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I
guess this would be one of the best known, if not THE best known story in
the Bible. In fact it's so well known that David has become a metaphor for
the victorious underdog. He's the archetypal cutter down of tall poppies.
The one who can overcome the greatest odds to win through to victory. But
of course the trouble with such an archetype is that it actually misses
the essential facts of the story. As we'll see as we go through the story
it isn't anything to do with David that brings about this victory. He's
simply a man of faith who believes intrinsically in the God he worships
and trusts him to act. |
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Although
it seems that David is now moving to centre stage to replace Saul as the
focus of God's plans for his people, the reality is that it's actually God
who holds the central place in the drama that's been and continues to unfold
before us. |
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In
fact we need to go back to ch16:13 to discover the source of David's success:
"the spirit of the LORD came mightily upon David from that day forward."
As we saw with Saul, the motivating and enabling power for everything that
David accomplishes is the Spirit of God. Provided that David remains faithful
in following the Lord, God will bring him success as king. God is at work
as David comes to prominence as the one who will lead his people to finish
the conquest of the land. |
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Now
before we think about David and Goliath we should first look at the end
of ch 16 because here we're introduced a little more to David. First though,
we discover something that's both surprising and a little disturbing. The
section begins with the statement that the Spirit of God has departed from
Saul. The effect of God's anointing moving to David from Saul, is that God
no longer empowers Saul for the kingship. In fact the opposite is the case.
Saul is now afflicted by an evil spirit, sent, you'll notice, not by Satan,
but by the Lord. Here's a surprising thing. You may have thought that evil
spirits were the sign of Satan at work but here we discover that God is
in control of everything that happens in his world. Saul has rebelled against
the Lord and so the Lord sends an evil spirit to torment him. But this evil
spirit, whatever it is, is also the means by which David is introduced to
Saul's court. |
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How
do you soothe someone who's afflicted by an evil spirit? Well it seems you
provide someone to play music to help them relax, to soothe them. And so
we discover that David is a gifted musician as well as being handsome. And
he's a man of valour. What a combination! He's both a man of culture and
a man of action. And he's someone who has a good presence. When he walks
into the room, people look up, take notice. He's the sort of man that others
follow. When he speaks to you, you feel good, you're glad that he's noticed
you. So much so that when Saul meets him and gets to know him he's pleased
with him. In fact we're told that he loved him greatly, and
David became his armor-bearer. |
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But
there's something else that strikes you about this small episode in the
life of Saul and David. The passage both starts and finishes with the reference
to the evil spirit. And so we need to think a bit more about what's going
on here. You know, some people say, well, Saul's suffering from depression
and David comes along and sings to him and that lifts the depression. But
that isn't what the passage says. What it says is that when David played,
the evil spirit would depart from him. |
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It's
almost as if the evil spirit is driven away by the Spirit of God, within
David, who inspires, not just his military success, but also his musical
gifts. Saul has lost contact with God's Spirit until David comes and brings
the Spirit close again. |
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There's
an incident recorded early in Mark's gospel where a man with an unclean
spirit encounters Jesus. Listen to what happens: "23Just then
there was in their synagogue a man with an unclean spirit, 24and
he cried out, "What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have
you come to destroy us? I know who you are, the Holy One of God." 25But
Jesus rebuked him, saying, "Be silent, and come out of him!" 26And
the unclean spirit, convulsing him and crying with a loud voice, came out
of him. (Mark 1:22-26 NRSV) The unclean spirit within the man recognised
the presence of God in the person of Jesus and was afraid. And perhaps the
same thing was happening when David sat down to play for Saul. The evil
spirit within Saul couldn't stand the presence of God in David and so it
departed. |
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But
now we come to the encounter with Goliath. Now I have to say that these
two accounts don't seem to run together as a sequential record. It's as
though the account of the evil spirit has been added in to fill out the
full relationship between Saul and David at some later date and they weren't
quite sure where to put it. |
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But
now we come to one of the greatest challenges of Saul's reign. The Philistines
have found themselves a champion. He's nine foot tall and six foot across.
He's Arny Schwarzenegger and a half. His armour alone weighs nearly 60kg.
Now I can tell you. I've lifted that sort of weight at the gym, doing shoulder
squats but there's no way I'd be walking around with it on my shoulders!
But this guy wears it like a jacket. What's more he's tough. He's a hardened
warrior. He's been fighting battles since he was a teenager. |
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So
when he challenges the Israelites to send out their best fighter to a one-on-one
fight to see who's the strongest, the whole army moves back a step in unison.
No-one's mad enough to take up this challenge. But at the same time they
can't just ignore it. Their honour as a nation is at stake. |
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And
so the stalemate begins. Each day for a month and a half Goliath comes and
delivers his challenge. And each day the Israelites become more and more
dismayed and afraid. |
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Then
into this scene comes the young and naive youngest son of Jesse. He's sent
there on an errand by his father, to take provisions to his older brothers.
They've followed Saul, but David is left behind to tend the sheep and to
go back and forth bringing supplies and possibly playing his harp for Saul.
