Amazing Grace

The very well known story of David’s sin with Bathsheba is found in 2 Sam. 12. Frankly, it is surprising that this account is recorded in scripture! God’s chosen king sins and experiences strong discipline for it.

Why was this event included in the Bible? There may be many reasons for this, but one certainly is to show the character of David. Even though he had committed atrocious sin, when he was confronted by Nathan the prophet, he did not debate or dodge the accusations. Instead, he confessed. Psalm 51 which was written at this time shows us that David was in great distress over his sin and would welcome a way to be restored to fellowship with God.

The second question that flows from this story is why David is forgiven, and his child still dies? I think Bill Arnold answers this question well by clarifying the difference between forgiveness and consequences when he says,

“The child’s death is a result of David’s sin, but this is not the same as punishment. It is a fundamental principle of life that God may forgive and cleanse us of all wrongdoing, but the consequences of our sin may, and in fact often, remain. The innocent suffer for crimes committed by someone else, but such suffering is not punishment for those crimes. A crack baby may die soon after birth because the mother used crack during pregnancy. The child dies; the mother lives. The child’s death is not the punishment but the consequences of the mother’s sin.”

Our sins can have implications for others. Often sin is not just between God and me as the Evil One wants us to think. Therefore, I must remember that how I live can impact others for good and for ill.

The third thing that stood out to me on this reading of the story is what is said in 2 Sam. 12:24-25,

“Then David comforted his wife, Bathsheba, and went into her and lay with her, and she bore a son, and he called his name Solomon. And the LORD loved him and sent a message by Nathan the prophet. So he called his name Jedidiah, because of the LORD.”

David had addressed his sin and experienced God’s forgiveness and cleansing.  In that restored state of fellowship with God, he sought to comfort Bathsheba as God had comforted him.  That again is a great picture of David’s character.  I doubt his motive was to have another child.  He wanted to care for Bathsheba, and she became pregnant with Solomon.

What do we learn about God through him allowing David to not only have a son through Bathsheba but that the son is Solomon? Solomon turned out to be the heir who would eventually become king in the place of David and through whom the Messiah would come! Answer: the God we serve is a gracious God!  David did not deserve such blessing from God, but God, being gracious continued the line of the Messiah through Bathsheba.

Father, I thank you that you love me as a father loves his son. Thank you for your patience with me and my imperfections. Thank you for your commitment to me and your endless grace that I experience moment by moment now and will continue for eternity. Help me to live with you being my primary allegiance!

Following Jesus with you,

A Yielded Life

The more I read about David, the more impressed I am with him as a man after God’s own heart. After David hears of Saul’s death and mourns for him and Jonathan, he does the following:

“After this David inquired of the LORD, ‘Shall I go up into any of the cities of Judah?’ And the LORD said to him, ‘Go up.’ David said, ‘To which shall I go up?’ And he said, ‘To Hebron.’ So David went up there, and his two wives also, Ahinoam of Jezreel and Abigail the widow of Nabal of Carmel. And David brought up his men who were with him, everyone with his household, and they lived in the towns of Hebron. And the men of Judah came, and there they anointed David king over the house of Judah.” (2 Sam. 1-4)

Does anything impress you about David when you read that account? What impresses me is that he did not assume he was now king and should be crowned as such. He inquired of the Lord! He even asked, “where should I go?”

If I were David, I would have put the cart before the horse again and assume that I was supposed to be king because Saul is finally out of the way. It would have been easy to go directly to Gibeah, where Saul’s palace was and begin making plans for my right to rule!

Instead, David seeks the Lord, his will, and his direction. How many times have I assumed what God wanted for me because the circumstances were right and then acted without his counsel? David again models humility, a yielded life and a heart for God and his purposes.

Father, David is a man that lived a very impressive life in submission to your leadership. There were so many opportunities for him to force his will and timing in becoming king rather than waiting for you to work out the details when you thought it best! Help me to live a yielded life to your leadership and not live with my own agenda but seek yours for my life.

