the kind of strategic wisdom that shaped kingdoms. Ahithophel was famous for this; 2 Samuel 16:23 tells us his counsel was regarded “as if one consulted the word of God.”
But here’s where it gets interesting. When Hushai responds with his counter-proposal, the narrator uses the same word yaʿaṣ, but the content is completely different. Ahithophel’s plan is surgical and decisive: strike fast, strike David alone, scatter his forces, bring the people back peacefully. Hushai’s plan sounds grand and glorious but is actually military nonsense – gather all Israel, bring overwhelming force, leave no survivors.
Grammar Geeks
The word tôb (good/better) appears repeatedly as each advisor claims their plan is “better.” But the Hebrew reader would catch the irony – what sounds “good” to human ears isn’t necessarily good in God’s economy. The narrator is setting us up for the revelation in verse 14 that God was orchestrating this entire conversation.
The most crucial phrase comes in verse 14: ki-yhwh ṣiwwāh – “for the LORD had commanded/ordained.” This isn’t past tense advice; it’s divine decree happening in real time. The Hebrew suggests God was actively working to frustrate Ahithophel’s counsel precisely at the moment it was being given.
What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?
Ancient Near Eastern readers would have immediately recognized this as more than a political coup – this was a contest between rival wisdom traditions. Ahithophel represented the pragmatic, Realpolitik approach that dominated royal courts. His advice was textbook military strategy: decapitation strikes against enemy leaders were standard practice, and his plan to isolate David while preserving the army was exactly what any competent general would recommend.
Hushai’s approach would have sounded like the kind of overblown rhetoric that appealed to young, inexperienced rulers. Ancient audiences knew that massive, unwieldy armies often defeated themselves through logistics problems and coordination failures. They would have winced at Absalom falling for such obvious flattery.
Did You Know?
In ancient warfare, the advisor who could predict victory often became more powerful than the king himself. Ahithophel’s defection to Absalom wasn’t just personal betrayal – it was like losing your entire intelligence apparatus and strategic planning department in one blow.
But there’s a deeper layer here. The original audience would have remembered that this isn’t the first time God used questionable human advice to protect His anointed king. Think of how He used the Philistines’ superstitions in 1 Samuel 5-6, or how He turned Saul’s jealousy into David’s training ground. They’re seeing a pattern: God doesn’t need perfect people or perfect circumstances to accomplish His purposes.
Wrestling with the Text
Here’s what keeps me up at night about this chapter: Why does Absalom, who’s been shrewd enough to orchestrate a successful coup, suddenly become so gullible? The text gives us a clue in verse 11 where Hushai appeals to Absalom’s ego, suggesting he personally lead the massive army “like the sand by the sea.” But there’s something deeper going on.
Look at verse 4: “The advice pleased Absalom and all the elders of Israel.” It wasn’t just Absalom who was fooled – experienced military leaders went along with the obviously inferior strategy. This suggests something supernatural was happening. The text confirms this in verse 14 with that crucial phrase about God ordaining the defeat of Ahithophel’s counsel.
Wait, That’s Strange…
Ahithophel’s immediate suicide after his advice is rejected seems extreme until you realize he wasn’t just embarrassed – he was politically savvy enough to know that when David eventually won (which the good counsel would have prevented), he’d be first on the execution list. His suicide was actually his final act of strategic thinking.
But here’s the wrestling point: If God was orchestrating this to protect David, what does that say about human free will and moral responsibility? Absalom is still making evil choices – he’s still trying to kill his father and usurp the throne. Yet God is using those very choices to protect David and preserve His covenant promises.
How This Changes Everything
This chapter completely reframes how we think about God’s sovereignty and human responsibility. It’s not that God makes people choose evil – Absalom’s rebellion comes from his own heart, his own unresolved anger, his own ambition. But God can work through even rebellious choices to accomplish His purposes.
Think about the ripple effects: Hushai’s “bad” advice doesn’t just save David; it preserves the Davidic line through which the Messiah will come. Every Christmas carol, every Easter celebration, every moment we worship Christ the King exists because God frustrated some good military advice in a tent outside Jerusalem.
“Sometimes the worst human advice becomes God’s best protection – not because the advice is good, but because God is sovereign even over our poor decisions.”
The messengers who risk their lives to carry intelligence to David (2 Samuel 17:17-22) show us how ordinary people become part of God’s extraordinary plans. That young woman who hid them, the servant who nearly exposed them – they probably never knew they were preserving the line of the Messiah.
This changes how we view our own circumstances when everything seems to be going wrong. When people in authority make decisions that seem foolish or harmful, when our enemies seem to have the upper hand, when the “smart money” is betting against us – God is still sovereign. He can work through Absalom’s pride, Hushai’s deception, and Ahithophel’s despair to accomplish purposes none of them could imagine.
Key Takeaway
When human wisdom fails and circumstances look impossible, God is writing a bigger story than anyone in the room can see. Trust His sovereignty even when His methods don’t make sense.
Further Reading
Internal Links:
- 2 Samuel 15:1 – Absalom’s rebellion begins
- 2 Samuel 16:23 – Ahithophel’s reputation for wisdom
- 2 Samuel 17:14 – God ordains the frustration of counsel
External Scholarly Resources: