Now therefore, please pardon my sin and return with me that I may bow before the LORD.”
Saul is at length brought to put himself into the dress of the penitent; but it is too evident that he only acts the part of a penitent, and is not one indeed. Observe, I. How poorly he expressed his repentance. It was with much ado that he was made sensible of his fault, and not till he was threatened with being deposed. This touched him in a tender part.
Commenting on 1 Samuel 15:24-31
Now therefore, I pray thee, pardon my sin,.... It can hardly be thought that Saul was so ignorant as to imagine that Samuel could pardon his sin, as committed against God, which none but God can do, but that he would forgive it, so far as he had offended him; or rather his meaning is, that as he was a prophet of the Lord, and...
Now therefore, I pray thee, pardon my sin, and turn again with me, that I may worship the LORD. (k) This was not true repentance, but deceit out of fear for the loss of his kingdom.