Sunday, September 20, 2009

Broken Vessels: David, Part III

Welcome! Today we will do the third part of our series on David, a part of our larger series called Broken Vessels, a series where we have looked at how God has used people as part of His larger plan even though they repeatedly sin and fail, and how God has even used these failings into His larger plan.

Last week I left you with a cliffhanger! We were reading in I Samuel 30 how David and his men had just come back to their town, Ziklag, a town deep in Philistine territory, only to find that the town was a smoldering ruin and all the women and children and the few men that had been there were gone! Upon seeing this calamity, the passage says that “David and his men wept aloud until they had no strength left to weep. David’s own wives had been taken – Ahinoam and Abigail; David’s first wife, Michal, if you recall, was now another man’s wife, this all having been arranged by Saul, who was fixed on killing David because of jealousy and his fear of losing the throne to him. 

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Broken Vessels: David, Part II

Good morning! Today we are continuing our 3-week mini-series on David, a part of the larger series entitled Broken Vessels, an exploration of the lives of key people in the Old Testament. I mentioned last week that there was no way we could have time to cover everything about David in only 3 weeks, and so this week and next we will do some skipping around.

Last week we went up to the point where David, although distraught and exhausted fleeing from Saul, continues to praise the Lord and follows the Lord’s leading and saves the town of Keilah from the Philistines. There was a powerful lesson for us here – that we too, regardless of our circumstances, should continue giving God worship and praise and also that we too, regardless of our circumstances, should continually seek the Lord and strive to do His will, particularly in terms of helping others. For us this means to keep on being salt and light to people, praying for them, giving them the good news of Jesus Christ, and helping them to grow as new believers. David is a model for us in these things.

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Broken Vessels: David, Part I

Welcome! Today we begin a new miniseries within the general series called Broken Vessels, a series that focuses on personalities of the Old Testament, looking at their strengths and weaknesses, their victories and their failures, their faith and their lack of faith in God. Our focus for the next three weeks is David. Now, there is more than enough material in the Bible on David to last 20 weeks, so we will just look at certain highlights of David’s life and try to get the “big picture” of this complex man.

Previously, we focused on the life of Saul, a man who repeatedly wanted to do things his own way instead of God’s way, a man filled with a mix of pride, insecurity, and fear that is common today and in every age. Saul’s life ended tragically with him taking his own life on the battlefield, at a battle in which not only Saul fell, but his sons and his nation as well.