The Bible Recap - Day 141 (2 Samuel 22-23, Psalm 57) - Year 4
Episode Date: May 21, 2022SHOW 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 FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: -... Psalm 18 - Episode 109 - The Bible Recap 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!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today we approach the end of David's life, so we're beginning to take a look back at all
the many ways God has worked in his life through all the ups and downs.
David's doing this too in song form.
As song in chapter 22 bears a lot of similarity
to Psalm 18, which we read on day 109, so here's a reminder of what we talked about on that day.
This song is a testament to the goodness of God through all of David's trials. He makes a lot of
claims about his righteousness here, but if we look closely, we see that he describes his righteousness
as being a gift from God. It is God who makes his way blameless.
He continues to point to God as the source of all these good things.
God is the one who equips him, delivers him, and protects him.
David recognizes that this all starts with God.
He is the source of all the good things we have and offer back to him.
The heading of chapter 23 in my Bible says,
The last words of David. But don't worry, there's still more of David yet to come in
this book, as well as in a couple other books.
He's not dead yet.
David begins by identifying himself humbly as the son of Jesse, and then he identifies
the ways that God has exalted the lowly by raising him up and anointing him.
Not only that, but God speaks to him and through him,
and he serves as a prophet to Israel, not just a king.
God is like sunlight and rain, bringing life and light to David
as he rules by the fear of God.
In stark contrast to Saul, he ruled by the fear of man.
God made a covenant with David, and he continues to deal with David
according to that covenant.
It hasn't changed and everything that has transpired in David's life has been a fixed part of God's
precise, unshakable plan. In verse 6, he refers to worthless men, which can be translated men of
Bilal or sons of the devil. He says they're like thorns that will be burned up.
Then we close the chapter by recounting David's mighty men
and a few of their exploits and victories.
One of those that we've read about before,
but that we didn't discuss,
was the incident where David happened to mention
how he wanted some water from back home,
while his hometown happened to be surrounded by the Philistines.
David's men were so loyal to him that three of them
risked their lives to go
get him water that he casually referenced, but when they bring it back to him he pours it on the
ground. Not because he's ungrateful, but because he wants to make a point that their lives are more
valuable than water or any of his fleeting desires. This may seem disrespectful to them, but by doing
this he actually shows them loyalty in return.
But then, of course, at the very end of the list, we see the name of a man he was not loyal to.
Eureia, Bethsheba's husband.
The introduction to Psalm 57 mentions that David wrote this when he fled from Saul in the cave.
There are a few times in this reading plan when things get out of chronological order and it
always feels a little weird to me, but maybe it's just part of the reflection
over David's life, I don't know. Regardless, we know this story so it shouldn't
owe any of us off, hopefully. A lot of David's life has involved crying out to God for help,
and he has seen God deliver him in the most unlikely of circumstances.
By paying attention to God's consistent deliverance,
he has grown to trust God over time.
So when he encounters new trials or new lions or new enemies,
his response is to praise God and expect God to deliver him.
He may ask how long oh Lord from time to time,
but he always seems to trust that there's an answer.
He knows that regardless what happens,
or even what is currently happening, God is working in it all to fulfill his purpose.
In verse 2, he says it like this,
I cry out to God most high, to God who fulfills his purpose for me.
How comforting is it to be reminded that God is at work on our behalf, and that his plans
for us can't be thwarted, because he is the God most high.
In verse 7, David says, My heart is steadfast, oh God, my heart is steadfast.
And even though David has had moments of wandering, this is still an overall true statement about
his heart toward God.
What was your God shot today?
There was something unique about God
that we haven't seen described much elsewhere in our reading,
at least not with the kind of poetry David used today.
It was in 2 Samuel 22, 36 in David's song.
David said, your gentleness made me great.
God's gentleness doesn't get a lot of press,
but David said it directly
corresponds to what has made him fruitful in life. David has been the recipient
of God's gentleness, particularly in the way God showed mercy in the
midst of his sins, and David has also displayed God's gentleness. He didn't
lured his power or position over others. He spared Saul's life, He cared for Muthibishev,
He pardoned His enemies.
This is what meekness looks like.
Meekness is not the absence of strength, it's strength under control.
And it manifests in David as gentleness.
For God Himself to display that kind of thing is remarkable and noteworthy.
God is gentle with us, and He's where the joy is.
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