Christ Church

  • Our Church
  • Get Involved
  • Resources
  • Worship With Us
  • Give
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

The David Chronicles 41: Covenant Kindness

Joe Harby on August 18, 2013

http://www.christkirk.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/1737.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Introduction

In the previous chapter, there was no dialogue. We had a summary of David’s exploits, and a testimony to how wonderfully God had established him on his throne. In this chapter, we return to ground level, beginning with “And David said . . .”

The Text

“And David said, Is there yet any that is left of the house of Saul, that I may shew him kindness for Jonathan’s sake? . . .” (2 Sam. 9:1-13).

Summary of the Text

David, now well established as king, remembers his covenant with Jonathan. Is there anyone he can show kindness to (hesed) from the house of Saul, for the sake of Jonathan? (v. 1). David’s courtiers apparently didn’t know of anyone, so they called someone who might know—Ziba, a man who had been a servant to Saul (v. 2). Ziba tells David that there was a son to Jonathan, lame in both feet (v. 3). He is living up north, in Lo-Debar, with a man named Machir (v. 4). Lo-Debar means nothing or no word. Think of it as living in Nothingburg. But for such an out of the way place, it housed one of Scripture’s greats—Machir (2 Sam. 17:27). So David sent, and brought Mephibosheth from there (v. 5). Mephibosheth came into David’s presence and prostrated himself (v. 6), which must have been very hard for him to do. David reassured him, made him a rich man, and gave him a seat with all the princes (v. 7). Mephibosheth responds by calling himself a dead dog, which makes self- esteem counselors everywhere shift uneasily in their seats (v. 8). David then entrusts the management of all the estates to Ziba, with a charge to take care of them for Mephibosheth, together with Ziba’s sons and servants (vv. 9-11). Mephibosheth had a son named Micha, who only appears here (v. 12). And so Mephibosheth ate at the king’s table, and he was lame in both of his feet (v. 13).

A Shot at the Throne

Mephibosheth did not pose any real threat to David’s position, especially from his out-of-the-way place as recipient of Machir’s kindness. But when he is brought near to the court, with a son, he is brought close enough to make Ziba’s later slander of him at least some kind of plausible (2 Sam. 16:3). It was never very plausible, both because of Mephibosheth’s lameness, and the fact that David was fleeing because of another very powerful pretender to the throne. But ambition is capable of not making very much sense, and his new position made that slander more plausible than it would have been before.

Hessed

Hesed is what David shows to Mephibosheth. This word refers to faithfulness to obligations under a covenant (in this case, between David and Jonathan), a faithfulness that is expressed by means of generosity and kindness. Think of it as covenant kindness, and so we should remember this incident as we are seeking to live as God’s covenant people. The covenant is not this great contract in the sky—the covenant is kept by means of remembrance and kindness. That is covenant keeping, and it can only be done by faith working through love.

Hesed takes the initiative. It overflows. It is not reluctant and does not hang back. Mephibosheth had no idea of what was coming, and it was hesed that was coming to him. Do you want to be faithful as God’s covenant people? Then surprise one another.

When David had been driven from the king’s table, Jonathan took the initiative, sought David out, and made a covenant with him. And now, when the king’s table is David’s table, he seeks out the son of Jonathan. We receive in order that we might give. We should long to receive much because we long to give much. We should give in order to get, in order that we may give some more.

Two Men Exalted

There were two men exalted here—Ziba and Mephibosheth, but only one of them fully. We learn from the following narrative that the one who was exalted as a result of hesed returned that covenant kindness with covenant loyalty, which is part of hesed. When Absalom revolted against David, Ziba brought provisions to David, but did so while lying grievously about Mephibosheth (2 Sam. 16:1-4). His ploy worked, at least initially, and David gave him all the lands that he had been steward of. But when David returned from exile, he discovered that Mephibosheth had been entirely faithful (2 Sam. 19:24-30). Ziba was promoted, but not really. Just as David had his Joab, so Mephibosheth had his Ziba. Mephibosheth was promoted, and the grandson of Saul remained faithful to the grace of God that had come to him.

