"This God - His Way Is Perfect"

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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. Two Samuel 22 and verse 32:  “For who is God, but the LORD?  And who is a rock, except our God?  This God is my strong refuge  and has made my way blameless.  He made my feet like the feet of a deer  and set me secure on the heights.  He trains my hands for war,  so that my arms can bend a bow of bronze.  You have given me the shield of your salvation,  and your gentleness [makes] me great.  You gave a wide place for my steps under me,  and my feet did not slip;  I pursued my enemies and destroyed them,  and did not turn back until they were consumed.  I consumed them; I thrust them through,   so that they did not rise;  they fell under my feet.  For you equipped me with strength for the battle;  you made those who rise against me sink under me.  You made my enemies turn their backs to me,  those who hated me, and I destroyed them.  They looked, but there was none to save;  they cried to the LORD,   but he did not answer them. I beat them fine as the dust of the earth;   I crushed them and stamped them  down like the mire of the streets. “You delivered me from strife with my people;   you kept me as the head of the nations;  people whom I had not known served me.  Foreigners came cringing to me;  as soon as they heard of me, they obeyed me.  Foreigners lost heart  and came trembling out of their fortresses. “The LORD lives, and blessed be my rock,  and exalted be my God, the rock of my salvation,  the God who gave me vengeance  and brought down peoples under me,  who brought me out from my enemies;   you exalted me above those who rose against me;  you delivered me from men of violence. “For this I will praise you,  O LORD, among the nations,   and sing praises to your name. Great salvation he brings to his king,   and shows steadfast love to his anointed,  to David and his offspring forever.”  Amen. Father, we look from ourselves to   you. Come by the Holy Spirit and quicken  our minds. Guide my thoughts and my words,   that we might hear from you in  your Word, for Jesus’ sake. Amen.  Well, as we near the end of these studies in  2 Samuel—and I think some of you are keenly   looking forward to the end—it’s important that  we don’t lose sight of what we have carried with   us all the way through. And I say that not to  rehearse a great deal but actually primarily to   remind us of what has been a sort of foundational  verse for us when we’ve been tempted to say, “Why   are you studying a book that is so far away from  here, both geographically and also historically?”   And the way in which we have approached  that from the very beginning is to remind   ourselves of what Paul says in Romans 15, where  he says, “For whatever was written in former days   was written for our instruction, that through  endurance and through the encouragement   of the Scriptures we might have hope.” So, while the immediate application of,   in this case, 2 Samuel impacted those who  were the initial readers and hearers of it,   nevertheless, the abiding relevance of  it is found in the fact that it came   from the very mouth of God. And since we will  “not live by bread alone, but by every word   that [proceeds] from the mouth of God,” then  we come to our study of the Bible routinely,   believing that God continues to speak through  what he has spoken. He continues to speak   through what he has spoken. And what he has  spoken has been given to us in the Scriptures.  And it is a message, ultimately, of hope. When  Peter writes, he says, “You know, you’ve been   born again to a living hope by the resurrection of  Jesus Christ from the dead,” thereby enabling us   to deal with the now in light of the then;  thereby enabling us to come to circumstances   in our immediate environment—which in many ways  are not dissimilar to what was being encountered   by David and his friends—in the awareness of  the fact that God speaks through his Word.   And it is important that as you listen to  my voice, that as we listen to God’s Word,   that we’re asking God, “Speak, Lord, to me. You  know all about me. You know my circumstances.   You know how I feel in these moments. I need to  hear your voice, beyond the voice of Alistair.”  Now, if, like me, you’re doing the Murray  M’Cheyne through-the-Bible readings of the year,   then you’ve been reading Judges. And in rereading  Judges, we have been reminded of the absolute   chaos that was involved in that period of  time, which gave rise to the cry for a king.   