Do you know a "difficult" person? Perhaps in your family, your Church, or your workplace. Do they get on your nerves, test your patience, and leave you wondering how anyone could be so obstinate, so selfish, so utterly blind to the grace others are extending toward them? You are not alone. There were difficult people in the Bible, too, and God, in His infinite wisdom, saw fit to preserve their stories not to embarrass them, but to teach us.
Take Nabal, for example. He was "surly and mean in his dealings" (1 Samuel 25:3, NIV). Even his own wife, Abigail, called him a "wicked man" and confessed plainly, "He is just like his name, his name means Fool, and folly goes with him" (1 Samuel 25:25, NIV). Yet from this thoroughly unpleasant man, God draws out timeless lessons about humility, forbearance, generosity, and divine justice. The story of Nabal is not merely a cautionary tale about bad behavior. It is a living portrait of what happens when a human heart closes itself off to God and others, and a breathtaking display of how God intervenes when we are willing to wait on Him.
Who Was Nabal? Understanding the Man and His Name
The text introduces Nabal with precision: "Now the name of the man was Nabal, and the name of his wife Abigail. The woman was discerning and beautiful, but the man was harsh and badly behaved" (1 Samuel 25:3, ESV).
The Hebrew word translated "harsh" is קָשֶׁה (qasheh), which means something hard, severe, or difficult, the same word used to describe the hardening of Pharaoh's heart in Exodus. It speaks of a person who is rigid, unyielding, and immovable in their selfishness. The ESV translates the second descriptor as "badly behaved," but the underlying Hebrew phrase רַע מַעֲלָלִים (ra' ma'alalim) is even more pointed; it means "evil in his deeds" or "wicked in his practices." This was not merely a man who had a few rough edges. This was a man whose very pattern of living, his habitual conduct, was morally corrupt.
And then there is his name. Nabal (נָבָל) means "fool" in Hebrew, not a foolish person in the modern sense of someone who is simply unintelligent or silly, but a moral fool. The Hebrew נָבָל denotes someone who is godless, who lives as though God does not exist or does not matter. Proverbs 17:21 uses the same root: "He who sires a fool gets himself sorrow." The Psalms declare, "The fool (נָבָל) says in his heart, 'There is no God'" (Psalm 14:1, ESV). This is a man who, despite his great wealth and outward success, has arranged his entire life around himself as though God were irrelevant.
His wife acknowledged it plainly: "Let not my lord regard this worthless fellow, Nabal, for as his name is, so is he. Nabal is his name, and folly is with him" (1 Samuel 25:25, ESV). The word "folly" here is נְבָלָה (nebalah), the same root as his name, denoting disgraceful, shameful, and senseless behavior. It was not merely that Nabal acted foolishly on occasion. His name and his nature had become one. He had grown fully into his folly.
David's Reasonable Request
To understand the full weight of what Nabal does, we need to appreciate the context. David and his men had been living as fugitives in the wilderness, fleeing King Saul. During this time, they had provided an informal but genuine protective service to the shepherds and flocks of Nabal in the region of Carmel. The text confirms this through the testimony of one of Nabal's own servants: "Yet the men were very good to us, and we suffered no harm, and we did not miss anything when we were in the fields, as long as we went with them. They were a wall to us both by night and by day, all the while we were with them keeping the sheep" (1 Samuel 25:15–16, ESV).
The image here is powerful. David's men functioned as a חוֹמָה (chomah), a wall, for Nabal's shepherds. This is the same Hebrew word used for the great city walls of ancient Israel, structures built to protect the vulnerable from raiders and enemies. David had provided real, costly, sacrificial protection without demanding anything in return. Now, during the festive season of sheep shearing, a time of celebration and generosity in ancient Israelite culture, David sent ten young men to Nabal with a polite and humble request for whatever provision Nabal might be willing to send.
This was not a threat. This was not extortion. This was an appeal to ancient Near Eastern customs of hospitality, covenant loyalty, and neighborly gratitude. Nabal's response was stunning in its contempt.
The Response of a Fool
"But Nabal answered David's servants and said, 'Who is David? Who is the son of Jesse? There are many servants these days who are breaking away from their masters. Shall I take my bread and my water and my meat that I have killed for my shearers and give it to men who come from I do not know where?'" (1 Samuel 25:10–11, ESV).
The arrogance here is breathtaking. Nabal feigns ignorance of David, who was widely known throughout Israel as a mighty warrior and the anointed of God, in order to demean him. His use of the dismissive phrase "I do not know where" (אֲשֶׁר לֹא יָדַעְתִּי מֵאַיִן הֵמָּה) is an act of calculated contempt. He is not confused about who David is. He is deliberately stripping David of honor, dignity, and recognition.