There are forms of loyalty that are unhealthy, but in this passage we see the kind of character that is loyal in the right way. We see it first in Machir—who is kind to Mephibosheth, excluded from the throne, and then later kind to David, when he was excluded from the throne. Machir was loyal. Mephibosheth expected no kindness, and when it was given to him, he responded to it with the right kind of loyalty. Hesed is the foundation of the right kind of loyalty.

Dead Dogs at the Table

We are gathering around a Table here. All of us belonged at one point to the house of the previous king. We are all of us lame in both our feet, and couldn’t rule over a paper kingdom. And yet, despite our helplessness and contemptible estate, God showed us mercy and kindness. He, through His great Son of David, invited us to come to the court, and to be seated with princes. We came, knowing ourselves to be nothing but dead dogs. That is the disposition that a true convert has. Who am I, that the great God of Heaven should show such kindness to me? David follows the instruction of Jesus here, showing kindness to someone who cannot pay him back.

Note that Mephibosheth said, “who am I, that I should come?” but then he came. Worm theology, in the sense that is unedifying and unhelpful, is the kind of theology that says “who am I, that I should come?” and then does not come. Humble yourself under the mighty hand of God and He will lift you up (1 Pet. 5:6). The Syro- Phoenician woman also called herself a dog, eating the crumbs under the table, but she also came.

The hand under which we are humbled is the hand of Christ, and the hand that lifts us up is the hand of Christ. When we are lifted up, when we are summoned, we come to the table, and we come in order to eat the bread of the Lord continually (vv. 7, 10, 13).

Read Full Article

The David Chronicles 40: Joram and Justice

Joe Harby on August 11, 2013

http://www.christkirk.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/1736.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Introduction

In this chapter, we have a summary of David’s very public victories before we return to the narrative of David’s life from a closer vantage. We also see the establishment of the blessed height from which David fell through his sin with Bathsheba—how much he tried to throw away.

The Text

“And after this it came to pass, that David smote the Philistines, and subdued them: and David took Metheg- ammah out of the hand of the Philistines . . .” (2 Sam. 8:1-18).

Summary of the Text

The first thing that happened was that David completely subdued the Philistines to the west (v. 1). After that he completely struck Moab, executing two thirds of the prisoners (v. 2). We don’t know what Moab did to warrant such severe treatment, but it must have been pretty bad—David was partly of Moabite descent (Ruth 4:17), and his parents had been given asylum there when Saul was pursuing David (1 Sam. 22:3-4). David smote Hadadezer of the Arameans (v. 3). David took captive a thousand chariots, but ham-strung most of the horses for them (Dt. 17:16). When the Syrians tried to help Hadadezer, David defeated them also (v. 5), placing garrisons in Damascus (v. 6). The Lord preserved David in everything (v. 6). David captured shields (maybe quivers) of gold, and brought them home (v. 7). David took an enormous amount of brass (v. 8). When Toi heard of this, he sent his son Joram with great gifts (v. 9-10). David dedicated this tribute, and his other great plunder, to the Lord (vv. 11-12). David’s reputation soared after he defeated the Edomites in the Valley of Salt (v. 13). He placed garrisons throughout Edom, and the refrain that God was with him is repeated (v. 14). So David reigned in Israel, and he executed judgment and justice for all the people (v. 15). Joab was the military commander and Jehoshaphat the recorder (v. 16). There were two high priests, which is interesting (v. 17). Benaiah was over the foreign palace guard (v. 18), and David’s sons were priests (v. 18).

Some Ends and Odds

We have some manuscript issues to sort out. The Masoretic text has Aram in v. 13, while Chronicles (and the LXX here) has Edom. Because the Valley of Salt is in the region of Edom, I think that is the better reading. David is the one who establishes the line of Zadok as a priestly line, descended from Aaron, while keeping Ahimelech (who was of the Shilonite house of Eli, claiming descent from Moses). David puts representatives of both these rival priestly houses in office, while knowing that the line of Eli had to come to an end sometime (1 Kings 2:27).

We are also told here that David’s sons served as priests (v. 18). The word is cohen, priests. Chronicles uses a different word, one which means chief officials (1 Chron. 18:17), so there are various possibilities. David’s sons were all from Judah, and so could not be priests in the public worship of God. One possibility is that these princes were authorized officials, able to conduct whatever priestly functions were allowed the king. Another possibility is that they were “chaplains” in private worship within the palace.

David established an elite force (probably a palace guard) formed of foreign Gentiles. The Cherethites were from Crete, and perhaps the Pelethites as well. Close loyalties are sometimes a great breeding ground for treachery, as David clearly knew.

The Meaning of Justice

We see that in the establishment of the Israelite monarchy, the king was the final court in the judiciary. It says here that David “executed judgment and justice unto all his people” (v. 15). His son Solomon established his reputation for wisdom in how he resolved a particularly thorny court case (1 Kings 3:16). And in the later revolt of David’s son Absalom, this was how Absalom prepared the way for his revolt, by sowing the seeds of discontent about how the court cases were not being resolved well (2 Sam. 15:3).

One of the things we have to get clear in our minds is the relationship in a society between top-down justice and bottom-up justice. The people get a government that is better than they deserve—that’s true enough. But that doesn’t mean that mercy and deliverance can’t come from the top. We want the dignity of individual responsibility without the idolatry of individualism.

The Meaning of Joram

In the story given of Toi—king of a neo-Hittite kingdom—we have another instance of Gentile conversion. Toi is not just paying tribute, it is a matter of religious allegiance. In 1 Chron. 18:10, his son’s name is given as Hadoram, which means “Hadad is exalted.” The Hadad that is referred to is the Hadad with whom Toi had gone to war in the past (v. 10), wars that had apparently not gone all that well. Joram here means “Yah is exalted.” There are any number of ways where we see how Gentiles were attracted to David.

Son of Jesse, Root of Jesse

David was a righteous king, and a relative type of the coming Son of David. We see him attracting and gathering Gentiles. We saw the Gittites who fought alongside him. We see Obed-edom. We see Toi, the Hittite king. But he was capable of letting them down also, as in the drastic case of Uriah the Hittite.
The image in the type had blemishes. Not so many as to undo the type, but enough to mar it. The antitype, the true gatherer of Gentiles, will never let anyone down in that way. There will be no grievous disappointment. And why?

“They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain: For the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea. And in that day there shall be a root of Jesse, which shall stand for an ensign of the people; to it shall the Gentiles seek: and his rest shall be glorious” (Is. 11:9-10).

Read Full Article

The David Chronicles 39: A Servant Throne

Joe Harby on August 4, 2013

http://www.christkirk.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/1735.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Introduction

When things are going our way, we want to build God a house. But God says no, let me build you a house. This is God’s way of doing things, and this is what justification by faith alone is all about.

The Text

“And it came to pass, when the king sat in his house, and the Lord had given him rest round about from all his enemies; That the king said unto Nathan the prophet . . .” (2 Sam. 7:1-29).

Summary of the Text

The Lord gave David rest round about from his enemies, and so the king sat in his house (v. 1). The king said to Nathan that he lived in a house of cedar, while the ark was in curtains (v. 2). Nathan, apart from a word from God, thought it was a good idea to build a temple (v. 3), but that night a prophetic word came to Nathan (v. 4). He was told to tell David, shall you build Me a house (v. 5)? Has God needed a permanent house up to this point (vv. 6-7). God took David from his role as shepherd (v. 8), and God has made David great (v. 9). God promises that He will plant Israel, and not move them around as before (v. 10). He then comes to the great promise—He will make David a house (v. 11). First, he will establish a line, a dynasty, unlike Saul (v. 12). David’s son will build the temple (v. 13). He will receive fatherly discipline (v. 14), but will not ever be rejected as Saul was (v. 15). God will establish the Davidic throne forever (v. 16). This was the word of the Lord through Nathan (v. 17).

