Biblical Framework
Charles
Clough
Lesson 75
We’re going to look at a situation in David’s
life, and watch how he manages this, watch what he uses of the truths of the
Word and try to absorb this as a model of how a team should operate, because
what we’re going to find is that the other teams don’t operate this way. This is the Davidic model, the Messianic
leadership model. We want to start by
turning to a Psalm of David that records this event, Psalm 57. David was one of the great believers of both
Old Testament and New Testaments, and he is often looked down upon as
unspiritual because of various things that happened in his life. But God’s evaluation, whether it’s mans or
not is another story, but God’s evaluation is that he is a man who wholly
followed after the Lord. This causes a
lot of heartache and problems with folks but that’s the evaluation of
Scripture. So if Scripture is our
criteria then we go with the Scripture.
In this Psalm we have a situation that
happened earlier on in his life, and I think we’ve given you enough background
of history so that as we get into the Psalm and watch it you can pick up on
things that you would not have picked up on had you not come to class. We’re going to look first at the Psalm
itself, the title, because in the Hebrew verse 1 is that title. If you looked in a Hebrew text Psalm 57:1
reads, “For the choir director,” even though the English translation verse 1
starts out “Be gracious to me, O God,” in the Hebrew “Be gracious to me, O
God,” is verse 2. The titles are
considered part of the Scripture in the Hebrew. So we take these titles seriously. Not often do the titles tell us a lot about the Psalm, but they
tell us enough, the Holy Spirit logged enough in those headings usually to set
us up with some of the content.
What we want to look at in this title is
after it says “For the choir director;” it says “Al-tashheth,” and whenever you
see something like that, that “tashheth,” you know that the translators didn’t
know what to do with it. Because if
they knew what to do with it they would have translated it; all they did is
alliterate it, they took it and made it a one to one corresponds between the
sound in the Hebrew and the English language.
In the Hebrew, if you read the Hebrew it says “Al-tashheth,” and
“Al-tashheth” doesn’t translate anything, it just puts it there. They’ve done that everywhere this
occurs. If you look at Psalm 58 it says
“Al-tashheth.” Psalm 59 says
“Al-tashheth.” In Psalm 75 you see
“Al-tashheth.”
So what does “Al-tashheth” mean? This is a Hebrew verb and Hebrew reads from
right to left, so “tashheth” is a prefix to the Hebrew verb, and it’s a
negation. It’s a particular kind of
negation, it says don’t do this; “tashheth” means to destroy, so the title here
in Hebrew means don’t destroy. The
reason the translators haven’t translated it is because it doesn’t really make
a nice title. “For the choir director,
don’t destroy,” is he telling the choir don’t destroy the song, what is going
on here. We have to decide why is this
in the title? Actually, most people
that have looked at this Psalm feel that “Al-tashheth” is sort of a code put
into Psalm 57, 58, and 59 to describe a period in David’s life when he had the
choice to destroy Saul. Psalm 57 is
going to be a snapshot of an event that probably didn’t last more than thirty
minutes in David’s life, but had very strong repercussions in how he ascended
the throne.
Let’s review a few things about David. David is a model of Messianic
leadership. He came after Saul, so we
have Saul, then we have David, and before we had Saul we didn’t have any
kings. There were no kings in Moses
day, or Joshua’s day. Why did they have
a king? Why was the institution of the
monarchy begun? It was the people that
cried out to solve a problem in their community and their politics. What was the problem? The problem they had was that society was
disintegrating into chaos, “every man did that which is right in his own
eyes.” That was an internal
problem. What they sought was an
external solution. That was the problem
spiritually and they tried to solve it with a human solution. So they demanded, they didn’t just ask, they
actually demanded that God give them a king.
How did they qualify it when they asked? God, give us a king like all the other nations. What a stupid request. What was the whole purpose of Israel in history? To be like the other nations? No, to be
different, they were to march to a different drummer; they were called to a
different calling.
That’s why the Old Testament is so good
because it just pictures us the way we are, and we get uncomfortable with
sanctification, we want to kind of have one foot in the world. That’s what they wanted; they wanted a king
like all the other nations. Remember
what happened is God said you’re not going to get a king like all the other
nations, I’ll consent to giving you a king, and He gave them this guy, out of
the tribe of Benjamin. He let Saul’s
monarchy, that dynasty, be a conditional dynasty. It was conditioned on whether or not Saul would obey the
Lord. So Saul is given a promise but it
was conditional, sort of like the Sinaitic Covenant is a conditional
covenant.
Saul disintegrated and got out of it,
rebelled against the Lord, a very proud man, nothing immoral in his life, lived
what would be a respectable life in the community, but he had a problem, and it
was right from the very beginning, it’s like he was half ashamed to be
identified with the Lord. When the
pressure came on him he immediately reverted to human solutions, couldn’t get
his eyes on the Lord, it was always Saul, Saul, Saul, what are people going
think of Saul, and never what does the Lord think of Saul. Finally Saul was replaced in God’s economy
by David of the tribe of Judah, and David eventually, not at the point of Psalm
57 but eventually he would be given an unconditional promise, i.e. the Davidic
dynasty would go on forever and ever.
So David becomes a model. God often works that way, He gives us what
we think is an answer to our prayers, for us to play with it for a while, then
get dissatisfied with it so we’ll really get down to business and look to Him
to solve the real problem. God gave
them a king, the one that was sort of like what they wanted. It failed, it started to fall apart and
David was the replacement. When we went
through that point of history I made a point of contrasting David’s behavior
with the contemporary ancient Near Eastern kings. I gave you some quotes from Sennacherib, some quotes about how
these kings dealt with political problems.
What was David’s political problem? He’s called to be king, what’s the
problem? What age was he when he was
called to be king? He was a late teen,
and it’s a little arrogant to be a late teen and here’s Saul, old enough to be
his father, who’s sitting on the throne.
So we’ve got a little problem, I’m called to be king but somebody else
is sitting on the throne. So we have to
have a change of dynasty here, not just a change of political party, a change
of dynasty. How was this usually
handled in the world. We gave quotes;
we gave historical background quotes.
