A Story of Deliverance

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The following message by Alistair Begg is  made available by Truth For Life  for   more information visit  us online at truthforlife.org. Well, I invite you to turn with me to the Old  Testament, to 1 Samuel, and to chapter 23,   and I’ll read from verse 1. First Samuel 23: “Now they told David, ‘Behold, the Philistines   are fighting against Keilah and are robbing the  threshing floors.’ Therefore David inquired of the   LORD, ‘Shall I go and attack these Philistines?’  And the LORD said to David, ‘Go and attack the   Philistines and save Keilah.’ But David’s men  said to him, ‘Behold, we are afraid here in Judah;   how much more then if we go to Keilah against the  armies of the Philistines?’ Then David inquired of   the LORD again. And the LORD answered him, ‘Arise,  go down to Keilah, for I will give the Philistines   into your hand.’ And David and his men went to  Keilah and fought with the Philistines and brought   away their livestock and struck them with a great  blow. So David saved the inhabitants of Keilah.  “When Abiathar the son of Ahimelech had  fled to David to Keilah, he had come down   with an ephod in his hand. Now it was told Saul  that David had come to Keilah. And Saul said,   ‘God has given him into my hand, for he has shut  himself in by entering a town that has gates and   bars.’ And Saul summoned all the people to war, to  go down to Keilah, to besiege David and his men.   David knew that Saul was plotting harm against  him. And he said to Abiathar the priest,   ‘Bring the ephod here.’ Then David  said, ‘O LORD, the God of Israel,   your servant has surely heard that Saul seeks to  come to Keilah, to destroy the city on my account.   Will the men of Keilah surrender me into his hand?  Will Saul come down, as your servant has heard?   O LORD, the God of Israel, please tell your  servant.’ And the LORD said, ‘He will come down.’   Then David said, ‘Will the men  of Keilah surrender me and my men   into the hand of Saul?’ And the LORD  said, ‘They will surrender you.’   Then David and his men, who were about six  hundred, arose and departed from Keilah,   and they went wherever they could go. When Saul  was told that David had escaped from Keilah, he   gave up the expedition. And David remained in the  strongholds in the wilderness, in the hill country   of the wilderness of Ziph. And Saul sought him  every day, but God did not give him into his hand.  “David saw that Saul had come out to seek his  life. David was in the wilderness of Ziph at   Horesh. And Jonathan, Saul’s son, rose and went  to David at Horesh, and strengthened his hand   in God. And he said to him, ‘Do not fear, for  the hand of Saul my father shall not find you.   You shall be king over Israel, and I shall be  next to you. Saul my father also knows this.’ And   the two of them made a covenant before the LORD.  David remained at Horesh, and Jonathan went home.  “Then the Ziphites went up to Saul at Gibeah,  saying, ‘Is not David hiding among us in the   strongholds at Horesh, on the hill of Hachilah,  which is south of Jeshimon? Now come down, O king,   according to all your heart’s desire to come down,  and our part shall be to surrender him into the   king’s hand.’ And Saul said, ‘May you be blessed  by the LORD, for you have had compassion on me.   Go, make yet more sure. Know and see the place  where his foot is, and who has seen him there,   for it is told me that he is very cunning. See  therefore and take note of all the lurking places   where he hides, and come back to me with  sure information. Then I will go with you.   And if he is in the land, I will search  him out among all the thousands of Judah.’   And they arose and went to Ziph ahead of Saul. “Now David and his men were in the wilderness   of Maon, in the Arabah to the south of Jeshimon.  And Saul and his men went to seek him. And David   was told, so he went down to the rock and lived in  the wilderness of Maon. And when Saul heard that,   he pursued after David in the wilderness of Maon.  Saul went on one side of the mountain, and David   and his men on the other side of the mountain.  And David was hurrying to get away from Saul.   As Saul and his men were closing in on David and  his men to capture them, a messenger came to Saul,   saying, ‘Hurry and come, for the Philistines  have made a raid against the land.’   So Saul returned from pursuing after David and  went against the Philistines. Therefore that place   was called the Rock of Escape. And David went  up from there and lived in the strongholds of   Engedi.” Amen.  