Nabal in Easton's Bible Dictionary
foolish, a descendant of Caleb who dwelt at Maon (1 Sam.
25),
the modern Main, 7 miles south-east of Hebron. He
was "very
great, and he had 3,000 sheep and 1,000 goats...but
the man was
churlish and evil in his doings." During his
wanderings David
came into that district, and hearing that Nabal was
about to
shear his sheep, he sent ten of his young men to ask
"whatsoever
cometh unto thy hand for thy servants." Nabal
insultingly
resented the demand, saying, "Who is David, and who
is the son
of Jesse?" (1 Sam. 25:10, 11). One of the shepherds
that stood
by and saw the reception David's messengers had met
with,
informed Abigail, Nabal's wife, who at once realized
the danger
that threatened her household. She forthwith
proceeded to the
camp of David, bringing with her ample stores of
provisions
(25:18). She so courteously and persuasively pled
her cause that
David's anger was appeased, and he said to her,
"Blessed be the
Lord God of Israel which sent thee this day to meet
me."
On her return she found her husband incapable from
drunkenness
of understanding the state of matters, and not till
the
following day did she explain to him what had
happened. He was
stunned by a sense of the danger to which his
conduct had
exposed him. "His heart died within him, and he
became as a
stone." and about ten days after "the Lord smote
Nabal that he
died" (1 Sam. 25:37, 38). Not long after David
married Abigail
(q.v.).
Read More about Nabal in Easton's Bible Dictionary