I’m giving you all this background because we’re going to deal with just
one word, in Psalm 57 we’re just dealing with one word, “don’t destroy.” To get the flavor for what’s going on here
we want to know our history. David’s
behavior differed from the behavior of his contemporaries in that his contemporaries,
when they wanted to ascend the throne what did they do to the opposition? Knock them off, kill them, and not only kill
the king but kill his progeny because of the dynastic idea. You know, if the guy’s got ten kids you’ve
got ten potential problems. So you
knock them all off, you don’t just kill the king, you kill his sons and if he
has grandsons you kill those too. Take
them all out. That was standard
procedure.
Does this give a little bit more flavor why
“Al-tashheth” is there? Don’t
destroy. David, at an early point in
his life, he has not yet ascended the throne, is being warned not to
destroy. The Psalm is characterized as
a “don’t destroy” Psalm. David knows he
is called to the throne, he knows Saul is after him, and he is going to say no,
I am going to trust the Lord to put me on that throne; it is going to be by
faith, not by works. I can sit here and
I can engineer the politics, I’ve got the army, I can train the assassination
team and they can go take him out, no problem.
But to do that would create a problem in that who gets the glory after
it’s all done? Obviously David in his
humanity gets the glory. David in his
human skills gets the glory. Where’s
the Lord in all this. The Lord was the
one that called Him to the throne, so David has a contest here. It’s bad enough to have to sit and wait for
Saul to get off the throne; it’s quite another story when the guy comes after
you to kill you, now you’ve got a problem.
And it becomes triply bad when you’ve got your own army, with guys that
have risked their life for you, and you’ve got a chance to take this guy out
and end the threats to their life and you don’t do it. That’s the situation, politically, for
David in the middle of this Psalm.
We want to look a little bit at the
background of what was going on because it says it’s “A Mikhtam of David, when
he fled from Saul, in the cave.” That
pins it down pretty much to certain passages of the Bible. We want to turn back to 1 Sam. 24, this is
when he’s in the cave, so let’s watch what happens. It’s an amazing story.
What we want to study is what must have gone through David’s thought
processes; that’s what we want to learn, we want to learn how to handle
problems like David did, not just the Goliath problem but the Saul
problem. Let’s see if we can mimic this
great believer’s mental attitude when he faced problems; that’s what we’re
trying to do here. Let’s go back in
history to 1 Sam. 24 and understand the situation.
I have to forewarn you here, the Old
Testament is very candid, and this passage as well as the one which I hope you
will read for next week, 1 Kings 11 and 12.
1 Sam. 24 is going to be one of those passages and the Hebrew has a
delightful ironic sense of humor here.
Watch for it. “Now it came about
when Saul returned from pursuing the Philistines, he was told, saying, Behold,
David is in the wilderness of En-gedi.”
If you have a map of Israel in your Bible, you have the Sea of Galilee,
the Dead Sea, the Mediterranean Sea over here, Jerusalem here, Saul has come
back from down in this zone and he comes across near the capital, Gilgal
because Jerusalem isn’t the capital yet, and right here where the Dead Sea
Scrolls were found, that’s where those caves are.
The cave that’s mentioned here is the same
area of the country, En-gedi, right on the western side of the Salt Sea, the Dead
Sea, and on this cliff, it’s an all brown desert area, you just have this water
sitting here and these mountains rise up on the west side, and up in those
mountains there’s caves. That’s where
the Dead Sea Scrolls were found, some little shepherd boy was up there in 1947
and he was throwing rocks into the cave for jokes and all of a sudden instead
of the rock going click click it went clunk, so he said hmm, wonder what my
rock hit. So he went up there and he
found a shattered urn and he started looking at the urn and here were some
scrolls. That’s the exciting story of
how, in 1947 the Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered, a very important
discovery. That’s the wilderness of En-gedi,
it’s a desert area that is full of caves, it was the hiding place and the
hideout of highway guys, guys that wanted to escape society. It’s near the area where John the Baptist
preached. If you’ve been there you
realize it’s nice and quiet, nobody bothers you because nobody wants to go
there. It’s just a wilderness area. David
is hiding there.
Verse 2, “Then Saul took three thousand
chosen men from all Israel, and went to seek David and his men in front of the
Rocks of the Wild Goats.” It’s a very
specific place, known apparently to the author of Scripture very clearly. [3] “And he came to the sheepfolds on the
way, where there was a cave; and Saul went in to relieve himself. Now David and his men were sitting in the
inner recesses of the cave. [4] And the men of David said to him, ‘Behold, this
is the day of which the LORD said to you, Behold; I am
about to give your enemy into your hand, and you shall do to him as it seems
good to you.’ Then David arose and cut off the edge of Saul’s robe secretly.
[5] And it came about afterward that David’s conscience bothered him because he
had cut off the edge of Saul’s robe.
[6] So he said to his men, ‘Far be it from me because of the LORD that I should
do this thing to my lord, the LORD’S anointed, to
stretch out my hand against him, since he is the LORD’S anointed. [7]
And David persuaded his men with these words and did not allow them to rise up
against Saul. And Saul arose, left the
cave, and went on his way.”
Think of this, put this in the historic
setting. Talk about getting caught with
your pants down, this is the place in the Scripture. Here it is, here’s the king in the most compromised position that
you could possibly imagine, and this is part of the humor of Scripture. It’s all done without making it silly humor,
but there’s a divine irony and we have to enjoy how the Holy Spirit worked here
in this situation. There’s tremendous
irony to this. Of all the caves that he
had to pick, it was the cave where who is in the back but David and trained
military guys, sitting there watching this whole thing go on. You can imagine David’s own guys, hey look,
we’ve got a clear shot here, let’s get the guy now, we can kill him and
disappear in the inners of the cave and they’ll never know it even happened,
they probably don’t know what cave he went into, it’ll take all day to find
this guy. A beautiful set up, beautiful
set up in the light of history.
David sits in the situation, tailor-made for an assassination against
the competing dynasty. If he were to
think as a pagan would think, as Sennacherib would have thought, there’s no
question what David would have done in this situation, absolutely no
question. But David is here and David
has something in his heart and it’s called the Word of God, and that makes a difference
in how he manages this situation.
Notice he has to manage his own situation, he has to manage the guys
that are with him, and he has to do it in such a way that it’s going to leave
him in conflict, serious conflict, with the accepted norm and behavior of
political people in that time and age.
With that background let’s go to Psalm
57. Before we’re finished you’ll see
that Psalm 57 is taken up in our hymn book.
