The Bible Recap - Day 137 (2 Samuel 16-18) - Year 5
Episode Date: May 17, 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 - Check out Hope Media Group,... WayNation, WayFM & WayFM’s Prayer Wall FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Episode 111- The Bible Recap - 2 Samuel 12:11 - 2 Samuel 15:34 - Merch for Grads - TBR Store 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.
When we last saw David, he was fleeing Jerusalem because Absalom had staged a coup.
On his way out of town, David found out that his advisor, Eithelfel, was a traitor.
He also ran into his friend Hushai and asked
him to keep him posted on everything that was happening in Jerusalem after he left.
Today, when we pick up on the story, David has just crossed over the mountain on his way
out of town when he runs into Zeba, one of the servants of Mephibishev.
As a reminder, Mephibishev is the son of Jonathan, who is David's best friend, a new help-saved
David's life when his father saw tried to kill him.
David had sworn an oath to Jonathan to take care of his family.
So when David found out that Mephiba Sheth was Jonathan's only surviving son, he took
him into his home and promised to provide for him forever.
But here are things taken interesting turn.
Mephiba Sheth's servant Zeba brings David a bunch of food, wine, and donkeys as gifts,
and then tells David that Mephiba Sheth is going to try to assume the throne that David stole
from his father, Jonathan.
You can imagine how hurt and angry this makes David after all he's done for Mephibasheth.
Plus, God gave David the throne.
He didn't take it.
So David hands all of Mephibasheth's blessings over to Zeba his servant instead.
Put a pin in this story. we'll come back to it.
As David and his crew continue on, they encounter a man named Shimei who is cursing him, calling
him a murderer, which he is.
David's servant wants to kill him, but David's trust in the Lord allows him to incur insult
without fighting back.
He's able to humbly receive whatever comes to him as though it were from God's hand.
He holds his anger and doesn't retaliate.
I can't imagine the weight of emotional defeat,
David must feel at this point.
He's been betrayed by his son Absalom,
his mentor Ahithathel, his beneficiary Mithibashif,
and now this rando Shimiai is verbally attacking him
in front of the few men who've stuck by him.
Shimei was a Benjaminite, a relative of Saul.
The Benjaminites never totally warmed up to having David as king since he was from the
tribe of Judah, because they felt the royal line should have continued to their tribe.
So it's not completely abnormal for a Benjaminite to hurl these kinds of curses at David, but
it was still illegal and punishable by death. But David spared Shimei.
Meanwhile, back in Jerusalem, Absalom runs into David's friend Hushai, the one David
asked to be a spy for him. Absalom is suspicious of him, but Hushai puts on a good front and pretends
to be on-team Absalom. Then Absalom seeks counsel from a hithafel, the advisor he stole from David,
who tells him he should sleep with David's concubines.
We saw the same thing on day 111 when Ishbosheth, Saul's son, accused his servant abner of sleeping with one of Saul's concubines.
Sleeping with a king's wife or concubine is a way of making a claim on the throne.
And because Ahithafel's advice is so highly regarded, absentee as what he says. And probably without even knowing it, they bring about
the fulfillment of what God foretold as one of the fourfold consequences of David's sin.
In 2 Samuel 12, God said, I will take your wives before your eyes and give them to your neighbor,
and he shall lie with your wives in the sight of this sun.
After this, Ithelfel unpacks his plan for killing David,
so Absalom can take the throne right away.
But Absalom decides to get a second opinion,
so he calls in Husha, who criticizes Ithelfel's advice,
and then with his quick thinking,
comes up with an elaborate, prolonged plan
that would allow David some time to escape, or at least plan his retaliation against their attack.
Hushai is sly in his delivery.
He praises Absalom as he explains his plan, but also gives Absalom a few subtle reminders
that his dad and his men are really good warriors, which probably plants some doubt in Absalom's
head about fighting them.
Absalom decides to take Hushai's advice instead of a Hithophel's, and a Hithophel sees the
writing on the wall.