Remember, Judges ends, “At that time there was  no king, and the people did what was right in   their own eyes.” They said, “This is the way  I see it, this is what I think I should do,   this is my plan,” and so on. And in the midst of that,   the people came, remember, asking for a king. They  were assuming that if they could only have a king,   then all of that chaos would be dealt with. And so  God gave them a king. “If only we had a king!”—and   then they had a king. And then after they had the  king, they changed their tune to “If only we had   a perfect king!” And as the story of the kings  proceeds from 2 Samuel and into 1 and 2 Kings, in   the kingdom of the north and in the kingdom of the  south, and as the searchlight scans, as it were,   the horizon looking for a perfect king,  still no perfect king has appeared.   That is a promise that has been made to David  in 2 Samuel 7, which awaits fulfillment.  And now, as you come to this twenty-second  chapter, which is a long song and which we   began to consider last time, it’s essentially…  I suppose we could think of it as a theological   commentary on the life of David—that it has been  placed here at the end of 2 Samuel, the writer   assuming that as we listen to this  song, as we read this song, that we will   interpret David’s life through this song.  Of course, we can’t do it in its totality,   and it would be tedious if we  went in a very miniscule way.   We’re not going to do that. We’re going to just  try and stand far enough back from the picture so   that we can understand the main point. Now, the review of David’s life   is focused entirely on God. And we ended last  time in verse 31, which, if your Bible is open,   you will see it. The focus is on “this God.” “This  God.” “This God,” he says, “his way is perfect.”   Absolutely perfect. Whether it is the way to bring  up children, whether it is the way to live married   life, whether it is the way to conduct business,  whether it is the way to live in bereavement,   the way to live in singleness, whatever  the way is, we may be absolutely certain   that “this God—his way is perfect.” Even  when it is the way of sadness, as we’ve sung,   even when the storms overwhelm us, we have to  hold on to this. “This God—his way is perfect,”   it’s absolutely perfect, and, you will notice,  he says, “And his word is entirely true.” His way   is perfect, his word is true, and everyone who  takes refuge in him proves this to be the case.  Now, as I say, we can’t work our way through all  of these verses in detail. And I’m going to assume   that the students among us will do maybe a little  bit of follow-up to fill in the blanks. The rest   of us will have to wait for another occasion, I  suppose. I worked very, very hard to figure out   exactly how I could say what we find here just in  a sentence, and this is the best that I could do:   what we discover here is that David’s  declaration of victory—because   it is a declaration of victory—anticipates the  day when King Jesus shall reign forever and ever.   David’s declaration of victory anticipates the day  when Jesus the King will reign forever and ever.  The Source of David’s Strength Now, in order to navigate our way through   the text, I wrote down one or two headings, and  the first one is to notice, in 32 and following,   the source of David’s strength. The source of  his strength. “For who is God, but the LORD? And   who is a rock, except our God?” Notice again:  “This God.” “This God is my strong refuge.”  Now, what he’s clearly doing here—and it’s  important for us to get—is he’s contrasting the   true and living God with all the so-called gods  which have proliferated throughout the nations.   The people of Israel understood that God is the  Lord, that he is the Creator, that he is the one   to whom they look. He gives them their food in  their season and so on. But when they began to   move out into the world, they discovered  that not everybody actually believed that.   In fact, people believed all kinds of things  about the possibility of gods and gods.  And I think it’s important just  to acknowledge that, given that   it’s not very dissimilar to today, is it? If you  are going to go out this morning and affirm in   your place of work or in your place of relaxation  the things that we have said in the thirty-first   answer of The [New City] Catechism, the things  that we have sung about the Lord Jesus Christ,   then it is going to become very quickly  apparent that you are in many ways a lone voice   amongst the clamor of the sound of a variety of  voices claiming all kinds of things. Do not be   alarmed. This is nothing new. The prophets  dealt with it. The psalmists dealt with it.  For example—and you can research this on  your own—when Jeremiah speaks from God,   he says, “Hear the word that the LORD  speaks to you, O house of Israel.   