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.
In a recent devotional I said “Don’t focus on the woman.” A dear friend took my advice and focused on the roof. Her point was that David had probably been there before. Point well taken, but was not the point of that devotional. So let us now talk about the roof.
From a pure standpoint of what a roof represents, it is not meant to be an observation point. Those are represented in the bible as windows and parapets. In this example it represents a high place, an advantage point, which it was not meant to represent.
In life this could be taking advantage of a natural position and abusing the position, such as being a supervisor or business owner. Abuse of power isn’t uncommon but we are not all in a position to worry about that danger. If you are in that position, take care not to cross those ethical lines of responsibility.
For most of us having information about a situation, private and perhaps secretive is more in-line with our positional advantage. Perhaps someone has placed trust in you, confided to you a thing which has burdened them. It might even be an observed behavior, something discovered which that party is not aware of your knowledge. The examples are too vast to cover them all.
How would you know if you are at risk of sinning because of this “position”? The position itself is not sin, only a “jumping off” point. What are the warning signs we should look out for here? I would have to say that David did not look away when he saw her naked. He observed her long enough to notice her beauty. So pondering on these observations is the first warning sign.
Do thoughts about a situation turn from an observation to an obsession? Do you think about it a little too much?
And still you have not sinned, but the warning signs are all there.
Yes, we are not to ponder about sin, the Bible tells us to FLEE from it. David didn’t flee. Easy to say yet hard to do, especially when satan has seen where we are weak, and there he places the greatest temptation. Taking thoughts captive and replacing them with something pure and worthy of our attention is what we are to do. Required a extra measure of self discipline.