Maybe I’ve ruined the image of the hymn for you but now when you start
singing that hymn again you’ll think of the cave. Psalm 57 is a “Mikhtam,” that means a kind of Psalm. Psalms have structures to them, and in the last
hundred years of church history there have been enough people study the Psalms
that they’ve been able to figure out there’s categories to Psalms. There’s a cycle inside these Psalms and if
you capture this cycle you’ll see it repeat.
It’s artistically done so it’s not mechanical, every Psalm is
different.
Here is the structure of a Psalm. Usually in a Psalm you have these elements,
I’ll list them and when you read Psalms just look for these kinds of
elements. One of the things that you’ll
find in a Psalm is a description or a lament over some problem; we call this
the lament section. Also you’ll find a
verse or two, usually not more than two verses in any given Psalm, that express
the promise or the doctrine that the Psalmist claimed by faith in the middle of
that lament. It’s a very interesting
study in the Psalms of how these guys thought, and by studying the Psalms you
can watch how they managed. There’s a
lament section, you can usually pick that out because it’ll be a description
of the problem. Then there will be a confidence section. When you get into the original languages the
verb tenses shift and there’s all kinds of signals for this, unfortunately in
the English translation it doesn’t all come out, but it’s much more powerful in
the original languages. There’s a
confidence section, then there’s usually a couple of petition sections, so
you’ll have a petition in there. So
lament, confidence, petition.
Then you’ll have somewhere usually a praise
section, and the praise is described two ways.
The scholars that have used this classification call some praise declarative
praise, and descriptive praise. Here’s
the difference: declarative praise means I declare what God did in the
particular situation, the specifics, that’s declarative praise. The descriptive praise is a generalization
of the character of God that led Him to do this specific thing in the
particular situation. It’s a
generalization, in other words, after watching God do it thirty-two times, that
He acts this way in this kind of situation, I start generalizing and saying,
well then, God is a God of love, God is a God of power, etc. That’s called descriptive praise.
You’ll see these five elements in almost
every Psalm, and there are patterns to combining these elements. There are certain Psalms that are heavy on
lament and they’re called the lament Psalms.
There are Psalms that are heavy on descriptive praise; they’re called
descriptive praise Psalms.” There are
Psalms that are heavy on declarative praise; so don’t think of all these five
elements as equal, sometimes they expand and the other parts contract.
This particular Psalm has a structure it, and
we can’t go through it verse by verse because we don’t have time, but I’m going
to go through enough of it so we’ll at least see a little bit about how David
thinks. As a side note let me give you
some structure of the Psalm. Verses
1-5, which concludes “Be exalted above the heavens, O God, let Thy glory be
above all the earth.” Most of verses 1-5 is emphasizing going to God in the
middle of the problem. Just quickly
scan that, Verse 1, “Be gracious to me, O God, be gracious to me, for my soul
takes refuge in Thee; and in the shadow of Thy wings I will take refuge, until
destruction passes by. [2] I will cry to God Most High, to God who accomplishes
all things for me; [3] He will send from heaven and save me; He reproaches him
who tramples upon me. Selah. God will send forth His lovingkindness and His
truth. [4] My soul is among lions; I must lie among those who breathe forth
fire, even the sons of men, whose teeth are spears and arrows, and their tongue
a sharp sword. [5] Be exalted above the heavens, O God; let Thy glory be above
all the earth.”
Do you see what’s going on there? Where’s the petition in that, where do you
see him talking to God, asking God to do something? Clearly the petition is in verse 1, “be gracious.” It’s not in verse 2, that’s describing
something, it’s not addressed to God.
Verse 3 is describing something, not addressed to God. Verse 4 is describing something, not
addressed to God. But verse 5 is
addressed to God. So it’s like a
sandwich, there’s praise in verse 1; there’s praise in verse 5. Let’s characterizes verses 2-4 that are the
meat inside the two pieces of bread.
Verses 2, 4 and 5, “I will cry to God Most High, to God who accomplishes
all things for me; [3] He will send from heaven and save me; He reproaches him
who tramples upon me. Selah. God will send forth His lovingkindness,” which of
the five elements is verse 3? The
confident section, that’s describing the confidence he has in the Lord in the middle
of the situation. Verse 2 is sort of
he’s talking to himself and he’s kind of up courage to trust the Lord. Verse 4 is a description of the problem, so
it would be more like a lament.
We haven’t seen any praise here. So the first five parts of this Psalm are
heavy into petition and lament. So
verses 1-5, that section of the Psalm tells us the mental attitude that’s going
on inside David’s head, very instructive, because the Holy Spirit who knows
David’s heart allows David later to write this out for our edification. Now we know the 1 Samuel 24 situation in the
cave, we see the situation David’s in and we want to get inside his head
because this guy is a sharp believer, we can learn a lot watching David. Verses 1-5 are how he’s cycling all this
data; this is what’s going on.
Verses 6-11, “They have prepared a net for my
steps; my soul is bowed down; they dug a pit before me; they themselves have
fallen into the midst of it. Selah.” What does that look like? The lament again, it’s a description of the
situation. Verse 7, “My heart is
steadfast, O God, my heart is steadfast; I will sing, yes I will sing praises!
[8] Awake, my glory; Awake harp and lyre, I will awaken the dawn! [9] I will
give thanks to Thee, O Lord, among the peoples; I will sing praises to Thee
among the nations. [10 For Thy lovingkindness is great to the heavens, and Thy
truth to the clouds. [11] Be exalted above the heavens, O God; let Thy glory be
above all the earth.”
What are the elements in that? Praise, heavy on praise. Verse 9 is praise, verse 10 is praise, verse
11 is praise, it’s a wish for God’s glory to be manifest. So clearly from
verses 6-11 the Psalm shifts. Do you
see how this shifted? Watch that,
you’ll see that again and again in the Psalms.
The Psalm starts out taking you through the problem, they take you to
exactly the doctrine and the truth the guy used, and then they take you to the
resolution. It’s a very insightful
thing. What we’re allowed to do by
studying these Psalms is get inside these guys minds, these great believers and
how they thought so we can walk through life holding their hand and saying
okay, take me through that trial David, I want to watch how you handled it from the inside.
