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Shalom friends. Welcome back to the
Prophets of Israel Daily. This is
brought to you by the Land of Israel
Network at the land of Isisrael.com. I
am on the road right now traveling from
Montana all the way to Miami. I I think
that I'm somewhere in South Dakota right
now on my way to Colorado. But we would
not miss this opportunity because I see
all over the country how many people are
benefiting and enjoying the prophets of
Israel daily. So Ari, you should know
all of our efforts, all of our time. It
is truly a blessing to people all across
the United States and I get mails from
people all around the world. So that's
really a marvelous thing. How's it going
in Israel?
>> It's going great. I go to Jerusalem, go
to Judea, you know, all around the
place, people are coming up to me,
prophets of Israel daily. It's really
people are hooked in. Thank God. And so
am I. And so am I. So let's dive in,
Jeremy.
>> All right, let's go. You know what's
beautiful about what we're doing now is
that it's not just a verse taken out of
context. It's really telling the story
of King David. It's a narrative. It's
not also we're not watching a cartoon of
David on Amazon or a Hollywood version.
It's the real David, a man of amuna, a
faith, a man of war, the man carrying
the destiny of Israel on his shoulders.
And to really understand what happens
now in chapter 8, we have to remember
where we left off in chapter 7 because
it's the key to everything that follows.
In chapter 7, David is finally settled
in his palace. The wars have quieted
down. His heart's deepest yearning rises
up. I want to build a temple. I want to
build a house for God. Here I am living
in this palace of cedar. And he says,
while the ark of God is still sitting in
a tent. And God answers, well, it's a
little bit bittersweet. He says, "David,
you're not going to build me a house.
Instead, I'm going to build you a house,
an eternal dynasty, and your son will
build my temple." And so, hold that in
your mind because here is the heart of
who David is. The moment he reaches the
height of achievement in worldly terms,
no enemies, victory, prosperity, a
palace, his one yearning is to build a
home for God. That has always been
David's deepest desire to put God first.
And here in chapter 8, it's the rest of
the story. It's the chapter where David
clears the board. Verse one.
And it came to pass afterward that David
smoked the Philistines and subdued them.
And it came to pass afterwards David
goes out and finishes the work. Is he
going to accomplish his ultimate goal in
life? No. That's just simply not his
destiny. David accepts it. And what he
does do next is he does the very next
thing that the best king could do. He is
going to be the best king he possibly
can for Israel with no regard for the
outcomes. So he strikes the Philistines,
Israel's tormentor for generations, the
enemy who killed King Saul, and he
subdues them at last. Then Moav, David
divides the Moabitete captives by a 2:1
ratio, killing 2/3 and sparing a third.
And at first, it sounds harsh and then
looking into the midash, it says that
when David was escaping Saul, he
requested that Moab take in his parents,
Moav betrayed David, killed his family,
killed all of his brothers except for
one. And this was David's payback. And
then verses 3 through8, the big one,
king of Sova, up by the Euphrates and
the Arameans of Damascus, they called
them to help. David defeats them all,
takes their chariots and horsemen,
captures enormous amounts of gold and
bronze. And this area, it's the northern
part of the land of Israel, a bit
northeast of modern Israel. In today's
map, you're looking at southern,
central, Syria, and maybe the eastern
parts of Lebanon. And victory after
victory. There's north, south, east. The
borders of Israel expand to sweep the
nation in a way that they've never
known. And this is the peak. And by now,
the world recognizes King David has
arrived. Yeah, Jeremy, I want to stop
there for a second because on that word
afterwards because I really think that
the order of these two chapters is the
whole point. And it's sort of easy to
miss that. Just think about how a normal
king story would be told. First, you
conquer everything. First, you secure
the borders. You defeat every enemy. You
fill the treasury. Then once you're safe
and rich and have nothing left to worry
about, then maybe you turn to God and
build him something nice with the
leftover gold. God comes last usually,
right? God is the luxury you get to once
the real work is done. But the Tanakh
deliberately tells David's story in the
opposite order. Chapter 7, the yearning
to build God's house, comes before
chapter 8, before the conquests are even
finished. David's hunger to put God at
the center doesn't wait for the
victories. It comes first and the
victories comes afterwards.
And I really think that reordering is a
big part of the spiritual revolution of
who David is. Most of us live our lives
saying, "Let me get established first.
Let me get secure first. Let me handle
everything first, and then I'll make
room for God." And most often that first
never comes. But David flips it. He puts
God at the center while the work is
still unfinished and there's still
enemies out in the field on the
battlefronts. Right? The the God-
centeredness isn't the reward at the end
of the success. It's the foundation
underneath the whole thing. You know,
that's exactly it. I mean, everything
about David's motivation was always so
God- centered. And now, you look at what
David does with all of the gold and
bronze that he captures because it
proves your point completely. He
captures the golden shields of Khadzar's
officers, the vast amounts of bronze
from the conquered cities. A normal king
lines his own palace with it. But if you
look at verses 10 and 11, look at what
it says.
These also King David dedicated to the
Lord with the silver and gold that he
dedicated from all the nations which he
subdued. Hikadish, he made it holy. He
dedicated it to a temple that he wasn't
going to build, but he was going to do
everything in his power to lay whatever
foundations he needed for the temple to
be built. So, every nation David
conquers, every treasure he captures, he
sets it aside for Hashem. And friends,
here is what is so beautiful about
David. He's been told he won't build the
temple himself. His son will. So, what
does David do? He spends his entire
reign gathering the gold and bronze and
silver of empires and consecrating it,
storing it up so that Solomon when he's
ready, the materials to build God's
house are already there and they're
already holy. I mean, every battle David
fights become a brick in the temple that
he'll never build in the temple he'll
never see. But as he sees it, David is
going to do as much as he possibly can
to be a part of the greatest project on
planet Earth.
