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[music]
Shalom friends. Welcome to the Prophets
of Israel Daily. This is 1st Samuel
chapter 27. I'm Jeremy Gel with my
[music] study partner here, Arya
Bremwitz. And this series is brought to
you by the Land of Israel Network at
[music] the land ofisrael.com.
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so, thank you for that. All right, let's
get right to it. Last chapter, we see
David just a giant of amuna and faith.
And like once again, Saul's like hunting
him down about to kill him. And David in
complete faith spares the king of
Israel, declared his trust in God. In
this chapter, we sort of meet David at
the end of his rope. He has a little bit
of a spiritual crisis. It seems like
he's just reached his limit and actually
starts to despair. Look at verse one. Vy
Davidid alipo. And David said to his
heart, "Now I shall one day perish by
the hand of Saul." Vy David Alipo. He
spoke to himself. He reasoned it out
alone. He spoke in his own heart. He's
not speaking to God or a prophet. He's
speaking to his own heart. One of these
days Saul is going to get me. And David
thinks he has no choice. I mean, he fled
throughout Judea. He's lived in caves.
Everyone keeps on like ratting on him.
and he's lived like among these
wilderness tribes and now he just comes
to the conclusion he has nowhere else to
go except to the land of the
Philistines. And you know some people
they fault David for not consulting with
God or a prophet. But I want to posit
that David at this stage in his journey
he's actually consulting with God by
speaking to his heart. I mean that's how
David is living a guided life living by
that intuition of his heart. And we're
going to see that all of David's
journeys now it's all a part of a bigger
plan that he's going through.
>> Yeah. So I I want to say that I'm not
100% clear on what's right and true here
because I hear a lot of different
perspectives. You know the on one level
the the opening phrase could maybe be
the whole tragedy elibo to his heart
because just a few chapters ago when the
men of Ka were ready to hand him over to
Saul what did David do? He called for
the aphod and inquired of Hashem and not
once right again and again. David's
entire greatness has been that in every
crisis he turns the question upward and
here for the first time he turns it
inward. You know for a moment it seems
like he stops talking to God and starts
talking to himself. And listen to what
his heart tells him. I will perish by
the hand of Saul. That's really the
message he comes with. But but but
Jeremy, that simply isn't true. Samuel
anointed him. Jonathan told him plainly,
"You're going to be king." Saul himself
just admitted it, right? Every single
voice from heaven says David will live
and reign. And the only voice in the
world saying that he's going to die
seems to be the one from inside his own
exhausted head. And on some level, maybe
sometimes that's what fear does. It
takes the one lie you tell yourself and
makes it louder than every other truth
God ever told you. I just want to make
it clear. I do believe that there's a
time to turn inward into your own heart
and even to try to hear Hashem's voice
from there. But people are complex and
life is confusing and David is really in
a difficult spot.
>> Exactly. David is constantly in a
difficult spot and we just have to have
compassion for David here. I mean he's
just spent he's worn down. It's like
years of running living in caves
betrayed by the people that he saved. I
mean it's not like faith is just
something you can flip on and then you
have it. And Muna is something that
needs to be renewed every day. And David
is just exhausted. And so as he sees
that there's nowhere to go. So he leaves
the land of Judea. Saul has found his
hiding spot. There's really nowhere else
for him to go. And so he crosses over to
the enemy again. Verse two. Davidesh.
So David arose and crossed over. He and
600 men with him to Akish, son of Ma,
king of God. Of all people, David runs
to the king of the Philistines. Akish,
the king of Got. The same Akish, the
same God where David fled in chapter 21
where he had to drool into his beard and
played like a madman just to escape
alive. And now he goes back and it's
like at first glance, that's pretty
puzzling to say the least. But it's
important to note this time is really
different. I mean, last time he ran
there a lone fugitive. This time he's
coming with 600 fighting men and their
families behind him. I mean, this time
he's coming back as a warlord. And by
now he's known for years that he's been
wanted by the king of Israel. He's an
enemy of the king. So Aisha's like, "All
right, come on in." He welcomes him with
his 600 men with all their swords, a
sworn enemy to Saul. That's exactly the
asset a Philistine king wants. And so
David's plan works. Verse four.
And it was told to Saul that David had
fled to God and he no longer sought him.
