David Before
and After the Bathsheba Disgrace
Koot van Wyk
(DLitt et Phil; ThD)
Sin is ugly and destructive. Appearing
very appealing, the thorns of the rose sting for a long time. Mental guilt,
sleepless nights, and when suppressing remembrance is exhausted, the results of
the sins start to work on the health, personality, and have physical
consequences. An overview of the diagram is
necessary in order to look at these aspects in the life of David, Jeroboam and ourselves.
Starting with ourselves: we have
skeletons in the closet. We have bags of sins that we carry. We have broken the
law of God which is His character and fall short of many things required from
simple, ordinary human beings of whom there are many who did and do keep that
law. It was not just a case of a slip-up. Those were well-calculated and
well-measured decisions on our part forcefully making it happen when it does
not come our way. Are we guilty? Absolutely. So people pay thousands of dollars,
rands, won and yen and everything more also in euros and pounds to see
psychiatrists prescribing “sleeping pills” and other pain-killers in order to “quiet
the conscience”. But the conscience bothering is good,
says the Bible. The Holy Spirit speaks through the conscience. So why not
paying attention and find a Book called the Bible to solve our problems.
David had his bag of sins. In fact, by
the time one gets through 2 Samuel 11 there are eleven sins that he committed: 1)
Slipped
away from army-duty (2 Sam 11:1 “but David tarried still at Jerusalem”). 2)
He
was a ‘peeping Tom’ (2 Sam 11:2 “and from the roof he saw a woman washing….” 3)
He
was told that she was a married woman, one of his soldiers (2 Sam 11:3 “Is she
not ….the wife of Uriah the Hittite?”) 4)
He
kidnapped the wife of Uriah (2 Sam 11:4 “David sent messengers and took her…”) 5)
He
raped her (2 Sam 11:4 “he [David] lay with her…”) 6)
He
made the wife of another man pregnant (2 Sam 11:5) 7)
He
planned Cover-up Plan A (2 Sam 11:6 by asking Joab to send Uriah) 8)
He
then planned Cover-up Plan B (2 Sam 11:13 “and he [David] made him drunk…” 9)
He
then planned Cover-up Plan C (2 Sam 11:14-15 Uriah must carry his own death
warrant to Joab) 10)
Uriah and other soldiers were killed (2 Sam
11:17) 11)
David rationalize the severity of the killing
away (2 Sam 11:25 “Let not this thing displease you…” Good
morning. Is the reader still there? Sins have clones and they duplicate rapidly
in a chain of one after the other. All in the name of secrecy and cover-up
attempts. This
is not just a case of “in sins my mother conceived me” or as Augustine tried to
squeeze out of Psalm 51, a case of original sin which he claimed are never
removed from the saint so that in the words of Martin Luther the sinner is simultaneously
sinner and justified. Augustine missed the turning heart event by David. From
God’s eye, these eleven sins displeased Him utterly (2 Sam 11:27 last part). David
was a lost man. When Nathan the prophet came in chapter 12 and told him about
the rich man and poor man with the poor man having only a pet little lamb, but
the rich man took it to make food for his guest at his house, David shouted
that the rich man should be killed. The law did not say kill, it said pay 400%
back. David’s darkened conscience could not keep the perspective of the broken
law anyway. So his punishment is in severity. All
religious persecutions happen because of this same phenomenon. When
Nathan said to David: “You are that man!” David realized that God knew all the
time everything. He stood exposed before the grace of God. David
said: “Nathan, I have sinned against the Lord”. This
admission. This total commitment of his sin-bag of eleven gross crimes and
mishaps were handed to the Lord. Now
the answer of the Lord is a speedy 100% forgiveness: “The Lord also has put
away your sin, you shall not die”. Forgiven
and in the diagram the sins are crossed out (X) the guilt are paid for by
Christ, the punishment of eternal death was taken by Christ and the breaking of
the Law was nullified (X) as well as the closet of skeletons emptied (X). Free.
But
there is one thing that the Lord does not take away, and I owe it to my teacher
dr. Smuts van Rooyen pointing it out in his May 1977 last sermon on this
chapter at Helderberg College Church, the results of our sins. Jesus
did not die for the results of our sins. What we sow we must reap. And what is
required of us, is to accept God’s forgiveness of our sins, accept His gift of
Christ our substitute in guilt and punishment dying the eternal death for us,
and finally, Smuts pointed out, accepting Christ’s justice and Righteousness in
letting us suffer the consequences of our own actions by the laws and forces of
a fallen nature. It may be cancer. It may be a stroke. It may be diabetes. It
may be kidney problems. Anything anywhere should be accepted by the saint as “Let
Your will be done because I accept all the consequences of my actions as my own
insanity”. No blame or fingerpointing to God. Years
later, when Solomon was born, God gave Solomon a new name. Yedidiah meaning: “Yahweh
very special friend is he” (2 Sam 12:25). Finally,
the confirmation of the situation of David in the eye of God is 1 Kings 14:13.
Jeroboam was in the same position as David almost with breaking the law of God
but whereas David made a 180 degree turn, Jeroboam did not. So God said of
Jeroboam comparing him with David: “and yet, you have not been as my servant
David, who kept my commandments, and who followed me with all his heart, to do
only right in Mine eyes”.
Dear
God Also
me. I need You also as my closest friend. I also need the forgiveness of David.
Also I want to turn around completely and utterly to You only. All to Christ I
surrender. Amen.