Title: Rise Of The Kings The Books of I
1Rise Of The KingsThe Books of I II Samuel
- II Samuel 11-14
- Davids Moral Failure
2Announcements
3I and II Samuel
Week Date Topic
1 07 Mar 12 Samuels Call 1 Samuel 11-41a
2 14 Mar 12 The Ark Narratives 1 Samuel 41b-717
3 21 Mar 12 Israel Demands a King 1 Samuel 8-12
4 28 Mar 12 The Decline of Saul 1 Samuel 13-15
5 04 Apr 12 David Gods Anointed 1 Samuel 16-19
6 11 Apr 12 Sauls Rejection of David 1 Samuel 201-282
7 18 Apr 12 The Death of Saul 1 Samuel 283-3113
8 25 Apr 12 David Becomes King II Samuel 1-6
9 02 May 12 The Davidic Covenant II Samuel 7-10
10 09 May 12 Senior Blessing
11 16 May 12 Davids Moral Failure II Samuel 11-14
12 23 May 12 Absaloms Rebellion II Samuel 151-198a
13 30 May 12 David Returns to Jerusalem II Samuel 198b-24
4Todays Objectives
- Review last weeks lesson, historical background,
and timeline for the books of I and II Samuel - Review historical maps of Israel and the region
- Read Chapter 11 and 121-14, Review Chapters
1215 to 1433 - Learn how David sinned and how Nathan confronted
him - Learn how second and third order effects of sin
can magnify the initial sin - Examine our own lives for self-deception and
denial
5Historical Background
- Samuel named as the primary author
- Samuel was the 13th (or 15th) judge of Israel
- Nathan of Gad wrote about Davids life (1 Chron
2929) - Abiathar, high priest, may have wrote later
chapters - Existed as one book until translated into Greek
around 300-200 B.C. - Written between 931 B.C. and 722 B.C. and covered
the period from 1080-950 B.C. or 130 years - Imperialistic void
- Hittite and Egyptian empires had fallen more than
a century earlier - Smaller kingdoms like the Ugarit had
disintegrated as well
6Historical Background
- Transition period in Israels history
- Conclusion of a great famine in the land (see
Ruth 11) - After the exodus, end of the period of the
judges, and beginning of the monarchy - Israel had disintegrated morally, spiritually,
politically - II Samuel Chapter 11-14 Key Events
- David commits adultery with Bathsheba
- Bathsheba, wife of Uriah the Hittite, becomes
pregnant - David arranges for Uriahs death in battle
- Nathan tells David a parable
- David repents
- Amnon rapes his stepsister Tamar
- Absalom, Tamars brother, kills Amnon
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11David Commits Adultery (111-5)
- Under David, God allows Israel to reach the
pinnacle of existence - Despite these blessings, Davids personal life
becomes entangled in sin - David dispatches Joab to battle against Ammon
- Spring of the year (111)
- Davids troops rout the enemy and attack Rabbah
- David remains in Jerusalem
- David, relaxing on his roof, sees Bathsheba
bathing (112) - David has her brought to his palace
- David slept with Bathsheba (114)
- She had purified herself prior to arrival
- Bathsheba becomes pregnant, tells the king (115)
12David Fails to Cover Up His Crime (116-13)
- David devised a plan to cover up his sin
- Orders Joab to bring Uriah the Hittite back to
Jerusalem - David question Uriah about how the battles were
going - David asks Uriah to go home, how come? (118)
- Uriah would think the child was his
- Uriah doesnt follow the kings plan
- Sleeps with his soldiers outside
- Refuses to indulge in comfort while his soldiers
slept in the open fields (119-11) - David tries to get Uriah drunk (1112-13)
- Contrast David with Uriah
- Uriah was devoted to David, but David was a
betrayer
13David Murders Uriah (1114-27)
- David concludes that his only option was to kill
Uriah - His plan called for Uriah to carry his own death
warrant to Joab (1114-15) - Letter directs Joab to place Uriah in a place
where fighting was the worst and where he would
likely die - Uriah dies in battle (1116-17)
- Joab sends a messenger to tell David
- Many Israelite soldiers died, which would upset
David - But David would be happy at the news of Uriah
- Bathsheba mourns over the news (1126)
- David takes Bathsheba as his wife (1127)
14David Repents (121-14)
- God is displeased with David (1127)
- God sends Nathan to David
- Nathan tells David a parable about the rich man
and the poor man (121-4) - David pronounces judgment on the rich man
- The rich man was David
- Nathan relates how David was Gods chosen one
- God would have given David even more if needed
(128) - God holds David responsible for Uriahs death
- Davids family would never live in peace (1210)
- God declares someone from Davids family would
cause him intense trouble (1211-12) - Bathshebas son would also be taken away (1114)
15II Samuel 1215-1433 In Brief
- Bathshebas son by David becomes ill and dies,
fulfilling Gods promise - Amnon, becomes attracted to his stepsister, Tamar
- Amnon devises a scheme and rapes Tamar
- Tamars brother Absalom develops an intense
hatred for Tamar - Absalom then murders Ammnon
- David banishes Absalom from Jerusalem for three
years - David allows Absalom to return after Joab
intervenes
16Review
- Reviewed last weeks lesson, historical
background, and timeline for the books of I and
II Samuel - Reviewed historical maps of Israel and the region
- Read Chapter 11 and 121-14, Review Chapters
1215 to 1433 - Learned how David sinned and how Nathan
confronted him - Learned how second and third order effects of
sin can magnify the initial sin - Examined our own lives for self-deception and
denial