Following Jesus with you,

Misleading Statements

In 2 Sam. 1 tells an absorbing story. It is also a confusing account because of how David reacts to the news of King Saul’s death. In this passage, an Amalekite brings David the crown Saul wore and told him that Saul had been mortally wounded in battle. He then gives more details about Saul’s death.  He tells David that Saul asked him to end his life so his enemies would not take him alive. The man tells David that he did as Saul requested.

In some ways, you could see that this man was in an awkward position and decided to help Saul end his life. In another way of looking at it, he killed Saul by his recollection of the story. Notice how David responds as he interacts with the Amalekite,

“‘So I stood beside him and killed him because I was sure that he could not live after he had fallen. And I took the crown that was on his head and the armlet that was on his arm, and I have brought them here to my lord’… And David said to the young man who told him, ‘Where do you come from?’ And he answered, ‘I am the son of a sojourner, an Amalekite.’ David said to him, ‘How is it you were not afraid to put out your hand to destroy the LORD’s anointed?’ Then David called one of the young men and said, ‘Go, execute him.’ And he struck him down so that he died. And David said to him, ’Your blood be on your head, for your own mouth has testified against you, saying, ‘I have killed the LORD’s anointed.’ ” (2 Sam. 1:10-16)

What did David mean that the Amalekite’s blood was on his head? And why did David have him executed? Notice how the death of Saul was recorded one chapter earlier,

“The battle pressed hard against Saul, and the archers found him, and he was badly wounded by the archers. Then Saul said to his armor-bearer, ‘Draw your sword, and thrust me through with it, lest these uncircumcised come and thrust me through, and mistreat me.’ But his armor-bearer would not, for he feared greatly. Therefore Saul took his own sword and fell upon it. And when his armor-bearer saw that Saul was dead, he also fell upon his sword and died with him. (1 Sam. 31:3-6)

This summary of the death of Saul is different than the one told by the Amalekite.

The ESV Study Bible makes an excellent observation about this story. It says,

“The narrator (whom readers should believe) in 1 Samuel 31 says that Saul killed himself. Having already read that, readers know that this man is lying to gain favor with the person who was most likely to replace Saul as king.”

It appears that the plan of the Amalekite was to lie in a way that he thought he would gain favor in the sight of David who would be the new king of Israel.  He found out that his lies backfired! Instead of putting him in good standing with David, David saw through his testimony and his lies sealed his fate. Because of his deception, David had him executed.

Father, this story is a great reminder that lies will be found out. There can be grave consequences for such behavior. Help me to be truthful and not seek personal advantage through misleading statements.

Following Jesus with you,

When The Pressure Is On

If you are like me, there are times in life when it seems relatively easy to follow Jesus. That often can be when things are going well, and I am not experiencing significant problems. The real test though is how I respond when the pressure is on.

This thought hit me when I was reading about Saul and David in 1 Samuel 28 and 30. They responded to pressure differently.  In the first section, Saul is fearful because of the massive Philistine army that is ready to attack Israel. He is feeling the pressure, and he responds as follows,

“When Saul saw the army of the Philistines, he was afraid, and his heart trembled greatly. And when Saul inquired of the LORD, the LORD did not answer him, either by dreams, or by Urim, or by prophets. Then Saul said to his servants, ‘Seek out for me a woman who is a medium, that I may go to her and inquire of her.’” (1 Sam. 28:5-7)

When God did not respond to Saul, he turned to a medium without any hesitancy! He wanted someone to answer him and did not seem to care from where the information came. He pursued what he thought was right regardless of what God wanted.

Contrast Saul’s response to how David responded to pressure. While David and his men were out raiding the enemies of Israel, the Amalekites attacked his hometown and took everything including wives, sons and daughters.

If that happened to your family, how would you respond? For me, I probably would have reacted and took off after the raiding party without thinking. Instead, notice what David did.

