When I was still a young believer of 19 years
old, I attended a small Baptist church.
There was always a shortage of workers in the church, so I was appointed
as Sunday school teacher to a group of fourth grade boys. I was given little training; just handed a
"quarterly" and assigned my room and group of boys.
Our lessons, as I recall, were about the
"heroes" of the Old Testament, the books of Judges and 1 and 2
Samuel. As I was still fairly new myself
to these stories, I was learning right along with my class, just trying to keep
at least a week ahead of them.
It wasn't long before I began to realize that
these "heroes" were not really heroes, they were bloody, violent
womanizing men, who seemed to have little if any regard for human life. My task it seems, was to be something of what
today would be called a "spin doctor." I had to make these guys look good to my
impressionable boys. It was hard.
Sadly however, we teachers seemed to be more
concerned about trivial matters then about the real moral conflicts. Some for instances:
David vows to kill every male in the household of Nabal because Nabal had refused to provide him and his men with food (1 Samuel 25). We were more concerned with our boys' giggles over David's referring to these people as "any that pisseth against the wall" (25:34 KJV) than over their hero planning to slaughter innocent people.
David brings the Ark of the Covenant into
Jerusalem (2 Samuel 6) and celebrates by dancing "before the LORD"
with all his might, clothed only in "a linen ephod," apparently not a
very modest garment and act. David's
wife greets him with scorn, accusing him of exposing himself to the women like
some pervert (6:20). David counters by
cutting her off from sex for the rest of her life (verses 21 and 23). Honestly, we were more concerned about David
dancing (a Baptist taboo) then about his cruelty to his wife.
And the story continues as David himself
commits adultery and murder; then his whole family falls apart. One son rapes his half-sister, then her
brother murders him and later leads a coup against his father. Civil wars follows -- violence and
murder. David ends up a pitiful old man. I can't remember how I explained all this to
fourth grade boys, or later to my own children.
How can I even explain these matters to adults?
And then we have the passages that present David
as "a man after God's own heart."
How can we justify that statement?
Well first of all, the statement does not
mean that David had a heart for God, but that God had a heart for David; in
other words, it's not saying that David sought God, but that God sought David
first! Compare the Hebrew construction
in these three passages:
"... Yahweh has
sought for Himself a man (literally) according to His heart." (1
Samuel 13:14)
"And his (Jonathan's)
armor bearer said to him, 'Do all that is in your heart; you go first; look I'm
with you according to your heart.'" (1 Samuel 14:7)
(David said to the
LORD), "For the sake of Your word and according to your heart, You
have done all this ..." (2 Samuel 7:21)
In all three, the
expression "according to your (or his) heart" has the meaning of
something like "as you choose" or "according to your
choice." We would say that God
chose David, a violent womanizer, an adulterer and murderer, a failure as a
husband and father to be the object of His grace. And we're not told why.
David's behavior is
not commended or justified, simply recorded, as part of the history of God's
chosen but sinful nation and of the family line of His Messiah, Jesus.But David did have a heart for God; we see it in the Psalms he composed, as he pours out the longings of his heart.
God
in the Bible does not present to us "good guys"; if we're looking for
them we will be sorely disappointed. He
rather presents to us a history of failures -- of fallen men and women, who
occasionally demonstrate a great love for God and their fellow human
beings. The people in the Bible are much
like the people we encounter in history, or in the news, or in our
churches. They are much like
ourselves: people who have come to God
as sinners and who have received and enjoy His grace.
2 comments:
I understand that "God had a heart for David," but nevertheless, David won't be one of the first I look up when I get to heaven. But maybe when my old nature is discarded I'll be more gracious. We'll see.
My father ran off with my mom's sister when I was a boy, and after that forgot I existed. David might well have been his prototype.
Sour grapes? You bet. Did you think your readers were all loving and forgiving?
Best as always from one who likes the way your mind works.
Bob McCollum
Good thing God has a heart for sinners or we would all be screwed! Glad He shows us this over & over in the Bible. I pray he gives me a heart like His for others.
(got a good chuckle about dancing)
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