David Anointed and Opposed — Part One

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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. Now we’re going to turn together to 2 Samuel  and to chapter 2. And this chapter will be   the focus of our attention both this  morning and then again this evening.   And in light of that, I’m going to read the entire  chapter. Two Samuel 2 and reading from verse 1:  “After this”—that is, after the lamentation that  we considered a couple of weeks ago—“after this   David inquired of the LORD, ‘Shall I go up into  any of the cities of Judah?’ And the LORD said   to him, ‘Go up.’ David said, ‘To which shall  I go up?’ And he said, ‘To Hebron.’ So David   went up there, and his two wives also, Ahinoam of  Jezreel and Abigail the widow of Nabal of Carmel.   And David brought up his men who were  with him, everyone with his household,   and they lived in the towns of Hebron. And the men  of Judah came, and there they anointed David king   over the house of Judah. “When they told David,   ‘It was the men of Jabesh-gilead who buried Saul,’  David sent messengers to the men of Jabesh-gilead   and said to them, ‘May you be blessed by the LORD,  because you showed this loyalty to Saul your lord   and buried him. Now may the LORD show steadfast  love and faithfulness to you. And I will do   good to you because you have done this thing.  Now therefore let your hands be strong, and   be valiant, for Saul your lord is dead, and the  house of Judah has anointed me king over them.’  “But Abner the son of Ner, commander of  Saul’s army, took Ish-bosheth the son of Saul   and brought him over to Mahanaim, and he made  him king over Gilead and the Ashurites and   Jezreel and Ephraim and Benjamin and all Israel.  Ish-bosheth, Saul’s son, was forty years old when   he began to reign over Israel, and he reigned two  years. But the house of Judah followed David. And   the time that David was king in Hebron over the  house of Judah was seven years and six months.  “Abner the son of Ner, and the servants  of Ish-bosheth the son of Saul,   went out from Mahanaim to Gibeon. And Joab the  son of Zeruiah and the servants of David went   out and met them at the pool of Gibeon. And they  sat down, the one on the one side of the pool,   and the other on the other side of the pool.  And Abner said to Joab, ‘Let the young men arise   and compete before us.’ And Joab said, ‘Let them  arise.’ Then they arose and passed over by number,   twelve for Benjamin and Ish-bosheth the son  of Saul, and twelve of the servants of David.   And each caught his opponent by the head  and thrust his sword in his opponent’s side,   so they fell down together. Therefore that place  was called Helkath-hazzurim, which is at Gibeon.   And the battle was very fierce that  day. And Abner and the men of Israel   were beaten before the servants of David. “And the three sons of Zeruiah were there,   Joab, Abishai, and Asahel. Now Asahel was … swift  of foot as a wild gazelle. And Asahel pursued   Abner, and as he went, he turned neither to the  right … nor to the left from following Abner.   Then Abner looked behind him and said, ‘Is it  you, Asahel?’ And he answered, ‘It is I.’ Abner   said to him, ‘Turn aside to your right hand or  to your left, and seize one of the young men and   take his spoil.’ But Asahel would not turn aside  from following him. And Abner said again to   Asahel, ‘Turn aside from following me. Why should  I strike you to the ground? How then could I lift   up my face to your brother Joab?’ But he refused  to turn aside. Therefore Abner struck him in the   stomach with the butt of his spear, so that the  spear came out at his back. And he fell there and   died where he was. And all who came to the place  where Asahel had fallen and died, stood still.  “But Joab and Abishai pursued Abner. And as the  sun was going down they came to the hill of Ammah,   which lies before Giah on the  way to the wilderness of Gibeon.   And the people of Benjamin gathered themselves  together behind Abner and became one group and   took their stand on the top of a hill. Then Abner  called to Joab, ‘Shall the sword devour forever?   Do you not know that the end will be bitter?  How long will it be before you tell your people   to turn from the pursuit of their brothers?’ And  Joab said, ‘As God lives, if you had not spoken,   surely the men would not have given up the  pursuit of their brothers until the morning.’ So   Joab blew the trumpet, and all the men stopped and  pursued Israel no more, … did they fight anymore.  “And Abner and his men went all  that night through the Arabah.   They crossed the Jordan, and marching  the whole morning, they came to Mahanaim.   