Prophet Old Testament

Prophet Gad

Also known as Gad the Seer · Gad the Prophet

A prophet and seer in the days of King David.

Feast Day
December 14
Draft
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Commemorated as

The Holy Prophet Gad

Life

Gad was a seer and prophet active during the reign of King David, recorded in the Hebrew Scriptures as a counselor attached to the king's household. He is first named in 1 Samuel 22:5, where he advises David, then a fugitive, to leave his refuge in the land of Moab and return to the territory of Judah, going to the forest of Hereth.

The Orthodox Church numbers Gad among the Old Testament righteous and commemorates him on December 14, and more broadly among the Holy Forefathers remembered on the Sunday before the Nativity of Christ. He belongs to the company of ancestors and prophets who lived under the Law and looked toward the coming of the Messiah.

Contributions & Legacy

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Prophet and seer in David's reign

Gad is presented in the books of Samuel and Chronicles as a prophet closely associated with King David. In 2 Samuel 24:11 he is given the title 'the king's seer.' His ministry was that of conveying the word of God to the king at decisive moments, both in counsel and in correction.

After David ordered a census of Israel and afterward confessed his sin, God sent Gad to present David with a choice among three forms of punishment (2 Samuel 24:11-13; 1 Chronicles 21:9-13). When the ensuing plague had run its course, Gad instructed David to build an altar to the Lord on the threshing floor of Araunah the Jebusite (2 Samuel 24:18), a site that later tradition associated with the Temple. The parallel account in 1 Chronicles 21:18-19 links this instruction to the appearance of the angel of the Lord.

Writings attributed to Gad

The acts of King David were said to have been recorded in part in the writings of Gad. 1 Chronicles 29:29 refers to 'the book of Gad the seer' as one of the sources preserving the history of David's reign. This work is generally considered lost, and is known only through this scriptural mention.

Commemoration among the Forefathers

The Sunday of the Holy Forefathers falls in the second Sunday before the Nativity, within the Nativity Fast, and commemorates the ancestors of Christ according to the flesh together with the prophets and righteous who awaited the Messiah. In remembering Gad among these forefathers, the Church places him in the line of those through whom God prepared the way for the Incarnation, recalling the promise to Abraham that in his seed all the nations of the earth would be blessed.

Notes

Among the Holy Forefathers, commemorated on the Sunday before the Nativity of Christ.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints