1. David had all the potential to be a great king.
- 16:1, 5-13 = Divine blessing, confirmation, & guidance
**notice however, humble beginning
**notice also, God’s choice for ‘most likely to succeed’ v.7
16:18; 17:4-11, 26, 32-37, 45-47; 18:30 = Courageous, confident, & great leader (vs Saul hiding in the luggage), giving guarantees ahead of time.
2. David demonstrates his righteous careful character through extreme trials.
18:10-11, 17, 19, 25, 19:6, 9-12, 18, 20:41-42, 21:13-22:2, 22:21-23 = Saul’s attempts to kill David -> Saul makes aggressive efforts to kill him, David loses one of his best friends, flees like a criminal, makes himself look insane, and Saul kills the priests in pursuing David.
*23:1-14 = stands up to his people, seeks God’s guidance
*24 = David’s test of sparing Saul’s life & standing up to his men. Attention to detail despite everything pointing to God’s deliverance.
*26 = David spares him again & again stands up to his men.
*30 = David’s own peeps talk of stoning him. Seeking God through the situation is part of being righteous.
2Sa 1 & 4 = David continuing to respect the King’s office
2Sa 7 = David’s covenant with God
8:15 = justice and equity
9:1-13 = David’s integrity
Character tests = Spares Saul’s life, is pressured by his men, is under threat of being stoned, David is reliant on God, trusts God, continues to pray to God (ref Psalms)
3. David saves his soul by submitting faithfully and quickly to God’s discipline.
2Sa 11 = David’s complacency leads to committing serious sin.
2Sa 12:1-25 = discipline (Psalm 51)
*Notice that David accepts what God uses to punish him. David doesn’t mope around.
*Ref David’s continued rapport with Nathan all the way into 1Kings
2Sa 15-18 Absalom’s rebellion and David’s response.
David ends his life with the legacy of a man after God’s own heart intact, ‘faithful in all things’, (Act 13:22; 1Kings 15:3-5)
Concluding principles that come from comparing Saul & David’s life:
1. What makes a man mighty in God’s eyes is not his ability to physically conquer but rather his commitment to carefully obeying God.
2. Response to discipline is a defining moment and test for people, possibly more than anything else.
3. Having the deck stacked in your favor is an indicator of future POTENTIAL, not future SUCCESS.
New principles from David’s life
1. Complacency kills. (David’s comfy in his palace instead of going to battle, Pro 1:32)
2. God expects us to respond righteously to authority even if/when they respond unrighteously. (Rom 13; 1Ti 5:19; 1Pe 3; Mat 5:38-41)
3. God expects us to be faithful, NOT perfect.
4. Growing distant from church members and/or your pastor(s) after discipline is a huge red flag. (notice David’s continued comms with Nathan vs Saul)
5. God doesn’t hold grudges. (He will bless and work all things for good if you’ll just turn and be faithful to Him. e.g. God doesn’t desire the death of the wicked [Eze 18, 33], and uses Bathsheba to continue David’s bloodline)
6. God demands our attention to detail even under pressure. (David slows down when pressured to kill Saul, doesn’t violate God’s command about building the temple, etc. vs Saul’s compromise, or Moses’ rush to strike the rock)
7. God expects you to honor your covenants/keep your word even to your own detriment. (Psa 15:4; 1Sa 20:14-17 w/ 2Sa 21:1-2)
8. Your sin has consequences and God expects you to accept that and move on. (David’s life was characterized by trouble after what happens with Bathsheba, but he doesn’t complain about it)
9. It’s important to be in your place when the fighting starts. (You don’t have to go sword to sword but do your part! This requires sacrifice, the good of the “ nation” over personal achievement/comfort. Don’t be someone who sits on the sideline or worse, thinks we shouldn’t be fighting)
Closing Contemplation: at the end of your life, will your choices reveal you to have been more like Saul or David?