Daily Bread for Apr 11, 2 Sam 22-24
Today's readings
are 2 Sam 22-24.
David's song in 2 Sam 22
parallels Psalm 18. Read it carefully, David recounts all the Lord has done for
him, giving the glory to God. This song should be considered in the
context of his circumstances, which have drastically deteriorated. Nonetheless,
David turns his attention toward God and pours out his heart in thanks to Him.
2 Sam 23:1-6 is not intended
to be David’s dying words. They are more of a testimony of God's power and
presence in David's life and in the future of David's throne, more like a will
or testament than a death bed proclamation. David wants to make sure
folks who follow him understand where his blessings originated. The poem is
prophetic, an oracle (2 Sam 23:1). Some see this passage as being a Messianic
prophecy.
The poem is chiastic in
structure, the primary emphasis being on the central element of the chiasm.
A. David speaks of himself
in the third person (vs 1)
B. David speaks in the first person (vs 2-3ab)
C. The
Lord speaks (vs 3cd-4)
B1 David
speaks in the first person (vs 5)
A1 David speaks, in the third
person, of the wicked (vs 6-7)
As is always the case with chiastic structure,
the primary subject is the central theme of the chiasm. David’s poem/will/last
testament gives God the final word.
2 Sam 23:8-39 gives
honor to the valiant men who fought with David. Combined with the oracle in the
first six verses, we see that David is providing a retrospective of his reign.
2 Sam 24:1 seems like a
dichotomy. God is angry with Israel yet, He incites David to take a census
which will later turn out to be a sin that requires repentance (2 Sam
24:10).
Meanwhile, the situation
is further complicated by Joab’s initial resistance to David’s order (2 Sam
24:3). Furthermore, Joab does considerably less than David orders him to do (2
Sam 24:4; 1 Chr 21:6). Notice, he doesn't venture far into Benjamite territory
nor does he count the Levites.
The reader is left to
wonder what’s going on! Did God order David to sin? Is David wrong about his
sin? What is Joab's problem that he seems to be constantly at odds with David's
orders?
The answer is found in 1
Chr 21:1, which looks back on this incident. In that passage we see that Satan,
appealing to David’s pride, is the messenger regarding the census. God allowed
Satan to tempt David so that God could show David that his heart still needed
some work, particularly after the amazing, God-centered statements made in 2
Sam 22-23. God is not punishing David, but reminding him that, as good a man as
he is, he is not yet perfect.
That David responds to
the idea of the census reveals that God is spot on about David’s pride.
Ultimately, once David's sin is exposed, his integrity will not allow him to
move forward without humbling himself, and repenting before the Lord (2 Sam
24;10-11).
Yet again, we see that
there are consequences for David’s sin (2 Sam 24:12-17). They are the result of
David numbering Israel out of pride, Joab resenting the order of the king,
taking things into his own hands and making things worse by doing less than he
was told. The emphasis in both passages is not on the accuracy of the numbers,
which will differ from those seen in 1 Chr, but the pride and disobedience of
the participants and the confusion and consequences that ensue when God is not
in the proceedings.
The lesson for us as believers is to be careful of numbering our
accomplishments for our own satisfaction and edification. David struggles with
the issue of pride. Joab struggles with being judgmental and
self-righteousness. Notice how David stumbles and Joab makes things worse. Sin
in response to sin never edifies or heals.
But there's another lesson as well, one we see repeatedly. The appropriate
response to sin is repentance -- heartfelt, contrite repentance. We neither
ignore it nor incessantly revisit it. We repent; God restores. David knows
this. Apparently, Joab does not.
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