Joab returned from the pursuit of Abner. And  when he had gathered all the people together,   there were missing from David’s servants nineteen  men besides Asahel. But the servants of David had   struck down of Benjamin 360 of Abner’s men. And  they took up Asahel and buried him in the tomb   of his father, which was at Bethlehem.  And Joab and his men marched all night,   and the day broke upon them at Hebron.” This is the Word of the Lord.   And thanks be to God. And we pause before in prayer:  Lord, speak to me, that I may speak  in living echoes of your tone.   As you have taught, so let me teach. We’re  erring children, lost and lone. Amen.  Well, we take our Bibles, and we  pick things up from where we were   as the great journey in following  David towards the throne continues.  You know, the task of the Bible teacher—whether  it is my task right now or in life groups that   are going on while we are present here—the  task of the Bible teacher is clearly,   in turning to the Bible, to help us to understand  what is written there; if you like, what happened   there and then. Because the there and then here  is a long time ago. And so, as we turn to it,   it’s important that the teacher  is able to help us in that regard.   And then, at the same time, the responsibility  falls to bring the there and then to bear upon   the here and now—for here we are,  and it is now—and then, thirdly,   by the help of the Holy Spirit, to show us how  the there and then bears upon the here and now.   Because if it doesn’t bear upon the here and  now, it really is a somewhat futile exercise   simply to engage in a rather exhaustive  study of ancient Israelite history.  So how would that work, then? Well, first of  all, one: What about the there and then? What   do we have before us? We have before us the  fact that David is anointed king at Hebron,   and a rival almost immediately appears. There is  actually a gap of some years, but nevertheless,   he is anointed, and a rival appears. And what  we’re going to discover is, of course, what   we know. We often say to one another, “Truth is  stranger than fiction,” which I think is probably   the case, and history also is a lot messier than  fairy tales. I like fairy tales. I like them   for myself, and I like the fact that when you  have grandchildren, you get to read to them for   at least a third time in your life. And usually  they resolve. History is a lot messier than that.   So, the there and then is this story of the  anointing of David, the opposition as it comes   through Abner, and the fact that there is a  lot of mess involved in the unfolding story.  In terms of the here and now, we recognize,  too, that the unfolding of our own history—our   personal histories, our lives—is not  marked, either, by a straight line.   When we look back over the bounds of history,  both in terms of the history of our world and the   history of our individual lives, we realize that  it is filled with all kinds of twists and turns,   and that whether we are following Jesus or  whether we are inquiring about Jesus, we would   all be able to testify to the same. Globally,  our world is clearly upside down. It doesn’t   have to be an elaborate discussion to reach  that conclusion. And it’s not merely rhetoric.  Personally, our lives are full of all kinds  of dangers, toils, and snares. As I sat to my   study this week, I thought about it very, very  much. Because I had just, in the previous hour,   been engaged with people on multiple fronts. And I  actually was so cognizant of it that I wrote down   the people that I either had spoken  with or had written to by way of a note:   a university student that was thankful for the  benefits of the gospel; an older couple who were   making a transition because of the dementia of the  wife and the support of the husband; a husband and   wife in their sixties whose twenty-seven-year-old  son and his four-year-old and three-year-old boys   had been consumed in a fire and whose other son  had lost their seven-week-old child to SIDS. I   wrote a note to a converted Jewish man who  wanted to tell me that at the age of sixteen,   a Sunday school teacher had pointed him to  Jesus as the Messiah, and he was very pleased;   a note to a lady in her seventies who is  involved in what I call “treadmill evangelism”;   a faithful lady who’s concerned because  her husband doesn’t share her faith;   ten Heritage Christian Academy students who had  written to me to tell me that they kind of like   me, but not a lot; and then a note to the office  of Rob Portman, our senator, because his assistant   had written to say how much she and others in  DC benefit from the ministry of the gospel.   Then I put my pen down, and I said,  “Now, let’s turn to 2 Samuel chapter 2.”  