At hearing of the death of his son by Bathsheba, David spoke these words concerning his son:
2 Sam 12:23b
I will go to him, but he will not return to me."
David
is making in this one little sentence a huge statement. He is
acknowledging eternal life, not only for him but for his child. They
cannot be together now but will be in eternity.
David laments the following at the cave of Adullam.
“Oh, that someone would get me a drink of water from the well near the gate of Bethlehem!”Ponder
this verse. When we think of Bethlehem, we automatically think of
Jesus, born in Bethlehem. Remember what Jesus said to the Samaritan
woman at the well?
John 4:10
Jesus answered
her, "If you knew the gift of God and who it is that asks you for a
drink, you would have asked him and he would have given you living
water."
So when David longed for a drink of water from Bethlehem, was he speaking prophetically?
Even
though David was thirsty and his men risked lives to get him the water,
David then poured the water on the ground without drinking any of it.
This may sound confusing to us. What David was doing was pouring out
the water as a sacrificial act of worship.
It is very
clear that David's mighty men were really MIGHTY men. David started
with several hundred before he became king, then out of the several
hundred were thirty special mighty men and then there were three
extraordinary men.
David captures and/or defeats Rabbah, Moab, Hadadezer, Damascus, Edom.
"The Lord gave David victory everywhere he went."
Even
though David had victory over his enemies, he had to be constantly at
war. The Lord didn't do David's fighting for him, David had to do it himself. He was given victory over the people living in all the lands that
Abraham walked, which included the land known as Syria today. Great lesson for us today...in all our spiritual battles, the Lord is more than willing to do the fighting for us. (Ephesians 6:10-18)
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