The Lord’s Day Evening
September 5, 2010
2 Samuel 2:1-11
“Will God’s King Rule
in Your Life?”
Dr. Derek W. H. Thomas
Turn with me if you would once again to the books of Samuel and we begin tonight
in 2 Samuel chapter 2. We’ll be
tracing the life of David, now as a king, and soon in a few chapters we’ll see
him crowned king in
If you have an ESV Study Bible with you tonight, and you’ll be weighed down if
you actually brought it into the sanctuary with you tonight, but if you possess
an ESV Study Bible I would recommend to you, maybe tonight when you go home, do
look at the maps especially in 2 Samuel chapter 1 and 2 Samuel chapter 2.
There are two just beautiful maps that help you focus everything in an
instant. Basically, on the western
side along the Mediterranean coastline, almost the entire coastline is occupied
by the Philistines. And from east of
that, from the bottom of the Dead Sea, right up north, though not including Tyre
and Sidon, is the land occupied more or less by Judah and Israel.
For the past dozen years, David has lived the life of a fugitive.
Ever since Samuel anointed him as the next king Saul has tried to kill
him, half a dozen times. David, you
remember, has lived as a double agent among the Philistines.
We’ve had problems even justifying some of the things that David has been
doing. He’s been on the edge as a
double agent. Sometimes he’s crossed
the edge perhaps, but everything has now changed.
Everything has now changed.
Saul, the megalomaniac Saul, is dead.
He is dead by his own hand.
He had been wounded, fatally wounded perhaps, by the Philistines, but he had
taken his own life on
Thomas Carlyle, the Scottish essayist and historian says, “For one man who can
stand prosperity, there will be a hundred that will stand adversity.”
Do you hear what he said? It’s
easier sometimes to take adversity than prosperity.
Be careful what you ask for.
Be careful what you ask for, because in prosperity many a man and many a woman
has fallen. All has changed.
Saul is dead. The time for
Saul is ended and the time for King David has begun.
Now as we read this chapter, before we read it let’s look to the Lord in prayer.
Let’s pray.
Father, we are thankful for the
Scriptures. Thank You for the Bible.
Thank You for keeping it pure throughout the ages.
Thank You tonight for Bible translations that make the Scriptures come
alive to us. We thank You
tonight that every jot and tittle, to the least stroke of a pen, is given by
inspiration of God and is profitable for doctrine and reproof and correction and
instruction in the way of righteousness that the man of God might be thoroughly
furnished unto every good work.
Grant the blessing of Your Spirit now, that as we read we might also be
illumined, for Jesus’ sake. Amen.
2 Samuel chapter 2 and verse 1. This
is God’s holy and inerrant Word:
“After this David
inquired of the Lord, ‘Shall I go up into any of the cities of
When they told David,
‘It was the men of Jabesh-gilead who buried Saul,’ David sent messengers to the
men of Jabesh-gilead and said to them, ‘May you be blessed by the Lord, because
you have showed this loyalty to Saul your lord and buried him.
Now may the Lord show steadfast love and faithfulness to you.
And I will do good to you because you have done this thing.
Now therefore let your hands be strong, and be valiant, for Saul your
lord is dead, and the house of
But Abner the son of
Ner, commander of Saul’s army, took Ish-bosheth the son of Saul and brought him
over to Mahanaim, and he made him king over Gilead and the Ashurites and Jezreel
and Ephraim and Benjamin and all
I. David seeks guidance from God.
Now the first thing I want to see here is this – the guidance that David seeks.
Staggering, isn’t it? You
know, David has been anointed king ever since he was a teenager.
He’s thirty years of age.
He’s known for a dozen years that he’s going to be king.
The only obstacle of him being king is Saul.
Saul is dead. But he goes to
the Lord. He knows he’s going to be
king but he goes to the Lord. He
asks the Lord, he inquires of the Lord.
He’s seeking guidance. He
wants direction. He wants God to
tell him where he should go.
Calvin preached a series of sermons on 2 Samuel.
Our dear friend, Dr. Douglas Kelly, translated them from their original
French into English so that the rest of us can enjoy the fruits of Calvin’s
ministry. Calvin makes this
extraordinary comment on this passage.
He says, “Because although he was on the way, he still knew he could err
seriously if God did not guide him.”
If God didn’t guide him, if God didn’t direct him, if God didn’t watch over his
every step, David knew that he could err.
God tells him, “Go to
You know, sometimes we do that. We
think we know what God wants for us so we run ahead, we presume.
So many things that are done
prayerlessly, so many decisions, from trivial decisions to perhaps important
decisions. Do you know the
reason why you pray for important decisions is because you pray for trivial
decisions, it’s because you have a habit of praying for God’s guidance.
We’re not told how this guidance came.
He probably consulted Abiathar the high priest.
He probably consulted those urim and thummim, those means of guidance for
God’s people under the Old Testament when they were under the “rudimentary
principles of this world,” as Paul says in Galatians 4.
We don’t need those anymore.