Now, what does that do? It does at least  this: it prevents the teacher of the Bible   from falling foul of the idea that one’s  responsibility is simply to be able to say,   “Look at what’s in the Bible, try your best  to understand it, and let me give you a couple   of ways in which you can make application  of it.” That is not the primary aim about   what is happening when the Bible is being  taught. The primary aim is that the teacher   and the taught—and we’re all taught—as the  Word of God is opened up, have an encounter   with the living God. In other words, we meet God  in the Scriptures. And so, when we go to the there   and then and we view it in terms of the here and  now, we anticipate that that will be the case.  Globally, the world is upside down. Personally,  our lives are all over the place. And nationally,   we are in the midst of moral and political chaos.  The political landscape dominates our thinking   this morning. Anybody that would be coming to  the occasion of teaching the Bible without an   awareness of that would somehow be living in  another planet entirely. It is almost impossible   to turn a page, to click online, to do anything  without this being pervasive, and understandably   so. And the fact that it dominates the landscape  also reveals to us the fact of a vast chasm which   runs right through the heart of our nation—a  vast divide through the very heart of our nation.  And so, it is very likely—and indeed,  it is my experience—that the resolve   then comes from those who know me, care for  me, and others who don’t: “Pastor… Pastor,   you’re about the there and then and the here and  now. Make sure you don’t miss the opportunity.   Make sure you don’t evade your responsibility.  After all, you’ve heard what others have been   saying this week. Pastor, maybe this is a  Sunday to set aside Samuel and to deal with   present reality.” That’s what people say to me.  They send me the notes, the quotes, they send me   the things I’m supposed to watch online: “Come  on now, Pastor. Be like those that we like.”  So, I have all this ringing in my head. But  what if I could show you—what if I could show   you—that this chapter may actually be the perfect  chapter for a congregation such as ours to study   two days before our election? Because when I  was studying this week, I suddenly made the   discovery—and what a delightful discovery it  was!—it dawned upon me that a substantial part   of 2 Samuel chapters 2, 3, and 4 is the story of  human politics. It is about political endeavor.  I say that… When we think in terms of politics,  we are talking about the process by which policies   and actions are organized and established  within an organization or within a culture or   society. And so, when you read these chapters, you  recognize that that is exactly what is happening.   And that’s why I said by way of introduction that  our study today must take us into the balance of   the chapter in order to make it clear, in order  that we might be reminded of one essential fact:   that placing our hope in politics  will mean that we are inevitably   disappointed. Placing our hope in politics  will mean that we are inevitably disappointed.  Now, with that said, what I  want to do is look at the text   and make sure that, at least up until verse 11,  we can do something with it. The big picture   that we have kept before us throughout all of our  studies here—in 1 Samuel as well—is that David and   his reign, as it is now being established, reveals  the kingdom that God finally establishes in Jesus.   So in other words, when you stand far  enough back from the picture and you say,   “That is there and then. That is a thousand—it’s  a millennium before the coming of Jesus.   It’s a long time away from us now.” What is  going on here? Why would we study this? What   is the purpose of this even being in the Bible?  It’s not to teach us simply history per se,   but it is because the establishing  of the reign of King David is a token   of the reign of Christ himself. And that is why  when you begin the Gospels, it begins—picking up   from all that has gone before—Jesus in Mark 1:15  says, “The time is fulfilled, … the kingdom of God   is at hand; repent and believe … the gospel.” That  doesn’t come out of the blue. That is in light   of all that has preceded it. And part of  what precedes is it is what we consider now.  Three words to help us: ascension, invitation,  opposition. Ascension, invitation, opposition. You say, “Well, what do you mean by ‘ascension’?”  