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[music]
>> Shalom and welcome to the Prophets of
Israel daily. This is the book of Samuel
chapter [music] 9 brought to you by the
Land of Israel network at the
landofisrael.com.
Uh Jeremy, it's good to see you. You're
in Wyoming, Montana, something like
that.
>> South Dakota.
>> South Dakota. What's the difference?
>> I've never been here before. America is
huge. You drive for hours in just the
open vastness of nothing for hours. It's
incredible out here.
>> And well, I am a person who loves Yeah,
that's what I was going to say. The
people I I love humanity, but that whole
neck of the woods there, Wyoming, South
Dakota, Montana, I just everyone I've
ever met from there are just the best
people.
Just goodness upon goodness. Anyways,
Jeremy, my friends around the world, let
me ask you something. When when a man
finally reaches the top, when every
enemy has fallen, every throne is
secure, every dream he ever dared to
dream has come true, what's the first
thing he does?
Because by the time we arrive at chapter
9, David has it all. The crown of Judah,
the crown of all of Israel, Jerusalem
conquered and established as his eternal
capital, the ark brought home with
dancing and singing and celebration, the
Davidic covenant. You have a covenant
named after you. Right? God's promise
that his throne would never end, rest
from his enemies on every side, and in
that moment of total triumph,
David doesn't throw a feast for himself.
He doesn't build a monument. He asks one
singular question. Verse 1. And David
said, "Is there yet anyone left of the
house of Saul that I may show him chesed
for the sake of Jonathan?"
Chesed,
loyal covenantal kindness. It is the
beating heart of this entire chapter,
and it does not mean charity. It does
not mean pity. Sometimes you translate
things to English and it just loses it's
the the depth of it. It just gets
clumped into words. Hesed is if you had
to put it somewhere say loving-kindness.
Hesed is love that keeps its promise
long after the moment of promising is
past and long after anyone is watching.
And let's remember my friends just who
David is asking about. He's asking about
the descendants of
>> Saul.
>> That's right. Saul. The king who hunted
David through the wilderness like an
animal, who hurled spears at him, who
forced him to sleep in caves for years.
And let's also remember that in those
days and you know what, also in ours,
the surviving house of a defeated king
is politically a house of rivals. Every
advisor in the ancient world would have
told David the same thing.
Any heir of Saul is a threat to your
throne. Eliminate them.
That is the politics of power 101 basic.
But David does the exact opposite. He
goes searching not for someone to
destroy but for someone to bless.
>> You know, Ari, it's just so noteworthy
here. David's love for Jonathan. It was
so pure. He wasn't thinking like a king
or a strategic politician. Ari, I think
he loved Jonathan's kids the way that I
love your kids. I mean, it's
intergenerational.
It's a love that is the foundation of
the Messianic dynasty. That's what it's
built on. This unconditional,
beautiful, transcendent,
intergenerational love. And David made
it a covenant with Jonathan decades
earlier when they were just two young
men and they had no idea how this story
would end. And now David is saying, not
through his words, but through his
actions, that a promise doesn't expire.
Our friendship doesn't expire. That's
the soul of a king fit to father the
Messianic line.
>> That's right. And David acts on his
friendship. He summons an old servant of
Shaul's household named Ziba and repeats
the question. And Ziba answers, right?
In verse three.
Jonathan still has a son lame in both
feet.
There is someone left, a son of Jonathan
and he is
raglaim. Crippled in his feet, both of
them.
And where is he living?
In a place with one of the saddest names
that you can think of. He's hidden away
in the house of Machir in Lo Debar.
Lo Debar, in Hebrew it means almost
literally nothing.
A place of nothing. A forgotten outpost
on the far side of the Jordan. The kind
of place you go when you want to
disappear from history altogether.
>> You know, and Ari, we actually know how
this son of Jonathan was crippled.