Thus says the LORD.” What does he say  immediately? “Learn not the way of the nations.”   “Learn not the way of the nations.” “[Don’t] be  dismayed at the signs of the heavens.” They look   up in the heavens. They worship the moon. They  worship the stars. They worship Zeus. They worship   this, that, the next thing—not in Jeremiah’s  day but as time has gone on; I understand.   The nations are dismayed at these things, he  says. This is God speaking. “For the customs   of the peoples are vanity.” Emptiness. “A tree from the forest is cut down   … worked with an ax by the hands of a craftsman. They decorate it with silver and gold;   they fasten it with hammer and nails  so that it can[’t] [even] move.  Their idols are like  scarecrows in a cucumber field,   and they can[’t] speak; they have to be carried,   for they cannot walk. Do not be afraid of them,   for they [can] do [no] evil,  neither is it in them to do good.” There is none like you, O LORD;  you are great, and your name is great in might.  You see the contrast? “This God.”  “Who is God, but the LORD?” G-o-d   spells in our culture whatever people want it  to spell. It means whatever people want it to   mean. You turn to the Bible and you discover: no,  not at all! Let not the stories of the nations   alarm you and disturb you. Don’t pay  attention to that. Don’t read the horoscope.   Don’t listen to this nonsense. This God,  he’s the Lord. He’s the refuge. He’s the one.  You see, there’s only one reason for this to be  made so wonderfully clear, and that is because   the people were susceptible to these things. I  don’t want to belabor it, but, you know, Psalm 115   goes along the very same lines: “Why should the  nations say, ‘Where is their God?’” So they’re   saying to the people of Israel, “So where is  your God? You don’t seem to have anything.”   That’s what people say when they come in here:  “Where’s your God? There’s no God stuff in here.   You don’t have any icons. You don’t have any  bits and pieces. Are you sure you have a God?   Where is your God?” Answer: “Our God is in  the heavens; he does all that he pleases.”  And this does the same thing.  The idols are absolutely useless:  “They have mouths, but don’t speak;   They have eyes, but don’t see. They have ears, but don’t hear.   They have noses, but don’t smell. They have hands, but don’t feel.   They have feet, but they don’t walk;  and they do not make a sound in their throat.  And those who make them become like them;  so do all who trust in them.  There you have it. You want to  understand the chaos of our culture?   Idolatry. Idolatry—and idolatry that starts  first with the great idol that is me:   “It’s about me. It’s about my decision. It’s  about my choice. It’s about my gender. It’s   about my ideas. It’s all about me.” No culture  can survive that. Our culture is proving it.  You say, “Well, we don’t walk around… I don’t have  any of these things in my house. I’m not using   little things. I’m not hammering in little gods.”  No, neither am I. But I understand that there is   a great appeal in all kinds of substitute gods  in our day—pleasure itself, and things besides.   Don’t go wrong on this, because idolatry is  essentially trusting someone or something   to provide us with that which only God can  provide. It’s trusting someone or something   to do for us what only the living God can  do. And that’s why he is so at pains to say,   as he sings this song, as he writes this  down, “Here is where my focus is to be found.”  In the New Testament, interestingly, Paul,  when he is writing to the Colossians and   he begins Colossians by pointing to  all of the reality of who Jesus is,   and the people in the Colossae valley  are saying very similar things—they’re   basically saying, “So, you don’t have  a temple. You don’t have a sacrificial   system. You don’t really have anything at  all. I don’t know what you people are doing.   Where is God?” They’re actually the same question  that was asked in the psalm: “Where is your God?”  And it’s in that context—you can see this in  Colossians 2—that Paul writes to these Christian   people, and he says, “See to it…” “See to it…  ” “[Make sure] that no one takes you captive   by philosophy and empty deceit.” In other words,  he says, “You need to make sure that when you   get up in the morning, you orientate yourself by  the truth of Scripture.” That’s why we read the   Bible every day. It is a lamp to our feet; it is a  light to our path. It’s not a blessed thought for   somebody who’s got fifteen seconds while they’re  finishing their Cheerios. It is rather that I need   to go here because my mind inevitably goes in the  wrong direction, and I am easily seduced by the   fact that so many, many people in my lab, so many,  many people in my college, so many, many people in   my classroom do not believe one single thing that  I believe. And I’m beginning to wonder, you see.  