Well, I mean simply making an ascent. Going up. We   tend to think ascension, essentially, in the move  of Christ. Clearly, that is not the way in which   we are using the word here. But it is because  five times the word in Hebrew for “going up”   is used in the space of three verses. And we’re  good enough students to know now that repetition   is there in order to point us to something that  we ought to understand. And you will see that:   “David inquired of the LORD, ‘Shall I go up …?’”  “The LORD said …, ‘Go up.’” “David said, ‘To which   shall I go up?’” “So David went up.” You get it?  So, we’re supposed to know that he is going up.   It’s not simply that he is making a geographical  move from Ziklag to Hebron, but he is quite   literally going up in the world. Now he is going  to step forward into the position for which God   has called him. It is for him an ascension, but  as we will see, it bears nothing of presumption.  You will notice in verse 1 that he  doesn’t make a move without asking God.   He “inquire[s] of the LORD.” We might be tempted  to think that since there had been so much   background to this, that when  it finally came to the moment,   that David said, “Well, this is what I  was here for, and let’s just get going,   and let’s put the business together.” But no,  it doesn’t happen. “David inquired of the LORD.”  Saul, we will remember, had been instructed by  Samuel to listen to the Lord. And he wouldn’t   listen. And as a result of his disobedience, both  his potential kingdom and his life collapsed. Here   we discover that David inquires, David listens,  David obeys. In other words, his exaltation is   along the path of obedience. He was the king that  God had chosen for himself. He was the one who was   a man after God’s own heart. The heart of God was  predisposed to David. He wanted him as his king.   But David had not taken matters into  his own hands. You will remember   he had an opportunity to take Saul out on two  or three occasions. He chose not to do so.   He hadn’t sought his own agenda. He hadn’t  pushed himself to the front of the queue.   He wasn’t seeking to make much of his own  personal advantage and his background and   “Do you know who I am? Do you know what I’ve  done? And you ever heard of the person who killed   Goliath? That was me. Do you know how I’ve rallied  together a group of four hundred ne’er-do-wells,   and we’ve taken people on?” and so on.  No, there’s none of that at all! No.  Well, you see, why would we be surprised?  Because he’s pointing to Jesus,   whose exaltation was along the  path of obedience, was it not?   Certainly that’s what Paul says  when he writes in Philippians 2:   “And being found in human form, he humbled himself  by becoming obedient [even] to the point of death,   even death on a cross. [And] therefore God  has highly exalted him” —that the path to   exaltation is the path of the inquiring mind,  the listening ear, and the obedient spirit.  That’s why when Peter writes—and he would know  about this, because he was masterful at putting   his foot in his mouth and then taking it  out so he could put his other foot in.   I say that as someone who is sadly one of his  disciples in that regard. But the fact is, he   says, “Humble yourselves … under the mighty hand  of God … that [in due season] he may exalt you.”   Isaiah 66:2: “This is the one to whom I will  look,” says Yahweh. Who do you look to, God?   “This is the one to whom I  will look,” says the Lord:   “he who is humble and contrite in  spirit and trembles at my word.”  He inquired of the Lord, “Shall I go up?”  “Yes, you shall.” “Where shall I go up?   Be specific.” And he said, “To Hebron.”  To Hebron. Places are important.   They’re important in our lives. We move somewhere  and we say, “Oh, I hate to have to go,” or we go   back and we say, “It’s so nice to be here again.”  And that’s true out of all of human history.  Now, he’s told, “Go to Hebron.” If you say to  me, “Pastor, how was this communicated to him?”   my answer is I don’t know. Right? It may  be that he used Abiathar, the priest,   and the ephod or whatever. But we do know in the  book of Hebrews that in the past, God spoke in   many and various ways by the prophets. So we can  leave it at that, because the message conveyed   is more important than the  method employed. In other words,   the main things are the plain things, and that  is that the message was clear: “Go to Hebron.”  Now, this, of course, is quite wonderful if  you know your Bible at all. Because Hebron is   a big place in the Bible. Genesis chapter [13],  and God speaks to Abram, and he says, “‘Arise,   [and] walk through the length and … breadth of  the land, for I will give it to you.’ So Abram   moved his tent and … settled by the oaks of Mamre,  which are at Hebron, and there he built an altar   to the LORD.” Now, for homework, if you like, take  a good concordance, click on “Hebron,” and enjoy   yourself. You will discover that it was here  at Hebron that the momentous meeting with the   three strange people took place, announcing  to Sarah that she was going to have a son.   