Victory through Divine Provision: Analyzing 1 Samuel 17
The salient theme of this podcast episode revolves around the profound narrative of David and Goliath as depicted in 1 Samuel 17, emphasizing the stark contrast between faith and fear. Throughout our discussion, we meticulously explore the character of Saul, who, despite his stature and position as king, succumbs to fear in the face of Goliath's challenge, thereby neglecting his duty to lead with courage. In juxtaposition, David emerges as a paragon of faith, demonstrating that true strength derives not from physical might but from unwavering trust in God. This episode serves as a poignant reminder that every individual encounters their own "giants," be they physical, emotional, or spiritual adversities, which can either instill fear or galvanize faith. Ultimately, we underscore the imperative of confronting life's challenges with reliance on divine strength, for it is through faith that we can secure victory over our personal giants.
Takeaways:
- The narrative of 1 Samuel highlights the profound contrasts between faith and fear, as exemplified by Saul and David.
- David's victory over Goliath underscores the notion that true strength is derived from unwavering faith in God.
- The story illustrates that our responses to life's challenges can inspire or discourage those around us, influencing their faith.
- In the face of adversity, one must recognize that the battle belongs to the Lord, emphasizing reliance on divine power rather than personal strength.
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00:00 - Untitled
00:02 - The Journey Through 1st Samuel
00:56 - The Rise of David: A Study of Faith and Fear
14:15 - The Theology of Victory
19:44 - The Assurance of God's Love and Our Victory
29:59 - The Battle of Unity: Overcoming Spiritual Struggles
36:10 - Transitioning to New Themes in Church Leadership
Go to 1 Samuel, chapter 17.
Speaker AWe've been in 1st Samuel for quite some time now and we've been walking verse by verse through this wonderful book of the Bible that reminds us of God's provision and his power through various individuals lives.
Speaker AWe looked at Samuel obviously at the very beginning of 1st Samuel and seeing how he is ordained by God to be in the ministry, to be a minister in the, in the temple there, and then also further on ministering to the leader named Saul.
Speaker AAnd we even saw Saul at the very beginning as he was anointed of God, was greatly blessed by God.
Speaker AAnd I think the, the thing that we can think about with Saul is just great potential.
Speaker ASaul had so much potential, but because of his selfishness, because of his pride, and because of his turning away from the Lord, he found himself not in God's power and provision, but ultimately found himself in God's judgment.
Speaker AAnd then we saw David come onto the scene.
Speaker AAnd we all know the story of David.
Speaker AWe understand that David was a man after God's own heart and God selected him to be the next king, but he also prepared him obviously way before he took the throne.
Speaker AAnd we saw that in 1st Samuel chapter 17 when it dealt with David coming against Goliath.
Speaker ASo that's where we're going to conclude here today in First Samuel chapter 17.
Speaker AAnd we're going to start in verse number 50.
Speaker ALast week we left off at the very end of the battle and the, the standoff between the giant and David.
Speaker AAnd obviously on paper Goliath should have won.
Speaker AObviously we know that he was much taller, much stronger, had more experience.
Speaker ABut the thing that was different was that he was in rebellion to God.
Speaker AAnd then David on the other side was smaller, younger, weaker, but yet he had God on his side.
Speaker AAnd so we looked at 1st Samuel chapter 17 a few weeks ago and we said let's think about not just thinking about David.
Speaker AThis even though David is the centerpiece to the story, ultimately one might argue that God is the centerpiece of the story.
Speaker ABut when we were looking at the humans here, we see David and we often think about David in this narrative.
Speaker ABut I also want us to think about two other individuals in this story because I think that so often we can skip over a lesson in those stories as well.
Speaker AAnd so think about Saul, think about Saul as he comes to this battle in the valley of Ewa and he stands against Goliath because he heard the same things that David heard.
Speaker AThink about when Goliath got out into the valley and he starts saying all These things against the God of Israel, basically mocking the God of Israel.
Speaker AAnd then he comes and says, hey, anyone want to stand up against me and the power of God?
Speaker AAnd no one did.
Speaker AAnd think about who the natural person was that should have stood up.
Speaker AIt should have been Saul.
Speaker ASaul was the king.
Speaker AFirst of all, he was the selected leader to stand up against the enemy.
Speaker ABut.
Speaker ABut two, we know that Saul was a man that was head and shoulders above everybody else.
Speaker ASo even physically, Saul was the man for the job.
Speaker ABut because of Saul's lack of faith and in turn, his fear, he cowered away from the opportunity to see God work through him.
Speaker AAnd we.
Speaker AAnd we talked about the contrast between faith and fear.
Speaker AAnd I think all of us have to come to grips with that decision when we come to a difficulty in our life, maybe we could even call it a giant in our life.
Speaker AAnd if we're honest with each other here tonight, and I hope that we are, all of us come to certain situations in our life that can be like a giant to us.
