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>> Shalom friends, welcome back to the
Prophets of Israel daily. This is the
book of Second Samuel [music] chapter
12. I'm Jeremy Gimpel here with my dear
friend, my partner in crime, and my root
to my study partner, Ari Abramowitz. I'm
on the road speaking across the United
States and Ari is broadcasting from
Judea and Prophets of Israel daily means
daily. One chapter a day, every day, and
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Network and the fellowship, we would
never be able to pull this off. So kudos
to them. All right, last chapter, we saw
the beginning
of David's fall, his greatest mistake.
While the army was off at war besieging
Rabbah, David stayed home in Jerusalem
and from his rooftop, he saw Bathsheba,
the wife of Uriah the Hittite, one of
his most loyal soldiers, one of the
mighty men who joined David even before
he was king. And he took her and she
became pregnant and to cover it up,
David arranged that Uriah be killed on
the front lines and then married the
widow.
So according to the p'shat, the simple
meaning of the text, King David, the man
after God's own heart, at the height of
his power, committed adultery and
engineered the death of one of his men.
And the last line of chapter 11 sums it
up. The thing that David had done was
evil in the eyes of the Lord. And that's
where chapter 12 opens. God sends a
prophet to David.
Verse 1. Vayishlach Hashem et Natan el
David. And the Lord sent Natan unto
David.
And Natan doesn't march in and accuse
the king, he tells him a story.
Verses 1 through 4.
There were two men in a city, one rich
and one poor. The rich man had vast
flocks and herds. The poor man had
nothing but one little lamb and he
raised with his children. It ate from
his plate, drank from his cup, slept in
his arms. It was like a daughter to him.
And when a traveler came, the rich man
wouldn't touch his own enormous flock to
feed his guest, he took the poor man's
only lamb and slaughtered it.
>> [snorts]
>> David, such a passionate man, erupts.
David's anger blazes against the man and
he declares, "As God lives, the man who
did this deserves to die. And he shall
restore the lamb fourfold because he did
this thing and had no pity."
And Nathan turns to the king and says
the words that expose David to himself.
Vayomer Natan el David, atah ish. And
Nathan said to David, "You are the man."
>> Jeremy, just picture
>> Atah ish. You are the man.
>> I It's It's just such a powerful piece
right here. I mean, just look at what
Nathan the prophet did there. It really
seems like he wasn't just exposing
David's sin, he was revealing a profound
truth about the human soul. Think about
it. How do you tell the most powerful
man in the kingdom, a man with the
authority to have you killed, that he's
a murderer and a thief?
You can't really accuse him directly. I
mean, you can, but it probably wouldn't
be wise. At best, he'd most likely, you
know, I guess probably rationalize or
deflect or or justify his actions the
way we all do pretty often. Well, I get
Maybe not you, Jeremy, but I know that I
do. Right? The human heart is infinitely
creative at excusing its own sins while
condemning the exact same sin in someone
else. So, Nathan doesn't attack David's
defenses, he goes around them. He tells
David a story about someone else and
David, feeling no threat, judges the
case honestly. His moral instincts are
are still perfectly intact right now and
he's outraged. He's righteous and he
pronounces the death sentence. Maybe it
wasn't actually a death sentence. He has
to repay it fourfold, but he said on a
deep like moral level, the man deserves
death. And the moment David has fully
committed to the judgment, that is when
Nathan springs the trap. You are the
man.
Without realizing it, David has just
sentenced himself. Out of his own mouth,
with his own sense of justice. And
here's the point I want to make, cuz
this idea has lived inside of me for a
long time. It's It's It's a precious
concept in my heart. Right, that lesson,
Jeremy, reaches far beyond David. Every
time we rush to judge another person, we
should be very careful.
David didn't condemn a stranger. David
condemned himself, out of his own mouth,
powered by his own sense of justice.
Whether he knew it or not, the moment he
judged that man, he was judging himself.
Maybe that's one of the reasons our
sages say that that we should really
judge others favorably.
Not only because others deserve the
benefit of the doubt, but because
perhaps every judgment we make of others
is, in Hashem's eyes, a judgment of
ourselves. Because, you know, I before
we're so certain about someone else's
guilt, it's worth asking, why are they
in my life right now? Why am I in the
situation that I'm judging them? Is
there at least a little bit of this in
me?