>> And Jeremy, I just want to say that that
really is a very powerful thing. And
it's powerful because of when David's
doing it. Think about it. Hashem
explicitly told David, "It won't be you.
You will not build my house." That's the
dream of his life. And the answer is no.
Not you, your son. And how does David
respond to being told no? Is he uh does
he sulk? Does he say, "Well, if I don't
get to build it, I'm not I'm not going
to do the work. I'm not going to lift a
finger." That's how I imagine many
people would react. If I won't see the
fruit, why plant the tree? Instead,
David spends the rest of his life
quietly gathering the materials, like
you said, building someone uh putting it
together so someone else is going to be
having the glory of completing it. He
fights the wars. He wins the gold.
Sanctifies it. Stockpiles it all for the
temple that will rise after he's gone
with another man's name, albeit his son,
but another man's name on the
dedication. That is one of the rarest
forms of greatness that there is to pour
your whole life into a foundation you'll
never stand on. And I think the the
deepest meaning of putting God first is
really is really right there. It's not
just about sequence, God before success.
It's about subduing the ego. David
wanted to build the house himself. He
wanted to be associated with it
personally and he was willing to
surrender even that to do the
unglamorous, invisible work of preparing
so that Hashem's house would be built
whether or not he gets the credit. He
cared more that the temple rise than
that he be the one to raise it. And that
is a man who's who has genuinely made it
about God and not about himself.
>> Yeah, that's really beautiful. Sorry.
You know, in the chapter, it doesn't end
on the battlefield or in the treasury.
It ends with a verse that sums up the
beating heart of the kingdom of God
that's finally coming to be. Verse 15,
David Israel. And David reigned over all
Israel. And David executed justice and
righteousness unto all his people.
Mishbat,
justice and righteousness for all his
people. So friends, don't push past that
after all the conquests, all the gold,
all expanding the borders. The Tanakh
tells us what David did with it. He
didn't just use his power to enrich
himself or to dominate it. He used it to
do justice. The whole point of the
strength that he had was to bring
righteousness into the world. And then
it lists his cabinet. Yoav over the
army, Yhoshafhat the recorder, Sadok and
Ebatar the priest. David builds the
institutions of a just and functioning
kingdom like power finally in the
service of righteousness and Hashem.
Well, I I think that final verse,
Jeremy, is the seal on the chapter
because it answers the question every
conqueror in history, I think I think
every conqueror in history really fails
to answer, which is what is all this
power actually for, right? The world is
full of kings who won every battle and
built nothing worth having. They subdued
nations, they filled treasuries,
expanded borders, and used it all for
what? for their own glory and their own
appetites. And then they die and they
decompose and they're forgotten. And the
Tanakh, having just spent 14 verses
describing David's overwhelming military
might, lands the whole thing on this. He
did justice and righteousness for all
his people. Not he was feared from the
Euphrates to the Egypt to whatever. He
was he was just. That's the verse the
text chooses to define his reign. And my
friends, here's the thread that I
believe ties it all together. Chapter 7
to chapter 8. David put God first. And
because he put God first, the power
never became about him. The gold became
God's. The victories became a foundation
for God's house. And the throne became
an instrument of justice for Hashem's
people. When God is genuinely at the
center, strength doesn't corrupt you. It
gets concentrated. That's the difference
between a David uh a King David in
history once in generations and
generations and every other strong man
that the world has ever produced.
>> Nori, that's a perfect way to articulate
it. It's hard to even imagine a modern
politically elected leader that truly
puts God's first above all else. I mean,
chapter 8 is a war chapter, a list of
battles and conquered nations, but
underneath it, it's teaching us David's
relationship between his power and his
purpose. You know, for David, greatness
sometimes means pouring yourself into a
temple you're never going to see
finished. And that speaks to us in two
directions at once in our days. Now,
first in our own lives, I mean, every
one of us is building something, a
career, a family, a mission in the
world. And the question David puts to us
is the question of order. It's like, do
we put God, righteousness, the things
that actually matter? Do we put them
first at the center when the work isn't
finished yet? Or do we keep telling
ourselves, you know, later once I'm
established, once I'm secure, that's
when I'll really focus on what matters.
David teaches us to put first things
first. What matters shouldn't be the
grand finale at the end. It needs to be
the foundation to start and to build on.
And second, the message to Israel. I
mean, look where we are. David. I mean,
he we have come into our strength just
like David came into his. A nation
reborn, an army that's able to defend us
on so many multiple fronts. I mean, the
borders that we fought for, a prosperity
that our grandparents could only dream
of as they were draining the swamps. And
chapter 8 puts to our entire generation
the exact question put to David. Now
that we have the country, we have the
economy, we have the power, what is it
for? Is it just for security and
prosperity?
Or do we look to David as our model and
dedicate it and make it holy? Will we
use our strength to build a nation of
justice and righteousness with the
presence of God in the heart of our
national life? That's the choice. David
won every war in this chapter, but the
verse that crowned him wasn't about the
conquest. It was
justice and righteousness. And so, may
we be the generation that earns that
same verse.
My friends, I'm moving across America
every night. I'm in a different town.
I'm speaking from Montana all the way to
Miami. And people from all over the
country are joining the land of Israel
fellowship. It's so exciting. And I
would love for you that's watching to
join us as well. Join our global
community. Learn with us. Communicate
with us. Let's grow this movement
together. Bringing the Torah from the
land of Israel to the nations of the
world. We would love to partner with you
to come together and to shine a bright
light that this dark world needs so
much. Desraat Hashem, we will see you
tomorrow for 2 Samuel chapter 9 and we
will see you then.