Well, a friend said to me last week, “You have  already given forty-five talks on 1 Samuel.”   And the inference, I think, was, “It might be  time for you to pick up the pace a little.”   It wasn’t said unkindly, and I think somewhat  humorously. But I was struck by the fact that we   have already looked into this book some forty-five  times. And so I said to myself, “Well, I will   endeavor to go through the twenty-nine verses  here, as it were, in one bite this morning.”  I have entitled our study “A Story” or “A Song  of Deliverance.” I suppose it could be “Stories”;   it could be plural, “Stories of Deliverance,”  because there are four deliverances here that   we want to notice, and I hope that might be a  help in guiding us along. When David reflected   on the circumstances that are described here,  he wrote a song, and we read part of it in Psalm   54. And he says there, reflecting on what  we are now about to consider, “I will give   thanks to your name, O LORD, for it is good.  … He has delivered me.” “He has delivered me.”  Now, we come to chapter 23 with, as  it were, our minds still at the end   of chapter 22. And I hope you will recall  that we ended with that striking contrast   between Saul’s statement made to Ahimelech, “You  shall surely die”—that’s in 22:16—and the promise   of David in 22:23, “With me you will be safe.” In  the presence of the shepherd king there is safety.   Because we have already discovered  that David is the Lord’s anointed.   He is, if you like, the messiah in process. One  day, as we have sung, great David’s greater Son   will fix his royal throne, but at the moment,  he is the “Christ,” he is the anointed one.   He is the one on whom God has set his heart to be  his king. And as a result of that, those who find   refuge in the king enjoy the same favor and  the same protection that he himself enjoys.  Let me just fast-forward, parenthetically, as it  comes to mind: that is why when we say that to be   in Christ means everything, and to be, then, in  Christ means that we ultimately cannot die—that we   will face the physical transition from  life into eternity, but in Christ,   because we are in the framework, in union  with the Shepherd King, we enjoy the same   protection that he himself enjoys. Now, in contrast to that, of course,   Saul has been rejected. From him the Spirit of the  Lord has departed. You need to go back to chapter   16 and read how those verbs sort of classify  his experience: “rejected” as king; the Spirit   of God has “departed” from him, and now he is a  “tormented” soul. And in his torment he is fixated   on killing God’s king. And that’s actually the  whole story here: it is the rejected king in   pursuit of God’s anointed king. And as we said  last time, he really provides us—Saul does—with   a picture of the antichrist, small a. Because  to be antichrist is to be opposed to God’s king.   And whether that opposition comes in a person,  or whether it comes in an institution, or whether   it comes in a worldview, that is what it is:  setting itself up in opposition to the Lord.  And what we discover is that Saul by  this point in his life has really no   other purpose for his existence other than the  elimination of David. That’s how he’s gonna spend   the balance of his life: trying to get ahold of  God’s anointed king. And one sentence that falls   almost in the middle of this chapter, there  at the end of the final sentence of verse 14,   gives to us, really, an apt  summary of what’s going on.   You see it there: “And Saul sought him every  day, but God did not give him into his hand.”  Now, with that we come to deliverance  number one, which, in verses 1–5,   is a deliverance for the inhabitants of Keilah. Now, I take it that what is described here in   these opening verses was taking place  while Saul was wreaking havoc in Nob.   If you think, again, in movie terms, you’re  watching the movie, and the events are unfolding.   We’ve seen what has happened in Nob, and then  the movie continues, and all of a sudden we are   in Keilah—which in actual fact is to backtrack,  is to fill in, because this, I take it,   has been happening simultaneously. So here you  have Saul in all of his aggravation, destroying   the priesthood, while David, the anointed  king, is dealing a blow to the Philistines.  Now, if we’ve been paying attention, we know  that Saul was charged with the responsibility—the   exercise of his kingship was explained in some  measure in just a sentence: “He shall save my   people from the hand of the Philistines.” You  have to go all the way back to chapter 9 for that.   