Day #72
Scripture Reading: II Samuel 15 - 19 …
Reading through the story of Absalom, the son of
King David, it would be easy to think that this is simply a sad story of a
family gone bad, and to believe that it doesn't have anything to do with you or
me. We have problems in our families, too, but hopefully nothing like
this! David's son tried to STEAL the kingdom from his father. By
being "nice" to the people, telling them what they wanted to hear and
making promises to help them, Absalom "stole the hearts of the men of
Israel" (15:6) and led a rebellion against his father. The goal
was power, prestige and wealth. However,
God overruled what Absalom and those following him were trying to do. In
the end, Absalom is killed and David is restored to his throne, where God had
put him.
In returning to Jerusalem, David appealed to the
tribe of Judah to accompany him back. After all, this was his
"family," the tribe from which he had come. But the rest of the
tribes of Israel were jealous, not understanding God's special plans for the
descendants of Judah, or perhaps just not accepting God's plan. The
Savior, the Messiah, would come from Judah (Genesis 49:10) and ultimately from
David's line. What God ordains to take place always comes to pass.
But this rivalry between Judah and the rest of Israel was a taste of what
would happen in the coming generations, when the kingdom would be divided and
all the tribes of Israel EXCEPT Judah would "disappear" ... until
their promised restoration that still lies in the future.
There are a number of things to be pointed out and
learned from these chapters, but two of them stick out as applications for us
today. First, note the contrast between David and Absalom. David
was "a man after God's own heart." Through the Psalms
David authored we see David's heart for God. Even after he had been
anointed by Samuel to be the next King of Israel, David honored King Saul, the
Lord's anointed. While Saul was trying to kill David, David would not
turn against Saul or harm him, even when he had the opportunity. David
trusted in God and left the timing of his ascent to the throne in God's hands.
He would not strike the Lord’s anointed.
Not so with Absalom. His mind was on anything
but God and His will. His mind was on earthly things. Absalom
wanted the kingdom for his own purposes and for his own advancement.
Absalom might have been a good candidate to teach a course in college or
grad school today: Politics 101. Win over the hearts of the people
with promises, convince them you are there to help them, to give them
"justice," and destroy your opponents any way you can in order to
gain popularity, power, influence and wealth for yourself and those around you.
It worked for Absalom - temporarily, and it seems to work for some today
- temporarily. But as God dealt with Absalom and his end came upon him
suddenly, so it will be for those today who seek unjust gain in the political
realm. Those who oppose God may appear to have victory, but they stand on
slippery ground.
The second lesson to be learned from this tragic
accounting of the rebellion of Absalom against his father is a hard lesson to
learn and an even harder lesson to accept: Your enemies will at times be
the members of your own household. We would like to think that the
families of those who become believers will come to know Jesus and be saved,
too. God DOES make promises to believers and to their children and many
come to know Christ, loving God and serving God alongside their parents, grandparents
and previous generations.
But in various ways, as parents and the Church as
well, we sometimes fail to teach our children by word and example, and
sometimes they turn aside from the way laid out before them, bringing dishonor
to themselves and even the cause of Christ. When children come to faith
in Jesus Christ it is by grace, as the Holy Spirit uses God's Word to bring
about regeneration, including repentance and faith. In this we can and
must rejoice.
Yet, for those who come to know Jesus and to
believe in Him later in their lives, faith in Jesus is not something you can
just automatically pass on. Only God can change hearts and minds.
Some today teach that Jesus came to save everyone and that eventually
everyone will be in heaven. They pretend that there is no opposition to
the Gospel and they don't experience any because they have "adapted"
the Gospel to the culture around them so they don't offend anyone - except GOD!
But where the true Gospel is believed and proclaimed and lived, there will
be opposition, and sometimes that opposition strikes very close to home.
Listen to the very words of Jesus to His disciples:
"Do not suppose that I have come to bring
peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword. For
I have come to turn 'a man against his father, a daughter against her mother, a
daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law - a man's enemies will be the members
of his own household'" (Matthew 10:34-36).
Taking a stand for Jesus Christ requires a
commitment that many are not willing to make ... are not ABLE to make.
Jesus goes on to say, "Anyone who loves his father or mother more
than me is not worthy of me; anyone who loves his son or daughter more than me
is not worthy of me; and anyone who does not take his cross and follow me is
not worthy of me. Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses
his life for my sake will find it" (Matthew 10:27-39). None of
us WANTS to have enemies, let alone in our own families, but when you are
united to Christ by faith opposition comes. You become a light in the
darkness and those who are still in the darkness hate the light.
David's heartache is the heartache of many who have
loved ones who rebel against God and who reject good counsel, but God never
left David, and He will never leave those who trust in Him today and who draw
near to Him through faith in Jesus Christ, the descendant of the tribe of
Judah, the "son of David," who sits on the throne!
God calls you to worship Him today and find comfort in His grace and love
to you.
"O LORD, our God, life in this world brings
with it heartaches and trials. At times I do not understand what is
happening around me or why things happen as they do. Help me, Father, to
trust You in those times and to know that You are still at work, even in what
may seem to me to be the worst of times. In You I find my strength, my
hope, my peace and my joy. In Jesus' name, Amen"
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