Monday, March 2, 2026

2 Samuel 12:1-15a - David Repents

2 Samuel 12:1-15a
Then David said to Nathan, "I have sinned against the Lord." And Nathan said to David, "The Lord also has taken away your sin; you shall not die." (verse 13)

Message: David Repents

Time: Second Samuel is set in the land of Israel during the reign of David and follows the course of his forty years as king of Israel (1011–971 BC). It chronicles the establishment of the Davidic dynasty and the expansion of Israel under God’s chosen leader. 

What the Lord is Saying: Nathan comes to David and shares a story or parable with David. It is about 2 men, one rich and one poor. The poor man only has a ewe lamb. "Now a traveler came to the rich man, and he was unwilling to take from his own flock or his own herd." This is a striking verse comparing David's sin in taking Bathsheba to the inability of the man recognizing what he already have. That is the sin we often commit. Not everyone time, but often this is how it is seen - God gives us a gift and we tell God it is not good enough and we need something else. Why? - wanting something different? It feels like to me I would say what I have is not as great as it has been and I need a temporary replacement. Or I see something in the public similar to what I had and want to seize it, but frankly it is taking what God has provided and saying to God, "Not good enough." 

David was caught up in the parable and felt the man who came to the traveler must die. At this moment, he has contempt and repulsion but doesn't see himself in the parable. It takes a moment, but David realizes that he has not simply gotten away with his sin and he repents. He has been exposed and he takes responsibility, but it still seems that he was forced to do this rather than voluntarily taking the consequences. I've watched someone close to me in my life voluntarily take the consequences for his indiscretion. He has suffered over the last year and it has been hard for him. He wasn't forced into it or exposed. And yet, not sure if it has made anything easier or different. To me, it means something but I am simply an innocent bystander. 

The Lord pronounces a consequence in verse 11, "I will raise up evil against you from your own household." Not sure what this means. David's sons die: Ammon is killed by Absalom and then Absalom is then murdered himself by Joab and Adonijah is executed by Solomon. Two sons killer two other sons. Their is division and discord within his family. Absalom also lay with his father's concubines. I think wealth and privilege can at times make one think that they can get away with things. The Lord once again shows David that though what he tried to do secretly instead his consequence will known throughout the kingdom and to this day through the reading of this Word. And so Bathsheba's child is killed. 

What matters in this is repentance and a resolve to Love the Lord. I see this as well in the life of the person I have seen confronted with sin, that they too are focused on loving the Lord now. Nathan tells David his sin was taken away and he will not have pay for it through his life. 

Summary: Nathan reveals to David his sin through a publicly and the Lord exposes David publicly. David repents. 

Promise: God declared David chosen and David's sin does not change this. 

Prayer: To think God that You have chosen me. Thank you for helping me to see my sin as well and to see that You have granted me much and I need to only embrace your gifts and nothing else. Keep me front and center. Thank you for the lesson of this passage and what it teaches people to this day. You are to be praised. Your ways are perfect. 


Note: If you are interested in other studies/devotions, check out my index of Bible Study's.

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