David
By F. B. Meyer
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F. B. Meyer
Frederick Brotherton Meyer (1847–1929) was a Bible teacher, pastor, and evangelist of German descent, born in London. He attended Brighton College and Regent's College, and graduated from the University of London in 1869.Meyer influence giants of the faith like Charles H. Spurgeon who said, “Meyer preaches as a man who has seen God face to face.” Meyer led a long and fruitful life, preaching more than 16,000 sermons, before he went home to be with the Lord in 1929.
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David - F. B. Meyer
1
TAKEN FROM THE SHEEPCOTES
(1 Samuel 16:1)
"We stride the river daily at its spring,
Nor in our childish thoughtlessness foresee
What myriad vassal streams shall tribute bring,
How like an equal it shall greet the sea.
"O small beginnings! Ye are great and strong,
Based on a faithful heart and weariless brain;
Ye build the future fair, ye conquer wrong,
Ye earn the crown, and wear it not in uain."
J. R. LOWELL
THE story of David opens with a dramatic contrast between the fresh hope of his young life and the rejection of the self-willed King Saul, whose course was rapidly descending toward the fatal field of Gilboa.
Few have had a fairer chance than Saul. Choice in gifts, goodly in appearance, favored by nature and opportunity, he might have made one of the greatest names in history. His first exploit, the relief of Jabesh-gilead, justified the wildest anticipations of his friends. But the fair dawn was soon overcast. The hot impatience that persisted in offering the sacrifice before Samuel came, his needless oath and ruthless proposal to take Jonathan’s life, his flagrant disobedience to the distinct charge respecting Amalek—all proved that he was not fit to act as God’s deputy and that he must be set aside.
The final announcement of Saul’s removal was made at Gilgal. At that spot, when entering Canaan, Israel, at Joshua’s bidding, had rolled away the reproach of uncircumcision. The place suggested humility, the only condition on which God can use human instruments. But in Saul’s case there had been no humbling of pride, no submission of self-will, no putting away of the wild energy of the flesh. He was called while seeking his father’s straying asses, as David was while watching his father’s sheep; and there was a good deal of the wild-ass nature about Saul, as about Ishmael, which neither of them sought to subdue. Saul, it is said, rejected the word of the Lord; and the Lord rejected him from being king.
From Gilgal, Saul went up to his house at Gibeah, in the heights of Benjamin; while Samuel went to Ramah, a little to the south. There was his house; there he had judged Israel for twenty years; and there he dwelt as father and priest among the people, known far and near as the man of God (7:17; 9:6,10,12). There, too, he mourned for Saul. No bad man drifts down the rapids unwarned, unwept; but the divine purpose cannot wait till such pitying tears are dried. Nor may we cling to the grave of the dead past, from which the Spirit of God has fled; but let us arise to follow as God transfers the focus of his operation from the rocky heights of Benjamin to the breezy uplands of Bethlehem and conducts us to the house of Jesse.
In the selection of every man for high office in the service of God and man there are two sides—the divine and the human: the election of God, and its elaboration in history; the heavenly summons, and the earthly answer to its ringing notes. We must consider, therefore, 1. The Root of David in God; 2. The Stem of Jesse—that is, the local circumstances that might account for what the boy was; and 3. The White Bud of a Noble Life.
1. THE ROOT OF DAVID. Once in the prophecy by Isaiah, and twice in the Book of Revelation, our Lord is called the Root of David.
The Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, hath prevailed to open the book, and to loose the seven seals thereof.
And still more emphatically, among the last words spoken by the Saviour before the curtain of the ages fell: I Jesus am the root and the offspring of David, the bright, the morning star.
The idea suggested is of an old root, deep hidden in the earth, that sends up its green scions and sturdy stems. David’s character may be considered as an emanation from the life of the Son of God before he took on himself the nature of man, and an anticipation of what he was to be and do in the fullness of time. Jesus was the Son of David, yet in another sense he was his ancestor. Thus we return to the ancient puzzle, that Jesus of Nazareth is at once David’s Lord and Son (Mark 12:35–37).
There are four great words about the choice of David, the last of which strikes deeply into the heart of that great mystery.
The Lord hath sought him a man (1 Sam. 13:14). No one can know the day or hour when God passes by, seeking for chosen vessels and goodly pearls. When least expecting it, we are being scrutinized, watched, tested in daily commonplaces, to see if we shall be faithful in more momentous issues. Let us be always on the alert, our uniforms on, our lamps burning, our nets mended and cleansed.