Earlier in the book we're told that when
the news came that Saul and Jonathan had
fallen in battle, this child was five
years old. His nurse snatched him up to
flee and in panic she dropped him and he
was crippled for life. So, think about
that for a moment. He wasn't born
broken. He was broken in the chaos of
his family's collapse. He carried the
wounds of that catastrophe in his own
body for the rest of his life, like a
permanent reminder, a perpetual constant
thing that he had to look at, live with,
the fall of his father, his grandfather,
and the line of the royal lineage.
>> Yeah, the entire that is the Saul's line
and
and then in what must have been one of
the most unexpected visits imaginable,
David sends for him. Now, imagine being
Mephibosheth. You're the grandson of the
king David replaced, you're crippled,
you're hidden, and you've spent your
whole life assuming that the day the new
king learns your name is the day you
die. And now, royal messengers are
standing at your door in Lo-Debar.
Uh he must have been terrified. He
brought but he's brought before David,
he falls on his face, and listen to the
very first words out of David's mouth.
Verse 7.
Fear not, for I will surely show you
hesed for the sake of Jonathan your
father, and I'll restore you all the
land of Saul your grandfather, and you
shall eat bread at my table always.
Al tira, do not be afraid.
The same words Hashem speaks to Abraham.
The same words that echo through the
mouths of the prophets again and again.
Before anything else, before the gift,
before the land, David puts Mephibosheth
at peace and removes the fear.
And then he gives Mephi- Mephibosheth
three things.
His name spoken with honor, his
ancestral land fully restored, and a
permanent seat at the king's table. And
how does Mephibosheth respond? With a
line of
humility, heartbreaking humility, and
really brokenness.
Verse 8.
What is your servant that you should
turn to a dead dog such as I?
A dead dog. That is how this man sees
himself. Not merely worthless, already
gone, already buried. I can't help but
to think that those are words you'd
expect to hear from someone that's been
hiding out in a place called Lo-Debar.
>> Yeah, or you know, I I really feel for
him at the moment. Just because of the
gap between how Mephibosheth sees
himself and how David sees him It's is
enormous. I mean, he looks in the mirror
and sees a dead dog. David looks at him
and sees the son of his beloved
Jonathan, a prince worthy of the royal
table. And already that really speaks to
me,
even just on a personal level, cuz I
can't help but feel that so many of us
are walking around convinced we're too
broken, we're too far gone, too crippled
by our past to ever deserve a seat at
the table. But that is not how the king
sees you. And I think that's exactly the
relationship Hashem is trying to have
with each of one of us. I mean, we call
ourselves dead dogs and he calls us his
children and sets a place for us at his
table. And the only question is whether
we'll have the ability to see ourselves
through the eyes of the king.
>> Yeah, I I that's what I love about this
journey we're on right now. It just
speaks to me in national ways and
personal ways. Speaks to my heart.
You know,
the chapter ends, right? Not with a
battle or a treaty, but with a dinner
table, like we said, right? Verse 13.
"Um
Mephibosheth dwelt
in Jerusalem, for he ate at the king's
table always, and he was lame in both
his feet."
Right? Read that verse carefully. It
tells us that Mephibosheth ate at the
king's table tamid, continually, always.
And then in the very same breath it
reminds us that he was still lame in
both feet.
Right? The text could have easily left
out that detail.
He's been restored, honored, brought
home. Why end on that wound of him being
crippled?
And And I think it's because the the
Tanakh is not
trying to build a fairy tale here. If
that's not clear by now, it's very
clear, especially moving forward here.
It's not about fairy tales. David's
chesed did not heal Mephibosheth's legs.
The brokenness remained, but something
even greater happened. His brokenness no
longer defined his place in the world.
The grandson of the rejected king now
sits at the table of the reigning king.
The man who walked in
walked into that palace expecting a
death sentence receives covenantal love
instead. And that, my friends, is the
power of chesed. Chesed is not merely
kindness. It's love Like we said, it's
love that keeps its promises. It's the
refusal to allow fear, politics,
resentment, or or even the passage of
time to erase a covenant. David made a
promise to Jonathan years earlier, and
Jonathan is gone. Saul is gone. The
circumstances have completely changed,
yet David remembers. And in remembering
Jonathan, he restores Mephibosheth. And
that's why this chapter
stands as one of the most beautiful
portraits of King David. Definitely in
the book I mean, in I think in all of
Tanakh.
