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KEYS TO SPIRITUAL MATURITY
David's Sin - Purity - #7 2
Samuel 11 The Bible is a book full of peaks and valleys of spiritual experience. Few valleys so deep and dark as that of 2 Samuel 11. The description of the fall of David is as tragic as it is gripping. The writer seems to slow down in the telling of the story of the great events of the times in order to concentrate on the spectacular fall of Israel’s greatest man. This chapter and the one that follows details for us how easily a servant of God can find himself in a morass of sin. The tale is like something from a modern Hollywood movie. It has all the elements of dramatic hyperbole: fame, adultery, lies, denial, and judicial murder. Except this is not hyperbole, but reality. This actually happened, and happened to one of God’s best and finest. Written all over it are is the warning: “if you think you are standing firm, be careful that you don't fall’ (1 Cor. 10:12).
The
Scriptures gives us two maps by which we may chart it this fall. One is the
historical narrative that is recorded for us in this chapter, and the other is
the personal, poignant and plaintive reflection of this incident in Psalm 51.
1
Samuel 11 is deep and dark because of the significance of David –he was the
man after God’s own heart (1 Sam. 13:14), the man that God had chosen to be
king (1 Sam. 16:1-13). But, it was also deep and dark because of nature of the
sin. Sexual impurity receives the disdain and opprobrium it does in this chapter
because it is something God frowns upon. It is a violation of the way he has
told us to life. It breaks the rules. It violates trust. It destroys love. 1.
THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF HIS TEMPTATION The
author underlines the circumstances: (a) A time of neglected duty. The opening verse sets the scene (and the problem): it is a time when kings go off to war! It is spring and wars were fought at seasons most conducive for battle. The Ammonites have still to be subjugated, despite the fact that ten years have elapsed since David’s coronation. David sends his Commander in Chief, Joab to take care of them in a battle at Rabbah. Joab was a powerful man and sometimes ruthless in his actions. He was later to be executed for his wanton assassinations and his part in the conspiracy of placing Adonijah instead of Solomon on David’s throne. Though the writer does not give us all the details, David will need his support and expertise in ensuring the death of one of his own men in battle. He was evidently loyal to David.
The point
of this detail about Joab and the battle at Rabbah is to inform us that David
himself did not go. David remained in Jerusalem while “the king’s men and
whole Israelite army” are at war (v.1). Worse,
the focus of the King is not the battle of Operation Rabbah (10:14), but the
beauty of a young woman called Bathsheba, bathing (provocatively?) on the
rooftop adjacent to the palace and in view of the King. His mind is not on
military strategy, but sexual strategy: he is trying to work out how he may
ensure that she visits the King’s bedroom. This story has all the features of
some tawdry afternoon soap opera special.
We often kid ourselves that things “just happen” when all along we have been urgently looking for their fulfillment. His resolve is gone; all he need is the opportunity to present itself, and though he may for a while appease himself with the thought that the temptation “just came,” but the truth is that he was probably looking for it. Lust will seek its fulfillment whilst insisting on its victim status. There are no prayers, no songs in the night to Yahweh, David’s God. Obsession has taken hold as he glimpses the naked body of a woman bathing on a nearby rooftop. With no spiritual restraint to guide him the course of the night is set on a downward slope. Sin having conceived will now bring forth. There is no stopping it. He had not nourished his spiritual affections; he had no energy to resist. All he needed was opportunity and desire to coincide... and they did! 2.
THE PROGRESS OF HIS ENTICEMENT
The same morphology is evidenced in the story of Achan in the Book of Joshua.
For Achan it was material greed: a Babylonian garment, some shekels of silver
and the wedge of gold. Then, the writer of Joshua employs his verbs: “When
I saw in the plunder a beautiful robe from Babylonia, two hundred shekels of
silver and a wedge of gold weighing fifty shekels, I coveted them and took them.
They are hidden in the ground inside my tent, with the silver underneath”
(Joshua 7:21). He saw,
coveted, took, and hid. This is why Robert Murray M'Cheyne's words are so valuable: think that the seeds of every known sin lie within our hearts. We are as capable of David’s sin as anyone else; as he was. Sin needs to be dealt with as soon as it raises its head. At the first instigations of sin allurement we are to be on our guard. Watch and pray are the key words.