It was here that Sarah also died. Here Sarah was  buried. Abraham was buried here. Isaac, Rebekah,   Jacob, Leah were all buried here at Hebron.  “There are places,” say Lennon and McCartney,  There are places I’ll remember All my life, … some have changed,  Some forever, not for better; Some have gone, and some remain.  All these places have their moments.  So, you see, when we read our Bibles and we come  to something like this, we don’t just say, “Oh,   he went to Hebron.” No, no, this was significant. Why? Well, I will tell you why.   Do you know how the Gospel of Matthew begins?  You say, “Well, with the first verse.” Yes.   But do you know how it actually begins?  “The book of the genealogy of Jesus Christ,   the son of David, the son of Abraham.” What are we  discovering here? We’re discovering that the story   of David’s kingship is directly related to the  story of God’s call of Abraham, which is related   to the coming of the King, of Jesus himself, which  is related to the establishment of a kingdom,   to which and in which we move. So, it’s  no surprise that he didn’t go by himself.   He took his wives, Ahinoam of Jezreel  and Abigail. You remember about Abigail,   I’m sure. Took his entire company with  him! It would be a big group by now.  And here, in a very silent, sort of surprising  way in verse 4, it just says, “And the men of   Judah came, and … they anointed David king  over the house of Judah.” What had happened   previously, remember, back in 1 Samuel —privately,  if you like—has now been ratified. It has now   taken place publicly. But it really doesn’t look  like very much, does it? It’s not very impressive:   “And there they anointed David king over  the house of Judah.” You say to yourself,   “Well, we’ve waited our way all the way through 1  Samuel and all the way through the first chapter,   and then we get here! It’s a bit of a nonevent,  isn’t it? No trumpet. Nothing at all.” No.  But actually, what we’re being told is that here,  for the very first time, God’s chosen king visibly   rules on the earth. Here, for the first time,  God’s chosen king, the man after God’s own heart,   begins his visible reign on the  earth. Doesn’t look like much.   Fast-forward, and the people said, “Which  one is Jesus? What’s all this fuss about?   A carpenter with some fishermen?” Fast-forward  to Paul writing to the Corinthians.   He says, “Not many of you were  mighty. Not many of you were noble.   You really didn’t look like very much at all.”  Exactly! And here, as Dale Ralph Davis says in   a wonderful little half-sentence, he says for the  time being, for the moment, the kingdom of God is   “tucked … away in the hills of Judah.” The kingdom  of God is “tucked … away in the hills of Judah.”  Anybody looking on would say, “Well, there’s  nothing here at all. There’s nothing of   significance going on here at all. The places  and the powers and the empires and the rulers   are of great significance. Whatever is going  on up some side street in Judah really has   got very little bearing upon me, and I can’t  see any reason why I should pay any attention   to it at all.” My friends, that’s exactly what  your friends say about Jesus! There are so many   things in this world that we need to be concerned  about—so many vast encounters, so many things that   may occupy and dominate our time. Why would I  spend any time about some Galilean carpenter   who wandered around for a long time two thousand  years ago, despite what everybody says about him?  Well, there you have it. That’s his ascension.  And then comes what I’m  referring to as his invitation.  Each of our candidates for president have been  spending a long time, most recently, telling us   what they are going to do if they are elected. And  some of it goes like this: “The first thing I will   do is x.” Okay, good, thanks for letting us know.  That’s important. We need to know. It helps us.   So what is the first thing David does when  he is established as the king? What is the   first action that he takes, and why does  he take it? Well, actually, he hears about   what had happened when these men of Jabesh-gilead  had shown kindness to Saul and his sons.   They come to him and they say, “You know, it  was the men of Jabesh-gilead who buried Saul.”  Now, think about this. The men of Jabesh-gilead  were Saul’s supporters. Saul’s supporters   and his army were opposed to David. Saul had  pledged himself to the annihilation of David.   So what possible interest would David really have  in what these supporters of Saul had done with   Saul? Unless, of course, he really cared about  Saul. And we know that he really cared about Saul.   