Today’s Reading: 2 Samuel 11 & Psalm 70
One
evidence supporting the trustworthiness of the Bible is the remarkable honesty
with which it tells us about its heroes like Abraham, Moses, Joshua, Jeremiah,
Peter, Paul, and the others. The portrait of each and every hero is painted
with dark spots and all. We are told of their failures as well as their
triumphs. So it is with David – shepherd, giant-killer, poet, soldier, and
king. Here is a very great man. Here is “a man after God’s own heart” who loved
the Lord deeply. But at the same time that David’s army is winning a
military battle on foreign soil, Scripture records that he is losing a moral
battle at home.
Second
Samuel 11 records a dark day in king David’s life. This story of David’s moral
failure is a vivid illustration of a principle taught in James 1:13-15 – “Let no one say when he is tempted, ‘I am being
tempted by God,’ for God cannot be tempted with evil, and he himself tempts no
one. But each person is tempted when he is lured and enticed by his own
desire. Then desire when it has conceived gives birth to sin, and sin when
it is fully grown brings forth death.”
The
principle is this: sin is not just a one-off event, it is part of a
process. Sin has, as it were, a ‘domino effect’. Evil desire leads
to sin, and sin leads to death. In other words, there are triggers, and
there are consequences.
The
trigger was an unguarded moment. It was spring-time, the time when
kings should be off to war with their troops. David had sent his army,
under its commander, Joab, to besiege the city of Rabbah. But David
stayed at home in Jerusalem, relaxing. He could afford to. This was
a time of military strength, of material prosperity, of personal leisure.
This was his unguarded moment. In this moment, he allows the casual
glance to become a lustful gaze which progresses into rationalizing thought and
culminates in his tragic moral failure. He commits adultery then begins a
tangled web of deceit to try to cover his sin.
David’s
experience presents a stern warning to all of us – watch out for those
unguarded moments! “Idol hands are the devil’s worship.” We are all susceptible
to the lure of sin and, if we don’t constantly keep our hearts in check, we too
could fall victim to our sinful desires. The words of Paul in 1
Corinthians 10:12 drive the point home: “Therefore, let anyone who thinks that he
stands take heed lest he fall.” Beware of the unguarded moment.
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