So Samuel is told, “Set Saul apart. And one of  the things that he will do is he’ll take care of   the Philistines.” Well, in actual fact, he’s not  taking care of the Philistines, but in this case,   David is doing what Saul should be doing. Now, how does he do it? Well, “Wise men say   only fools rush in.” And you can see here that  David is not a fool. He inquires of the Lord.   Now, sometime in your home Bible study you can  have a discussion about how this is taking place.   You may ponder the possibility that the  prophet Gad, to whom we were introduced   at the early part of chapter 22, perhaps he is  still around. However God communicated with David,   he communicated clearly with him. And in verse  2, having inquired of the Lord, “Shall I go and   attack [the] Philistines?” the answer came back,  “Go and attack the Philistines and save Keilah.”  Well, that’s all well and good, but he’s not there  on his own, is he? He is in charge of this motley   crew, this strange group of individuals, a bit  like—a microcosm of it would be that Hoosiers team   in the movie about the Indiana basketball  team. I have such a vivid picture of that,   and what a strange little group they looked,  and how impossible it seemed that they would   be able to do anything of any worth at all.  And that’s exactly what this group looked like.  Well, what they had to say to him was, “Well,  wait a minute, David…” Verse 3: “We’re scared   enough right here where we are without getting  into it with the armies of the Philistines.” They   are really a strange group made up of, as we saw  last time, those who were distressed and “in debt”   and some “bitter in soul” and so on. They just  really didn’t look like much of a group at all.   Neither did the followers of Jesus with  his disciples, and frankly, neither do we.  And so, what does David do? Well,  perhaps in gracious response to this   pushback, he inquires of the Lord again, so  that the Lord might give to them the answer.   And the answer comes back: “Arise, [and]  go down to Keilah.” And then there is,   along with the previous answer, an assurance:  “I will give the Philistines into your hand[s].”  Now, these fearful followers, then,  have been responded to by God,   and he has assured them that if they go in  this way, then success will be their portion.   And you will see there that the way in which this  is explained, in a sentence at the end of verse 5,   is that “David saved the inhabitants of Keilah.” “Well,” you say, “well, that’s interesting. I   thought it was God who gave them into his hand.”  That’s exactly right. God gave them into David’s   hand, and David saved the inhabitants of Keilah.  He knew how this worked, because that is exactly   the language that is used when he  took on Goliath of Gath. You remember,   he looked him—I was gonna say in the eye, but  he kind of probably looked him in the chest,   and he said to Goliath, “The LORD will deliver you  into my hand, and I will strike you down.” That’s   it. That is it! That’s it in Keilah, and that’s it  in Cleveland: the Lord delivers and enables those   of us who serve to see salvation brought about. Well, then we go from verse 6 to verse 14,   where we find a deliverance, this time for  David—a deliverance from the hand of Saul.  Now, Abiathar, whom we had met at  the end of chapter 22—apparently   the sole survivor of the brutal destruction where,  you see back in 22, “Doeg the Edomite … struck   down the priests, [killing] on that day  eighty-five persons who wore the linen   ephod.” This was a linen garment that was part of  the priestly uniform, if you like. The high priest   had a particular one which contained in it the  Urim and the Thummim. I’m not gonna delay on this.   You can deal with this just with a concordance  on your own, and it will give you a profitable   afternoon if you’re looking for something to do.  The Urim and the Thummim was simply one of the   means that was used at this point in history for  the people of God to discern the direction of God.  And actually, if you think about  this for a moment here—this   whole idea of God communicating with  David—you realize that we really are not   sure exactly how all this really  works. And when we’re tempted to be   sidetracked by that, a sentence like this from  our good friend John Woodhouse is helpful,   where he writes, “Bible writers” are interested in  “the fact and the content of divine revelation,”   seeing it “far more important than the mechanism”  by which the revelation was given. Now, that seems   to make a lot of sense, doesn’t it? That the  fact and the content of the revelation is more   important than the mechanism by which it came. But verse 6 is clearly important: “When Abiathar   the son of Ahimelech had fled to David in Keilah,  he had come down with an ephod in his hand.”   