And if there was no other way of our knowing apart  from the lament which is the balance of chapter 1,   then we would recognize that that was not a  fabrication, that that was not a political   move on his part, but it was an expression  of his heart. No matter the fact that he   was pursued by Saul, that Saul wanted him gone,  still he recognized that as the Lord’s anointed,   he was worthy of respect and care. And so he realizes these fellows felt   the same way. And a kindness is long remembered.  A kindness is long remembered. I don’t remember my   schoolteachers who were geniuses. There were  a number of them. I remember the kind ones.   I remember the ones who said, “Oh, come  on, Begg, you’ll be okay.” And so do you.   You remember the kind people.  You see, the men of Jabesh-gilead could not  forget when the messengers came to them—when   the messengers came to them—announcing  the fact, on behalf of Saul, “Tomorrow, by   the time the sun is hot, you shall have  [deliverance].” And Saul had intervened   on behalf of the men of Jabesh-gilead. The men  of Jabesh-gilead, in remembering that kindness,   then expressed a kindness of their own  in doing what they did with Saul’s body.  Now, once again, messengers are dispatched. This  time, the messengers are dispatched from David,   and he has a message for them. And  you’ll see it there in the text:   first of all, “God bless you for your loyalty.”  “Bless you for your loyalty.” You see, the fact   that the people of Jabesh-gilead had  been themselves the friends of Saul   did not mean that they were ipso facto the  enemies of David. And, if you like, there   is a measure of politics in this as well. It’s  very skillful. He does a little campaigning here,   and he says, “I want you to know that you should  be blessed by God. You’re very loyal people.”  Secondly, he says, “And I want to pray that you  will know the steadfast love and faithfulness of   God to you.” That’s why we began as we did, with  that great hymn this morning. “May you be blessed   by the Lord: you showed loyalty. May the Lord  show steadfast love and faithfulness to you.”   This is the great need, you see: steadfast love  and faithfulness. This is who and what God is.  I was thinking this morning when I wakened—and  I meant to go and find it, and I didn’t.   You can read it yourself in the introduction  to Knowing God by J. I. Packer, the late J. I.   Packer. And in the introduction, he quotes from  a sermon by Charles Haddon Spurgeon when he was   only twenty-three years old. And I’ve quoted  it to you before, but it is worth remembering,   where Spurgeon says to his congregation  at the age of twenty-three, he says,   “Would you drown your cares? Would you bury your  sorrows? Would you deal with your problems?” and   so on. Then he says, “Go drown yourself in the  sea of the immensity of God.” “Go drown yourself   in the sea of the immensity of God.” People come to me and say, “You know,   what we need is a political solution. What we  need is guidance and wisdom from you.” I’ll   tell you what we all need: we need to drown  ourselves in the immensity of God. You need   to go to bed at night saying, “‘The abounding,  steadfast love of the Lord never ceases. In the   morning, his mercies never come to an end.’ He is  absolutely faithful to his word. He is absolutely   sovereign over the affairs of time. The big  issues of the world, the matters of our nation,   and the personal concerns of my tiny life are  under the care of an everlasting God.” You see,   that is why “the people [who] … know their  God shall be strong, and do exploits.”   Why are we not doing exploits? Because  we don’t know God as God is to be known.  That’s what we need to say to our world:  “God—this God, you see, this God—is   worthy of your faith.” It is a God like this  that makes faith possible. Think about it!   If God is a fabric of your imagination, if God  is an internal mechanism, if God is some kind   of philosophical construct, why would you have  faith in this? It’s your own invention! I can   only trust in somebody who is vaster, bigger,  stronger, brighter, loving in every dimension.   And I do! And how has he made that love known  to us? In a King, buried in the hills of Judah,   seen on the streets of Jerusalem, sung of on the  fields in Bethlehem—and walking the streets of   Cleveland in the body of Christ himself. Those  “who trust him wholly find him wholly true.”  Woodhouse observes, “David’s message to those  who had every reason to regard him as their   enemy … was about [the] grace [of God].” Isn’t  that right? They were on the wrong side. He said,   “Why don’t you come here? I want you to  be blessed because of your loyalty. I want   you to be in an awareness of the steadfast  love and faithfulness of God to you.”   