On the surface, David's plan worked. He
finally finds safety. He finds rest for
the first time in years. Finally, no one
is hunting him.
>> Yeah. And and I want to just say that I
don't want to just rush past this
because we could ask ourselves now that
nobody's hunting him. Why does the road
to the throne have to go through enemy
territory? Why does the anointed king of
Israel have to go down into Philistine
land before you can go up to Jerusalem?
Now, I think maybe it's part of the
oldest pattern in our whole story. Maybe
even the story of the world
aliyah, a descent for the sake of an
ascent. Aram goes down to Gar. Yakov
goes down to Egypt. Yseph goes down into
the pit before he rises to rule. The
seed of Israel almost always has to be
buried in foreign soil before it breaks
through into something greater. And
there's a lot to it. And you know, I'm
looking at what David is actually doing
down there. He's not just hiding. He's
learning. The future king is about to
spend over a year living inside the
Philistine camp. Their language, their
politics, how their kings think, what
their armies fear. Saul Saul fought the
Philistines his whole life, but from the
other side of the valley, and he died on
Mount Gilboa, never having ever ever
really understood them. David is going
to walk among them, study them, and one
day break them so completely that the
word Philistine becomes a memory. Right?
David isn't a man who lost his way. I
think he's a man being planted. He's a
man that's no longer being defined by
the guy who who was chasing him all this
time, but now he's actually coming into
his own definition on some level.
>> Yeah, I think that's exactly what's
happening. I mean, David gets tested all
of the time. And so, Akish gives David a
town called Clog to settle in and David
begins this journey. And what's
interesting is he immediately starts
defending Israel. He starts conducting
raids. I mean, David looks a little bit
like Samson. He's like working for
Israel deep from within the Philistine
territory. I mean, and you just see like
look who David's reigning on on behalf
of the king of Philistines, the king
Akish. Look at verse eight.
And David and his men went up and raided
the Gisherites, the Girizzites, and the
Amalachites. He's attacking the enemies
of Israel, the Amalachites, the very
nation Saul was commanded to destroy and
fail to. David is picking up the slack.
David is still fighting Israel's battle.
He's still clearing out Israel's ancient
enemies, even from inside Philistine
territory. And so, you know, it's
interesting. In his war, David leaves no
survivors, men or woman. Look at verse
11. David would let neither man nor
woman live to bring news to God, saying,
"Lest they tell about us." lest they
tell about us. He leaves no one alive
because no one can be allowed to report
the truth back to Akish. When Akish asks
like, "Where did you raid today, David?"
David says, "Oh, it's against the
negative in Judah." Making it sound like
he's attacking the Israelites in
Israelite territory. He's making believe
he's become a traitor to Israel and he's
burned every bridge to home. So, Aish
will just trust him completely.
>> Yeah. And look, by the way, look at who
David is killing out there in the
wilderness. the Amalachites, the very
nation that Sha sitting on the throne
with the crown on his head and a direct
command from the prophet Samuel ringing
in his ears. Saul couldn't bring himself
to wipe them out. He had Saul had
everything, the kingship, the army, the
word of God spoken to his face. And he
spared Amalcch and it cost him the
kingdom. Now look at David. No throne,
no crown, on the run in exile, hiding
behind a lie in the city of his enemies.
And he is the one finishing the job Saul
left undone. I really think that is a
big part of the secret of what it means
to be the anointed one of Israel. It was
never about wearing the crown. It was
about carrying the mission. Saul held
the throne and abandoned the mission.
David lost everything and he still
carries it even from the gutter, even
behind enemy lines. That's why the
kingdom is being torn from Saul and
being given to David.
>> Exactly. I mean, that is what makes
David David. I mean, even when he's down
and out, the mission never leaves him.
You just have to love him. I mean, he's
been hunted by the king of Israel to the
point where he has to escape to the
Philistines. And all the while, David is
still protecting Israel. I mean, every
raid is against Israel's enemies. He
never once harms his own people,
obviously. And I mean, it's just thinks
he does. And so the instinct to guard
Israel is so ingrained in him. It
pulsates through him even in his
toughest situations. I mean the monster
within that we talked about before with
Naval, David is able to still point it
in the right direction. And when
everything around him is going sideways,
he never loses focus of his mission to
be the leader of Israel and protect
them. But the reality is that David is a
little bit in a trap that he's making
himself. I mean, ultimately, the truth
is going to come out. Something is going
to happen that's going to expose David
for who he really is. But the chapter
ends with David's plan working. Look at
verse 12. Amen.