Verses 7, 8, 9 and 10 all deal with
praise. Do you notice anything in
verses 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 where you see a confidence section repeated, where
he’s expressing confidence in something?
Verse 7, it’s very clear in verse 7 that he has absolute confidence the
Lord’s going to handle this problem for him. There’s one other little tidbit in verse 6, you have to look at it
carefully, go through each one of the lines, and see if you don’t notice
something different between verse 6 and verse 4. We said both of those are
laments. Verse 4 is a lament in the sense
it describes the problem; verse 6 starts out looking like it’s doing the same
thing, but what happens at the end of verse 6?
That’s a prophecy of something.
What verb tense is that, past, present, or future? It’s past, “they have fallen into the midst
of it.” Therefore, is verse 6 looking
at the problem before resolution or looking at the problem after
resolution? It’s looking at the problem
after it’s been solved. So this
section, and this is typical, the praise sections of the Psalms will look at
the situation after God solved it.
That’s why they’re praising God.
Now here’s the tricky part, sometimes the
confidence is so powerful in the heart of these believers that they can absent
themselves from the situation, get out of the situation, and look at the
situation as though it’s already been resolved, even though it hasn’t been in
reality. When you see that, and there
are several Psalms that do that, that tells you how powerful these guys were
mentally, it shows you what kind of a mental attitude they had. Talk about tough people, people like David
in these kinds of situations accomplish these great things for God because on
the inside they have that amazing confidence, they could even visualize it in
their mind as something that is already past, the problem is already over, even
though it wasn’t over. They had a grip
on the mind of God, it was that powerful.
Let’s go back to verse 1 and go through this
and study how David handles it. Watch
what truths come in here, because now we want to go verse by verse. Let’s look at what sort of truths, what kind
of doctrines about God is David using here.
“Be gracious to me, O God, be gracious to me, for my soul takes refuge
in Thee; and in the shadow of Thy wings I will take refuge, until destruction passes
by.” The first line, “Be gracious…be
gracious,” we’ve gone through the events, creation, fall, flood, covenant, etc.
why does he ask God to be gracious?
What does that immediately tell you where David’s coming from in the
situation? Does he merit this? No.
He immediately puts himself in absolute humility before the Lord,
realizing he is a sinner. Because he
can say “be gracious to me, O God,” that is one of the secrets of why he didn’t
get so self-righteous and say I’m so much better than Saul, God has to kill
Saul because I’m so great. That’s not
part of his attitude, it doesn’t even figure into the equation. He starts right out on a grace basis. He says my relationship with the Lord is
based from beginning to end on His grace and that means it’s not some merit
that I have in my heart that I’m such a great and wonderful person that God
just have to open the pearly gates for me, I’m coming, hey God, get ready. There’s none of that in here, just “be gracious,
be gracious to me.”
Then it says “for my soul takes refuge in
Thee; and in the shadow of Thy wings,” when you see an expression “in the
shadow of Thy wings,” and you have a concordance, try looking that up and see
where it first happens in the Scriptures.
When you look at a concordance always look at expressions and find out
when it was first used. Think about
what we’ve learned in history, I want to take you where this expression is
first used. Turn to Deut. 32:11, where
did David get all this truth from?
“Like an eagle that stirs up its nest, that hovers over its young, He
spread His wings and caught them, He carried them on His pinions. [12] The LORD alone guided
him,” etc. That’s a picture of God’s
grace toward who? What did we
study?
We got into Deuteronomy, we got into the giving
of the law and I said the national anthem had to be taught to the nations. The national anthem that was given to Israel
was Deuteronomy 32. Our national anthem
depicts what happened in Baltimore harbor in an actual historical event. Most people are too embarrassed to sing the
second and third stanzas but they really are neat. Deut. 32 is the national anthem of Israel and it does our
national anthem one better. Our national
anthem looks back to what happened at Fort McHenry, but Deut. 32 looks back and
it looks forward into history to the future ultimate consummation of the
history of Israel, and it gives confidence that the nation Israel is not going
to evaporate, disappear from history, it has a destiny. In the middle of all that, verse 11 is a revelation
of the nature of God in analogy with an eagle caring for its young. The eagle was looked upon as a great bird of
prey, a strong, strong shelter. So it’s
a picture in verse 11 of a mother or father eagle covering up its young.
Just a side note, this metaphor of God
spreading its wings to protect its young occurs again, several times in the
Bible. Do you remember where Jesus used
this? There was one point in Jesus life where He mentioned this same metaphor. It was toward the end of His life, He came
into Jerusalem on palm Sunday and the crowds began to turn against Him and He
knew He was going to go to the cross, and He looked back at the walls of
Jerusalem, and He said, O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, like a mother hen I would
gather the young but you would not.
That shows you a feature that is consistently depicted from Deut. 32 all
the way through the Gospels, God is pictured as a mother bird caring for its
young. There’s something in the
biological behavior of the structure of that animal behavior that is
deliberately designed in to reveal something about our God in heaven.
Where did David get the metaphor? He got it from the national anthem. So let’s go back to Psalm 57, it’s not a
mystery now. These words in these Psalms
are all things that the guy learned in various places. He learns to come to God on the basis of
grace. “Be gracious to me, O God, be
gracious to me, for my soul takes refuge in Thee; and in the shadow of Thy
wings I will take refuge, until destruction passes by.” Notice the confidence there? That he’s not going to have to take refuge
for much longer because he has this confidence that the destruction will pass. Where’s he getting that from? Who’s sovereign? What does David have in his God that the pagans don’t have in
their gods? Go back to that basic
diagram. We’ve got to live as David
would have back in those days.
The pagan has this idea of Continuity of
Being, he has gods that are finite and limited. If he puts his trust in god B, how does he know what’s going to
happen next week in the council of the gods, who’s going to be chairman next
week, god F; well what happened to god B, I trusted him last week. That’s why, remember when we had that quote
from Sennacherib, and I deliberately put it in the notes, I had him quoting how
many gods and goddesses, he was praying to this god and that god, all the
gods. Why? Covering his bases. He didn’t know who was going to be in charge
next week, because the pagans have ignorance ultimately underlying them because
they have no Word of God, there’s no Bible that Ishtar wrote, Venus wrote,
Jupiter wrote; did any of those gods or goddesses write a Bible? No, because
none of them talk. So the pagan
ultimately is done, he is ignorant. He
faces silence there.