Notice also the string of possessives in his speech: "my bread," "my water," "my meat." This is the grammar of a man who has made an idol of his possessions. He cannot see beyond ownership to generosity. He cannot look beyond himself to his neighbor. The ancient wisdom literature warned against exactly this kind of hoarding spirit: "Whoever has a bountiful eye will be blessed, for he shares his bread with the poor" (Proverbs 22:9, ESV). Nabal's eye was anything but bountiful. It was closed, calculating, and cold.
This is the portrait of practical atheism. Nabal does not necessarily deny that God exists. But he lives as though God has no claim on his resources, no interest in his neighbor's needs, and no power over his future. He is rich in goods and bankrupt in soul.
The Danger of Unchecked Anger is Seen in David's Response
What happens next reveals something crucial not just about Nabal, but about David, and about ourselves. "And David said to his men, 'Every man strap on his sword!' And every man of them strapped on his sword. David also strapped on his sword. And about four hundred men went up after David, while two hundred remained with the baggage" (1 Samuel 25:13, ESV).
David was furious. And we understand why. He had been gracious. He had been protective. He had been honorable. And he had been slapped in the face. His anger was not irrational. But it was in danger of becoming unrighteous. Four hundred armed men marching toward one household is not justice, it is vengeance. And David, in that moment, had committed himself to something he would later regret: "For David had said, 'Surely in vain have I guarded all that this fellow has in the wilderness, so that nothing was missed of all that belonged to him, and he has returned me evil for good'" (1 Samuel 25:21, ESV).
This is a pattern we recognize in ourselves, isn't it? Someone wrongs us. Our sense of justice flares. And before long, we have rationalized a response that goes far beyond what is appropriate. The Apostle Paul's words ring with ancient relevance: "Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God, for it is written, 'Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord'" (Romans 12:19, ESV). David had not yet learned this lesson. He was about to.
The Wisdom of Abigail
Into this volatile situation steps Abigail. She is described as תּוֹבַת שֶׂכֶל (tovath sekhel), "discerning" or literally, "good of understanding" (1 Samuel 25:3, ESV). This is not merely intellectual intelligence. The Hebrew שֶׂכֶל (sekhel) encompasses prudence, insight, and wisdom applied to real situations. Abigail had the wisdom her husband lacked entirely.
She does not hesitate. She does not inform her husband. She acts. She loads donkeys with an extraordinary provision, bread, wine, dressed sheep, grain, raisins, figs, and rides out to intercept David before he can carry out his plan of violent revenge. When she meets him, she falls before him and speaks one of the most remarkable speeches in all of Old Testament narrative.
"Please let not my lord regard this worthless fellow, Nabal, for as his name is, so is he. Nabal is his name, and folly is with him. But I, your servant, did not see the young men of my lord, whom you sent" (1 Samuel 25:25, ESV).
She takes responsibility without having committed a wrong. She intercedes for a man who does not deserve intercession. She appeals to David's better nature, to his calling as God's anointed, to his future reputation. "And when the LORD has done to my lord according to all the good that he has spoken concerning you and has appointed you prince over Israel, my lord shall have no cause of grief or pangs of conscience for having shed blood without cause" (1 Samuel 25:30–31, ESV).
The phrase "pangs of conscience" translates the Hebrew מִכְשׁוֹל (mikhshol), meaning a stumbling block or obstacle. Abigail is telling David: do not let this moment of rage become a stumbling block to your destiny. Do not let Nabal drag you down to his level. Do not become what you are fighting against.
This is wisdom that speaks across every generation. When difficult people provoke us, they offer us an invitation, not an invitation to retaliate, but an invitation to discover what we are truly made of. Will we respond with the character of the flesh or the character of the Spirit?
David's Response to Grace
David's response to Abigail is itself a lesson in humility. "And David said to Abigail, 'Blessed be the LORD, the God of Israel, who sent you this day to meet me! Blessed be your discretion, and blessed be you, who have kept me this day from bloodguilt and from working salvation with my own hand!'" (1 Samuel 25:32–33, ESV).
David acknowledges something remarkable: God sent Abigail. He sees in this providential interruption the hand of the LORD. The word translated "bloodguilt" is דָּמִים (damim), literally "bloods", the plural form used in Hebrew to denote the guilt of shed blood. David recognizes that he had been on the verge of incurring a terrible spiritual and moral debt. He had been one encounter away from becoming a murderer in his anger. And he blesses God for the grace that stopped him.
He also blesses Abigail for her discretion, her טַעַם (ta'am), a word that can mean taste, discernment, or good judgment. The same word is used in Proverbs 11:22 for good sense. David, in his humility, is willing to receive correction and redirection from an unexpected source. This too is a mark of wisdom. Proud people cannot receive wisdom from sources they consider beneath them. Humble people can receive it from anywhere God chooses to send it.