I have found David my servant (Ps. 89:20). There is ecstasy in the voice, like the thrice-repeated found of Luke 15. David was found long before Samuel sent for him. Which was the moment of that blessed discovery? Was it one dawn, when in the first flicker of daylight the young shepherd led his flock from fold to pasture; or one morning, when, in an outburst of heroic faith, he rescued a trembling lamb from lion or bear; or one afternoon, when, as he sat and watched his charge, the first conception of the Shepherd Psalm stirred in his heart; or one night, when he heard the silent speech of the heavens declaring the glory of God? And was there not some secret glad response to the Master’s call, like that which the disciples gave when Jesus found them at their nets and said, Follow me
?
He chose David to be his servant (Ps. 78:70). The people chose Saul, but God David. This made him strong. He was conscious that the purpose of God lay behind and beneath him; and when in after-years Saul lay in his power, or Michal taunted him because of his extravagant gestures, the thought that he was divinely commissioned was his support (2 Sam. 7:21). We are immovable when we touch the bedrock of God’s choice, and hear him say, He is a chosen vessel unto me, to bear my name.
The Lord hath appointed him to be prince (1 Sam. 13:14). Appointments are not solely due to human patronage, nor won by human industry; they are of God. He bringeth low and lifteth up. Saul might chafe and fret; but from amid the ruins of his waning power the authority of David emerged as a sun from a wreck of clouds, because God willed it. Equip yourself for God’s service; be faithful. He will in due time appoint you; promotion comes neither from the east nor west, but from above.
I have provided me a king (1 Sam. 16:1). That answers everything. The divine provision meets every need, silences every anxiety. Let us not yield to anxious forebodings for the future of the church or of our land. God has provided against all contingencies. In some unlikely quarter, in a shepherd’s hut or in an artisan’s cottage, God has his prepared and appointed instrument. As yet the shaft is hidden in his quiver, in the shadow of his hand; but at the precise moment at which it will tell with the greatest effect, it will be produced and launched on the air.
2. THE STEM OF JESSE. We turn for a moment to consider the formative influences of David’s young life. The family dwelt on the ancestral property to which Boaz, that mighty man of wealth, had brought the Rose of Moab. Perhaps it was somewhat decayed, through the exactions of the Philistine garrison, which seems to have been posted in the little town. We read of the few sheep in the wilderness that composed the flock; and the present sent by Jesse to his soldier sons was meager in the extreme. The conditions under which he brought up his large family of eight sons and two daughters were probably hard enough to severely tax the endurance and industry of them all.
David says nothing of his father, but twice speaks of his mother as the handmaid of the Lord.
From her he derived his poetic gift, his sensitive nature, his deeply religious character. To the father he was the lad that kept the sheep, whom it was not worthwhile to summon to the religious feast; to his mother he was David the beloved, and probably she first heard the psalms which have charmed and soothed the world. He honored them both with dutiful care; and when it seemed possible that they might suffer serious hurt on account of their relationship to himself, amid the pelting storm of Saul’s persecution, he removed his parents to the safekeeping of the king of Moab, the land of his ancestress.
The lad may have owed something to the schools of the prophets, established by Samuel’s wise prescience to maintain the knowledge of the law in Israel. They appear to have been richly endued with the gracious power of the Holy Spirit, and to have been to Israel what Iona was to the wild tribes of the North in later times. The sons of these institutions would doubtless visit Bethlehem, and they found an eager response in the guileless nature of the young shepherd. From them he would learn to reduce his melodies to metrical order and accompany them with the harp; from them, too, he learned to know and prize the divine Word.
But nature was his nurse, his companion, his teacher. Bethlehem is situated six miles to the south of Jerusalem by the main road leading to Hebron. Its site is two thousand feet above the level of the Mediterranean, on the northeast slope of a long gray ridge, with a deep valley on either side. These valleys unite at some little distance to the east, and run down toward the Dead Sea. On the gentle slopes of the hills the fig, olive and vine grow luxuriantly; and in the valleys are the rich cornfields where Ruth once gleaned, and which gave the place its name, the House of Bread. The moorlands around Bethlehem, forming the greater part of the Judean plateau, do not, however, present features of soft beauty, but are wild, gaunt, strong—character-breeding. There shepherds have always led and watched their flocks; and there David first imbibed that knowledge of natural scenery and of pastoral pursuits which colored all his afterlife and poetry, as the contents of the vat the dyer’s hand.
Such were the schools and schoolmasters of his youth. But preeminently his spirit lay open to the Spirit of God, which brooded over his young life, teaching, quickening and ennobling him, opening to him the books of nature and revelation, and pervading his heart with such ingenuous trust as the dumb animals of his charge reposed in him.
In the spiritual as in the physical realm he had every reason to say, long after:
"My substance was not hid from thee
When I was made in secret,
And curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth.
Day by day were all my members fashioned."