Nathan didn't just reveal David's sin.
He held up a mirror while David thought
he was looking through a window.
Right, he revealed a truth about the
human condition. We all have blind spots
exactly the size of ourselves. And if we
can learn to look inward before looking
outward, we'll become not only more
compassionate judges of others, but more
honest judges of our own hearts.
>> You know, that's exactly it, Ari. I
mean, now look at David's response.
Because this is why, even after
everything, he remains the man after
God's own heart. Nathan lays out the
full indictment. God anointed you, gave
you everything. He would have given you
even more, and you just judged yourself.
And even more so, you struck down Uria,
you took his wife. You know what you've
done is wrong in the eyes of Hashem. And
David says simple words, verse 13.
Vayomer David el Nathan, "Chatati
l'Hashem." And David said unto Nathan,
"I have sinned against the Lord."
"Chatati l'Hashem." I have sinned
against the Lord. There's no excuses,
there's no but, no blaming Bathsheba, no
blaming the war, no spin. Those words of
total, unconditional confession and
responsibility.
>> Right, Jeremy, and those those two words
are the entire reason David is David,
and the reason he's not Saul. Because
we've seen this exact scene before,
haven't we? Go back to the first book of
Samuel, the prophet Samuel confronts
King Saul about his sin, disobeying God
at Amalek. And what does Saul do? He
argues and he explains, he says the
people made him do it, he says that he
was going to sacrifice the animals
anyways, he says he basically did obey,
right? He defends himself right up to
the point that he loses the kingdom.
When he's confronted with the truth,
ultimately, Saul protects his image. On
the other hand, when David is
confronted, he falls to his knees. Same
situation, a prophet, an accusation, a
king's pride on the line, and the two
men respond in opposite ways. And that
is the whole difference between them. It
was never that David didn't sin. David's
sin here is arguably even worse than
Saul's. The difference is what they did
when they were confronted with the
truth. Saul defended himself, and David
surrendered. And that, friends, is the
definition of true greatness. True
greatness is not the absence of failure,
but the capacity to own it completely
the moment that the light hits you.
The 51st Psalm, "Lev tahor bara li
Elohim." We said this before, "Create in
me a pure heart, O God." That's what he
wrote at this moment. One of the
deepest, most beautiful prayers of all
of repentance, possibly in all of human
history, was born out of David's worst
fall.
>> Yeah, all right, you know, there's no
question that this episode with Uriah
was his worst fall. Nathan answers
immediately, "God has removed your sin.
You will not die." He prophesies in real
time. David is forgiven. But forgiven is
not the same as no consequences. Nathan
tells him the child born of this union
is going to die, and that the sword will
never depart from his house. And the
rest of the chapter is hard to read. And
in some ways, this is the turning point
in David's life, from the height of his
rule as king of Israel, walking on the
roof, top of the world, king of the
master of the all of Israel. He was just
like so good. David betrays from the
path, and things start to unravel. The
child falls deathly ill. David fasts,
lies on the ground all night, refuses to
eat, pleads with God for the child's
life for 7 days, and on the 7th day, the
child dies. And when David realizes the
child is dead, he rises from the ground,
washes, anoints himself, changes his
clothes, goes into the house uh of God
and worships, and then asks for food and
eats. And his servants are bewildered,
like, "While the child lived, you wept
and fasted, you were on the ground, and
now that he's dead, you get up and eat?"
And David's answer is really a powerful
testimony to his faith, and his trust,
and his acceptance of God's will. Verse
23.
V'atah met. Lama s'ani tsom?
But now he is dead. Why should I fast?
Can I bring him back again? I shall go
to him, but he shall not return to me.
>> Jeremy, I just want to zoom in for a
second on that. We could just move on,
but there's really a lot in there. You
know, cuz while there's still something
that he could potentially do,
while the child lived and prayer might
still move and have a real world effect
on the situation, David poured out
everything he had. He fasted, he wept,
he threw himself on the ground, he left
nothing on the table. But the moment the
decree was final, the moment it was
truly beyond his power to change it,
David did something that feels like
superhuman. He just accepted it fully.
