Chronicles does not mention any anointing of Saul, but says that the elders of Israel anointed David.
The third king of Israel hasn't arrived yet. No, Saul wasn't the first king of Israel--at least, not as far as God was concerned. He was never anointed (i.e., acknowledged by God) as king and didn't meet God's qualifications. His reign, then, was illegitimate. David was the first "anointed" (i.e., divinely endorsed) king of a united Israel (2 Sam. 7)--and that divine anointing placed him in the lineage of the Messiah, the ultimate Anointed One. David's son Solomon, then, was the second king of united Israel. Then, when Solomon died, the kingdom was splintered into northern and southern factions. Today, we finally have a reunited Israel (both north and south), but no king as yet. However, the third king of united Israel is on His way. He will be Yeshua (Jesus), "the son of David" via the genealogical line of His mother, Miriam (Mary). He came the first time 2,000 years ago as God's Suffering Servant (Isa. 53), but will come the second time as King of kings and Lord of lords (Rev. 19:16).
King David was the second king of Israel. He drove out the Philistines.
David.
David
prophet isaiah
Solomon
Yes, he was the third king of Israel, after Saul and David.
King Solomon.See also the Link.About King Solomon
Yes, Solomon was the son of King David and Bathsheba. Solomon was the third king of Israel.
In the first book of kings and in the first eleven chapters.
Today there is no king of Israel.
Hoshea was the last king of Israel.
The wisest person in the Bible is the third king of Israel, Solomon. He was the son of David and Bathsheba.
Third Way - Israel - was created in 1996.
Third Way - Israel - ended in 2011.
Saul was Israel's first king.
jehu