Speaker AMaybe it's a physical situation that we're going through, maybe it's an emotional situation, maybe it's a spiritual situation, but nonetheless, we come to a situation or a circumstance that causes us to fear.
Speaker AAnxiety could be many different emotions that we're experiencing.
Speaker ABut when we come to the situation, we can either face it in fear or we can face it in faith.
Speaker AAnd so Saul faced it in fear.
Speaker AIf you go back and look just in this chapter, there was multiple occasions in which Saul had an opportunity to stand up, but it says that he was in fear.
Speaker AAnd then his leadership rubbed off on other people.
Speaker ASo Saul's fear led to everybody on the battlefield in fear.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd that's really what it looks like in our own life.
Speaker AAll of us are called to some level of leadership.
Speaker AAnd the Bible says that as we walk in fear, so we then are going to lead others to fear.
Speaker AAnd so David on the other side says, no, I'm going to have faith.
Speaker AAnd so he trusts in the Lord.
Speaker AHe trusts not in his own strength, but he trusts in what God had done before.
Speaker ASo he called back.
Speaker ARemember, he called back to the lion, he called back to the bear, and he called back to the power that God had through him.
Speaker AAnd that's who he utilized for his victory against the enemy.
Speaker ASo let's look at verse number 50 here.
Speaker AThis is the conclusion to the chapter.
Speaker AAnd there's one other person I want us to look at, but I want us to kind of see that after we read these Next few verses, verse 50 says, so David prevailed over the Philistine with a sling and a stone and smote the Philistine and slew him.
Speaker ABut there was no sword in the hand of David.
Speaker ATherefore David ran and stood upon the Philistine and took his sword and drew it out of the sheath thereof and slew him and cut off his head therewith.
Speaker AAnd when the Philistines saw their champion was dead, they fled.
Speaker ANow let's stop right there.
Speaker AI know that this can be somewhat graphic, but we need to understand why this is here and what this is teaching us.
Speaker AAnd so David is going to make certain that his enemy is dead.
Speaker AHe doesn't just leave it to the stone that hits him on the head.
Speaker ANo, he takes a step further and he eliminates the threat of Goliath by removing his head with his own sword.
Speaker ANow you would say, why do we have to emphasize that?
Speaker AWell, I do believe that that's here for a reason.
Speaker AAnd what that means for us is that we can't mess around, we can't compromise with sin in our life.
Speaker AWe might think that, hey, you know what?
Speaker AI fought off that, that temptation today, but we can leave ground for it to come tomorrow.
Speaker AWhat he does here is he wipes out his enemy.
Speaker AWe have to wipe it out.
Speaker AWe have to cut it out.
Speaker AThe Bible actually speaks of those things in the New Testament that, that sin and these things can be like a canker or a sickness and we have to cut it out.
Speaker AAnd so David uses Goliath's own sword to remove him and to say, you know what?
Speaker AThis is a final judgment.
Speaker AThis is a final, final wiping away of this naysayer of God.
Speaker AAnd so, yes, there was three people that I really want us to think about.
Speaker AThere was David, there is Saul, and then there's Goliath.
Speaker AWhat does Goliath represent?
Speaker AWell, some people might say that Goliath represents a sin or a fear in our life.
Speaker AAnd certainly he could represent that, but he also represents those that are in rebellion to God.
Speaker AIf you go back, think about what Goliath was saying.
Speaker AGoliath was saying, who could judge me?
Speaker AWho could fight against me?
Speaker ANot even this God that you claim to be all powerful.
Speaker AHe can't even stop me.
Speaker AAnd so what Goliath was showing was he was showing the opposite side of faith.
Speaker AHe was showing the opposite side of submission and humility to God.
Speaker AHe was showing a sense of pride and self exaltation.
Speaker AAnd we would even maybe argue that he was talking about false gods and idolatry.
Speaker ABut nonetheless, we see the outcome of the one who rejects God, the outcome of the one who is in rebellion to him, and ultimately it's defeat.
Speaker AAnd we can transfer that over to the New Testament.
Speaker AAnd we know that the promise of God is that one day he is going to make all things right.
Speaker AHe is going to have every single person to kneel down before him.
Speaker APhilippians chapter two says that every knee shall bow and every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.
Speaker ANow, those that are in faith, those like David, and those that are here tonight that might trust in Jesus Christ as Savior, one day we will be crying out to the Lord in faith and experiencing the blessing of knowing that he is our God and He is our conqueror and he is our Redeemer.
Speaker ABut then those that are in rebellion will still cry out, knowing that God is who he says he is.
Speaker ABut it will be in judgment, it will be in separation.
Speaker AAnd ultimately we know that it'll be an eternal death.
Speaker AAnd so Goliath is a picture of those that are judged in their sin.
Speaker AAnd so David is the vessel in which God uses to bring about that judgment upon the Philistines, and particularly with Goliath.
Speaker ASo at the end of verse 51, we see what the Philistines see.
Speaker ATheir champion was dead.
Speaker AAnd what do they do?
Speaker AThey flee.