3. THE WHITE BUD OF NOBLE LIFE. He had not the splendid physique of his brother Eliab, who so impressed the aged prophet. But he was strong and athletic. His feet were nimble as a gazelle’s; he could leap a wall or outstrip a troop; a bow of steel could be easily broken by his young arms; and a stone sent from his sling would hit the mark with unerring precision. Too slight to wear a man’s armor, and yet able to rend a lion or bear. His face glowing with health. The blue of his eyes and beauty of his fair complexion in strong contrast to the darker visages of his companions. The sensitiveness of the poet’s soul, combined with daring, resource, and power to command. His dress, a coarse and simple tunic; his equipment, a wallet sling, a rod and a staff.
His soul is reflected in the psalms that must be attributed to this period of his life, because so free from the pressure of sorrow and anxiety, and the strife of tongues. Among them are the Eighth, Nineteenth, Twenty-third, and Twenty-ninth. So full of wonder that Jehovah should care for man, and yet so sure that he was his Shepherd; so deeply stirred by the aspect of the heavens, and yet convinced that the words of God were equally divine; so afraid of secret faults and presumptuous sins; so anxious to join in the universal chorus of praise ascending from the orchestra of nature, but yet so certain that there were yearnings and faculties within his soul in which it could not participate, and which made him its high priest and chorister. To these we will come again—they are too radiant with a light that never shone on sea or shore for us to pass them so lightly by.
Ah, guileless, blessed boy! You do not know that you will die amid the blare of trumpets announcing the accession to the throne of your son, the splendid Solomon. Still less do you dream that your unsullied nature shall one day be befouled by so sad a stain! Yet your God loves you, and you shall teach us many a lesson as we turn again the pages of your wonderful career—poet, minstrel, soldier, exile, king—and read them in the light that streams from the face of your greatest Son, who was born of the seed of David according to the flesh, but was declared to be the Son of God by the resurrection from the dead!
2
FROM THAT DAY FORWARD
(1 Samuel 16:13)
"Once for the least of children of Manasses
God had a message and a deed to do,
Wherefore the welcome that all speech surpasses
Called him and hailed him greater than he knew."
F. W. H. MYERS
FROM whatever angle we view the life of David, it is remarkable. It may be that Abraham excelled him in faith, and Moses in the power of concentrated fellowship with God, and Elijah in the fiery force of his enthusiasm. But none of these was so many-sided as the richly gifted son of Jesse.
Few have had so varied a career as he: shepherd and monarch, poet and soldier, champion of his people and outlaw in the caves of Judea, beloved of Jonathan and persecuted by Saul, vanquishing the Philistines one day and accompanying them into battle on another. But in all he seemed possessed of a special power with God and man, which could not be accounted for by the fascination of his manner, the beauty of his features, the rare gifts with which his nature was dowered, or the spiritual power which was so remarkable an attribute of his heart. We touch these many chords, but the secret still eludes us until we read the momentous words that sum up the result of a memorable day that lay as a jewel in the obscure years of opening youth: The Spirit of the Lord came mightily on David from that day forward.
1. IT BEGAN LIKE ANY ORDINARY DAY. No angel trumpet heralded it. No faces looked out of heaven. The sun arose that morning according to his habit over the purple walls of the hills of Moab, making the cloud curtains saffron and gold. With the first glimmer of light the boy was on his way to lead his flock to pasture lands heavy with dew. As the morning hours sped onward, many duties would engross his watchful soul—strengthening the weak, healing that which was sick, binding up that which was broken, and seeking that which was lost; or the music of his song may have thrilled the listening air. A cunning player on the harp was he.
A breathless messenger suddenly broke upon this pastoral scene with the tidings of Samuel’s arrival at the little town and announcing that the prophet had refused to eat of the hastily prepared banquet until the shepherd boy had joined the bidden guests. His father had therefore sent to summon him with all speed. How the young eyes must have flashed with pleasure! Never before had he been wanted and sent for thus. Till now he had been only the lad that kept the sheep.
The family life had been complete without him. His father and brothers had followed their pursuits and pleasures in almost total disregard of the young son and brother who was destined to make their names immortal. He had borne it all in patience. His heart was not haughty, neither his eyes lofty; neither did he exercise himself in great matters or in things too high for him, but quieted himself as a child that is weaned from its mother. Still it was a genuine pleasure to feel that the family circle in great Samuel’s eyes was not complete till he had come. He therefore left his sheep with the messenger and started at full speed for home.
Samuel, on his coming, had sanctified Jesse and his sons, passing them through a series of ceremonial ablutions to fit them for the festival in which the social and sacred elements combined. But David needed none of these. His pure and guiltless soul was right with God, and clad in the spotless robe of purity. No soil needed punctilious removal. Let us so live as to be prepared for whatever the next hour may bring forth: the spirit in fellowship with God, the robe stainlessly pure, the loins girt, the lamp