“Then David and the people who were with him raised their voices and wept until they had no more strength to weep… And David was greatly distressed, for the people spoke of stoning him, because all the people were bitter in soul, each for his sons and daughters. But David strengthened himself in the LORD his God… And David inquired of the LORD, ‘Shall I pursue after this band? Shall I overtake them?’ He answered him, ‘Pursue, for you shall surely overtake and shall surely rescue.’” (1 Sam. 30:4-8)

David’s first response to unthinkable pressure was to strengthen himself in his relationship with God and seek his direction before he acted! Wow! I think I would have pursued the Amalekites assuming that is what God wanted. Instead, David yields to God’s leadership and makes no assumptions even regarding the desperate circumstances of his family.

How often do I naturally do what I think is best without seeking God’s leadership? Father, thank you for this amazing contrast between Saul and David and how they handled situations that were severe. Help me to be like David. Help me to seek you first before I do what I think is best. May I learn the lesson to strengthen myself automatically in you and seek your guidance as my normal course of life when times are good and when the pressure is on.

Following Jesus with you,

In Hindsight

Going through challenges and difficulties is not fun. Have you noticed though that when you have made it through those trying times, we often can look back on them and see how we are better people because of them?

The Psalmist makes this observation in Ps. 119:71 which says,

“It is good for me that I was afflicted,
that I might learn your statutes.”

There is a form of affliction that the writer now sees as beneficial for him to have experienced. How could suffering be helpful for him? He says that it allowed him to learn God’s ways.

What may have caused this affliction to come upon him? The answer seems to be a couple of verses earlier when he said in verse 67,

“Before I was afflicted I went astray,
but now I keep your word.”

Experiencing the discipline of the Lord, as an earthly loving father would correct his children, is something that God can use to get us back on his path. It is not always the reason for trials, but it can be a reason. In this case, as the Psalmist reflected on his life, he saw that he was disobedient, and it was affliction that helped him see the error of his ways and get him back on God’s path. He now can say that he loves to keep God’s Word.

We all stray and God is not out there waiting to zap us, but when we persist in sin, he may discipline his children. That is why it is important to keep short accounts with God. Walk in moment-by-moment fellowship with him and confess sin when you become aware of it to get back on God’s path. Ask God for a pliable, teachable heart that is willing to follow him and his ways.

Father, thank you for loving us enough that you want us to live lives of faithfulness and obedience. Give us your grace to be teachable and keenly aware when we have strayed so that we can confess that sin and get back on your path for us. Help us also to become progressively more like Jesus and love your Word as he does.

Following Jesus with you,

How Am I Doing With…

One of the most amazing chapters in all of the Bible is Ps. 119. It is a masterpiece in its description of the value of God’s Word. Because of the Word’s great value, the psalmist says the following in verses 13-15,

“With my lips I declare
all the rules of your mouth.
In the way of your testimonies I delight
as much as in all riches.
I will meditate on your precepts
and fix my eyes on your ways.”

Three statements stand out to me in these verses. The Psalmist is actively responding to the truths of God’s Word. His first response is that he says that he will “declare” the Word. This means he wants to make the surprising truths contained in it known to others. He is so excited about the Word that he talks about it to others. How am I doing is declaring the value of God’s Word to others because they mean so much to me and have such value?

The second response to God’s truth is the writer says he will “delight” in it. This means that he will take great pleasure and find mental satisfaction in it. The more he thinks about it, the more he relishes the Word in his mind. His mind is thoroughly satisfied with the reality of God’s promises. I am so thankful that we have a Faith that can satisfy our minds and intellects. How am I doing in “delighting” in God’s Word?

The third response in these verses is that the Psalmist says he will “meditate” on the truths of God’s Word. The word for “meditate” means “to ponder…converse (with oneself)” (Strong’s Dictionary). The writer contemplates the great truths of the Word and has a conversation with himself about them! He thinks deeply about them and how they apply to his life. How am I doing in “pondering” God’s Word?

It takes discipline to respond to the Word as described here. I must tell others about it; I must satisfy my mind with it and I must ponder it deeply and discern how it applies to my life so that I can be careful to live it out.

Father, thank you for the surpasses greatness and value of your Word. May you help me to think deeply about it so that I can live it and tell others about it.