So David went into the tabernacle (of David) and sat before the Lord (before the ark) (v. 18). “Who am I?” he said (v. 18). What is this? (v. 19). What can I say? (v. 20). God did this for His Word’s sake (v. 21). There is no God like the Lord (v. 22). And related to this, there is no nation with a history of deliverance like Israel (vv. 23-24). As Mary said, so let it be as you have said, so also David (v. 25). Let God’s name be magnified in His faithfulness to the house of David (v. 26). David’s prayer this way is based on God’s promise (v. 27). God has promised goodness to his servant (v. 28).

A Servant on the Throne

When David was established in his rule, and had been given rest from his enemies round about, we see this described as him sitting (v. 1). After Nathan’s word to him, he goes into the tabernacle and sits before the Lord there (v. 18). This is the only time in the Bible where sitting is described as a posture of prayer, but it is fitting. It is a coronation prayer—David is being enthroned.

But at the same time, it is a servant king who is being enthroned. The word servant is used eleven times in this chapter. This is a covenant-making occasion (Ps. 89:19-37; Ps. 132:10-12). Keep this in mind whenever you are thinking about Romans 13—where civil magistrates are described as God’s servants, God’s deacons.

Apostolic Commentary

One of the great tragedies of our time is the refusal of modern Christians to allow the New Testament to interpret the Old Testament for them. We often start to go down that road, but then pull up short.
First, Hebrews 1:5 quotes from our text, and applies it to Jesus. The promise to David included Solomon, and the rest of the Davidic kings (“when he commits iniquity . . .”), but it does not stop there. The throne of David is forever because Jesus is enthroned on it (Luke 1:32).

But we need to be prepared to be staggered the way David was—even though it is hard to be prepared for something like that. Our passage is also quoted in 2 Cor. 6:18. “And will be a Father unto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty.” He shall be my son includes, in the original context, many sons. But here Paul makes it explicit, and includes all of you in this room. “Ye shall be my sons and daughters.”

Remember how in David’s grateful prayer, he included God’s goodness to Israel, and His goodness to the house of David, mingling them together. It is the same here. You are a called and separated and holy people (2 Cor. 6:16-17). Come out, come out.

Jesus is the Public Person

If God fulfills His promises through Jesus, then He is also fulfilling all His promises through those who are in Jesus. If Jesus is the seed of Abraham, and He is (Gal. 3:16), then we can be the seed of Abraham, and we are (Gal. 3:29). If Jesus is king and priest, and He is (Rev. 1:5), then we can be kings and priests (Rev. 1:6; 5:10). If Jesus rules the nations with a rod of iron (Rev. 12:5; 19:15), then so can we (Rev. 2:27).

In Jesus Christ we find that all of God’s promises find their yes and amen.

“For the Son of God, Jesus Christ, who was preached among you by us, even by me and Silvanus and Timotheus, was not yea and nay, but in him was yea. For all the promises of God in him are yea, and in him Amen, unto the glory of God by us. Now he which stablisheth us with you in Christ, and hath anointed us, is God; Who hath also sealed us, and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts” (2 Cor. 1:19-22).
Jesus is the Bridegroom, which means that all the accounts are joint accounts. Everything He has and is has been given to you.

Come to Jesus

In business jargon, the “come to Jesus” talk refers to the time when you finally talk to wayward employees, telling them to get with the program. This is a faint shadow of the come to Jesus appeal at the end of a hot revival meeting in a tent in east Texas. But there is more we must say. That is a faint shadow of the come to Jesus that we see in New Testament. To come to Jesus is to come to everything. To come to Him is to come to height and breadth and depth. It is to come to all things made new, and to all things now put right. It is to respond to the message that the Church has been given by the Spirit. The Spirit and the Bride say, “Come” (Rev. 22:17).

Read Full Article

The David Chronicles 38: A Savior for Gath

Joe Harby on July 28, 2013

https://www.christkirk.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Sermon-A-Savior-For-Gath-II-Samuel-6-1-23.mp3

Download Audio

Introduction

God’s intention in salvation has always been for the salvation of the world. He has always had all the nations of men in mind, and the fact that Israel was the chosen nation was not in tension with this reality, but rather was the down payment on it, the first installment of it.