I probably would imagine that it was  the ephod that had been his father’s,   and now he appears. It’s that important? Yes, it  is important, because it is going to be by means   of that Urim and Thummim that more of  David’s questions are going to be answered.  Now, in verse 7, Saul knew  that David had come to Keilah.   And he does not rejoice in the victory over the  Philistines. It doesn’t say, “And Saul discovered   that David had come to Keilah and in Keilah  he had dealt the Philistines a massive blow.”   Saul is supposed to be the king who will deal with  the Philistines. There’s not even a mention of the   Philistines! Why? He can’t rejoice in that  victory because he is consumed with murder.  We might just note in passing that sin distorts  a man or a woman’s thinking. Sin distorts   our thinking. Our actions are the product of our  thinking. And if you look carefully at the text,   you will realize that Saul, who is a murderous  tyrant, is so messed up by this point that   he can actually view the things that he’s doing  and is about to do as coming from the hand of God.   Do you see the irony in this? “And Saul said, ‘God  has given him into my hand.’” “This is what God is   doing. God wants me to kill his anointed king.”  He’s going to find justification in his actions.  I resist the temptation to pause and  give you a litany of such statements   made to me as a pastor over the last forty years  or so, as people have sat beside me and said, “Oh,   but you don’t understand: God is very happy if  I would do this. Surely God is at work in this.   God wants me to do this,” and so on. No,  no. Sin, you see, distorts the thinking.  “Oh, well, we’ve trapped him,” he says. And  so, in verse 8, he summons “all the people   to war.” And at the same time, David  has been made aware of this plot.   And so, what does he do? Well, he does what  he does: he inquires of the Lord. “Bring the   ephod here.” “You haven’t just come down here for  nothing,” he says to Abiathar. “I’m sure in the   purposes of God he has saved you, he has brought  you here. You’re the man for the moment. Get that   stuff out of your linen ephod here, and let’s ask  God what we’re supposed to do. Bring it here.”  And “then David said, ‘O LORD, the God of  Israel…’” “The God of Israel.” God is the God   of Abram, Isaac, and of Jacob. This is not some  personal little skirmish between David and Saul.   No, “You are the God of Israel. Your servant has  surely heard that Saul seeks to come to Keilah to   destroy the city on my account. Therefore, let me  ask you this: Will the men of Keilah surrender me   into his hand? Will they give me up? And will  Saul show up?” That’s his twofold question:   “Will they give me up, and will Saul show up?” And you will notice that the Lord answers   question number two at the end of verse 11: “And  the Lord said, ‘Yeah, he’s gonna show up. He will   come down.’” Then David asks the first part of the  question again: “Will the men of Keilah surrender   me”—notice—“and my men into the hand of Saul?”  “You are the God of Israel. You are the God of   your people. These people that I am now the  commander of—a motley crew, I recognize,”   David might have said, “but nevertheless,  they’re the people that you’ve given me.”  You see, this is it for the leader at any point.  The average pastor is an inadequate soul himself,   and he is leading an inadequate bunch of people in  his wake. “These are the people you’ve given me.”   He must have said to himself, many a time as he  looked at them in the wilderness there, “Are we   really gonna do anything of substantial worth with  this group?” And then perhaps he thought about   himself. And the Lord answered, “Well, they will  surrender to you. They are going to give you up.”  Now, no comment is actually made here by  the writer on the morality of the matter.   Because think about it: Who are these  people that are about to give him up?   They’re the people that he has saved  by fighting against the Philistines.   He can’t even trust the people he saved! That  ought to make you think about Jesus as well.  Well, they could have protected David out of  gratitude. But apparently, fear of Saul was   a greater motivator. After all, in fairness to  them, think about Nob. Think about them having   a council meeting: “What do you think we ought  to do about this? I mean, we don’t want to get   on Saul’s bad side. Remember what happened in  Nob.” Someone in the meeting says, “You mean to   tell me he has a good side?” Someone says, “Good  point. I think we’ll stick with the program.”  