“The king
therefore said to Joab and the leaders of the army who were with him, “Tour all
the tribes of Israel from Dan to Beer-sheba and register the people, that I may
know their number.” (2 Samuel 24:2)
What was David thinking when he gave the above order to
Joab? To know the true population of
Israel? To know the population of
taxable adults? Very unlikely as the
story will reveal. David had reached the
pinnacle of power. He is a powerful king
inside and outside of Israel. Now he
begins to think: “I did it by my own
strength.” Because God loves David so
dearly, God gave him a way of escape from this temptation through the prophetic
utterance of Joab:
But David would not listen:
“However, the king’s command prevailed over Joab and the leaders
of the army, so they left the king’s presence in order to register the people
of Israel.” (2 Samuel 24: 4)
Then he realized what he has done:
“Afterward, however, David regretted having numbered the people.
David said to the LORD: “I have sinned grievously in what I have done. Take away,
LORD, your servant’s
guilt, for I have acted very foolishly.”* (2
Samuel 24: 10)
But sin had already been committed and the penalty of sin
must be paid.
What are the lessons of this story? God had been with David in his entire crisis
and had given him innumerable victories.
David himself composed psalms and songs in testimony to what God has
done for him. Yet he was tempted to
believe that he did it by himself and could do it by himself again. Nobody is above temptation. David’s human weakness as this story
illustrates is lust for grandeur. He had
also lust for flesh as we saw in the drama with Bathsheba. But David’s
greatest quality is to glorify God by his sins.
God is the Father of mercies and the God of all consolations who
delights in showing His supreme power through forgiving the sinner. David gives the Father this opportunity by
his eloquent contrition. O that we may learn this from David.
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23-Psalm1to2