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Shalom friends. Welcome back to the
prophets of Israel Daily brought to you
by the land of Israel network at the
land of Israel.com. This is the second
book of Samuel chapter 7 part two. So
yesterday we left David trembling before
one single profound life-changing
question. God had told him plainly, "You
will not build my house. Your son will."
And David, whose whole heart burned to
build it, turned to God and asked the
question that's bothered me personally
for years. If my hands are clean, David
said, "If the blood I spilled in
Israel's wars was precious before God
and not a stain on my soul, then why, oh
master of the world, can I not build
your house?" And I told you the answer
is going to turn the whole thing on its
head. And here it is. God says, "Because
if you build it, it can never be
destroyed. If you build it, it will
never be destroyed." Now, Jeremy, let's
just think about that for a second. The
reason David is turned away isn't that
he isn't holy enough. It's the opposite.
It's that his holiness is too great.
Right? A house built by David's hands
would never fall. It would stand
indestructible against any enemy and any
century. And that sounds like the
highest blessing imaginable until you
remember what God already knew was
coming because he's God, right? Hashem
foresaw the day Israel would sin gravely
enough to deserve destruction. And the
wrath would have to land somewhere. If
the temple were indestructible, it would
land on the people, on the children, on
the children of Israel. So God arranges
for Schlommo, right? King Solomon, whose
very name comes from the word shalam,
which means wholeness and peace. Hashem
arranges for Schlommo to build a house
that can fall. So that in in our hour of
judgment as we read in the fourth
chapter of the book of lamentations a
right God could pour out his wrath on
the wood and on the stones and spare his
children. Do you hear what that means?
The destructibility I don't know if
that's a word. The destructibility of
the temple was never a flaw. It was
mercy. The beta mikdash was built un was
built breakable and in some deep way it
had to be breakable so that the children
of Israel would be unbreakable.
Then God turns from what David won't do
to what he's already done. Verse 8,
I took you from the pasture from
following the sheep to be ruler over my
people over Israel. I was with you
wherever you walked. I cut down your
enemies and I made your name great. And
then came the words that actually change
history. Verse 11.
And the Lord declares to you that the
Lord will make you a house. Jeremy, did
you hear that there? Right. David turned
to God and said, "Hashem, my God, I will
build you a house." And how does God
answer him? No, I will build you a
house. Now, David meant cedar and stone.
God meant a dynasty, an eternal royal
line, right? David offered God a
building that could one day fall. And
God hands David back the one thing that
never will fall. And then God spells it
out, leaving no room for confusion.
verses uh 12 and 13.
I will raise up your seed after you and
he shall build a house for my name and I
will establish the throne of his kingdom
forever.
Your son Solomon will build the temple
and his throne will stand forever. And
then God says something so intimate,
words that as a father I imagine must
have been such a comfort for David to
hear. Right? Speaking of his son
Solomon, God says verse 14en,
I will be to him as a father and he
shall be to me a son. Right? If he sins,
God says I will correct him with the rod
of men. But my my loving kindness will
never depart for him as I took it from
Saul. And my friends, I really think
that that that one line, that's the
whole difference between a kingship that
ended and a kingship that never ends.
You know, that's right. A kingship never
ends. It lasts forever with David. And
it really lays down the blueprint for us
because David carries the dream of
building the temple. And God tells him,
"It's your son that's going to lay down
the stones." And that is the design.
That's how redemption is going to move
forward. The dreamer and the builder,
they're rarely the same person. Herzel
never set foot in the Jewish state. The
Kalutim, the pioneers, they drained the
swamps, buried their friends to malaria.
They never saw their greatgrandchildren
flying F35s over the land. The nation is
built by people planting trees that are
never going to sit in the shade of those
trees. And I think the challenge for
David now is that he has to find the
inner strength and character to pour his
whole heart into a dream he already
knows he's not personally going to
complete.
>> Right? And and while that's I think a
challenge a challenge for many of us for
David I feel like that's just part of
his character. It's part of his essence.
Right? And then comes his response and
it isn't triumph it's it's tears. Right?
Verse 18. Adonai,
who am I, oh Lord God, and what is my
house that you have brought me this far?
The greatest king Israel would ever
know. And his first instinct is, "Who am
I?" And then he says something the
commentators have wrestled with for over
2,000 years. Verse 19,
"And this is the law of man, O Lord God.
Torah to Adam and this is the Torah, the
teaching of humankind. Now, I'm not
going to act like I fully understand
this or I get it, but because that
phrase is almost untransatable in a way
that would make simple sort of sense,
and I think that's the point, David is
reaching for something far larger than a
royal contract. It's as if kneeling in
his cedar palace, he glimpses that the
promise to his house was never only
about David or even about or or even
only about Israel, but that this one
eternal throne is the channel through
which all of humanity's redemption will
one day flow. one line, the whole future
of the world folded into the heart of
one humble king with a heart for God.