And “then David and his men,” who now number about  six hundred, “arose and departed from Keilah.”   I like that. I like it very much indeed. I like  what is missing, and obviously missing. What’s   missing? Well, apparently, no consultation. No  committee meeting. No gathering to reflect on   the circumstances. No, they arose and they left.  Nobody sitting around saying, “Well, you know,   why don’t we just see how things unfold?” No. Dare I say it? No prayer meeting.   No prayer meeting. You say, “Wait a minute, now…”  No, I mean it entirely! You remember I’ve told   you in the past about an elderly member of my  congregation in Scotland called Mr. Collins, the   one who had that stick, and who told me that if  I ever said anything that was remotely heretical,   he would come and take the stick to me. He was a  very forthright man. And I remember him speaking   to a group of young people, and someone was asking  about something that was so clearly a violation of   the purposes and plan of God; it was contrary  to the law of God and to the tenor of Christian   living. And I remember he said to him, “Listen,  young fellow: don’t pray about it. Chuck it!”   “Chuck it!” And there’s something of that  here: “There’s no time for a prayer meeting.   Let’s get outta here!” And out they go. Saul then realizes that it’s not gonna   come to fruition, and so his expedition is  cancelled and the extermination is delayed.   And so, out they go, back into the caves,  the captain and his band on the run.   And what is the explanation for  the deliverance at this point?   There you have it, the verse we mentioned  earlier: “God did not give him into his hand.”  Well, the third deliverance, I suggest to you,  in 15–18, is David being delivered from fear.  You read verse 15 and you find yourself saying,  “Where is the good part in verse 15, that   ‘David saw that Saul had come out to seek  his life’?” So in other words, he’s living   constantly under threat of his life. He’s “in the  wilderness of Ziph at Horesh.” It really doesn’t   sound that good, does it? And I don’t think it is.  The little study I did on it, it’s not the place   that you want to go for your vacation. It  certainly—I mean, if you like Mentor Headlands,   you’re not going to like the wilderness  of Ziph, and that’s where they were. It’s   really a very sad-looking picture,  isn’t it? An inhospitable place.  I don’t know, if David had had a soliloquy at  this point—if we had heard him as he just got   up in the morning and rubbed his eyes and looked  out on the day—we might have heard him saying,   “How did I get myself into this? It seemed  at first, when Samuel came and anointed me,   that life was filled with such promise. But  this is just one disaster after another.”  And then, into the darkness, the light shines,  and Jonathan—Jonathan, whom we know from the past;   Jonathan, remember, who had taken off  his vestiture, his indication of his   princely rule, and put it on David  on a previous occasion —“Jonathan,   Saul’s son, rose and went to David at Horesh.”  You see, there was a decisiveness about this,   a determination about this. He got up and  he said, “I’m going to go and find David.”  It’s quite interesting, isn’t it, that  hatred towards David had essentially blinded   Saul, whereas love for David shone, as it  were light, on the pathway, leading him   to his bosom buddy? For Jonathan was  David’s best friend in the world.   And he did what in Christian  terms, at least, best friends   seek to do: he “strengthened his hand in God.” Incidentally, I have chosen not to delay   at this instance, but for yourself, there’s  another study here, and that is just to   look at every time hands are mentioned. It is,  if you like, a “handy” study, because “the hand   of God,” “the hand of the Philistines,” “the  hand of Saul,” and so on, is worth considering.  Anyway, he “strengthened his  hand in God.” How did he do this?  Well, he did it first of all by his presence.  By his presence. That’s why the isolation   of these days is so daunting: because the  presence of one another really does matter.  He did it not only by his presence but also by his  exhortation: “He said to him, ‘Do not fear’”—to   which David might have been apt to say,  “That’s easy for you to say, Jonathan.   