He didn't rage against God or collapse
into bitterness, he got up, he washed,
he prayed, and he ate. And that single
line I am going to him, but he will not
return to me. Is also one of the
clearest affirmations of life beyond
death in the Tanakh cuz really that
subject we don't focus so much, we don't
read that much about it on Tanakh, but
we do see about it there. Right? But
David isn't only saying that the dead
don't come back, he's saying, I will go
to him. There is a place where they will
be reunited. Right? His grief is real,
but it's wrapped in faith. The death is
not the absolute end. And I think that
is how David is modeling for us how we
can navigate waters that may feel
unbearably painful. We most of us go
through them at sometimes in our lives.
You you know, you you pour out
everything while you can act.
You surrender completely when you
cannot.
And remember the entire time that Hashem
is in control and that this life is not
all that there is.
>> Yeah, it's remarkable. I mean, we've
seen David has such passions and
emotions. The story of Bathsheba is a
window into David's overpowering
passions, but we see that although his
inner world is truly a storm his faith
allows him to accept reality as it comes
knowing that everything that happens
from Hashem is ultimately true and
ultimately for his good. And so, David
comforts Bathsheba and she bears another
son. And they name him Solomon,
And the Tanakh adds a line that points
to order within the chaos, "And the Lord
loved him." God sends word through
Nathan to call the child Jedidiah,
beloved of God. And out of the deepest
failure of David's life, after genuine
repentance, God brings forth Solomon,
the son who will build the temple, the
wisest of all kings, the king who gives
us the only window we have into the
Messianic era with the temple in
Jerusalem, peace with all the nations,
the nations streaming to Jerusalem to
learn God's ways. And the story, you
know, it just it doesn't end with sin.
It ends with redemption. I think that is
one of the most important teachings from
David's greatest sin. From something
that looks completely dark comes the
greatest light, comes comes the
temple, and ultimately comes Mashiach.
And then the chapter does something
just kind of closes the circle. It takes
us back to Rabbah. Verses 26 to 31, Joab
nearly captured the Ammonite capital,
the very siege David walked away from at
the start of chapter 11. And he sends
word, and he says, "Come, finish it
yourself, or the city will bear my
name." So, David rises, gathers the
people, goes out, and takes the city.
And so, you see the frame closing. The
whole tragedy began because David stayed
home in his palace, away from his mighty
men and the soldiers of Israel.
That exact battle, now restored and
forgiven, he finally goes. The king is
back where he belongs with his people in
the battlefield. And in this chapter,
King David guides us in two dimensions,
on a personal level and a national
level. So, first in our own personal
lives, this is the chapter that tells us
the truth about greatness. It was never
about being perfect. David committed a
terrible sin.
But what made him the man after God's
own heart was that when the mirror was
held up, he didn't argue, he didn't
hide, he didn't defend his image. He
said, "Hatati Hashem. I have sinned
Hashem." And he meant it with his whole
soul. And every one of us, just like
what Ari said, you said it so
beautifully, we have a blind spot
exactly the size of ourselves. Every one
of us needs the courage to hear, "You
are the man."
And then not flinch away from it. I
mean, the promise of this chapter is
that even our worst failures, brought
honestly before God, they can somehow
they can become the soil out of which
our greatest blessings grow. Out of
David's lowest moment came
And on a national level, this chapter is
the secret to Jewish eternity. Every
other ancient nation wrote propaganda.
Their kings were flawless gods. Their
histories airbrushed. But Israel did the
opposite. We preserved
our stories as sacred scripture. The
story of our greatest kings, our is most
shameful sin. We read it aloud every
year forever. Why? Because a nation that
can look honestly at its own failures,
take responsibility, turn back toward
God, is a nation that can never be
destroyed. We don't claim to be perfect.
We claim to be a people who, when
confronted by the truth, can still say,
"Hatati. I've sinned." We can pick
ourselves up, wash our faces, and walk
back toward Hashem. That is what has
kept us alive for 3,000 years, and it's
what will carry us home to a new
Jerusalem. All right, friends. Hazak
Ve'ematz. Oh, and before we go, if these
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tomorrow
>> [music]
>> for 2 Samuel chapter 13 where
it all continues. Shalom.