Right? Not David the warrior or the
conqueror, or even David the king, but
David the man of chesed.
The man who after securing the kingdom
uses his power not to destroy a rival,
but to honor a covenant. The man who
teaches us that true greatness is
measured not merely by what we build,
but by what we remain faithful to after
we've built it. And that's exactly why
this story appears here. I believe
that's why this story appears here,
because the chapter before this one
contains the promise of the eternal
Davidic dynasty. The kingdom has been
established, the covenant's been given
to David by God himself, the future's
been set in motion, and now it's as if
the Torah
pauses for a second to ask a question.
What kind of kingdom is it?
What is the secret that makes David
worthy to become the father of Israel's
eternal royal line? And the answer is
not found on the battlefield. It's found
at the dinner table. In in a king who
remembers that covenant and who uses his
power to restore rather than to destroy.
And there's a verse that says this
outright.
And it does not appear
just anywhere. It
In the very Psalm that celebrates the
eternal covenant with David,
the same covenant given one chapter
before ours,
the entire distilled
blessing is in one single line, which we
find in Psalm 89. I encourage everybody
to read the entire Psalm when you have a
chance. But Psalm 89, verse 3.
For I have said, "The world is built on
chesed."
The world is built on chesed. The Psalm
that swears David's throne will stand
forever is the same Psalm that tells us
that the throne stands upon chesed. Not
conquest, chesed. Kingdoms are won by
strength. The kingdom destined to bless
the entire earth is built by a
faithfulness to a covenant. And notice
by the way, Jeremy, why David shows this
chesed.
Clearly, it's not because Mephibosheth
earned it. Not because of anything
Mephibosheth did at all. We see the
reason very clearly in verse 7.
For the sake of Jonathan. Mephibosheth
is loved for his father's sake. He's
carried to the king's table on the
strength of a covenant his father made
before he was even born. And that's not
a small detail. Because if you think
about it, that's precisely how we stand
before Hashem. We call it avot, the
merit of of fathers. We're not summoned
to the table because we're strong or
unbroken or even particularly righteous
or deserving. I just had this debate
today with someone. It's it's a tough
sell.
We are summoned by Avot Avraham,
Yitzchak, v'Yaakov. For the sake of
Avraham, Yitzchak, and Yaakov. On the
strength of a covenant God made with our
fathers long before we drew breath.
Mephibosheth's entire inheritance flows
through a promise he did nothing to
earn.
And so is ours. And perhaps that's why
this chapter feels so relevant, I think,
in our generation. Because we're
witnessing the restoration of Israel
before our very eyes. We're seeing the
exiles return and the ancient promises
fulfilled. We're seeing Jerusalem
restored as the beating heart of the
Jewish people. But the question before
us is not merely whether the kingdom is
returning.
The question is whether we are becoming
worthy of it. Whether we are willing to
do the teshuvah, to return to Hashem in
a way that makes a people fit to usher
in such a kingdom into the world.
Whether we're learning the lesson of
David that the purpose of power is not
domination but responsibility. That the
purpose of blessing is not
self-glorification,
but it's service.
And that the throne of David was never
meant to mirror the thrones of men. It
was meant to reveal in this world the
chesed of God.
And that, my friends, is exactly what
we're trying to build out here. You
know, I want to invite all of you,
really, to our weekly fellowship. It's a
global family, people from over 35
countries who gather every week from the
hills of Judea to learn, to pray, and to
to remind each other that no one needs
to walk this road alone. It's a
covenant, and it's a community, and it's
chesed in action. And if something in
your heart is stirring right now,
there's a place for you in it. So, come
find your seat at the table at the
landofisrael.com. Chazak v'ematz, my
friends. Bezrat Hashem, we'll see you
all tomorrow as we dive into chapter 10
with you, Jeremy.
Shalom, everybody.
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