And trusted David, saying, "He has
surely made himself utterly hated by his
people Israel. Therefore, he shall be my
servant forever."
Evolam,
a servant, a slave forever. I mean,
Akish is convinced. He thinks David is
now permanently his. David has so
betrayed Israel. He could never go home.
He will serve God for the rest of his
life. So the lie worked so well that
David, he's kind of talked himself into
a corner because in the very next
chapter, Akish marches out to war with
Israel and he expects David, his servant
forever, to fight against his own
people. And so the lie that brought
David safety, it's about to demand
something that David can really never
do.
>> Yeah. And and I want to just focus on
that word for a second, Jeremy. Uh levid
olam, a servant forever. Because Akish
looks at David, like you said, and he's
certain he's got him figured out that
he's a broken man. He's a traitor with
no home to go back to. He's an asset
that Aish owns for life, right? And we
know that he could he couldn't be more
wrong. This is the blindness of the
nations in a single sentence. They're
forever sure that they finally figured
out the Jew, that we're finished, that
we're dependent, that we belong to them
now. Pharaoh was sure of it. Babylon was
sure of it. Every empire that ever held
us and was convinced it had written the
last chapter of our story. But look at
who the word forever actually belongs
to. It isn't David who is the servant
forever. It's the house of David that is
the kingdom forever. Malut Bed, the
eternal throne. Akish got the entire
Philistine world is going to vanish so
completely that today like we said we
use their name as a synonym for defeated
right and and the man Akish thought was
his property for life is going to
outlast every one of them and he is
going to be the father of the line of
Messiah the anointed redeemer of Israel
and the whole world right and that's why
we hear the word forever at the end of
this chapter we need to realize that we
are hearing a prophecy the enemy
stumbled into without really
understanding a single word of it. The
nations keep declaring forever over
their hold on us and they keep being
wrong. In this whole story, there's only
one thing that is truly forever and it
was never theirs. It was ours. No,
that's exactly right. You know, and
friends, that's why this chapter is so
important. It shows us the great King
David at one of the lowest points in his
life. I mean, he's living among the
Philistines. And so why? It's so that we
understand something essential. It's
like the path to the throne is not a
straight line up. It doesn't happen
overnight. It's filled with caves and
detours and escapes. I mean, David is
being refined. And on our way to the
top, we are going to be refined as well.
And I see a prophecy for our generation
that we're living through right now.
We're living through this transition of
the era of Saul to the era of David.
From a nation that's focused only on
survival to a nation that's living its
divine purpose. And in chapter 27, it's
that's a prophecy that's embedded right
in the middle of this transition. It's
like the question has to be asked if
David is the anointed one. He's the
chosen king of Israel. Why does he have
to seem so weak? Why does he have to
rely on the king of another nation? Why
is a part of his journey to become this
like subservient servant of this other
king? Can't he just become the king? And
so today people ask the same question.
If Israel is the chosen people, if this
is if what's happening in this land is a
part of the great redemption. Why does
Israel have to run everything by the
president of America like we're their
servant? I mean, if we're anointed,
can't we just be a self-respecting
country? I mean, David aligning himself
with the interests of Akish teaches us
that before the rise of King David,
before David is recognized as the king,
there going to be moments where it might
seem like we have to rely on President
Trump because our interests might align
against our common enemies. It may seem
embarrassing to operate under the
authority of another nation. It's
embarrassing for David, but King Akish
treats him and sees him like a servant
forever. And as embarrassing as that
might be, David through his political
alliance is able to fight and remove the
enemies of Israel from the world. And
with some perspective, just a bird's eye
view, we can see that all of David's ups
and all of David's downs, they're just a
part of a greater plan that's unfolding.
And the real King David is rising up and
soon to be revealed in the world. And so
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Be strong and courageous, [music] my
friends. We will see you tomorrow.
Chapter 28 with Ari. Shalom from the
hills of Judea.