The Text

“Again, David gathered together all the chosen men of Israel, thirty thousand . . .” (2 Sam. 6:1-23).

Summary of the Text

David has established Jerusalem as his capital city, and determines to bring the ark of the covenant to that place. He starts by gathering some elite troops, 30,000 of them (v. 1). Having done so, he goes to Kiriath-jearim, where the ark is (v. 2). They put the ark on a cart that had never had a profane use, and they set out—Uzzah and Ahio driving the cart (v. 3). Eleazar, their brother who had been keeping the ark, is not mentioned here. Uzzah apparently sat up on the cart, and Ahio walked in front (v. 4). David (and everyone else) played on all kinds of musical instruments (v. 5). When they reached Nachon’s threshing floor, Uzzah reached to steady the ark (v. 6). God was angry with him for this, and struck him dead (v. 7). David was angry in his turn, and he named the place after the Lord’s bursting forth upon Uzzah (v. 8). Not only was David angry, but also fearful (v. 9), and diverted the ark to the house of Obed-edom (v. 10). The ark was there for three months, and the household of Obed-edom was greatly blessed (v. 11). When David heard this, he went to bring the ark up to Jerusalem, and did so with gladness (v. 12). The ark was carried this time, and when the men carrying it had taken six steps, a great sacrifice was made (v. 13). David was dressed in a linen ephod, and danced before the Lord with all his might (v. 14). And so it was that David and the whole house of Israel brought the ark up to Jerusalem with shouting and trumpets (v. 15). When the ark entered the city of David, Michal looked out the window and saw David dancing, and despised him (v. 16). They brought the ark to the tent that David had prepared for it, and more sacrifices were made (v. 17). David then blessed all the people, and gave them gifts (vv. 18-19). Afterwards, he came home to bless his own house, and was met with sarcasm from Michal (v. 20). David replies sharply—it was before the Lord, the same God who chose Michal’s husband over Michal’s father (v. 21). David insists that he will continue to behave in the same way (v. 22). As a result of this clash, Michal had no children (v. 23).

A Moment for Michal

Without arguing with the providence of God—to which we gladly submit—we can at least take a moment to feel bad for Michal. The last time she saw David in Scripture, she was helping him escape from a window (1 Sam. 19:12), and now she looks out at him through a window in contempt. She had been given to a man who loved her (Phaltiel in 2 Sam. 3:15-16), and had then been taken back from him by David, for apparently political reasons. When she comes back to David, he already has other multiple wives and probably a small harem. Great.

But she is still a female Uzzah. Uzzah was concerned that the ark would be dishonored if it fell, and so he took it upon himself to steady the ark the way he thought best. You know, he had his reasons. But God still struck him down as a result. Michal is concerned for David’s royal dignity, and objects to him being dishonored. When she complains that he had “uncovered” himself, she was not complaining about nakedness, because it says that he was wearing a linen ephod. He was not wearing his royal robes—and he was dancing in a way that she believed was inconsistent with his office. She tries to steady him, and has no children as a result.

Do it the Way God Says

David has 30,000 troops present for the first attempted transfer, and is humiliated in front of them. That is the same number that Israel lost to the Philistines in the battle at Aphek (1 Sam. 4). God had burst forth on the Philistines in the previous chapter, and He burst forth on Israelites for acting like Philistines in this chapter (transporting the ark by cart was a Philistine technique). This happens at a threshing floor, which is a common symbol of judgment in Scripture. David is defensively angry and fearful at first, but he learns the lesson of true gladness from the blessings that fall upon the head of the ark’s new temporary home. All of which is to say that reverence is defined by the Word of God, and not our own makeshifts.

Christ for the Nations

It would be easy for us to think that God loved the Jews exclusively in the Old Testament, but that the Gentiles are included in the New through a bit of reverse engineering. But the Gentiles are in view from Genesis through Malachi. There are too many passages to cite here, so let’s just look at what we have that is connected to our passage.