David believes in the Creator/creature
distinction. He knows that there’s a
Creator who is omniscient, He knows that God is all powerful; he knows that God
is sovereign, so destruction will pass him by.
In verse 2 he quotes a name for God.
This is not a Jewish name and you should be sensitive to this. “God Most High” is unusual for a Jew to
address God that way. That’s striking,
why doesn’t he call Him Yahweh? But why
“God Most High.” That is a pagan
Gentile name; that’s the name Melchizedek used. Oh, Melchizedek used it, and who was Melchizedek? Melchizedek was the last of the king-priests
before the baton was handed over to Abraham.
What does David’s kingship mirror?
He is to be a king and a priest after the order of Melchizedek, preparing
himself for the ultimate, Jesus Christ.
So he’s using Melchizedekian language to describe God, Gen. 14.
Now we know, “shadow of Thy wings” is from
Deut. 32; we know that “Most High God” is a title from Gen. 14. He says “He will send from heaven and save
me; He reproaches him who tramples upon me. God will send forth His
lovingkindness and His truth,” verse 3.
There’s a whole bunch of studies on all those words. But I want to single out two words, the
words translated
lovingkindness and truth because those appear
frequently. You can’t read the Psalms
without understanding these two words, they’re very critical to understand
vocabulary wise.
Lovingkindness is an adjective that describes
covenant loyalty. Implicit in the word
lovingkindness is a covenant of some sort.
Does that ring a bell? Yes, the Davidic Covenant, the Sinaitic Covenant,
the Abrahamic Covenant, these guys all thought in terms of those
contracts. See how powerful that
contractual way of thinking is. When
they got themselves in a jam, apparently they went back in their hearts, whose
contract is involved here. I’ve got the
paperwork and it’s all signed, and they went back to the paperwork, they went
back to the contract. This
lovingkindness is always used in terms of some sort of covenant. That’s why it’s used for marital love; it is
not used for when two young people fall in love; that is another word, ahav, because there’s not yet a covenant
established. The vocabulary shifts to chesed when there’s a covenant. So lovingkindness has covenant in the
background. The idea of truth there is
the picture of strength and stability.
Remember immutability, God is immutable, He doesn’t change, He is all powerful,
the word kind of encapsulates all those attributes sort of like in one
package. [Blank spot]
Well, this is where the confidence is coming
from. What he is doing here is he’s
taking all that information about the covenant, about keeping covenant, about
God who is sovereign, God who is omnipotent, God who is omniscient, God is who
is eternal, God who is loving, God who is holy, all that wrapped up in these
words. That’s why he’s able to do what
he’s going to do in this cave.
Verse 4 is a description of what happens, and
notice how he generalizes it, it’s not just Saul, “My soul is among lions; I
must lie among those who breathe forth fire,” now knowing what you know of 1
Sam. 24 what do you suppose he’s talking about there? Do you suppose he could possibly be including some of his own
people? It’s just a thought, we can’t
be dogmatic here. The guy is supposed
to be a leader here, and he’s got to lead in the nation. One group is out to kill him, the other
group is out to kill that group, so it’s kind of isolating for David, he’s the
lone guy. So he says “My soul is among
lions,” and the word “lions” is often used of warriors, that’s why that same
imagery is taken over in 1 Peter and applied to who? “…a roaring lion seeking whom he may devour.” “My soul is among lions, I must among
those,” I have to sleep, “with people who breathe forth fire, even the sons of
men, whose teeth are spears and arrows, and their tongue a sharp sword.”
Do you notice the emphasis in verse 4 on
speech, watch how often in the Psalms David is complaining about gossip and
maligning and criticism. Speech! Here’s a guy that went out there, a
warrior. I could show you passages in
the Old Testament in Samuel of him coming back from battle, you think Saul
relieving himself in a cave is a problem; you ought to see what it says in the
Hebrew about what David did when he came back from the battlefield. The point is, it’s very, very picturesque
what’s going on here. Yet in all that
violence of the battlefield the thing that bothered David the most was people
running off at the mouth. I think we all
see that. What does the most damage to a group? It’s the maligning, criticism and gossip, and everything else
that goes on, and it ruins people’s reputation, it ruins communication, it
ruins fellowship, so there are warnings in the Scripture about using our
mouth.
Now in verse 5 he ends with an appeal, it’s
sort of like a preliminary praise, but it’s in the form of a petition. “Be exalted above the heavens, O God; let
Thy glory be above all the earth.” What
does that tell you in context with verse 4?
See what he’s doing? In verse 4
he’s analyzed the problem, he’s so thought about the problem that he perceives,
there’s no way I can solve this problem because it’s the sons of men, it’s
inherent fallen human nature, so if there’s going to be any redeeming work
here, God has to do it. That’s why he
says let there be a testimony for God.
That’s one of the things that is involved in praise. Who gets the credit? After all is said and done, in the final
analysis, who gets the bulk of the credit here?
David is controlling him and his men in that
cave, when they could so easily, within feet, a few more feet, a sword and a
knife, would have taken out his problem.
You can just see these guys saying let me go get him! Now, come on, he’s almost finished, he’s
only got a few minutes to do this thing, and these guys are professional
killers; that’s what their job is, they’re trained to do that, that’s the
warrior group, he trained them all the way from another cave, called the cave
of Adullam. David has trained these
guys. And they’re just chopping at the
bit to do this and he says no, do not destroy, do not destroy. What do you mean don’t destroy, come on
David, if we let this guy go we’re going to be killed some day in battle, don’t
you have any consideration for us, we’re trying to help you pal. So the pressure is on David from his own
people.
But David isn’t thinking about his own
people, he isn’t thinking about Saul.
Verse 5 tells you where this man’s heart is. He is thinking about who gets the credit. God has called me to this dynasty, if the
dynasty is ever to get going in history, God will have to put me on the throne,
no one else, not my wisdom, not my political gimmicks, not all my negotiations,
God is going to have to do it and God will get the credit. And God did.