Well, listen: “See to it that no one takes you  captive through philosophy and through empty   deceit.” And he says—they’re asking the question  about God—“Here in Jesus, all the fullness of the   godhead dwells in bodily form.” You want to know  God? You want to meet God? You want to see God?   You will meet him in the person and work of the  Lord Jesus. It is in him that all the fullness   of deity dwells, and it is in nobody else  that all the fullness of deity dwells.  I don’t know why I woke up this  morning with that song—you know,  It won’t be [the] Buddha [Who]’s sitting on the throne,  And it won’t be … Muhammad [Who]’s calling us home,  And it won’t be Hare Krishna That[’s] play[ing] [the] trumpet tune,  Because we’re going to see the Son, Not Reverend Moon.  And hundreds and hundreds of people were married  in one of those vast ceremonies, if you saw the   pictures, of the Unification Church, which  is a flat-out forceful denial of what David   is affirming in this song and what I am seeking to  help us understand: the God of David is the true   God, the living God, the everlasting King. And so, in his inimitable pictorial style,   giving to us a verbal picture, he allows us  to ponder what this actually means for him.   First of all, that he is a “strong refuge.” Also  that he “has made my way blameless.” Remember,   when we studied that last time, we said,  “How can he make such statements about being   blameless and so on?” Well, he’s not saying  that he’s sinless, but he’s saying that he’s   blameless. How could he possibly be blameless?  The same way that you and I may be blameless:   that Jesus “took the blame,” he “bore the  wrath: we stand forgiven at the cross.”  The fact that the prophet could come to David and  say, “Your sin is forgiven,” is not simply because   God somehow or another had decided that that  would be okay and it doesn’t really matter. No,   it was not okay, and it really mattered. But the  forgiveness that was pronounced for David is the   same forgiveness that is enjoyed by all who have  come to Jesus and found in him the one who has   taken the blame that we deserve and the punishment  that would rightfully have fallen on us.  “God is my strong refuge. He’s made my  way blameless. He made my feet like the   feet of a deer.” Well, of course, that’s the  picture, isn’t it? I hope it’s not literal.   I always smile when people say, “Well, you’re  not taking the Bible literally.” I say, “Oh,   really? You think that David actually  had feet of a deer? I don’t think so.”   Because metaphor is metaphor, and simile is  simile, and so on. “He set me secure on the   heights.” Well, you can just go back through the  book, and you know this is the case. We saw him,   as it were, leaping around and jumping and  hiding and going in caves and coming out.   All of his strength, all of his  strength, is found in this God.  Notice the emphasis: it’s the “He made my feet,”  “He trains my hands.” Then it goes to the second   person: “You have given me the shield of your  salvation. Your gentleness, your kindness, the   fact that you stooped down to me, made me great.  You gave a wide place for my steps under me.   And my feet actually didn’t slip.” Now,   this is about David. It’s not about us. But  the same God who provided David with strength   is the God who provides us with strength—“strength  for today … bright hope for tomorrow.”   When we were last together at Communion,  we sang the hymn “Here, O my Lord,   I see thee face-to-face; here would I touch  and handle things unseen.” You remember, Danny   helped us with Communion that night. And one  of the verses in that hymn goes like this:  I have no help but thine, nor do I need Another arm save thine to lean upon;  It is enough, my Lord, enough indeed; My strength is in [your] might … alone.  Do you never get up in the morning and say,  “I don’t think I’m going to make this day”?   Do you never find yourself looking  at circumstances and deciding that   they’re of such an overwhelming nature that  probably you just don’t have it in you? Well,   the answer is you just probably don’t have  it in you, nor do I. And God in his amazing   mercy brings us into difficulties and darkness and  overwhelms us—yes, overwhelms us—because he knows   that the discovery of his strength is in  the honest acceptance of our weakness.  David was a peculiar individual, but he was just  an individual, and his strength was in the Lord.   That’s the source of his strength. The Extent of David’s Victory  Then I noted the extent of his victory.  