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This
time, though, when he gets to the Israelite camp the army has just gone
out to face the Philistines in their morning ritual of defiance. Now you
can imagine David, can't you? He's been left behind with the sheep, but
like most young boys, he really wants to be with the men fighting in the
army. So what does he do? He goes to find his brothers, knowing that they'll
be somewhere near the action. And so he's standing there talking to his
brothers when Goliath appears for his daily challenge. |
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The
men near him fill him in on what's going on. They tell him how desperate
Saul is for someone to fight Goliath and save him some face. Mind you, you
may remember that Saul is the one who's head and shoulders above the rest,
so he's probably the logical one to fight Goliath, but he has no more wish
to volunteer than any of his men. Besides which, he's the king isn't he?
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Well,
David listens to the men in disbelief. He says, what's Saul offering? All
that, just to kills this uncircumcised Philistine? Doesn't anyone understand
what's going on here? |
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David
understands. On this side we have a Philistine. Uncircumcised is a shorthand
for someone who has no relationship with the living God. Someone who relies
on dumb idols. On the other side we have the armies of the living God. |
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A
mere mortal. The living God. A bit unbalanced wouldn't you say, if it came
to a fight? Forget the fact that he's nine foot tall and weighs 150 kg.
That's chicken feed compared to the living God who made the world and everything
in it; who formed the heavens with his fingers (Ps 8:3). But why can't anyone
else see it? Is it just that David's naive? That he hasn't experienced enough
of this world to see that there's more to the situation than that. Or is
it that the army and Saul, in particular, have forgotten, or perhaps never
really realised, the power of the God they supposedly worship. |
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Well,
David hasn't. He's lived with the living God all his life. He's sat out
on the hills, watching the sheep, looking up at the sky reflecting on the
wonder of God's creation. He's sought God's help time and time again when
he's been faced with wild animals, lions and bears, who have threatened
his sheep. And he's seen the way God has protected him and given him victory
over those wild animals. So he looks across the valley at this giant of
a Philistine and he sees just another man who opposes God and who'll die
at God's hand in the end. |
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And
so he's brought to Saul, who decks him out in his own armour. Well, you
can imagine how that looks. Saul's 7 foot tall remember. And no doubt his
armour feels as heavy to David as Goliath's would have. So David takes it
off and sets out with just his ordinary clothes and a staff and a sling.
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Goliath
is understandably amused when he sees this young boy approaching. In fact
he laughs at David coming at him with a stick as though he were a dog. But
he's miscalculated. David isn't coming against him armed with just a stick;
not even with a sling. He's coming armed with the power of God. He says:
45"You come to me with
sword and spear and javelin; but I come to you in the name of the LORD of
hosts, the God of the armies of Israel, whom you have defied." You
can almost feel sorry for Goliath can't you? He doesn't stand a chance.
Do you remember that scene in "Raiders of the Lost Ark" when Indiana Jones
meets this huge Arab wielding an even huger sword. He takes a step back
at first, then he pulls out a gun and shoots him. Well, it's a bit like
that isn't it? Goliath is outgunned and outclassed. And to make it clear
what's going on here he adds: "that
all the earth may know that there is a God in Israel, 47and that
all this assembly may know that the LORD does not save by sword and spear;
for the battle is the LORD's and he will give you into our hand." And of
course we know how the story ends. |
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But
it's amazing how hard we find it to learn from history. You know the saying:
"This is the one thing we learn from history: that we never learn from history."
Sadly it's as true for God's people as it is for the general populace. What's
the point of this story of David and Goliath? It isn't that little people
can do great things if only they'll try. It isn't that strong people can
be overcome by weaker people who put their mind to it or who give it their
all. |
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No
it's this: "that all the earth may
know that there is a God in Israel." That the God of Israel is the true
and living God. And it's this: "47and that all this assembly
may know that the LORD does not save by sword and spear; for the battle
is the LORD'S and it's he who gives the victory." |
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Here
is the hardest lesson for us to learn still. It's God who gives the victory,
not their skill with sword and spear, not our skill with word and media
presentation. Who is it who will help us achieve our aims as a church? How
are we going to win hearts for Christ? How are we going to convince people
who are quite happy, thank you very much, that their lifestyle has a use-by
date; that there will come a day when God will ask them to answer for the
way they've responded to his Son, let alone the way they've obeyed his commandments?
How are we going to grow a church through conversions? How are we going
to help people grow in their faith and knowledge of Jesus Christ? |
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Only
by this means: by relying on the God of Israel, on the true and living God.
He's the one who brings victory. He's the one who saves, not by sword or
spear, but by his word proclaimed in the gospel, by his Spirit who fills
each one of us just as he filled David. So that when we come near to tell
people about Jesus their spirits are touched by his presence. Our God is
a great and mighty God. We fight the rulers, the authorities, the cosmic
powers of this age, but we do it in his strength, knowing that he will bring
the victory and that his word will not return to him empty. |
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Let's
then be confident in fighting the battles we have to face as Christians
in proclaiming the gospel wherever we are, knowing that God is with us fighting
alongside us, bringing people to salvation through the words we proclaim. |