The rest of it is the declaration of
praise. This is looking back at it,
verse 6. We come now to this past tense
in verse 6, because here is where you start to pick up the flavor. The crisis is over; verses 1-5 analyze what
was going on in his mind. Now whether
verses 6-11 went on in his mind at that time or whether verses 6-11 tell you
what he was thinking after the whole thing was resolved we don’t know. “They have prepared a net for my steps;”
this is all the plotting with Saul and his men, “my soul is bowed down;” and
notice when it says “my soul is bowed down” he’s admitting that he’s
depressed. He’s not going, you know,
“I’ve got the joy, joy, joy” business; it’s not quite like that. He is depressed, he’s feeling the
pressure. This goes on day after day
after day after day. He’s got to
sustain this group of guys out in the caves of this En-gedi wilderness. Can you imagine the food problem, just think
about this. You’ve got a little
practical problem. Where are you going to get food and water out to that
group? So they have foraging, they must
have had to go out on search missions to get their food every single day. All kinds of problems, just the logistic
problems alone, no wonder he felt “bowed down.”
“…They dug a pit before me; they themselves
have fallen into the midst of it.”
Knowing what’s going on in the cave, do you see where that metaphor came
from? See, there’s an irony to
this. They literally have tried to set
David up in the wilderness of En-gedi, surround him and destroy him. And what he’s saying, God, they’ve set a pit
and they’re the ones that are going to fall into it. This guy is on a pit right now.
You have to read this with the background in mind to get the full flavor
of what’s happening here. There’s irony in all this, there’s a tremendous sense
of the sovereign of God. What did God
accomplish? He brought Saul within a
few feet of David. We’ll see what the response is in a moment. He speaks, “they have fallen into the midst
of it.”
Now in verses 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11 is his
tremendous confidence. “My heart is
steadfast, O God, my heart is steadfast.”
What did he say in verse 6, “my soul is bowed down,” but “my heart is
steadfast.” There’s a difference, you
can be depressed and still believe. You
can still believe that these are promises; it may not always work out to put a
smile on your face, but deep down, at your deepest level, even though it hurts
up in the upper levels, at the deep levels, the foundation levels, you’re not
really disturbed, your feet are on the ground.
It smarts and stings a little bit up here, but down in the depths of
your heart your feet are solemnly planted. We’ve all been in that situation,
that’s where he is. “My heart is
steadfast, O God, my heart is steadfast,” and now he says I’m going to sing, “I
will sing, yes, I will sing praises!”
In verse 8 he’s talking to himself when he
says, “Awake, my glory,” “my glory” is usually used synonymously with soul, and
he says “Awake, my soul, awake my harp and lyre,” what was one of his
talents? Music. It was a method of expressing his
thankfulness to God. Verse 9, “I will
give thanks to Thee, O Lord” and notice, not just personally, who was he giving
thanks before? “among the peoples; I will sing praises to Thee among the
nations.” How did David, literally,
sing praises among the nations? What
are we reading here, what book of the Bible?
Psalms. Has he given praise
before the nations? Yes, because the
book of Psalms got published among the nations.
Plus the fact in his own career he probably
shared this with other kings. Don’t
think while he was reigning in Jerusalem he didn’t have business deals. We know
he talked to Hiram of Tyre because that’s how Solomon knew how to get the cedar
for the temple. So David probably
talked many times, and these kings would share stories of how they got to the
throne. Well David, how did you get to
the throne? And that was his
opportunity to give a testimony. These
other kings would say, well I killed So and So, and I killed this guy and I
wiped out his family. David, how many
families did you wipe out? None. You’re nuts, you didn’t kill your
opponents. No, I didn’t kill them. Why not? Because I have a God in heaven,
that’s why, and I don’t have to take care of those kinds of things because He
takes care of them for me. It was an
opportunity to give testimony. So David
gives testimony to the truth.
Let’s conclude by turning back to what happened
at the end of that incident in 1 Samuel to see what kind of a victory God
really gave to David. Something
stunning happened here. As we read
before, David came up, cut a garment off of Saul, after Saul went out of the
cave David said, in verses 9, 10, 11, he went out into the open and he said
Saul, I’m here, look, and he held up this piece that he’d cut off his
garment. I was here.
[Verse 8, “Now afterward David arose and went
out of the cave and called after Saul, saying, ‘My lord the king!’ And when
Saul looked behind him, David bowed with his face to the ground and prostrated
himself. [9] And David said to Saul, ‘Why do you listen to the words of men,
saying, ‘Behold, David seeks to harm you? [10] Behold, this day your eyes have
seen that the LORD had given you today into my
hand in the cave, and some said to kill you, but my eye had pity on you;’ and I
said, ‘I will not stretch out my hand against my lord, for he is the LORD’S anointed.’
[11] ‘Now, my father, see! Indeed, see the edge of your robe in my hand! For in
that I cut off the edge of your robe
and did not kill you, know and perceive that there is no evil or rebellion in
my hands, and I have not sinned against you, though you are lying in wait for
my life to take it.’ [12] May the LORD judge between
you and me, and may the LORD avenge me on you’ but my
hand shall not be against you. [13] As the proverb of the ancients says, ‘Out
of the wicked comes forth wickedness;’ but my hand shall not be against you.
[14] After whom has the king of Israel come out? After whom are you pursuing?
After a dead dog, after a single flea? [15] The LORD therefore be
judge and decide between you and me; and may He see and plead my cause, and
deliver me from your hand.”
Saul knows very well that if David got close
enough to cut this off, he got close enough to chop his head off or stab
him. So it was living evidence that
David wasn’t just bluffing. He goes on
and describes it; it’s an amazing dialogue, verse 11, 12, 13 and 14. Now verse 16, here’s the result, here’s the
end of the scene. “Now it came about when David had finished speaking these
words to Saul, that Saul said, ‘Is this your voice, my son David?’ Then Saul
lifted up his voice and wept.” Saul was
a very emotional person, a very unstable kind of person. He floats around spiritually but he was
emotional. By the way, it shows you
therefore that emotions and the Holy Spirit working doesn’t necessarily
coincide.
Verse 17, “And he said to David, ‘You are
more righteous than I; for you have dealt well with me, while I have dealt
wickedly with you.” See, it led to a
confession of sin. Verse 18, “And you
have declared today that you have done good to me, that the LORD delivered me
into your hand and yet you did not kill me. [19] For if a man finds his enemy,
will he let him go away safely? May the LORD therefore
reward you with good in return for what you have done to me this day.”