There in verse 38, he recounts it:   “I pursued my enemies and destroyed them, and  did not turn back until they were consumed.”  Incidentally, it’s probably helpful to  point out right now that all of this we   need to understand not in terms of David  as a sort of private member of society,   exercising some kind of hostility  towards everybody he didn’t like,   exercising vengeance because it sort of made him  happy to be cruel. Not for a moment. We need to   understand that all the way through this,  the great issue is the issue that takes us   all the way back to Genesis chapter 3, where the  conflict between the serpent, the Evil One, and   the seed of the woman will be the conflict which  runs throughout the totality of human history.   And whether it is Herod in seeking to destroy  Jesus in his infancy or whatever it might be,   that’s the issue. And the Lord’s anointed—in this  case, David—is the agent of God in the execution   of his righteous vengeance. And so don’t go wrong when you read this,   as if, “Well, this is a dreadful situation.”  No, read this in light of the vengeance   and the wrath that is expressed at the cross  of Jesus Christ. That is the extent to which   God is committed to eradicate rebellion against  him and to deal with the rebellious heart. So   when he writes in this way, don’t go wrong. “I pursued my enemies.   I didn’t turn back. I thrust them through so  that they didn’t rise. They fell under my feet.”   Now, if you think about this, that’s the  very beginning of the story, isn’t it?   That’s how he dealt with Goliath. Goliath was just  the beginning. That was the first big one. And it   was a big one. Do you remember? He says to David,  “You come out here with a stick and a little bag   of stones? What do you think I am, a dog or  something like that?” And David… I would like   to have heard his voice, wouldn’t you? You know,  if it was like, “Hey, wait a minute…” It was more   like, “Ah! Ah! Uh… I come to you—ahem—in the name  of the Lord of hosts”—you know—“the God in the   armies of Israel, whom you have defied. Don’t look  at me. I’m not here in my own right. I’m not here   just to get something for myself. I am here by  divine appointment.” The anointed of God is in the   place of God’s appointment. (That is why Jesus,  when he is confronted by them, when they say,   “We came to get you,” he says, “Are you looking  for somebody?” ) No: “… whom you have defied.   This day the LORD will deliver you into my  hand, … I will strike you down … cut off your   head … that all the earth may know”—“that all the  earth may know”—“that there is a God in Israel,”   and that he is this God and this Lord. Now, all the subsequent battles are to   be understood in the same way. And you will  notice in the text the juxtaposition of the “I”   and the “you”: “I pursued …. I consumed  …. For you equipped …. You made my enemies   turn their backs to me, those who hated me,  and I destroyed them.” What you actually have   there is a kind of Old Testament version of the  principle that Paul reminds the Philippians of   when he says to them, “Work out your own salvation  with fear and trembling, for it is God who [is at   work] in you, both to will and to [do of] his  good pleasure.” And that’s exactly what he’s   doing here. That’s what David is doing here. He’s  working out the plan and purpose of God for him,   recognizing that he does  it in the Lord’s strength,   and it is on account of that that  his victory is extended in that way.  All that David was able to accomplish was  according to God’s plan and on account of   God’s power. And that is true for all who  are the servants of the Lord Jesus Christ.   That’s why… I just was doing 2 Timothy in  England, as you know, and I was struck again   by the way in which, in all of the exhortations  that are given to Timothy as a young man who is   about to face life without the apostle Paul—he’s  going to be left in an alien world with a culture   that wants to disown him and deal with him—right  at the very threshold of it all, Paul says,   “Be strengthened, my son. Be strengthened,  my son. Be strong by the grace that is in   Christ Jesus.” That’s it. A Mixed Reaction  Thirdly, in verses 42 and  following, I simply wrote down,   “A Mixed Reaction.” I wasn’t quite sure what to  do with this, but perhaps this will make sense.  Notice verse 42: “They looked.” Incidentally, when  you look through this text, this is the “I,” the   “you,” the “them,” the “they.” “They looked.”  Who? The enemies. “They looked.” “They cried.”   “They looked, but there was [no one] to save.”  Well, of course there was no one to save!   Because they didn’t look to the  living God. They looked to other gods.  