07 How to Approach Your King After You Failed (2 Samuel 19)

07 How to Approach Your King After You Failed (2 Samuel 19)

With Absalom dead, Joab blows the trumpet to end the battles and the civil war is over. Except David is still in exile. Now we have a guilty nation and a vindicated king, and the question that remains is how to restore the relationship. How do you approach your king after you’ve been sinful or rebellious?

06 The Price of Rebellion: A Son Hung on a Tree (2 Samuel 18)

06 The Price of Rebellion: A Son Hung on a Tree (2 Samuel 18)

2 Samuel 18 is the climatic battle for the throne. But instead of highlighting the ferocity of the battle, the spotlight focuses on David’s anxiety over his son, and how the news of Absalom’s death impacts him, especially when he learns that the price of rebellion is the death of his son. It is a price David cannot bear to pay, but it is a price God pays for us. David’s grief gives us a glimpse of the price our heavenly father was willing to pay on our behalf.

05 When God’s Plan isn’t Obvious (2 Samuel 17)

05 When God’s Plan isn’t Obvious (2 Samuel 17)

As we’ve studied the rebellion of Absalom, we’ve been asking what we can learn about responding when we sin, understanding the discipline of our heavenly father, and how to respond when suffering unjustly. With 2 Samuel 17 we focus on these questions from God’s perspective.

2 Samuel: David as King

2 Samuel: David as King

1 & 2 Samuel reflect two sides of a promise — the promise to David that he would be king over Israel. In 1 Samuel David is waiting for that promise to be fulfilled. In 2 Samuel the promise is fulfilled.

1 Samuel: Path to Kingship

1 Samuel: Path to Kingship

In the book of 1 Samuel records three “tectonic shifts” in how God structures His kingdom. These three shifts are to prepare the way for the next major shift: transforming God’s people from with a geopolitical identity to a people with a heavenly identity.