God is not with his counsel, and God is not with Absalom, because David is the man God has
placed on the throne.
A Hithophel also knows this means he'll be killed for treason when David inevitably
returns to Jerusalem, so he goes home and hangs himself.
Meanwhile, Hushai secretly appoints two messengers to let David know the plan.
It's about 20 miles from Jerusalem to where David and his men are staying, so it's a
long journey by foot.
Some of Abselam's people spot the messengers on their way out of town, but they can't
track them down because a woman hides them in a well. This reminds me of when Rahab hid the spies in Jericho.
Then the messengers make it to David and tell him to cross the Jordan River and continue
fleeing away from Jerusalem. They stop about 40 more miles to the north.
Three men bring food and provision and beds for them from far away,
and in the midst of such great betrayal, this had to really encourage David's heart.
Following Husha's advice,
Absalom gathers his army and tries to find David.
David splits his army into thirds and sends them out to do battle,
but tells them not to harm Absalom if they find him.
They fight in the fields and in the forest, and 20,000 men die.
Most of them in the forest, which is a tough place
to do battle, apparently.
While Absalom is trying to ride his mule through the forest,
he gets his head caught in a tree.
And most commentators think this refers to his thick hair
getting caught up in a branch.
So his glory becomes his downfall.
His mule keeps going, and he's left hanging in the tree
by his head.
A soldier witnesses all this and reports it to Joab,
his commander.
Joab is angry that the soldier didn't just kill
Absalom when he had the chance,
even though that warrior was obeying David's commands.
So Joab goes to find Absalom and stabs him in the heart.
Then 10 of his armor bearers put him out of his misery.
Joab declares an end to the battle,
then two messengers race back to give David the news.
The first just tells him the good news that they won the battle,
even when David specifically asks about Absalom.
Then, the second messenger arrives and tells him the truth
that his son Absalom has died,
and David goes off to be alone to weep and mourn.
Where did you see your God shot today?
Mine was in the nuances of the way God worked through a Hithophel's advice.
The first time he gave Absalom counsel, Absalom took it,
which lined up perfectly for God to bring about the fulfillment of what had said in 1211.
But the second time a Hithophel gave counsel, Absalom did not take it, which lined up perfectly to answer
David's prayer in 1534.
God's providence and sovereignty brought all this to pass.
1714 puts it like this.
The Lord had ordained to defeat the good counsel
of a Hithophel so that the Lord might bring harm up on Absalom.
Once Hithophel's advice was received
and once it was rejected,
and both responses lined up perfectly
with God's sovereign plan.
He's in the subtle nuances.
He's in the seemingly coincidental timing
of David running into Hushai as he was fleeing Jerusalem.
He's in the curious timing of Hushai arriving back in Jerusalem
just as Absalom gets there. He's in the hesitation in Absalom's mind as he gets a second timing of Hushai arriving back in Jerusalem just as Absalom gets there.
He's in the hesitation in Absalom's mind as he gets a second opinion from Hushai.
God is working in all the things seen and unseen to bring about his good plan.
He can be trusted with timing.
He can be trusted with chance encounters, and he can be trusted even with the thoughts and plans of our enemies.
He's in control, and he's where the joy is.
It's almost that time of year when people walk across stages and get diplomas.
Do you want to get them something to celebrate their accomplishment?
First, I'd recommend our brand new personal sized copy of the Bible recap book.
We call it Baby Blue.
It has a beautiful blue vegan leather cover, and it contains all the same great content
from Big Blue and our Delex edition.
But it's way easier to carry when you graduate and go off to college or off to your first
job or the military.
Probably not a great option for the kindergarten graduates though.
So for them, I'd recommend grabbing one of our little Bible reader shirts. And finally, stickers are fun for all ages, so grab a few of those while
you're shopping for all your college, high school, and kindergarten grads. You can find all
these items at thebibelrecap.com, forward slash store, or click the link in the show notes.
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