I mean, if you’d been with me for the  last while, you would realize that I am   filled with fear. I lie down at night hoping  that I’m alive in the morning, and I get up   in the morning, and I have to go and hide some  place different from where I hid yesterday.”  But, you see, his exhortation is not simply a  call, “Do not fear,” but it is accompanied by   an explanation. And the explanation gives the  foundation as the antidote to the fear itself.   To say just “Do not fear” is not really any help  to anybody at all: “Well, okay, I’ll try my best.”   No. What does he say? “Do not fear,” number  one, because “the hand of Saul won’t find you.   He’s not gonna find you, I guarantee  you.” Secondly, “You shall be king.”   This is actually the first outright declaration  on the part of Jonathan to David in this way.   It has been by inference all the way along. And in  the narrative story of 1 Samuel, different parts   of the journey along the way are building the  understanding that that which had taken place   in a secret anointing was going to come to  fruition. “I shall be next to you,” he says.   “You’ll be the king, and I shall be next to  you.” Sadly, that was not going to happen. But   it is a wonderful expression of devotion. “Hey,  ain’t it good to know … you’ve got a friend?”  And fourthly, he says, strengthening his  hand, “Saul my father also knows this.”   “I know,” Jonathan may have said,  “that he doesn’t want to admit it.   He may not want to admit it, but he knows it.”  And then, strengthening his hand, strengthening  his own, it says, “And [then] the two of them   made a covenant before the LORD.” I take it that  what happened was they simply reaffirmed what   we saw quite wonderfully back in chapter 18. So, he reminded David of God’s promise:   “You will be the king.” He encouraged David  to let the facts overrule his feelings,   so that in the deep, cloudy darkness,  in the distressing, troublesome   incidences of daily life, he’s saying essentially  to David, “It’s going to be very important, David,   that you fly by the instruments. Please don’t  try and make sense of what’s happening here   by looking out of the window. You are lost  in turbulence, and you are lost in cloud.”  Neither of the two of them were to know that this  was the last occasion this side of eternity that   they would be together. It makes it very poignant,  doesn’t it? Because there will be a last time   when we’re in the presence of our  friends. And that’s why all of our   hellos and all of our goodbyes really  matter—the way we walk from a situation.  You say, “Well, you’re sounding a little  sentimental here, Alistair.” Well, careful.   Careful. Because it’s not that sentimental  coziness is what is expressed here—some   kind of touchy-feely thing: “Oh, Jonathan and  David…” No! No. Ralph Davis gets it beautifully:   “Encouragement from God for the people  of God comes from the word of God.”   “Encouragement from God for the people  of God comes from the word of God.”  And then, finally and quickly, deliverance  that comes at the eleventh hour.  And this is the story of the Ziphites. And the  wilderness of Ziph is where the Ziphites lived.   They come to Saul, and they say,  “We’ve got another chance for you   to get your hands on David.” And you can see  that there in verse 20: “Come down, O king.   I know you want to come down. We’ll  surrender him into the king’s hands.”   And the response of the king there  is actually pathetic, I think:   “And Saul said, ‘May you be blessed by the  LORD, for you have had compassion on me.’”   I read it that way because that’s the way  it comes across to me. What a big… Well,   this is not good. This is not good. He casts  himself as the victim! “I’m the victim!”   David’s the fugitive! David’s the one you’re  trying to kill! “Oh, thank you for taking pity   on me. I’m sure you understand how difficult it is  for me as the rejected, tormented king.” You know?   You see how sin really distorts? You see how  self-pity invades a soul, even in the darkness?  And so, verses 22 and 23, I don’t know what his  great concern is here. Maybe it’s because he   had to cancel his last expedition that he doesn’t  want to have another one that results in nothing,   and so he gives very detailed requirements: “See  where his foot is. Ask if anybody’s seen him.   I know that he is very cunning. Take note of all  the places where he hides. Come back to me with   sure information. Then I’ll go with you.” Does this make you think of Herod at all?   I just put in my notes, “Herod.” Remember that,  to the wise men? “Go and search for him, and when   you come back, then I’ll be able to worship him  too.” Well, that wasn’t the objective of Saul,   but it’s the same mentality. It’s the spirit  of the antichrist: both Herod and Saul,   opposed to the one who is the anointed king. And  so “they arose and went to Ziph ahead of Saul.”  