Called

Romans 1:1 Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ, called to be an apostle, separated unto the gospel of God,

In the beginning of this series I pointed to King David’s big sin. I was saying that doing kingdom business provides a hedge of protection around us. While David failed to perform his duties it was not that failure that was his sin, nor was it the cause.

Let us once again assume that you have discovered who you are in Christ and you know your calling. What can we discover about King David’s behavior that will help us not repeat his mistakes? I am not saying that keeping your nose to the grindstone will keep you from sinning. Far from it. Being obedient to God’s commands does that. Sometimes the Lord says rest.

Let us return to King David’s sin and see if we can identify where he went wrong.

2 Samuel 11:2 And it came to pass in an eveningtide, that David arose from off his bed, and walked upon the roof of the king’s house: and from the roof he saw a woman washing herself; and the woman was very beautiful to look upon.

Stop focusing on the woman. That is not David’s problem. David was restless. He got up from his bed because something was troubling him. I do that. I get up when I am restless and cannot sleep. That is how I can recognize it in David. What should we do when we are restless, when things are not right within us? I went back and looked to see if I could discover what was disturbing David and I found nothing except assumptions. The passages do not tell us.

We have to look to the behavior to see where things went wrong. David walked upon the rooftop alone. It is in the alone time that David discovered opportunity to go wrong. So the first opportunity to avoid sin was in keeping his stress to himself. This is where accountability partners come into play. They will help talk out the problem and get to the root source of the stress.

Do not suffer stress alone.

4 thoughts on “Called”

  1. You are assuming that he was restless. He hadn’t gone into battle with his troops this time, which was unusual. Why had he remained at home? The Bible doesn’t tell us but it allowed him to be in a place he shouldn’t have been. Had he been doing his business in the first place, this wouldn’t have happened. Didn’t David have concubines in the palace? He abused his position of power just like Bill Clinton did. I don’t like David very much.

    1. Yet we are told David had a heart after God and not one negative things is said of him in the New testament. Just because we do not like someone does not mean we cannot learn things from their behavior.

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