Now the amazing thing in verses 20-21. Keep
the history and background in mind; keep your history in mind! What is the big picture? Dynastic
succession. That’s what’s going on
here, who is going to control the throne of Israel. Here’s the guy that’s on the throne, who has all power, and what
does he say in verses 20-21 as a result of this? “And now, behold, I know that you” not only will be king, “but
you shall surely be king, and that the kingdom of Israel shall be established
in your hand. [21] So now,” look at this, look at verse 21, “So now swear to me
by the LORD that you will not cut off my descendants after me,
and that you will not destroy my name from my father’s household.” And guess what the verb “destroy” is? It’s the title of the Psalm, “Al-tashheth,”
don’t destroy my seed. What’s the
object of the verb “destroy?” The old dynasty.
Why not destroy it? Because God
is in control. It is not man’s
prerogative, it is God’s prerogative, it is the Word of God that’s going to
establish this thing, and I’m going to trust the Lord to do this.
Here we have an eloquent portrayal of the
behavior, for about thirty minutes, probably this whole thing was started and
finished in thirty minutes, a snapshot of one of the great believers of all
time and how he managed adversity, trial and pressure, and how he came out of
it. Then in verses 20-21 what he
accomplished by it. He could have
killed Saul, but what would that have done?
It would have hardened the people who were the Saulites. It would have hardened them you would have
had to fight all of them. But by having
Saul himself, in verses 20-21, admit that yeah, my dynasty is finished, and the
destiny of my sons rests on you, he’s defeated. Who is defeated here?
Saul is defeated, and he was defeated without even being touched with a
knife. The reason is because David used
another sword, the sword of the Word of God that is living and powerful and
sharper than two-edged sword. David is
an amazing story here of a guy, a king, a Messianic leader who operated with
all of the covenant knowledge, all the knowledge of the attributes of God, and
now we’re going to watch, sadly, one of the all-time ignoramuses on the throne,
called Rehoboam. Watch what this guy
does. Keep David in mind; use him as a
reflector as we start studying these other guys. It’s going to be a study in what we call, in the actual area of
doctrine it has a name, it’s called hamartiology. Hamartiology is a study of sin, and that’s what we’re going to
be studying, hamartiology and sanctification, hamartiology and sanctification,
over and over. That’s the story of the next few weeks. It’s great, because we need to know that.
----------------------------
Are there any questions on what we’ve done as
far as the history up to this point because as I said, we’re going to go pretty
fast through an awful lot of history in the next few chapters, because we’ve
got to cover everything from 930 BC, we’ve got to cover 200 years of history
and it involves political intrigues, and if you’re new to the Bible this can be
very confusing for you because if you don’t know kings and who did what under
whose reign it can get kind of confusing.
So what I’m going to try to do is go through passages of Scripture. Next week I’d like to go through 1 Kings
11-12 and just go through the passage, so if you haven’t gone through it and
it’s new to you, by the time we get through next week it won’t be new to you.
That’s a critical section. So we won’t
attempt to go through every single chapter, we’re just going to take segments
through a few certain chapters of the Old Testament. Any questions?
Question asked: Clough replies: I think I
know what you’re talking about, you get it on the radio and in books and stuff,
the problem with that approach is that you’re fooling yourself and ultimately
it’s deception because only the Holy Spirit can give you that confidence. We’re talking true truth here, and frankly,
I think we’re better off being somewhat skeptical about things until the Holy
Spirit opens our hearts. The analogy
would be before you became a Christian, and you might have been around
Christians, peer pressure, and you might have felt well, I believe in
Jesus. Before I became a Christian I
thought I believed in Jesus too, but if you asked me what was the content of my
belief I couldn’t tell you. But I could
have tried to work something up, but that’s all stuff that you work up. Real truth, like we all know, someday the
Lord opened your heart and you trusted the Lord. And you didn’t do that, you didn’t sit there and work it up.
Well, it’s the same thing; you don’t sit and work that kind of stuff up. When
those Psalmists experienced that confidence, I’m sure they would have told us
if we could interview them, oh well, the Holy Spirit just gave me that, the
Lord just opened my heart to that truth.
That’s why you don’t always observe it, it is not true that that’s one
in every Psalm. It’s not standard
procedure. I just pointed it out so you
could be on the look out for it.
Some people have argued that they had a
prophetic spirit in that they could actually visualize, the Lord might have
taken them to visualize this in a way that He doesn’t to us, because after all
we’re talking here about people who write Scripture. So special situations might have applied to them that don’t to
us. But the main problem, the main principle
in what we’re seeing here is always look for the confidence section when you
read a Psalm. Look for a confidence
section, because that will queue you as to what was going on in their head
about God. That will tell you what the
battle was. I think that’s the
discipline we want to get. I always am
intrigued by how did they handle that?
I want to know, how did they handle that, what were you thinking when
you acted that way. That’s why those
confidence sections inside the text are so critical. Just like tonight when that past tense occurred, the visualization
is that they’d fallen into the pit and it’s not like I commanded them to fall
into the pit, I claimed that they’d fallen into the pit, it’s much more, almost
like passive, they did this to me and they’ve fallen into the pit. He can see it happen.
Like I say, I don’t think we know in Psalm 57
whether that happened prior to or after, it’s hard to tell.
Question asked: Clough replies: You can use it oppositely though; you can
use this in another way, backwards.
Instead of using it, name it and claim it, there’s another way I’ve
found useful and that is when I’m not trusting the Lord…. The problem is usually when I’m not trusting
the Lord I’m distracted from not trusting the Lord so I’m not even conscious
I’m not trusting the Lord. That’s what
the problem is because sin is so deceptive.
So when circumstances hit me over the head or my wife hits me over the head
or something like that, and I realize I’m not trusting the Lord in this situation,
when you first become aware that you’re not trusting the Lord in a situation, a
good question and discipline to do is say to yourself, now wait a minute, I’m
not in neutral, so what am I trusting in?
And then when you start asking yourself, what kind of a God-image am I
having that leads me to behave this way, it’s great because all of a sudden it
grabs all the crud in your thought
patterns and pulls it out for examination and you say man, I have accepted a
pagan premise here. God really isn’t in
control, because I have to believe something. At all times I’m operating on one
presupposition or I’m operating the other.