Few
writers have been as helpful in this realm than the seventeenth century English
puritan, John Owen. Writing on the need to mortify sin at it first appearance,
he added: "Rise mightily against the first actings of thy distemper, its
first conceptions; suffer it not to get the least ground" (Works
6:62). The believer must become an astute observer of the occasions when he or
she is vulnerable to sinning, and carefully endeavor to avoid them. 3.
THE COMPLEXITY OF HIS SIN
COVETOUSNESS: He desired what was not his to have
Furthermore,
by comparison with Uriah: he breaches the commands concerning God's honor and
glory.
Don’t you think he also broke the command: honor your father and your mother?
You
see what happens when his life is placed under the microscope? It is what Paul
says: Sin is seen to be exceedingly sinful (Rom. 7:13).
And this is David! The man after God’s own
heart, the king that God had chosen, the one whose psalms some of you read and
sing every day. 4.
THE HEART OF HIS FAILURE (i)
What happened in David's heart -- 2 Sam.12:10 -- he despised the Lord.
He counted his own satisfaction of greater worth than God's word and
honor. You see, what had this night of passion brought him?
Pregnancy, for one thing! The only spoken words recorded of Bathesheba
are “I’m pregnant” (v.5)! And the writer underlines it all by calling her
“the wife of Uriah” (v. 26). Stuart Briscoe “the world is littered with
the debris of what sexual lust has promised but never fulfilled.” (ii)
What happened in God's heart -- displeased him.
The
tragedy was: it was this man after God's heart, who pleased him -- who caused
such grief. David was to cry later of his own son “O Absalom my son, my son
Absalom”. Here, it is as though God is crying, “O David, my son, my
son David!” Now, we are not finished with David yet -- but notice some things before we leave him:
Firstly,
the importance of guarding the mind. Constant
reflection and meditation upon God’s word will keep our minds God-ward and
pure.
Secondly,
the importance of the law. The law is given to defend
and protect us. It is the way God helps us know where the boundaries are.
Failure to comply with notices of trespassing will lead to problems. God keeps
us sweet by making sure we know where safety lies, and where dangers lurk. Cries
of legalism whenever a “thou shalt” or more pertinently, a “thou shalt
not” arise are out of place and immature. God’s law is not a shackle to
confine us but a boundary within which we are free to roam at our pleasure, and
at God’s.
Thirdly,
there is always the possibility that this issue is exactly the area of your
temptation. It is an interesting conspiracy theory—those who raise a hue and
cry about sex and adultery being openly spoken about are Christians! And
it is altogether possible that they are the very ones who need to hear it.
Fourthly,
it is vitally important for Christians to know that even though condemnation is
written all over this sin, there is a way of forgiveness. The verse of
the chapter reads, “the thing David had done displeased the Lord.” There is
no word of forgiveness here, of course. David,
at the end of chapter 11 has not yet confessed his sin.
There is no acknowledgment of his wrong and no pronouncement of his
vindication. That must await chapter 12 and David’s inner struggles as
recorded in psalm 51, with its expressions of conviction, confession, and
repentance.
When
we let the Savior down, what then? Can we ever be the same again? Is there a
condition that goes beyond failure? Are we doomed to live a second class
existence, forgiven but redundant?
What does failure and success look like from a divine perspective? The Bible is
not only a book, which records the successes of individual men and women, but
also their failures. In one sense at least, the failures recorded in Scripture
attests to its divine inspiration—men would have ensured a more glamorous
portrayal than the one given in Scripture! Does God give a second chance at
something? Or a third? or a fourth? or a fifth? Can God use a failure? The
answer, of course, is that God uses the likes of David again. Just as he uses
the likes of Peter again after his spectacular failure of denial. Is
this God's word to you? Maybe it's in the past and the memories of it are
painful. Maybe it's un-confessed.
Maybe it's just lurking there as a dread possibility that just awaits the
opportunity. Some business trip,
when your marriage has lost its savor and the opportunity just presents itself,
or maybe, you secretly look for it without knowing that you do. The one sure help is a
healthy and strong marriage. And we will have to look at this on another
occasion as we consider the keys to spiritual maturity. But for now, it is the
word of grace that beckons:
“I have sinned against
the Lord” (2 Sam.12:13). |
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