Obed-edom, who is given responsibility for the ark, is a Gentile. His name means servant of Edom, and he is a Gittite—which means that he was from Gath, Goliath’s home town. About 600 Gittites were in David’s refugee army later (2 Sam. 15:18), when he fled from his own son. David had 600 Israelites when he fled from an Israelite king, and 600 Gittites when he fled from Absalom. So here God blesses a Gentile and provokes David to action.

When the ark arrives in Jerusalem, it is established in a tabernacle that David built on Mt. Zion. When Solomon finally builds the Temple, he does so on Mt. Moriah. After Shiloh had been destroyed a generation or so before, the main high place was Gibeon—where God appeared to Solomon. What Solomon did was combine the functions of Gibeon and Zion in the building on Moriah—which is one of the ways music came into the formal worship of God. Some innovations are bad (carts) and others are good (music).

So what did the tabernacle of David on Zion represent? According to Scripture, it represented the salvation of the Gentiles. The prophet Amos declared that in the latter days, the tabernacle of David would be restored (Amos 9:11), and he was talking about this tabernacle. And James the Lord’s brother cites that verse from Amos as being fulfilled in the conversion of the Gentiles (Acts 15:16).

So Christ is the Savior of the nations, and this is why we sing to Him.

Read Full Article

The David Chronicles 37: Lord of the Bursting Dam

Joe Harby on July 7, 2013

http://www.christkirk.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/1731.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Introduction

If God is not establishing a work, or a house, or a kingdom, or a nation, then it cannot be established. And if God is doing so, then nothing whatever can prevent it—however mighty that opposing force might be.

The Text

“Then came all the tribes of Israel to David unto Hebron, and spake, saying, Behold, we are thy bone and thy flesh . . .” (2 Sam. 5:1-25).

Summary of the Text

The tribes of Israel come to David and present three arguments for making David king. They are related to him (v. 1), David has proven himself in battle (v. 2), and God has promised the shepherding/kingship to him (v. 2). And so the elders, representing the tribes, come to David in Hebron and make a pact with him (v. 3), and anoint him king over all twelve tribes (v. 3). David was 30 when he first became king in Hebron, reigning for 40 years total, 33 years over a united kingdom (vv. 4-5).

David starts by conquering a capital city from the Jebusites, a city that would not be part of any tribe—just as D.C. is not part of any state. At the same time, the city was in the territory or region of Benjamin, some consolation to the tribe of Saul. The Jebusites do a little trash talking from the wall, the meaning of which is ambiguous. The best guess is that they were saying that an army of blind men and cripples could defend this place against you all (v. 6). But David captured the city anyway (v. 7). They did it by climbing up a steep water tunnel (which archeologists have found and identified), and that is how David got saddled with Joab (v. 8; 1 Chron. 11:6). That water course was about fifty feet tall. David then consolidated his rule (v. 9), and God blessed him greatly (v. 10), and which David saw clearly (v. 12). Hiram of Tyre made an alliance with David (v. 11), and David had many more sons (vv. 13-16). From all these sons, the only two which receive subsequent mention are Nathan and Solomon, both sons of Bathsheba (1 Chron. 3:5). Nathan is an ancestor of Joseph (Luke 3:31).

At this the Philistines invaded, and David retreated into a stronghold (v. 17). The Philistines set up in the valley of Rephaim, a valley named after giants, just a couple miles west of Jerusalem, easily within sight (v. 18). David inquired of the Lord, and was told to go out (v. 19). He went and was victorious, like the breaching of a dam (v. 20). They captured the Philistine idols and burned them (v. 21). These idols were so pathetic that they weren’t even capable of running away like their worshipers could. The Philistines tried again, in the same place again (v. 22). When David inquired of God again, he was told to attack the Philistines from behind this time (v. 23), and to follow the lead of the Spirit in the tops of the trees (v. 24). The botanical identification of the trees is uncertain (mulberry, balsam, aspen?). This David did and struck down the Philistines decisively (v. 25).