It gives us just an inkling of Jesus, doesn’t  it? You can imagine these people getting together   and, you know, having an evening meal after the  messengers have come with this great news from   David the king. And they said to one another,  “You know, even while we were still his enemies,   he showed us his love.” “Oh,” you say,  “that’s it, isn’t it?” Yeah, that’s it!   Romans 5: “Even when we were  yet sinners, enemies, Christ   died for us.” That’s what’s being portrayed here. And thirdly, he says, “You can count on me.”   That’s quite a thing to say, isn’t it? “I will  do good to you because you have done this thing.”   On what basis? Well, he’s the king.  The king can dispense the bounty.  And then here comes, if you like, the  straightforward invitation. Verse 7:   “Now therefore let your hands be strong, and  … valiant.” “You’ve been strong and valiant   before. It was pretty brave of you to make that  journey and go and get Saul down off that wall.   But now your lord is dead, and the house of  Judah has anointed me as the king over them.   Come on. Come and join me.” If while we  were his enemies we were reconciled to God…   Again, that’s Romans 5, isn’t it, as  I think about it—5:8? We quoted 5:10.   “For if while we were enemies we were  reconciled to God by the death of his Son,   much more, now that we are reconciled,  shall we be saved by his life.”  We sing of it, don’t we, in that hymn about the  work of God’s grace? I can’t remember how it   starts, but we have that line: Your enemy you made your friend;  Pouring out the riches of your  [generous and] glorious grace,  Your mercy and your kindness know no end. … Once your enemy, now seated at your table.  You see, unless we understand the reality of the  fact that by our nature we are separated from God,   and that although separated from God on  account of his wrath and on account of our   sinful rebellion and indifference, still he loves,  still he seeks, still he is what he is, abounding   in steadfast love and faithfulness and pursuing  to the very end those upon whom he has set   his heart. This is the story. “This is my song.” The third word is opposition. I’ll just mention   it; we can pick it up this evening. But in  verse 8, just when it seems to be going along   quite nicely: “But…” “But Abner the son  of Ner, [the] commander of Saul’s army…”  Interestingly, we’re not told how these  folks responded to this invitation from   David. They’re mentioned a little while  later on, but it’s only in reference   to something that went before. We don’t know if  they joined up. But we do know that the opposition   immediately arrives in the form of a rival.  Abner was Saul’s cousin. Abner was aware of   the fact that the kingship was for David. But  he was flat-out unwilling to accept the fact.  Now, what he’s actually doing here in  saying no to David is he’s saying no to God.   Because God is establishing his rule through his  king. And our time is over, and so we will cease.   But that’s where we pick it up. The picture that we have in our strange culture   is that somehow or another, everybody is  really sort of at various levels of okayness,   that there is no real reason to jeopardize our  feelings of security by thinking about our death,   nor of considering the claims of this King.  But my friends, the Bible is absolutely clear:   the possibility of neutrality in relationship to  the kingship of Jesus is actually impossible. We   are either on the Lord’s side or we  are on the side of the opposition.  Well, we’ll pick it up when we come back. Let us pray together.  I want to use the prayer that Calvin prayed  when he came to the end of his sermon   on these verses. He said to his congregation,  Now let us prostrate ourselves before the majesty  of our good God, recognizing … our faults, praying   to him that he may touch us with such repentance;  that groaning over and confessing our sins,   we may be displeased with them; and  that we may be confused in ourselves   and may seek in him all that is lacking in us. May  this not only serve to abolish our past offences,   but may it renew us in such fashion that, being  clothed with his righteousness, we may glorify him   in all our life and words and deeds and thoughts. Through Christ our Lord. 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: 6,573
Rating: 4.9444447 out of 5
Keywords: Biblical Figures, Christ as King, Faithfulness of God, Obedience, Sovereignty of God, Trusting God, Truth For Life
Id: uz6PwZ5FmwA
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 40min 47sec (2447 seconds)
Published: Thu Nov 05 2020
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