Speaker AAnd so the.
Speaker AThe faith that David displays shows number one, the strength of God, but then number two, the inadequacy of the God of the Philistines.
Speaker AAnd they were looking to Goliath as the.
Speaker AThe figurehead of their God.
Speaker AAnd when he falls, they run because they realize that the God of Israel is more powerful than anything that they have ever seen.
Speaker AAnd so we see that the Philistines see their champion fall and they run.
Speaker AAnd obviously they understand that David's victory was God's victory.
Speaker ASo David's example gave them fear of their rebellion.
Speaker ABut then look at verse number 52, because now we see another side of the coin.
Speaker AThese Philistines are running because they're on the other side.
Speaker ABut what happens in verse 52?
Speaker AAnd the men of Israel and of Judah arose and shouted and pursued the Philistines until thou come unto the valley into the gates of Ekron.
Speaker AAnd the wounded of the Philistines fell down by the way, to sh.
Speaker AEven unto Gath and unto Ekron.
Speaker AAnd the children of Israel returned from chasing after the Philistines, and they spoiled their tents.
Speaker AAnd so we see on the other side, the people of Israel see David's faith in the Lord and see the power of God working through him.
Speaker AAnd that empowers them, that encourages them, that strengthens them to a place where they say, you know, we can do this.
Speaker AAnd so this is a lesson for us that when we live in faith publicly, other people will be encouraged and strengthened in their faith.
Speaker AAnd so David is going to be the example of trusting in the Lord.
Speaker ASo David's example gave them courage and faith in the Lord.
Speaker AI think about this, and I quoted this verse last week, but I think it's important for us to note again, even though I don't think David ever read First Timothy 4:12 because it hadn't been written yet, but the same principle is there.
Speaker AFirst Timothy 4:12.
Speaker ALet no man despise thy youth, but be thou an example of the believers in word and conversation and charity and in spirit, in faith and in purity.
Speaker ANow, that's the theme verse for our team group.
Speaker ABut it's important to note that even a young person, even a person who has inexperienced Christian walk, can be an example to those around them by the way that they live.
Speaker AAnd David was example to everybody around him, and they saw the power of God working through him.
Speaker AAnd I hope that you have a desire in your life to have the power of God working through you so that others can see that testimony and that public display of God's provision and protection and power.
Speaker ASo verse 54.
Speaker AAnd David took the head of the Philistine and brought it to Jerusalem, but he put his armor in his tent.
Speaker AAnd so this is the conclusion of the battle.
Speaker AAnd now Saul is going to it.
Speaker AIt says here basically that Saul is going to ask some questions about David.
Speaker AAnd these could be somewhat confusing for us because in our minds, Saul already knows David, right?
Speaker ADavid has been in the king's court, and we know that he's been playing music for the king in this time.
Speaker AAnd so you could read this passage of Scripture and be somewhat confused if you don't really understand the context to this.
Speaker AAnd there's actually two different ways to view these next few verses.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd I'll pose both of those to you.
Speaker ABut it says in verse 55, and when Saul.
Speaker ASaul saw David go forth against the Philistine, he sent unto Abner, the captain of the host, Abner, whose son is this youth.
Speaker AAnd Abner said, as thy soul liveth, O king, I cannot tell.
Speaker AAnd the king said, inquire thou whose son this stripling is.
Speaker AAnd as David returned from the slaughter of the Philistine, Abner took him and brought him before Saul with the head of the Philistine in his hand.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd Saul said unto him, whose son art thou, thou young man?
Speaker AAnd David answered, I am the son of thy servant Jesse, the Bethlehemite.
Speaker ASo some people read that passage and say, well, there's a contradiction in Scripture because Saul knows who David is.
Speaker AWhy is he asking about David's lineage?
Speaker AWell, it could be very reasonable that he knows who David is, but he doesn't know David's father and David's lineage and David's.
Speaker AAnd that was a very important for them to know who the father was and to what line they came from.
Speaker ASo this could be simply Saul saying, david, I know you, but who do you come from?
Speaker AAnd that's actually another important question because if you remember what was promised to David in his victory, it was promised that he would.
Speaker ASaul would give David his daughter to Mary.
Speaker ASo he kind of needs to know who the new family line is going to be.
Speaker AAnd also there were some benefits with taxation and things of those, of those areas.
Speaker AAnd so he's going to basically just inquire about David's family line here.
Speaker AAnd so that could be one angle.
Speaker AAnd I think probably the angle in which we could look at that passage of Scripture and understand it, the other side of it is that some people thought that maybe David had been in Saul's court, but when he had played music for Saul, he was like behind a curtain.
Speaker AAnd so maybe Saul had never met David face to face.
Speaker AHe had only heard about him and heard his music.
Speaker AWe don't know that for sure.
Speaker ASo I think that either way you look at it, Saul is asking what David's lineage is, who he's from.
Speaker AAnd obviously David says, I am the son of thy servant Jesse from Bethlehem.
