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2 Samuel 23:1-7                                            

 

LYRICAL / THEOLOGICAL AFFIRMATIONS - This passage serves as a grand summary of the life of David with the royal ideology at the core. Two poetic forms-Hannah’s prayer at the beginning (1 Samuel 2:1-10) and David’s prayer at the end (2 Samuel 23)-bracket the narrative accounts that will include Samuel’s rise to prominence, Saul’s rise and fall from prominence, and David’s remarkable journey from shepherd boy to Shepherd-King.

SPIRIT BEHIND THE SUCCESS - No one can truly have success-can be exalted, anointed, and blessed-apart from God. Such success as David’s rise from insignificance to prominence is no accident, nor is it the product of human machinations or clever planning. Such success is the direct result of God’s decision to extend God’s self through the raising up of such a leader. David can only live by the decree (word), power (spirit), and the will of God. God’s faithfulness, not human ingenuity or might, makes the monarchy possible. [1]

DREAM DREAMS - David’s song calls us to reimagine our future as God’s future. If we are so busy in the church realistically analyzing our institutional and societal issues that we fail to dream dreams or see visions, then we will perish like the ‘worthless ones’ of 23:6-7. If, however, we claim with David the everlasting covenant of God’s promise (23:5), then the hope of our future will be based in a reality that transcends the powers of this world. Our hope can never settle for the realistic assessment of human possibilities. Just and faithful human rule is always rooted in the trustworthiness of God’s promises. [2]

 

Have you ever played, "He Said / She Said?" A topic is raised-how you fold t-shirts, favorite slang, food, TV show, etc-and each member of a couple must answer what they think their other half would answer. Try it on your spouse or a family member or friend! The bottom line: perceptions about reality varies with each person!

How does David’s perception on his narrative from shepherd boy to Shepherd-King in his prayer in 2 Samuel 23 seem out of sync with actual facts?

Describe your encounter with two kinds of church language: (1) visionary-language which speaks of God working inside, under, through, inspite of ourselves to bring us to a new place; and (2) speech that is earthbound problem-enamored, and so negative that a new idea can never capture soar and capture imagination?

 

I would look for brokenness in the text-the gap between David’s perceptions of his life’s work and what in reality actually occurred. David seems to speak idyllically.

You may want to move now into the congregation and pulpit; how our own perceptions of what we’re doing in God’s name and in life may not square with reality.

Move back to the text and demonstrate how David is speaking in visionary language, the God-language that speaks a reality that soars beyond our own earthbound perceptions. A faith-based language will move congregations and Christ-followers in remarkable faith-filled, faith-ful directions.

Suggest that your listeners compose their own lyrical-theological piece! (A large sheet of flipchart paper with a timeline drawn across it as a continuum; invite them to note the special moments of life and to mark on their life line God’s special promises and actions in their lives.

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[1] Walter Brueggemann, Interpretation: 1st and 2nd Samuel (Louisville: John Knox, 1990), page 345.
[2] The New Interpreter’s Bible II (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1998), page 1371-2.