And friends, I think this is the essence
of everything we're praying for. Right?
Three times a day, we ask for
we pray for the flourishing offshoot of
David, the the longing for Messiah, for
the Messiah, son of David, the Messiah
from the house of the Davidic line, his
descendants. It's not, this isn't a
poetic sort of add-on to Judaism. It was
planted right here in in a palace of
cedar on the night that a prophet had to
take back his own words. Right? The
prophet Natan said, "I was wrong. That
was from me." Right? And Jeremy, look
where this leaves us. We have returned.
We have houses of cedar or Jerusalem, he
stone. We have a sovereign state, an
army, vineyards blooming in the Judeian
hills. And yet, and yet the throne of
David, as of now, it appears to still be
empty. The house is not built. Jerusalem
holds the world's attention, but the
presence of God still in the deepest
sense dwells within curtains. You know,
I really want to touch on that now
because we're sort of living in this
transition as we're watching Jerusalem
being rebuilt. And when you look at the
Tanakh, especially with King David, you
can really connect to prayer at the most
fundamental level. I mean, David was the
poet of the psalms that we read. That's
how we pray. It's like King David taught
the world, the Catholics and Christians,
like taught all the world how to pray.
And so this point is pretty essential.
God just told him, "Your house will be
eternal." That's it. It's guaranteed.
Sworn by God himself. And then David
turns right around and prays for the
very thing that God just promised him. I
mean, he prays to God to bless his house
that it should stand forever. And
usually we think about prayer is like
praying into the unknown. You know, we
pray when we're a little bit anxious,
when the outcome is a little bit in
doubt and we're desperate and we have
nowhere else to turn. And here David is
like holding like this ironclad divine
promise in his hands. And he prays
harder. Like the promise is the
foundation of his prayer. The promise is
what gives David permission like the
audacity to ask boldly. David's prayer,
it's like a conversation with what God
has already spoken. He's taken the
promise and he's handing it back to
heaven and saying, "You said it. Now
bring it to pass." That's the boldest,
most intimate form of prayer that there
is. He's not begging for a faroff god
for a favor or for mercy. He's holding
his father to his own word. And I see it
like this. Right now in this generation,
God promised through his prophets that
he would rebuild Jerusalem, that the
city would be restored, that the
children would return to their borders.
And we're watching it happen before our
eyes. Jerusalem today is larger, more
alive, and more full of Jewish children
than any moment in 3,000 years.
Jerusalem today is huge compared to
David's time. The promise, it's visibly
coming true right in front of us. And
so, what is our job? It's to do exactly
what David did. Take the promise we can
see unfolding and pray it the rest of
the way home. To stand in the rebuilt
city and to hold God to his word and ask
Hashem to finish what he started,
>> right? To finish it. That's what we're
praying for every single day. To finish
it. Not for our sake, but for God's for
God's own sake. for his own name. That's
it. Exactly. You know, David uh David, I
think he teaches us the the posture that
we can really seek to emulate for living
inside an unfinished promise like we are
right on on one side, who am I? Total
humility, knowing none of this was
earned. And on the other, he turns right
around and boldly ask God to fulfill the
promise forever. Right? Verse 29, the
final words of the chapter. or David
requests of God, bless the house of your
servant that it may stand before you
forever. Right? Humility and boldness,
gratefully receiving the promise on the
one hand and still daring to ask for its
completion
on the other hand. Right? And maybe
that's where this chapter and the moment
of history we find ourselves in right
now, that's where it's that's where they
meet. Right? Remember my friends why
David couldn't build, why he couldn't
build the temple. It was so that the
house could fall and the people could
live. Twice the temple was destroyed.
Not once, but twice. And every time the
wrath landed on wood and stone, and
Israel walked out of the fire and back
into history. The building was made
breakable so the nation would be
eternal. And here we are. the very
children those stones were destroyed in
order to protect back on these hills
holding the miracle of return in one
hand and the empty throne in the other
hand. So we keep building and we keep
praying and we keep faithfully marching
toward the day that the dynasty of David
will be rebuilt. He only got a glimpse
of it but it will be rebuilt in the
world that we live in now. May we be
that generation. May we be that
generation that helps carry it across
the finish line. I mean, can you imagine
my friends and we'll see you tomorrow as
we move into chapter 8 with Jeremy. And
if you're enjoying walking this journey
with us, you're invited to join us on
our global fellowship family at the land
ofisrael.com. It's like nothing else on
earth. Shalom, my friends.