Speaker AAnd so we all understand the connection there.
Speaker AWe understand David's lineage and we understand the implication of that and the importance of that.
Speaker ABut this doesn't mean that Saul didn't recognize David.
Speaker AIt just simply means that he's asking about David's family background.
Speaker AAnd so Saul promised his daughter to the man who killed Goliath.
Speaker AAnd so now David is going to reap the benefits of that.
Speaker AAnd we're going to study that more in First Samuel, chapter 18.
Speaker AAnd so David comes back, he's won this great victory, but we know that this victory would not be found outside of his relationship with God.
Speaker AAnd I think that's how we have to understand every victory that we have in our life.
Speaker AAnd I think that we could study 1st Samuel 17 in many different ways.
Speaker ABut I want to think about it from the idea of the theology of victory, you say.
Speaker AWhat do you mean by that?
Speaker AThe theology of victory.
Speaker AWell, how we should think about our victory in the scope of who God is and what he has done.
Speaker AWe're going to have a lot of victories in our life, and those are times to celebrate.
Speaker AI think we can go to a lot of passages of scripture that speak to the victory that we have in the Lord.
Speaker ABut I think the greatest passage of Scripture, and this is just my opinion, is Romans chapter 8.
Speaker AAnd so if you would like to turn there with me, I would encourage you to turn there with me to Romans chapter 8.
Speaker AWe see that we are told about this wonderful victory that we have in being in the family of God.
Speaker ANow it's going to say something here that I think is so encouraging.
Speaker AAnd it starts with Romans chapter 8, verse 1.
Speaker AThat tells us that there's no more condemnation to those that are in Christ Jesus.
Speaker ANow, right there, that is victory.
Speaker AI don't know about you, but there is victory in Jesus.
Speaker AAnd the fact to know that even though we are not perfect, we have no more condemnation because we are in Christ Jesus, that that's.
Speaker AThat's enough.
Speaker AI could stop there and say, that's the victory, but God says that there's more.
Speaker AAnd we could break down all of Romans chapter 8.
Speaker AWe don't have the time to do that.
Speaker ABut what I would like to tell you here this evening is that there's another victory that we see later on.
Speaker AIn Romans chapter 8, it says in verse number 9, but ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit.
Speaker AIf so, be that, the Spirit of God dwell in you.
Speaker ANow, if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his.
Speaker AAnd so what is that telling us?
Speaker AIt tells us this.
Speaker AAnother victory that we have in the Lord is the fact that we don't have to live in our flesh anymore, but now we get to live guided by the Spirit.
Speaker AThat might not sound immediately like a victory, but the victory is already won in the fact that when we decide to yield our lives over to the Spirit, we know that God is guiding and directing and he's the one who is giving us the steps.
Speaker ABut yet we turn back to the flesh as believers.
Speaker AEven though the Bible says that we're no longer bound by the flesh, sometimes we turn back.
Speaker AAnd there's that battle that Paul describes in Romans chapter seven.
Speaker ABut I think that it's so important to note that the victory is given to us in the fact that God is living within us.
Speaker AAnd in that same passage, it says the same power that rose Jesus from the dead is living within us.
Speaker AAnd so that is a victory that we have in the Lord.
Speaker AAnother one we can see there in verse 12.
Speaker AIt says, Brothers, we are debtors.
Speaker ANot to the flesh, to live after the flesh, but if he live after the flesh, ye shall die.
Speaker ABut if he lived through the Spirit to mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live.
Speaker AAnd so what this means is that we don't have to live in the bondage of sin anymore.
Speaker AVerse 15.
Speaker AFor ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear, but ye have received the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, abba, Father.
Speaker AAnother victory is that we get to be in the family of God and we have the benefits of being a child of the King.
Speaker AWe can call God Father in a more clear and I would say, appropriate way.
Speaker AWe can call Him Daddy.
Speaker AWe have a personal connection with Him.
Speaker AThat word abba is a personal, endearing term that we can cry out to him and have a personal God and a personal father.
Speaker AYou know, I have a lot of relationships with a lot of people, but I really can't think of too many that are more intimate than those are with my children.
Speaker AI mean, my children can come to me at any point.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AYou know, I have an office door and I.
Speaker AWhen I first became a pastor, I said, I have an open door policy.
Speaker AAnyone can come in.
Speaker AWell, I realize that there's a boundary that has to happen, okay.
Speaker ABecause I might be on a phone call that's pretty important, and someone just barging in might.
Speaker AMight not be appropriate.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ASo there's an open door policy with exceptions.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker ABut with my children, for the most part, there's an open door policy.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause there's nothing that brings more joy to my heart than seeing my children run, call me Daddy and wrap their arms around me.
Speaker ABecause you know what?
Speaker AThat's not always going to be there.
Speaker AI take sometimes as parents, we know, we've taken that for granted.
Speaker ABut one of the exciting things is that my children would come to me and want something from me and I can provide for them.
Speaker AThat's the type of relationship that we have with the Lord.
