The Bible Recap - Day 111 (2 Samuel 1-4) - Year 5
Episode Date: April 21, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits - Win a trip to Israel! ...FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Video: 2 Samuel Overview - 1 Samuel 31 - 1 Samuel 16:13 - Ezekiel 33:11 - TBR in Spanish SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
Today we started our 11th book of the Bible, and we're 30% of the way through.
Can you believe it?
Let's jump into 2 Samuel.
Israel is going through a tough time.
First their prophet Samuel died.
Then their first
King and three of the sons died in a battle, where they also lost a lot of land to one of
their fiercest enemies. Fortunately, it seems like some people have heard the news that
Samuel had appointed the next King before he died, so there's a rough idea of what will
happen next, but there's no precedent for this, and no specific plan in place for how to
move things forward. They're building the plane while flying it, so to speak.
Meanwhile, David has been living at his refugee home in Felistia
and he's just defeated the Amalakites.
So to make sure we have it all straight,
we've just gone through two simultaneous battles.
The Battle of Israel and Saul against the Philistines,
which Israel lost,
and the Battle of David in Felistia against the Amalakites,
which David won. Confused
it? Don't worry about it. The vital parts will all make sense.
First, there's this. David wasn't anywhere near the battle saw was fighting. He was a three
days journey away. But an excited messenger decided to make that trick to tell David what
he thought would be good news. Hey, guess what? Your enemy is dead. But this guy obviously
doesn't know David's character.
David does not rejoice at this. And on top of that, the messenger seems to think he can score some
extra points with the future king by claiming responsibility for killing the old king.
But you may have noticed a discrepancy in the messenger story and the story scripture told
us yesterday in 1st Samuel 31, which says that Saul fell on his own sword. So there's a good chance this guy is making things up to earn favor, but what he's actually
doing is digging his own grave.
Since David doesn't have access to 1st Samuel 31 like we do, all he knows to do is take
this guy's word for it.
Even though this happens during a war, this messenger is a sojourner among Israel.
So killing a fellow inhabitant of Israel and especially the king still warrants the death penalty,
which is what David orders.
David inquires of God about what to do next,
and God sends him to Hebron in Judah.
Judah was the largest tribe by far.
They had the largest land allotment
and they even had their own army of sorts.
In some ways, Judah was to the tribes of Israel,
what Texas is to the 48 continental states.
So David goes to Hebron and they make him king, but only over Judah at this point.
When Samuel anointed David in 1 Samuel 16, it was in private, so it may not necessarily be
something the whole country is aware of or even on board with yet. Everything is going okay for
about five years until some of Saul's people, specifically his military commander and cousin Abner,
decide that they want to keep their positions of power, so they anoint one of his surviving sons, Ishbosheth, as King.
They effectively made him King over the other 11 tribes.
After about two years of having two kings in the Promised Land, the commanders of the two armies meet up for a chat by the pool. Abner is the commander of Team Saul slash Ishbosheth, and Joab is the commander of Team David.
Joab is one of David's three nephews who were there that day.
The poolside combo turns into a series of one-to-one battles between each side's 12 best warriors,
like a dozen David and Goliath battles back-to-back.
And just like in that incident, David comes out ahead again.
His warriors win the most battles, even though all 24 men die.
Then, Abner from Team Saul has a conflict
with one of David's nephews, and Abner kills him.
So, David's two other nephews try to chase him down,
but a bunch of other men show up to get Abner's back,
so David's nephews decide to stand down.
Abner from Team Saul calls it's never used to stand down.
Abner from Team Saul calls it truce,
and Joe Ab from Team David agrees.
It was a pretty smart move on Abner's part
because through all of this,
Team Saul lost nearly 20 times the amount of men
Team David did.
David's power continues to grow, as does his family.
He has six kids with six wives and concubines
while he's living in Hebron.
Meanwhile, Abner was also continuing to amass power on Team Saul.
But then, something happens that shifts everything.
Ishbosheth, Saul's son, accuses Abner of sleeping with one of Saul's concubines.
Now, Saul is long and dead, so this wouldn't have been an offense against him personally.
So why is this a big deal to King Ishboshev?
Sleeping with a former King's wife or concubine was usually a strategic display of power.
It served as a way to show you're trying to take over the throne.
So Ishboshev is essentially accusing his commander, Abner, of attempting a coup against him.
We never find out if it's true or not, but Abner is so offended by the accusation that
he actually makes an oath to help David become king over all 12 tribes and he switches teams.
God is working out his plan even through these accusations.
First, Abner reaches out to David to let him know he wants to join team David and David's
like, sounds fun, just one thing first.
Remember when your cousin Saul took my first wife, Mikal away from me without my consent?
I know I have a bunch of other wives now,
but I want her back.
Make it happen or the deal is off.
And Mikal goes back to David,
but she's still married to her second husband as well.
She's perhaps the first
and maybe even the only female bigamist in the Bible,
even though it was through no fault of her own.
As you can imagine, this creates a lot of trouble
because her second husband wants her to himself,
but Abner sends him home heartbroken.
Meanwhile, Abner gets the other tribes on board
with having David as king, and he fills David in on the good news.
But his timing was terrible because Joab,
the commander of David's army, wasn't there at the time.
And when he finds out that the former commander of Saul's army
is acting nice, he becomes
highly suspicious, and possibly even feels threatened, so he kills Abner, which also avenges
the death of his brother, Asahel.
Across the Jordan, King Ishbosheth is upset at the news of Abner's death, even though
they'd recently become enemies.
Things are starting to crumble for Ishbosheth, little by little.
And then finally, he's killed by two of his military captains.
Much like the messenger who brought David news of Saul's death, these men excitedly come
to tell David they've killed his enemy, thinking they'd be hailed as heroes.
Nope.
David orders the death penalty for them both.
But even through their wicked actions, God's plan to position David as king moves another
step forward.
There's still one surviving member of Saul's family, though. His grandson, Mephibbasheth,
son of Jonathan. Mephibbasheth is unlikely to make an attempt to take the throne because he's
very young and because he was crippled in a terrible accident a few years earlier.
So at this point, it looks like we're poised for David to be the king of all 12 tribes of
Israel, not just Judah. My God shot today was in 339, where in the midst of all these people
being killed against his will by people who think they're pleasing him, David says,
I was gentle today, though anointed king. The king's position makes people fear him as one
who might be harsh and ruthless. David says, I'm not that kind of King.
So how does this demonstrate God to me?
Remember how David was called a man after God's own heart?
I believe this shows us glimpses of the Father's heart.
Though he is the King, he's also gentle.
The kind of King we can draw near to, not run from.
In fact, in Ezekiel 33-11, God says something along these very lines about himself.
He says,
I take no pleasure in the death of wicked people.
I only want them to turn from their wicked ways so they can live.
He's a gentle king, and he's where the joy is.
Hola!
Okay, I don't speak Spanish very well, but I'm trying. where the joy is. Hola!
Okay, I don't speak Spanish very well, but I'm trying.
Fortunately, I'm not the one who voices
our Spanish language podcast.
Did you know we have one of those?
Yes, the Bible recap podcast is available in Spanish.
It's called Lusanozas de la Viblia,
and you can find it wherever you listen to TBR.
We've also translated our printable reading plan
and our digital reading plan through you version.
You can find links for all of those resources
at our website, thebibelrycap.com,
forward slash espanyol,
or click the link in the show notes.
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