Transcript
A (0:00)
Hey, everyone. Welcome back to the podcast. Before we dive into today's episode, I have some exciting news that I know a lot of you have been waiting for. Our A Year in the Bible Study is back in stock. But here's the deal. This study will sell out fast. So if you've been waiting for it to come back in stock, this is your sign. Go get your A Year in the Bible Study now by clicking the link in the top of our show notes before they're gone foreign. Hey, thanks for joining us on A Year in the Bible with Daily Grace. We're so glad that you join us for a few minutes of your day each day so we can break down your reading. We're in the book of Second Samuel. Chapters seven through nine are what we are covering today. And cj, I know that you mentioned that we're nearing the pinnacle of Samuel.
B (0:52)
Yeah.
A (0:53)
Do we reach the pinnacle in these chapters today?
B (0:55)
I think we're here. 2 Samuel 7 is the pinnacle in the sense that we're introduced to what's called the Davidic Covenant, where God promises that David will always have an heir to rule on the throne. And of course, we recognize that that's Christ.
A (1:13)
Yeah.
B (1:14)
But we'll get there. We'll get there eventually. Yeah.
A (1:17)
Okay, so we're going to reach the pinnacle. Is it a short moment? Is it a long moment?
B (1:23)
So, yeah, we hear about it in 2 Samuel 7, where God and David actually converse and talk about the Davidic covenant, and then we sort of see some of the effects of it. Okay. So in chapter eight, we see how David defeats the Philistines and the Moabites and the Ammonites and the Amalekites and the Edomites. In other words, all of these surrounding nations are bowing the knee to God's king. Okay. Which, of course, is anticipating the greater king who is to come, the rightful heir that the Davidic covenant promises. Okay. But then in chapter nine, David also wonders if there's anyone else from the house of Saul and Jonathan that he can bless. So this shows the righteousness and the generosity and the mercy that David extends to essentially the family of his mortal enemy. Yes, it was his friend Jonathan, but it's also the family of Saul, the man who wanted him dead. But he holds to his promise and his covenant, and he tries to bless the family of Saul. So he ends up finding Mephibosheth, who's Jonathan's handicapped son, and he's blessed by David. And David instructs Saul's servant to. To take care of this man and say, I'll pay for everything. You just watch out for this man. Because I promise that I would.