Speaker AHe wants us to come to Him.
Speaker AHe wants us to cry out to Him.
Speaker AAnd so that is a victory in and of itself, is that we are part of the family of God and we have that access.
Speaker AAnd then we go to verse 17, it says, then we are joint heirs with Christ.
Speaker AWe're beneficiaries of the inheritance of the blessings of God.
Speaker AWe could go verse by verse, but I think about that, and I think about later on in that passage.
Speaker AIt says something amazing.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd I think that we get so used to it because we've seen it so often within church and within Bible studies.
Speaker ABut think about the implication that verse number 37 says.
Speaker AIf you go back just a few verses, it says, who shall separate us, verse 35, from the Love of Christ.
Speaker AAnd then you list a bunch of things that we could consider in our life.
Speaker AGiants, okay?
Speaker AProblems, issues.
Speaker AHe says, verse 35 shall tribulation or distress or persecution or famine or nakedness or peril or sword.
Speaker ANow, many of us, most of us, haven't faced the sword for our faith, but many of us do go through situations of distress.
Speaker AIt's famine, spiritual famine, for sure.
Speaker AMaybe not physical famine, but we go through those times of emptiness.
Speaker AWe go through times of tribulation.
Speaker AThen he says in verse 37, no, nay, in all these things and all these problems that we might face in this world, we are more than conquerors.
Speaker AAnd I love that phrase, more than conquerors, because in the Greek, You've heard me say this before, maybe if you've been in one of my sermons.
Speaker AThe Greek word actually literally means super conquerors, meaning above conquering.
Speaker AIt says that we're more than conquerors or more than victorious through what, him that loved us.
Speaker ASo the idea really is this, that any victory that we have in our life, whether we think it's a minute victory or an extreme victory of our salvation, any victory that we have is victory in Jesus.
Speaker AThat's why we sing that song, Victory in Jesus.
Speaker ABecause it's always because of him.
Speaker AIt's always through him.
Speaker ANow, why do we emphasize this?
Speaker ABecause the temptation sometimes is to think that we have done something, that we have accomplished something.
Speaker AYou know, as a.
Speaker AAs a pastor, as a man, as.
Speaker AAs anybody, as a human being, we see things happening and we see what we've poured into it, and we start to think, and have that fleshly temptation to think that, well, it's because of me.
Speaker AIt's because I have done that.
Speaker AIt's because I have sacrificed.
Speaker AYou know what?
Speaker AI deserve this.
Speaker AI put the work in.
Speaker ABut let me tell you, and I know this isn't something that we want to hear in our flesh, but the Bible says the only thing that we deserve for the wages of sin is death.
Speaker ABut the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Speaker ASo with that being said, thinking about the theology of victory, I don't have any victory in myself.
Speaker AThe only thing that I have earned the only thing that I have won in my life is death.
Speaker ABut the Bible says here that we're more than conquerors through him, through Jesus, through our Lord that loved us.
Speaker AAnd then he says, for I am persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Speaker AHe reminds us again in verse number 39.
Speaker AThe whole idea of us not being able to be separated from God's love is because of Jesus Christ.
Speaker AIt's not because we're good people.
Speaker AIt's not because we go to Middletown Baptist Church.
Speaker AIt's not because we're American.
Speaker AEven though those are all good things.
Speaker AI'm happy that I go to Middletown Baptist Church.
Speaker AI love this church.
Speaker AI really do.
Speaker AI wake up every day thanking the Lord that I get a church family that I can come to and I love and I enjoy.
Speaker AI wake up every day thanking the Lord that I'm living in America and I have air conditioning and that I have, you know, food and everything here.
Speaker AThere's all these great blessings, but the biggest blessing is it says that nothing will be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Speaker AAnd so we think about these things, and we think about victory, and we think about everything that we have in our life.
Speaker AAnd we might ask the question, why do I have what I have?
Speaker AOr how did I get to where I am?
Speaker AWell, you might have worked really hard.
Speaker AI, I, I can appreciate that.
Speaker AI think we should work hard in the Lord.
Speaker AI think we should strive to be excellent in all that we do.
Speaker AI think we should do everything that we possibly can to honor God by the way that we live.
Speaker AFirst Corinthians, chapter 10, verse 31.
Speaker AWhether, therefore, you eat or drink or whatsoever you do, do all of the glory of God.
Speaker ASo it's not about being lazy and just saying, well, you know what?
Speaker AHopefully God works in my life.
Speaker ANo, the Bible does speak to us working.
Speaker ABut ultimately, at the end of the day, everything that we do, every victory that we have, any gift, as James, chapter one, verse 17 says, is coming down from God.
Speaker ANow again, you're like, pastor, why are you emphasizing this?
Speaker ABecause think about David.
Speaker ALet's go back.
Speaker ALet's go back to David.
Speaker AI guarantee you, because I know this in Scripture, that David understood that the battle was won through the Lord.