I mean, if you think about it for just a tiny  time, you realize what an absolute emptiness   any form of idolatry actually is. I was listening  to the original version by Ray Stevens of “Mr.   Businessman.” And this was actually banned on  some radio stations in America when it came out,   because it was regarded as an anticapitalist  diatribe. I don’t think he was dealing   with economics. I think he was dealing with  morality. And so, in one of the verses, he says,  Spending counterfeit incentive, Wasting precious time and health,  Placing value on the worthless, Disregarding priceless wealth,  You can wheel and deal [with] the [rest] of them.  But it’s vanity. “They looked,  but there was none to save.”  Can I ask you this morning who you’re looking to  as you live your life? As you map your career? As   you plan for the future? As you make investments?  As you determine what you’re going to do for the   sake of those who come behind you? Who do you look  to? Are you looking to this God? To David’s God?   It’s a big question.   “They looked, but there was none to save.”  And even worse, “they cried to the LORD,   [and] he did[n’t] answer them.”  “Really?” Yeah. “I thought it says in the Bible  that the Lord is near to all who call upon him   in truth.” It does say that in the Bible.  It’s Psalm 145:18: “The LORD is near to all   who call [upon] him … in truth.” What about  those who don’t call upon him in truth?   He’s not near. What about those who,  having tried their self-depleting idols,   to which they looked and got no answer,  decided, “Well, we’ll just give this one a try”?   You hear people using terminology  like, “Well, the big man in the sky…”   That’s a long way removed from  “Come, let us worship and bow down;   let us kneel before the LORD, our [Creator].”  No, to come in hypocrisy, to come in rebellion,   to come simply moaning and complaining,  giving “this God” a try—expect no answer.  This is not unique to 2 Samuel 22. In  fact, it comes across quite chillingly   in Proverbs. And I’m not going to read it  all to you, but the same principle is there:  Then they will call upon  me, but I will not answer;   they will seek me diligently  but will not find me.  Because they hated knowledge  and did not choose the fear of the LORD,  would have none of my counsel,  … despised all my reproof…  One of the most chilling encounters in that  regard is when, in the Gospel of Luke, we have   the arrival of Jesus in the court of Herod.  And as he is brought into that context,   Luke records, “And when he learned that he  belonged to Herod’s jurisdiction, he sent   him over to Herod, who was himself in Jerusalem at  that time. When Herod saw Jesus, he was very glad,   for he had long desired to see him, because  he[’d] heard about him, and he was hoping to   see some sign done by him. So he questioned him at  some length.” Here we go: “But he made no answer.”   “He made no answer.” Plumer, the Puritan commentator, says,   “Even prayer will not save a bad cause.” Could  anything, rightly considered, be more alarming   to a sinner—and we’re all sinners—to a sinner who  continually listens to the teaching of the Bible,   says no to it, and assumes that there will be  a day when, in his own time, or in her own time   and on her own basis, she will be ready for  this? Make no such assumption. When you hear   the truth of the gospel proclaimed, if you’re  not converted by it, you’ll be hardened by it.   Because you become used to it, and you understand  it, and you’ve become adept at deflecting it.   The chilling reality of this  is very clear, isn’t it?  The “foreigners came.” The “foreigners came.” Hm.   That just means the outsiders, means the  unbelievers. They “came cringing”—“cringing   to me; as soon as they heard of me,  they obeyed me.” You go back through   some of the stories, and you realize that  something happened, and all the people said,   “Okay, fine, we’re good with you, David.”  That’s what he’s describing there—that   “foreigners lost heart.” They “came  trembling out of their fortresses.”   “Came trembling out of their fortresses.” It’s an  amazing picture, isn’t it? So, “Hey, sinner-man,   where you gonna hide? If I run to  the rocks, the rocks won’t hide me.”   Hey, “I’ve built walls, a fortress [deep]  and mighty, that none may penetrate.”   It’s Paul Simon. It’s a poem. It’s  the reality of some people’s lives.  Where are you hiding? Where’s your fortress?  If you’re not hiding in Jesus, you’re hiding in   something else. He is this to all who take refuge  in him. To those who do not take refuge in him,   they’re taking refuge somewhere else—whether  you’re a boy or a girl, a teen or an adult or   ancient. Where do you go? Where’s your secret  place? Where’s your Corrie ten Boom place?   