We’re, as Paul says in that reading from this morning, you remember in Galatians
4, we’ve grown up now. We are sons
in God’s house. He’s given to us His
Word. He’s given us the Bible to
guide us and direct us.
God has a plan you see, and He has a plan for David,
but He has a plan for you and for me.
You know that, that God has a plan for you.
God has mapped out your life.
God has made the decisions for your life – who you should date, whether you
should date, who you should marry, what job and vocation you should engage in,
where you should live.
And David, I find this so instructive,
David inquires of the Lord. He knew
what his future was. You could have
sat David down and said, “David, how do you see your future?”
“Well, I’m the anointed king!”
But he seeks God’s corroboration
at every point. The kingdom has
now come to
“The
God plants His kingdom in
This week, some of you have seen it I’m sure, in the newspapers – in
The London Times, on the BBC, in
The Wall Street Journal headlines – in
The Wall Street Journal yesterday, Steven Hawking’s essay, “God Did
Not Create the Universe,” this powerful force in the world today.
Did you read the article? Did
you read the conclusion, the final sentence?
He writes well. He’s a
terrifyingly good writer. That
closing line – “Who are the lords of the universe?” he asks.
“We are. We are.”
And what’s God’s answer to that?
You know, a few years ago we were celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of the
discovery of DNA, the double helix.
Those scientists, one of them was James Watson, he got a Nobel Prize for it.
You know James Watson said, “The two stupidest sentences in the English
language are, ‘Love thine enemy’ and ‘The meek shall inherit the earth.’”
He credits his own success to his own lack of meekness and his own
self-promotion. Against those kinds
of forces God says, “Go to
You plant a little church in the midst of
II. The king’s invitation.
Well the second thing we see in this passage is the king’s invitation.
You see it there in verses 4 through 7, at least the second half of verse
4 through to 7. Now I need to remind
you of this incident with the men of Jabesh-gilead.
Right at the very end of 1 Samuel, the closing paragraph of 1 Samuel
records what the men of Jabesh-gilead did.
When the Philistines had killed Saul and Jonathan and two others of his
sons, they took their bodies and they hung their bodies on the walls of
Beth-shan. And the men of
Jabesh-gilead, Saul had saved Jabesh-gilead way back in 1 Samuel chapter 11 from
that hatchet man, Nahash the Ammonite, and they’re returning the favor.
They make this trek. They
schlep this twenty mile journey to recover the bodies of Saul and his three sons
and bury them in Jabesh-gilead and David, David is thanking them for their
bravery and for their courage.
And he says in verse 6, “May the Lord show steadfast love and faithfulness to
you, and I will do good to you because you have done this thing.
Now therefore-”
You know David’s a politician. You
understand that. He understands how
these things work. He’s going to
need the support of
“Let your hands be strong and be valiant
for Saul your lord is dead and the house of
What will the men of Jabesh-gilead do?
What will they do? Will they
join the ranks of
But there’s a rival. It’s what you
see in verses 8 through 11.
Jabesh-gilead is a long way away from
It’s always the way. It’s always the
way. Jesus says, “I build My
church,” and He builds His church – where does He build His church?
In enemy occupied territory.
He builds His church against, right up to the gates of hell.
There’s always an enemy.
There’s always opposition to the
What do we make of this opposition?
Do you remember that dream that Daniel had?
It was Nebuchadnezzar’s dream but it was Daniel who interpreted the dream
in Daniel chapter 2. You remember
Nebuchadnezzar saw a dream of a gigantic statue and then a stone is hurled
against that statue and breaks it.
And this stone grows and grows and fills the whole earth.
You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to understand what Daniel chapter
2 is saying. The
What do we make about this opposition, this reign of the king of
Whose kingdom will you support?
You know, what’s this passage about?
It’s asking you, it’s describing a piece of history three thousand years ago,
but it’s saying to you and me tonight,
“Which kingdom do you belong to?
Which king do you give your allegiance to?”
What did Ligon say this morning from Luke 12?
He wants – you know we’re trifling with such inconsequential things and
the Father wants to give us a kingdom.
Where is your treasure tonight?
Where’s your treasure tonight?
Is it in the King of kings and Lord of lords?
Have you seen in Jesus something that raptures your soul?
Because where your treasure is, that’s where your heart is going to be.
This little cameo, it’s a little cameo in church history and it’s saying,
you know, God plants something and it’s really, really, really small, but it’s
going to grow and it’s going to grow and Babylon will fall.
So that’s the question.
Whose kingdom are you in, the
kingdom of the world or the kingdom of heaven?
Which king are you following?
Which king are you giving allegiance to?
Because there’s only one true King and He sits at the right hand of God
and His name is Jesus, Jesus.
Father, we thank You for Your
Word. Thank You for the confidence
it gives us. Thank You for the
courage it gives us in a hostile and evil world.
We can lift up our heads without any sense of embarrassment or shame
because we serve the King of the universe, the only King there is.
Lord, give us now that faith, strong faith, for Jesus’ sake.
Amen.
Please stand. Receive the Lord’s
benediction. Grace, mercy, and peace
from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ be with you all.
©
First Presbyterian Church,
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