Speaker AIf I can point you to Scripture and I can show you what it Says he says, I know that this battle was given to me by the Lord.
Speaker AHe says, I'm fighting this battle in the Lord.
Speaker ASo David understood that he didn't do this on his own.
Speaker ADavid understood that this was ultimately through the power of God.
Speaker AAnd so he says, I'm facing you not with this sling and the stone, but I'm facing you in the power of God.
Speaker ANow you would say, did David forget about that?
Speaker AWell, later on we know that he did.
Speaker ALater on, we know that there were times in David's life where he was tempted to think that he, he had the right to do something.
Speaker AWe know that David later on did struggle with areas of pride and lust and greed and all those things that we can see in our lives today.
Speaker AHe did it all for God.
Speaker AIf you go to 1st Samuel, chapter 17, verse 46, I think verse 46 is the one that summarizes it all of this.
Speaker AHe comes in 45 and says, I come to you in the name of the Lord.
Speaker AAnd then verse 46, he says, this day will the Lord deliver thee into my hand.
Speaker AAnd at the very end of that verse, he says that in all the earth might know that there is a God of Israel.
Speaker ASo obviously, David was working in 1st Samuel, chapter 17 with the right theology, but later on in his life, there were periods where he wasn't working with the right theology.
Speaker AAnd, and we could pick apart certain things.
Speaker ADavid's life, obviously his interaction with Bathsheba, and remember how bad it got.
Speaker AIt kept spiraling because he kept thinking he could handle it.
Speaker AWell, maybe I can be victorious if I just send Uriah into battle and make sure that this is all covered up.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIt's his own way of thinking.
Speaker AIt's his own victory that he's trying to win.
Speaker AAnd so we know that just because we can experience the victory of God and know that it's his victory in our life doesn't mean that we're set forever.
Speaker AIt means that we have to every day be resolved to give it over to the Lord and be prepared for the next giant that might come.
Speaker ABecause for David, he was prepared for Goliath.
Speaker AHe was ready to go.
Speaker ABut I would venture to say that later on, he wasn't as prepared to go when he had spiritual confrontation that came up.
Speaker AI. I don't want to preach too far ahead in the book, but we know that in the times in which David should have been on the battlefield, he was not on the battlefield.
Speaker AHe wasn't where he needed to be.
Speaker AThere was times in which he should have followed God, and yet he turned away.
Speaker ASo again, it's not here to beat up David, because David, we know, was a man after God's own heart.
Speaker AAnd if David could fall into the trap of thinking that the victory was his, guess what?
Speaker AAll of us can fall into the trap of thinking that the victory that we have in our life, the blessings that we have in our life, came from us and not from the Lord.
Speaker AAnd so we need to be reminded, we need to go back to the well that never runs dry to say, lord, it's because of you that I had this victory yesterday.
Speaker AIt's because of you that there's this victory today.
Speaker AAnd it's only because of you that I'll have that victory tomorrow.
Speaker ASome of us might be facing struggles in our life right now.
Speaker AI don't know everyone and everyone's story.
Speaker AI don't know everyone's battle that they're going through.
Speaker ABut I do know this thing that you are going through a battle, or if you're not going through a battle right now, you're coming out of one, or if you're not coming out of one, you're about to go into one.
Speaker AThat's the reality of the Christian life.
Speaker AAnd so what I would encourage all of us to do this evening is resolve in our heart to say, you know what?
Speaker AI'm going to give the battle over to God.
Speaker AAnd when he gives me that victory, I'm going to give him all the honor and glory for what he is going to do.
Speaker AFor some people, it's a physical struggle.
Speaker ASome of you might say, you know, Pastor, you don't know what my.
Speaker AMy pain is like right now.
Speaker AYou don't know what I'm struggling with.
Speaker AAnd that might be the case.
Speaker AI might not know.
Speaker ABut the good thing is, is the Bible tells us that God knows our pain.
Speaker AGod understands our struggles.
Speaker AHe's the great physician.
Speaker AHe can touch us if it be his will and take that away.
Speaker ABut he also has the grace and the peace to touch us and give us the peace and strength, even if he doesn't take away the physical pain.
Speaker AWe know that through the life of Paul and many others, there's some other instances in our life that might not be physical, but it might be spiritual.
Speaker AI heard a dear brother recently giving his testimony, and it hurt my heart.
Speaker AIt broke my heart that he said what he said, but it was true what he said.
Speaker AAnd so I'm not upset about him saying what he said, but it broke my heart that it had to be this case.
Speaker AHe Said, you know what?
Speaker AThe greatest hurt that I've ever experienced in my life was through other Christians within the church.
Speaker AAnd that hurt my heart that he said that.
Speaker AI'm not denying that that's true.
Speaker ABecause some of us might understand that there have been times in our life where a Christian has hurt our feelings, that another brother or sister in Christ has done something to hurt us.
Speaker AAnd, and, and that breaks my heart because it shouldn't be that way, but it.
Speaker AThe reality is that it is.