Where’s the hiding place? Only God can  bring people out of their fortresses.   And the gospel brings people out of their  fortresses, because the gospel tells the truth.   It says, “Here’s the predicament. Here’s  the solution. Here’s the invitation.   Come! Get out of the fortress. That’s a stupid  place to hide. There’s no help there.” Well,   that’s how they came. They lost heart. An Encore for the End  And then a little encore for  the end. An encore for the end:   “The LORD lives, … blessed be my rock.” Word study  on “rock”: get a concordance, just go to “rock,”   and have a great afternoon. “And exalted be my  God, the rock of my salvation.” We’ve sung of it.   “Upon this rock I will build my church.”  Out of the rock, Moses, and so on.   It’s the rock that doesn’t roll. The God who gave me vengeance   … brought down peoples under me, … brought me out from my enemies;   you exalted me above those who rose against me;  you delivered me.  That’s what I’m saying. It’s like a PS, almost.  It’s an encore. Let’s go back through it again:   “The LORD lives.” “The Lord lives. He  brought them down. He brought me out.   He exalted. He delivered me. And so,” he  says, “for all these reasons and more,   I will praise the Lord among the nations.” “I will  praise the Lord among the nations.” He’s already   said in verse 44 that he has been “kept … as the  head of the nations.” Well, David’s position as   head of the nations was not insignificant, but  it couldn’t exactly be said to be international.   I mean, it’s a tiny little place,  a small Middle Eastern empire.  So you see, this expression of victory anticipates  the ultimate victory: that the story of the kings   eventually breaks the boundaries. The picture,  the Identi-Kit picture that we’re given,   cannot contain the ultimate reality.  And it takes out and beyond. God’s   promise to David is fully realized,  but not in David’s own lifetime.   Because the promise of God was beyond the capacity  of any mere human king to fulfill. David died.   David was buried. The kings came. They died. They  were buried. We would need a king who never dies.   “When your days are fulfilled …  I will raise up your offspring   after you …. My steadfast love  will not depart from him.”   That was the promise. Now look at verse  51: “Great salvation he brings to his king,   and shows [his] steadfast,” his covenant, “love to  his anointed, … David and his offspring forever.”  Well, here’s the point: Jesus is  the King who will rule the nations.   Jesus is the King who will rule the  nations. “The kingdom of [this] world   has become the kingdom of  our Lord and of his Christ.”   The Cleveland Chorus can help us  with that at Christmastime. Hm.  How should I end this? Well, I don’t know  what kind of day it was, or evening it was,   when the slip of a girl was caught completely  off guard by an angelic visitation—that   the angel actually said to her… And  she was actually a virgin. She was   betrothed to a man who was of the house  and lineage of David. “Your offspring.”   And out in the fields, where David had  looked after the sheep, the shepherds   became the receiving entity  of the message of the angels:   “Unto you is born this day in the city of  David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.   And this will be a sign [to] you: you will  find [the offspring]…” “The offspring”—that   God was committed to David, and his promise  would be fulfilled in his offspring.   It almost makes you wish that it  was Christmas in August, doesn’t it?   I hope you get some sense  of how this fits together.  Father, help us as we rehearse these  things and as we try again to understand   the wonder of your Word, as we receive  its challenges and exhortations,   and as we realize that as David looked forward,  as the prophets looked forward, as they stood   on their tiptoes looking over the boundaries  of time to the one who would finally come,   as Mary initially recoiled from the news,  as she went to find her cousin, as the   angels flooded the heavens—this is our  song; this is our gospel. We thank you   for it. Help us to believe it entirely,  to share it widely. For Jesus’ sake. 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.
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Channel: Alistair Begg
Views: 56,391
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: #Biblicalfigures, #christasking, #faithfulnessofgod, #idolatry, #trustinggod
Id: 5d73CW2LjuM
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Length: 42min 9sec (2529 seconds)
Published: Wed Aug 03 2022
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