The LORD Strikes Nabal
Abigail returns home to find Nabal hosting a drunken feast "like the feast of a king" (1 Samuel 25:36, ESV). The irony is thick. While David had been ready to destroy his household, Nabal was celebrating, utterly unaware of how close to death he had come. Abigail waits until morning, until "the wine had gone out of Nabal", and then tells him what had happened.
The text records the consequence simply and profoundly: "And his heart died within him, and he became as a stone. And about ten days later the LORD struck Nabal, and he died" (1 Samuel 25:37–38, ESV).
The phrase "his heart died within him" uses the Hebrew verb מוּת (mut), to die. His heart literally died. Most commentators suggest Nabal suffered a stroke or a catastrophic cardiac event when confronted with how close his foolishness had brought him to destruction. He had spent his life with a heart closed to God, to generosity, to grace. And now his heart simply stopped.
Then, ten days later, in God's timing, not David's, the LORD completed the work. The verb used is נָגַף (nagaph), meaning to strike or afflict. This is the same word used of the plagues God sent upon Egypt. It is a divine action. God was not absent from this story. He was simply not operating on David's timeline. And this is the great encouragement to every believer who has ever struggled with a Nabal in their life: God sees. God knows. God acts. But He will do so in His time and in His way, which is always better than ours.
What We Learn from Nabal
The story of Nabal leaves us with several enduring truths worth carrying from the ancient text into our modern lives.
First, folly is not merely intellectual; it is moral and spiritual. The נָבָל (nabal) of Scripture is not simply a dim-witted person. He is a person who has excluded God from his practical daily life, who hoards instead of gives, who demeans instead of honors, who lives as though his resources are entirely his own. Let us examine ourselves: in what areas of life have we acted as practical atheists, living as though God has no claim on our time, our money, our words, or our relationships?
Second, difficult people reveal what is inside us. Nabal did not create David's capacity for rage; he simply exposed it. In the same way, the difficult people in our lives are often used by God as mirrors, showing us what still needs to be sanctified in our own hearts. When someone provokes us beyond what seems fair, the question is not only "what will I do to them?" but "what is God showing me about myself?"
Third, grace can interrupt vengeance if we are willing to receive it. David could have dismissed Abigail. He could have said, "You don't understand what your husband did to me." Instead, he received her wisdom, recognized God's hand in her coming, and turned back from the path of destruction. When God sends us an Abigail, a word of counsel, a timely sermon, a faithful friend, let us be humble enough to receive it.
Fourth, vengeance belongs to God, and He is good at it. God struck Nabal. God vindicated David. God did not need David's four hundred swords to accomplish His purposes. The hardest spiritual discipline is often the one that requires us to lower our weapons, walk away, and trust that the God who sees all things will act with perfect justice at the perfect time. "Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good" (Romans 12:21, ESV).
Loving the Nabals in Our Lives
Dale Carnegie once observed that "any fool can criticize, condemn, and complain, and most fools do. But it takes character and self-control to be understanding and forgiving." How much more is this true in the life of a Christian, who has not merely been told to love difficult people but has been empowered by the Spirit of God to actually do it?
When we encounter Christ in the Gospel, we discover something humbling: we were the difficult people. We were the ones who dismissed the grace of God, who hoarded our hearts, who lived as though we owed Him nothing. Yet He came for us anyway. He interceded for us, not like Abigail, with food and wise words, but with His own body and blood. And in receiving that grace, we become conduits of it.
The Apostle Paul, who had his own share of difficult people to love, wrote: "Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful" (1 Corinthians 13:4–5, ESV). Every one of those qualities is a direct counterpoint to the character of Nabal. And every one of them becomes possible not through gritted teeth and sheer willpower, but through the love of God poured into our hearts by the Holy Spirit (Romans 5:5).
A Final Word
Do you have a Nabal in your life? Someone whose harshness, ingratitude, or selfishness has left you reaching for your metaphorical sword? Today, the story of 1 Samuel 25 invites you to lay it down. Not because that person deserves it. Not because justice doesn't matter. But because God is just, and He is enough, and He has a better plan than your vengeance.
Why not take a moment now to pray for that difficult person in your life? Not a grudging, performative prayer, but a genuine cry: Lord, I cannot love this person in my own strength. But you loved me when I was unlovable. Give me your love for them. Give me patience. Give me wisdom. And give me the faith to trust You with what I cannot control.
The God who struck Nabal in His perfect time is the same God who holds your situation today. He has not forgotten you. He has not forgotten them. And He is working, even now, in ways you cannot yet see.
Trust Him. Wait on Him. And let love have the final word.
¹ Dale Carnegie, How to Win Friends and Influence People (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1936).