Speaker AAnd so what do we do when someone that we think is a Christian, or maybe someone who is a Christian, hurts us?
Speaker AWhat do we do?
Speaker AHow do we respond?
Speaker AWell, the thing is, is that one of the many, many gifts of Scripture is to remind us that our faith is not in somebody else.
Speaker AOur faith is in the Lord.
Speaker ASo we keep our eyes on the Lord.
Speaker AWe don't keep our eyes on other individuals.
Speaker ASo if another individual hurts me, the reality is, is that I don't justify the hurt.
Speaker AI don't.
Speaker AI don't celebrate them.
Speaker ABut what I can do is understand that my relationship with God is not tied up with somebody else.
Speaker AThat if someone else harms me, I need to pray for them.
Speaker AI need to.
Speaker AHopefully they ask for forgiveness.
Speaker AHopefully there's restoration.
Speaker ABut at the end of the day, just because I'm hurt by someone else doesn't mean that God hurt me.
Speaker AIt actually means that God can give me more strength in the midst of the battle.
Speaker ASo I say all that to say this.
Speaker AThere could be some spiritual hurt that's going on within certain individuals.
Speaker AAnd it might have been something that's happened long, long ago.
Speaker AAnd the idea might be that I might not be able to have restoration with that person.
Speaker ABut what I do know is that I can look to the Lord and He can heal my wounds.
Speaker AHe can give me the peace that passeth all understanding.
Speaker AAnd so when I heard that testimony, it really rang true to me that, you know what?
Speaker AIt's not just people outside of the church that can hurt us.
Speaker AIt can happen in our midst.
Speaker AAnd we have to be so careful with that.
Speaker ABecause I think that when we go back to New Testament and we think about the Lord's design for the church, and his prayer for his body is that we would be unified.
Speaker AHe doesn't say that we would be perfect, because the reality is, is that none of us can be perfect.
Speaker AHe doesn't say that we'll have a lot of people, a lot of money, a lot of power.
Speaker AHis prayer is that his church would be unified and so often a lot of the pain that we face and a lot of the struggles that we face come through being disunified and being broken apart and free, fragmented.
Speaker ASo what do we do?
Speaker AWell, we think about certain things in our life as being victorious.
Speaker AOne of the victories that we can have within the church is being unified because we're fighting against the enemy.
Speaker AAnd when we're unified, that's a victory in and of itself to say, satan, you cannot overthrow us, you cannot divide us.
Speaker AAnd so the only way that that's going to be able to happen is that we go back to What Romans chapter 8 says, to be filled with the Spirit.
Speaker AAnd it's a daily struggle being filled with the Spirit, or am I going to yield to the flesh?
Speaker ADavid certainly yielded to the flesh.
Speaker AAnd we're going to talk more about those instances.
Speaker ABut in 1st Samuel chapter 17, we certainly see that he was led by the Spirit.
Speaker AAnd being led by the Spirit, he was able to see great victory.
Speaker AAnd if you follow the Spirit in your life, if you yield to the Spirit, if you're unified, if you're, if you're encouraging, if you're acting in ministry as God has called us to act in ministry, we're going to see great victory.
Speaker AHow do we define victory in the church?
Speaker AI. I think we go back to what the New Testament has to say about that.
Speaker AWhen we're acting like Christ, when we're living like the body of believers, when we're building up the spiritual house with living stones and building our house upon the sure foundation of Jesus Christ, I think we can slay our Goliaths that we face in this world.
Speaker AYou know, the church is facing a lot of, a lot of opposition.
Speaker AWhether, whether we know it or not, there's opposition that comes.
Speaker AAnd opposition can come directly or maybe even indirectly.
Speaker AYou know, I know that when we were in Rwanda, you know, I didn't know what to expect when I got there.
Speaker AI thought, like, are there going to be, like, people as soon as we get off the plane, persecuting us?
Speaker AThere wasn't that.
Speaker ABut then I heard, okay, there's only 20 churches in Rwanda.
Speaker ALike 90 something percent of them got wiped out.
Speaker AYou're like, why did that happen?
Speaker AIs the church, is the, is the government against them?
Speaker AAnd when you ask them straight up, it's not in a direct attack against the church.
Speaker AAnd the fact that, hey, they don't care what you preach, but it's an indirect attack in the fact that they're putting all these sanctions upon churches to make sure that they're just right so that they can open up their building.
Speaker AWell, indirectly, Satan has used those things to limit the furtherance of the gospel.
Speaker ASo Satan works trick.
Speaker AHe's a very tricky guy.
Speaker AHe's deceitful.
Speaker AAnd the Bible says that he doesn't always come saying, hey, I'm Satan.
Speaker AHey, I'm evil.
Speaker AHe's going to come in certain ways.
Speaker ABut what we're going to see is that there's many different things that are opposing the church.
Speaker AAnd so for Rwanda, it was the sanctions of the rules and trying to have enough money to get everything together so that they can meet in person.
Speaker AFor the American church, we don't have to face that as much.