Following Jesus with you,

Going Home

Of all the places I have been in life, there is nowhere like home.  Would you agree?  The encouraging words in the Bible are that death is really going to our true home for the believer in Jesus!

The Bible tells us that the reality of death is something to be pondered rather than avoided since we all must face it.  The wisdom of King Solomon is shown in Ecc. 7:2 when he says,

“It is better to go to a funeral than a feast.For death is the destiny of every person,
and the living should take this to heart.”

The wise person then should think deeply about death and what happens after it.  In this way, a person can maximize life and be prepared for death.

As I was thinking about this, I was encouraged by something the Psalmist said,

Precious in the sight of the LORD
is the death of his saints.” (Ps. 116:15)

What does it mean for the death of his saints to be “precious”?

“The point is not that God delights in or finds satisfaction in the death of his followers! The psalmist, who has been delivered from death, affirms that the life-threatening experiences of God’s followers get God’s attention, just as a precious or rare object would attract someone’s eye.” (NET Bible note)

God is intimately aware of the circumstances and the events related to the death of one of his saints. God does not take our death lightly.

Additionally, Knight suggests the following,

“As the Jerusalem Bible renders it, ‘The death of the devout costs Yahweh dear’. That is to say, the Lord feels the death of his Covenant folk. He mourns with those who mourn, because he is actually present with them through the bonds of the Covenant.”

In addition to God assigning a precious value to the death of his committed followers, mourning with them, and being present with them when death comes, Dahood has suggested,

“This statement that Yahweh puts great value on the death of his faithful assumes that he will take them to himself when they die.

The possibility of the thought of God taking us to be with him at death makes me think of a couple of things Jesus stated in the NT. In Jn 11:25 Jesus said,

“I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live.”

And in Jn 14:1-3 Jesus said,

“Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me. In my Father’s house are many rooms. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also.”

The NT describes the death of a saint as going to sleep (1 Thes. 4:13-18), going on a journey (2 Tim. 4:6) and going home into the very presence of Jesus (Jn 14:1-3). The end of physical life is very challenging and hard. God, though, is intimately aware of our suffering, is present with us through death and will take us home as we transition from earth to heaven. These truths should give us magnificent hope as the end of our life nears.

Father, thank you for not leaving us alone at the time of death. Thank you that our faithfulness, life, and death are precious to you. Thank you for loving me and for the promise to personally escort me home to heaven when I die.

Following Jesus with you,

One God

We are bombarded today with the devotion of people to their gods. Citizens in America are allowed to worship any god they want. They also are free not to worship God at all. Even though these freedoms are available, it does not make them right.

This tolerance of multiple gods can be confusing at times for the Christian. How may gods are there? Are the Muslims, Mormons, Hindus, and Jehovah Witnesses all worshiping the same God as the Christian?

Notice what 1 Ki. 8:60-61 say about that,

“May all the peoples of the earth know that the Lord is God; there is no other. Let my heart be fully committed to the Lord my God, to walk in Your statutes and keep Your commandments, as at this day.”

There were many “gods” worshipped by many nations in the Old Testament very similar to today. Sincere efforts were often made to please these gods. Unfortunately, they worshipped God in ignorance. Why? Because there is only one God and he has only made himself known through his Word. Paul tells us in Romans 1:18-25, that man rejected the true God and began creating the gods they wanted.

It may be common for people to worship a god, but the Bible tells us there is only one true God. He is the triune God of the Bible. All other gods are man made and are not gods at all. There may be sincere efforts to worship the true God by people throughout the world, but God is only found in the Bible through Jesus.  Therefore, the wise person is the one who seeks the God of the Bible and is true to him alone.

Father, I am so thankful that you chose to reveal yourself to us through your written Word, the Bible. In it, we gain a picture of your nature and your expectations. May I seek you alone and may my heart be faithful to you alone.

Following Jesus with you,

The Foundation For Life

If you are like me, you have noticed a clear decline in the morals of our country. Times have changed so much from when I was growing up in our great country. Right and wrong was easier to distinguish then than it is today.

