Three
years ago, I did a study of the life of David in the Old Testament, one of the
most remarkable characters in the entire Bible, and certainly one who is
presented in all his human strength and frailty.
For
that is what struck me about David – he is presented as fully human as it gets in
the Bible – his faith, his joy, his fear, his depression, his royal
countenance, his adultery, his murder of Uriah, his own family blowing up on
him, and his near-loss of the throne. He becomes God’s anointed king of Israel,
but his is a very human king, with very human (recognizably human) weaknesses.
Nowhere
did I get greater insight into David’s mind and heart, “a man after God’s own
heart,” than in the psalms he wrote. The non-fiction story is told in 1 Samuel;
the more creative version is told in the psalms. To understand David, I had to
read both the historical narrative and the poetry. Both were true; the psalms
often emphatically so. To read “Davis was anguished” is one thing; it’s quite
another to read a psalm like the twenty-third and experience the depth of that
anguish and despair, and then the hope rising.
David
experienced adulation and condemnation. He was acclaimed and disparaged. He was
elevated to near-royal status and then hunted down by that same king to be
killed.
Bob
Sorge, in The Fire of Delayed Answers, calls this David’s “cave
experience.” Forced into living a wilderness experience, life for David became
very daily, and perhaps very hourly. You don’t plan your future kingdom when
you’re barely one step ahead of your own execution.
And
then there was the loneliness. For a time David was by himself, holding on only
to the memory of his friendship with Jonathan, cut off from family and friends.
Even when the “600 warriors” found and joined him, he was still largely alone,
Sorge says. Yes, he now had people to help but what they really wanted him to
do was to strike Saul down – and they had little patience with David’s waiting
on the Lord to act. Twice David deliberately did not take advantage of the
opportunity to kill Saul. He wasn’t going to raise his sword against the Lord’s
anointed, no matter how tempting, no matter how easy it would have been.
Instead,
he would wait for God to act.
Led
by Jason Stasyszen and Sarah Salter, we’ve been reading The Fire of Delayed Answers. To see more posts on this chapter, “David’s
Cave,” please visit Jason at Connecting toImpact.
Photograph by Marina Shemesh via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
3 comments:
You're so right about David being presented in all his humanity. What a hope it gives us. And though we live on this side of the cross, we still have to know that his way of processing and taking things to God (as displayed in his psalms) is what healthy people will do. Good thoughts, Glynn.
I think that is the reason why I love reading about David, as well as the psalms. David is flawed. He struggles and, at times, makes some really bad choices. And, yet, He is anointed by God and God still uses David and loves David. And David loves God with his whole heart. It is beautiful. And filled with hope. Great post, Glynn.
David is not only a man after God's own heart, he was the first man in the Bible that I could so solidly identify with in terms of behaviors and failures - and yet God loved him. His story helped me to come to believe that even I could be loved by God.
Great post, Glynn!
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