وَقَتَلَ دَاوُۥدُ جَالُوتَ وَءَاتَىٰهُ ٱللَّهُ ٱلۡمُلۡكَ وَٱلۡحِكۡمَةَ وَعَلَّمَهُۥ مِمَّا يَشَآءُ
Quranic context: Al-Baqarah 246-252
Full context: The Israelites asked their prophet (Samuel) for a king to fight with them. Allah chose Talut despite their objection to his poverty. The prophet said: "Allah has chosen him over you and increased him in knowledge and physical ability."
The river trial: "When Talut set out with the soldiers he said: Allah will test you with a river" — whoever drank from it would not follow him except those who scooped a single handful. Most drank, but a few held firm. The steadfast then said: "How many small groups have overcome large groups by the permission of Allah."
Dawud kills Jalut: "And Dawud killed Jalut" — Dawud began as an unknown soldier in Talut's ranks. He was then given prophethood, kingship, and wisdom.
Three lessons in leadership:
- Allah chooses the leader: Not by wealth or popularity — but by knowledge and ability
- Trial before victory: The river distinguishes the deserving from the rest — numbers do not guarantee victory
- Rising from the ranks: Dawud began as a soldier and ended as a prophet-king — victory creates its leaders
Question: What was the purpose of the river trial in the story of Talut, and how does it reflect a Quranic principle about the nature of victory?
Answer: Its purpose was to filter the army of the weak-willed before battle — victory does not need numbers but needs firmness. "How many small groups have overcome large groups by Allah's permission" is a Quranic principle: victory comes from Allah, not from numbers.