I am sure there are many reasons for these changes, but one reason seems to be the lack of clarity as to absolutes. In our politically correct world, tolerance is the new absolute. In fact, if a person is not tolerant of what other people think and feel they are treated as if there is something wrong with them, and they are the problem. Those who believe in absolutes are considered out of touch with the times and lack “love” which they think is the virtue that trumps all others.

The problem with this approach to life is that it ignores the clear teaching of the Bible. The Bible is God’s inspired and inerrant Word. It is our guide for life and is our moral handbook. Morals start with God. He is the one who establishes right and wrong.

The Bible is not to be a book that we are to pick and choose what we like or what we think fits our view of God. In fact, the Bible tells us that God is just, as well as loving and is able to be both in complete harmony. Disobedience to his will can never be excused because of love.  Yes, God loves us, but it took the death of his Son to allow us to experience that love.  His justice had to be satisfied for love to be experienced.  They work together.

I was reminded of the value of the Bible in Ps. 111:10 which says,

“To obey the LORD is the fundamental principle for wise living;
all who carry out his precepts acquire good moral insight.”

What we need today is good moral insight and that is one of the things the Bible gives us. The belief in a supreme God brings the reality that we need to yield to his wishes whether we like them or not.

He is in charge and we are not. His Word is to be our authoritative guide for life. This understanding of life leads to an understanding of what is right, wrong and morals. As the Psalmist said, the wise principle upon which we should build our life is obedience to his Word. As a result, we will gain real moral insight.

We as disciples of Jesus need to get back to unashamed complete obedience to God and live by his Word whether it is popular or not.

Following Jesus with you,

The Need For Speed

One of my favorite characters in the Old Testament is Ezra. As the Jews returned from their 70-year exile, Ezra was the pioneer God used to help reestablish the temple practices so that the returned exiles could worship God the way he designed.

Notice how this great hero of the Faith is described in Ezra 7:6, 9-10,

“Ezra went up from Babylonia. He was a scribe skilled in the Law of Moses that the LORD, the God of Israel, had given, and the king granted him all that he asked, for the hand of the LORD his God was on him…For on the first day of the first month he began to go up from Babylonia, and on the first day of the fifth month he came to Jerusalem, for the good hand of his God was on him. For Ezra had set his heart to study the Law of the LORD, and to do it and to teach his statutes and rules in Israel.”

The first thing to notice here is that Ezra was “skilled” in the Law of Moses. During the captivity, Ezra diligently studied the Torah to the point that he was “skilled” in it.

“The word translated ‘skilled’ has at its root the idea of speed. He was so conversant with his material that he could make considered judgments rapidly. And this level of expertise had been achieved because ‘he had set his heart to study the law of the Lord.’” (McConville)

I love that description. He studied the Word to the point that he could quickly use it to govern his life and help others understand and live it. This is a great challenge for me and should be for all of us. I need to be so familiar with the Word that I can navigate it with ease.

The second thing that stood out to me in this passage is that Ezra “set his heart to study the Law of the Lord.” This is describing the motivation of Ezra. He had a strong desire to do this. He was not complacent or riding on the coattails of others.

Finally, he did not just desire to study it; he wanted to practice and live it out in his life! McConville rights observes,

“How readily the means can become the end! The business of study itself, or the mere mechanics of any area of Christian service, can be so attractive that it can cease to be subjected to the governing hand of God. Ezra, however, had not only ‘set his heart to study the law of the Lord’, but also ‘to do it.’. . For Ezra, to know the law of God was to know his mind, both in terms of promise and expectation, for his people. It was impossible, therefore, merely to study it. It had to be lived.”

Father, thank you for the great model of Ezra. He was a passionate follower of you. He sought to know your will by studying your Word. BUT, he did not study to know more, he studied to live more in line with your will. His model of study and application served to be the foundation of his teaching. Help me to be as passionate about knowing your will as Ezra so that I can live as you desire and help others do the same.

Following Jesus with you,