Constitutional Government

When Samuel established the monarchy, he wrote down a constitution, and placed it before the Lord (1 Sam. 10:25). When David became king, the Lord had anointed him (through Samuel), but the people also established him as king through anointing him. He was the king-in-principle from the moment Samuel anointed him, but he was not installed until the people anointed him. This is contrary to the whole “divine right of kings” approach, and it is utterly contrary to the arrogant attitude of our current ruling elites. This is something which the Reformers saw very clearly, and was the basis of their understanding of government. We owe our republican forms of government to that understanding.

When David was anointed by them, he also made a covenant with them (v. 3). Israel was governed by the law of God (Deut. 17:14-20), of course, but it was also governed by a written constitution. This is because written constitutions are a great barrier to dishonest men, not to mention the cowardly men who let them be dishonest.

Big with Mercy

The last verse of Cowper’s great hymn (God Moves in a Mysterious Way) expresses a very biblical truth in an altogether lovely way:

“You fearful saints, fresh courage take;
The clouds you so much dread
Are big with mercy and will break
In blessing on your head.”

God’s deliverances often are given to us in bursts. The first victory here against the Philistines was at Baal- perazim, Lord of the Outburst. David said that the Lord broke forth on the Philistines like the breaching of water. In 1 Chronicles (1 Chron. 13:11), and in 2 Samuel, the time of this victory is followed by “the breach of Uzza,” or Perez-Uzza. This breach was a judgment, but also a mercy. Although Uzza died, the people of Israel were taught to receive back the ark of the covenant in reverence (carried by Levites, as the law required), and not hauled on a cart, the way the Philistines did it.

And David is the descendant of Perez, so named because he “breached” before Zarah, who had been marked and identified by a scarlet cord tied to his wrist (Gen. 38:28-30). Achan, who died for his treachery, was descended from Zarah. Rahab, who was the mother of David’s great-grandfather Boaz (descended from Perez), completed the breach when she let down a scarlet cord from her window at Jericho. Here is the line of blood red redemption, found always in the unlikely places! This is the line of the Lord Jesus Christ, and this is the way of the Lord Jesus Christ. What was His death and resurrection but the bursting of death’s dam?

And Then Pentecost

After the Lord breaks through, like the breaching of water, He delivers Israel in another unlikely way. He tells David to go around behind the Philistines, and to wait for the sound of the wind (think of the Spirit) in the tops of the trees. The text says explicitly that the Lord was going before them (v. 24). And then attack, following the Spirit. Never run ahead of the Spirit. Wait in Jerusalem until you receive power from on high. This second victory over the Philistines was just about a couple miles from where the Spirit was poured out upon the disciples centuries later.

This is how we are to fight giants in the valley of giants. We pray for the Lord to make a breach, like a dam bursting. We pray for the Lord to rush before us, like the wind in the top of the trees.

Read Full Article

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • …
  • 12
  • Next Page »
  • Worship With Us
  • Our Staff & Leadership
  • Our Mission
  • Our Distinctives
  • Our Constitution
  • Our Book of Worship, Faith, & Practice
  • Our Philosophy of Missions
Sermons
Events
Worship With Us
Get Involved

Our Church

  • Worship With Us
  • Our Staff & Leadership
  • Our Mission
  • Our Distinctives

Ministries

  • Center For Biblical Counseling
  • Collegiate Reformed Fellowship
  • International Student Fellowship
  • Ladies Outreach
  • Mercy Ministry
  • Bakwé Mission
  • Huguenot Heritage
  • Grace Agenda
  • Greyfriars Hall
  • New Saint Andrews College

Resources

  • Sermons
  • Bible Reading Challenge
  • Blog
  • Music Library
  • Weekly Bulletins
  • Hymn of the Month
  • Letter from Elders Regarding Relocating

Get Involved

  • Membership
  • Parish Discipleship Groups
  • Christ Church Downtown
  • Church Community Builder

Contact Us:

403 S Jackson St
Moscow, ID 83843
208-882-2034
office@christkirk.com
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

© Copyright Christ Church 2025. All Rights Reserved.

Copyright © 2025 · Genesis Framework · WordPress