Now, at this point, there is no further dialogue.  At this point, it’s simply descriptive. So,   if you imagine, here’s where the musicians  really come into their own, where all that we’re   doing is we’re seeing this scene unfold. And the  mastery of people who write movie scores is seen   in something like this, so that we’re helped by  the way in which the music underlying the visual   creates this sense of anxiety and pressure  that we may not get unless we bow ourselves   underneath it, unless we enjoy the story. “Now David and his men were in the wilderness   of Maon in the Arabah to the South of Jeshimon.  Saul and his men went to seek him.” Ba-dum-bum.   “And David was told, so he went down to the  rock and he lived in the wilderness of Maon.   And when Saul heard that, he said, ‘Let’s go to  the wilderness of Maon.’” Da-dun-dum. “And Saul   was on one side of the mountain, and David and  his men were on the other side of the mountain,   and maybe Saul was trying a pincer move, and David  said to his guys, ‘Retreat!’ and was hurrying to   get away from Saul. And Saul and his men were  closing in on David”—da-da-dum, da-da-dum,   da-da-dum-dum-dum—“and his  men to capture them.” And now,   just when the whole thing  is gonna end at chapter 23,   somebody comes onto the battlefield and says,  “Hey, we got a problem with a Philistine raid,   and if you don’t get out here now, Saul, and do  what you’re supposed to do, we’re all dead men.”  “So Saul returned from pursuing after  David and went against the Philistines.   [And] therefore that place was called the Rock  of Escape,” or it was called the Narrow Escape.   The people would have picnics there in later  years, and grandchildren would ask their   grandparents, “Why is this called Narrow Escape?”  And they would say, “Oh, let me tell you, son.   Let me tell you, a great thing happened here.” What a terrific story!   Stranger almost than fiction. And that’s  why David, when he reflected on it,   as we read together, wrote, “Strangers have arisen  against me; ruthless men seek my life; … God is   my helper; … he has delivered me.” And then it  simply says, “And David went up from there,”   and he now moved into the region of Engedi. Now, let me just finish in a sentence or two   in this way. Imagine yourself as part of that  group—the motley crew, as we’ve referred to it,   which perhaps is rather unkind, but  they’re described as not a particularly   attractive bunch. You imagine that you’re part  of that, and now the eleventh-hour deliverance   has come, and so we say, “Captain David,  Commander David, where are we going now?”  And David says, “We’re going wherever.” “‘Wherever’? Where is ‘wherever’?”  “Follow me. You’ll find out.” Someone else in the group says,   “Hey, Captain David? You know, when I joined  this group, I never bargained for any of this.”  David says, “Don’t worry. I’ve got your back.”  Someone else says, “How in the world  are we possibly gonna get through this?”  Now, that’s just the way that some of us may  be feeling: “Jesus, where are we going now?”  “Follow me.” “Jesus,   I didn’t realize that it would be rough like this.  Jesus, how can we possibly get through this?”  You see, because here’s what we’re  learning, or learn—I hope we learn:   in laying down our lives to  serve and follow the King,   we join him on the path of suffering, knowing  that he will keep us safe on the journey.   You see, none of us have the strength  or the ability to get through it.  The night is dark, but I[’m] not forsaken. For by my side, my Savior … will stay. …  To this I hold, my Shepherd will defend me. Through the deepest valley, he will lead.  Lord, meet us where we are today. And now, unto him who is able to keep us   from falling, to present us faultless before the  presence of his glory with exceeding joy, to the   only wise God our Savior, be glory and majesty,  dominion and power, now and forevermore. Amen. This message was brought to you from Truth  For Life where the learning is for living   to learn more about truth for life with Alistair  Begg visit us online at truthforlife.org
Info
Channel: Alistair Begg
Views: 12,464
Rating: 4.8733029 out of 5
Keywords: Biblical Figures, Christ as King, Christian Thinking, Faith, Fear, Trusting God
Id: 5lXP47_5O-M
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 41min 21sec (2481 seconds)
Published: Tue Jul 14 2020
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