Speaker ABut there are a lot of other things that are fighting against the church here.
Speaker AI would venture to say that the number one thing that's fighting against the church is just worldliness.
Speaker AJust.
Speaker AJust trying to live in the world and be like the world and look like the world and then try to make church happen and work the way that the Bible says to work.
Speaker ASo we can't be worldly.
Speaker AWe can't love the things of the world.
Speaker AThere's other things that are attacking the church in more, I would say, overt ways.
Speaker AI mean, you look at all the agendas that are being painted on the Internet and the media, right?
Speaker AAll those agendas that are against the word of God are an attack against the truth.
Speaker AAnd what the church can do is either one, embrace all of those false beliefs and bring them into the church, and then it's no longer the church.
Speaker ANow it's a church that's filled with evil.
Speaker AOr a church can just ignore what's going on around and not fight what's going on.
Speaker AOr the church can say, you know what?
Speaker AWe're going to just stand up for the truth.
Speaker AWe don't have to buy into the lies.
Speaker AWe don't have to teach our children the way that the world teaches their children.
Speaker AWe don't have to have our marriages the way that the world tells us to have our marriages.
Speaker AWe don't have to go about all these things the way that the world tells us.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause God tells us something different.
Speaker AAnd so we need to be aware of the attack at hand and say, you know what?
Speaker AThere are Goliaths that are coming against us, mocking our Lord, coming against us in ways that we might not have ever expected.
Speaker ABut nonetheless, at the end of the day, we know that if God puts a giant before us, he will give us the tools, he will give us the power.
Speaker AHe will Give us the comfort.
Speaker AHe will give us all the things needed for battle.
Speaker AAnd one of the things that I would really point you to is in the book of Ephesians, putting on the armor of God, right?
Speaker AWe need to put on the armor of God every single day.
Speaker AAnd when we put on the armor of God, we're able to stand, as the Bible says, against the wiles of the devil.
Speaker AAnd they're wiles, and he's a wily guy.
Speaker ABut at the end of the day, we know that he is no more powerful than, than our Lord.
Speaker AAnd we know that our God is all powerful and there's nothing that can limit him.
Speaker AAnd so when we turn it over to him and say, lord, you do church.
Speaker AWe want to do church your way.
Speaker AI want to live my Christian life the way you call me to live.
Speaker AI've been thinking about this a lot recently.
Speaker AWe try to add so much into church that's just not there.
Speaker AAnd we try to make those the things that we need to focus on.
Speaker AThe Bible gives us the marching orders to follow.
Speaker AAnd if we follow those things, God will multiply.
Speaker AGod will produce fruit.
Speaker AWe look at it from the perspective of, well, if we just help God out a little bit by doing this.
Speaker ANow, I'm not saying that we, we have to, you know, worship the same way they did in Acts Chapter two.
Speaker AI think that all of you guys are thankful for air conditioning and lights and things of that nature.
Speaker AThat's not how they worshiped in Acts chapter two.
Speaker AWe know that.
Speaker ABut what I will say is that there's certain elements that we find in the book of Acts that we should always have within our church.
Speaker AAnd when we focus on the material more than the spiritual, we get our priorities all messed up.
Speaker AAnd so what we have to do is say, hey, there's nothing wrong with having facilities.
Speaker AThere's nothing wrong with having programs.
Speaker AThere's nothing wrong with doing all these things that we do as long as we're making sure that we're hitting all the things that God tells us to do in scripture that are non negotiables.
Speaker AAnd so we say all that to say that that is the victory.
Speaker AThe victory is following God.
Speaker AAnd so David's victory was in faith, following the Lord.
Speaker ASaul's defeat really was the fact that he faced it in fear.
Speaker AAnd so in his fear, he didn't get to see the victory in the Lord personally.
Speaker AAnd then we see Goliath's defeat was in his rebellion to God and his.
Speaker AIn his open mocking of the Lord.
Speaker AAnd he faced judgment.
Speaker ASo we will come back not next week, because next week is vbs.
Speaker AAnd so there's going to be a lot of different things going on next week.
Speaker ASo we will take one week off when it comes to our corporate Wednesday night service.
Speaker ABut when we come back in two weeks, I won't be here, but Pastor Ethan will be.
Speaker AAnd Pastor Ethan will be speaking in 1st Samuel chapter 18, and he's going to be walking through that chapter for a few weeks there and just be used to that here on Wednesday nights.
Speaker AWe're going to take some time to share some preaching there, and I think that's important as well.
Speaker AIt's always good to hear another voice preaching the word of God.
Speaker AAnd there's so much here in First Samuel.
Speaker AYou know that David has a lot to learn from in the good way and to learn from and to not do what he did in some bad things.
Speaker AAnd then we'll work our way into Second Samuel.
Speaker AAnd I think that we can ultimately glean a lot of information that not only can just stick in our heads as, you know, Bible knowledge, but we can apply to our hearts and into our lives to see practical application when we stand in faith.