Question asked: Clough replies: You’re saying it’s spontaneous. Obviously praise is after the fact, it’s
just that in some cases there’s a prophetic element in these Psalms. I can’t think of a good example now, but
there are those cases where this thing happens and you know from the context
that he’s still in the middle of the problem, and he has this ability to see
it. But it’s not always there. Now
Psalm 57 you’re probably right, probably all these are, all of them were
written after the fact. The question is when they wrote them after the fact,
when David sat there and either dictated it to somebody, a scribe who wrote it
down, is he telling the scribe that gee, thinking back on that cave incident,
this is how God was praised, or is he saying to the scribe who’s writing it
down, let me tell you what I was thinking when I did that? It’s hard to say because we don’t know how
these Psalms were composed.
Question asked: Clough replies: Is confidence even specifically more than
that, and that’s what I wanted to get into when I showed you the eagle
metaphor, and how he used chesed,
the word for lovingkindness, I brought those two up because I wanted to show
that David had more, he knew God well enough to know He was omnipotent,
omniscient, etc. and he surely did trust that way. But the very fact that he was using those words and those
metaphors that are anchored to covenants tells you that he was standing on
those covenants. Even though he doesn’t
say “I believe in the Davidic Covenant,” he doesn’t have to say that to tell us
that’s in fact what he’s doing.
Question asked: Clough replies: We have to realize that the presence of
depression and fear is not always a sign we’re out of fellowship, because if it
is, we’ve got a problem with Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane. If Jesus was sinless, and He is so upset by
what’s going to happen that’s He’s rupturing temple areas in His forehead, I
beg to differ with some people, He wasn’t just sitting back and “naming it and
claiming it,” not in that situation He wasn’t.
Then what are we going to say, Jesus was out of fellowship in the Garden
of Gethsemane. Clearly not. Then that shows you that you can be in faith
and still be working through all kinds of emotions. It’s who wins, does the emotional pattern totally overwhelm you,
or finally is there a spiritual control, where a human spirit is not ultimately
be subdued by the fleshly emotions.
Question asked: Clough replies: Saul is all over the board. He’s a double-minded man, and he’s all over
the board. And this is why it’s caused
no end of Bible scholars…, because over the years people have asked the
question, was Saul a believer? You can
hardly tell with this guy, at times he really looks like a genuine believer,
and at other times he blows it. I
personally think he was a believer. I
think he had all kinds of disobedience problems, and God thrashed him. And finally God killed him. We have to
recognize that all believers don’t… the end of every believer’s life is not
always a happy story. We’ve got a little deception going on in our own little
evangelical circles about that, people go around and say well, Solomon couldn’t
have been a believer because he didn’t last.
I beg your pardon, but Solomon was a believer. Now he tubed out at the end of his life. Did he lose his
salvation? No, he didn’t lose his
salvation. The point is 2 Sam. 7 says
he who disobeys will be chastened with the rod of men. Who’s doing the chastening? The men?
No, behind it is an unseen hand that’s doing the chastening.
Like in I Cor. 11 we read at every communion
service here, “many are sick and weakly and many sleep,” it’s clearly saying
that the Lord kills people, believers, He doesn’t bother the unbelievers, it’s
the believers. So you find believers in
jail, you find believers in the funny farm, you find believers sick when they
shouldn’t be, we’re amiss, we’re all sheep, stupid sheep. That’s why David is so good because he gets
involved in about everything we can get involved in and yet he comes out
smelling like a rose, and it’s just because David was dong things in his life
that the other guys didn’t do. David
would get out of it, but somehow David’s heart was sensitive and the Holy
Spirit came to him and he responded and got back on track. He had a whole log of glop to deal with, but
he got back on the track.
And then you see somebody like Solomon and
you say for crying out loud, what happened to this guy? He had everything going for him and he wipes
out. Then we’re going to see some real
ripping cases as we go on in 1 Kings.
Some of these guys, you wonder where did these guys come from, what
planet are they from? Were they
believers? Probably, yeah. That’s why I
want to go through that history because I want us to see what crummy messy
lives these guys had, not because we want to lead crummy messy lives, because
these guys paid for it, they suffered for it.
When God calls a nation to a destiny and the people don’t respond to
what He called them to, He’s going to get out the whip. That’s what’s happening here. God says I’m going to chasten with the rod
of men and boy He chastens with the rod of men 300 years. 1 Kings 11 is 930 BC, the big dates are 2000
BC, Abraham; 1400 BC the Exodus; 1000 BC David, now we’re going to go from 1000
BC to 500 BC. The revolution, the civil
war, happens in 930-931 BC. Then from
930 BC to 720 BC, this is how long the northern kingdom lasts, and in 721 BC
the Syrians come in and they take it out.
So ten of the twelve tribes are totally shot in 721 BC. The southern kingdom goes on to 586 BC and
they’re taken out by the Babylonians.
So now you have the northern kingdom and the southern kingdom terminated
in history.
But the neat thing is that while all this
horror story is going on that we’re going to look at, there arises in Israel a
new class of people, and these are the people that write practically the whole
center part of the Old Testament.
They’re called the classical writing prophets. We want to look at those classical writing prophets because
liberals who criticize the Scriptures have always insisted that the classical
prophets were reformers. This is the
liberal idea, that they were reformers; they came to reform the nations and do
these things. We went through the
treaty last year and I showed the cursings and the blessings. What we’re going to see is that when the
classical writing prophets start doing their business, Isaiah, Jeremiah, the
big guys, when they start doing their business and they start writing, they
start ministering to the nation, they are not reforming to the nation. They are prosecuting attorneys that are
going back to particular parts of Deuteronomy and Leviticus and Numbers, taking
those Scriptures and taking them centuries later and applying them to their
society. And they’re convicting the nation for violation of these particular
parts of Scripture. There’s no reformation, there’s no reform, there’s no
social agendas there. It’s prosecuting
attorneys that are coming up and convicting the nation and explaining, you are
suffering because you violated this point, this point, this point, and this
point. That’s what those cries of the
prophets were all about. It’s not
saying you’re sinners. They are
sinners, but it’s far more specific than that.
It’s covenantal.
That’s what we want to see, it’s the
structure that goes on. Even though the
word covenant isn’t in Psalm 57, the imagery is there. David is functioning in
the light of covenant. So watch what
happens in 1 Kings 11-12.
Have a good week.