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2 Samuel 22-23: David’s Final Song and Final Words
Manage episode 432537257 series 2872645
In 2 Samuel 22, we are going to read David’s song and final words. Recall that 1 and 2 Samuel were really one long book. 1 Samuel begins with Hannah’s song, and 2 Samuel ends with David’s song. The two songs are bookends to the story of Samuel, Saul, and David. Hannah’s song celebrates what God has done, how he reverses situations, and looks forward to what He will do in the future. David’s song celebrates what God has done and how he powerfully saved him, looking back on the past. The point is that the two songs creatively bookend the whole story, Hannah’s looks forward with a prophecy of an anointed king and David’s looks back on the fulfillment of this prophecy.
The author uses the songs in another creative way. There is another song in the beginning of 2 Samuel which place is right in the middle of the other 2 songs. It is David’s song of lament for the death of Saul and Jonathan. If we string all three songs together: Hannah’s Song begins as a series of reversals.
- God brings death and life.
- He humbles and exalts
- He guards the faithful and silences the wicked
Then Hannah ends with a prophecy:
2:10 “He will give strength to his king and exalt the horn of his anointed.”
Hannah sings of a king to come, for there was no king at that time. Recall, the book of Judges ended with...
Judges 21:25 In those days Israel had no king; everyone did as they saw fit.
Everyone sinned because there was no king. Hannah has caught a vision of a time when God will reverse the situation, an anointed king will overcome the evil. Then we read David’s song of lament for Saul 2 Samuel 1. David sang about how the mighty have fallen...meaning Saul. A king had come but he was not the king God had wanted. Saul was wicked and God humbled him and he and his descendants died. In the 3rd song, David sings of the reverse. David was faithful, and God exalted him, and his descendants will live and reign forever. The point is that what Hannah foresaw was fulfilled.
Thank you for being a part of the club.
Show Notes
- Blog
- The Path to Good or Evil
- The Tribal Allotments of Israel
- Jerusalem in the Time of David and Solomon
- David's Wars of Conquest
- The Old Testament Books
- The New Testament Books
- Bible Timeline
Contact Bible Book Club
Like, comment, or message us through Bible Book Club's Instagram
Like or comment on Susan's Facebook or Instagram
Leave us an Apple review
Contact us through our website form
Thanks for listening and happy podcasting!
197 つのエピソード
Manage episode 432537257 series 2872645
In 2 Samuel 22, we are going to read David’s song and final words. Recall that 1 and 2 Samuel were really one long book. 1 Samuel begins with Hannah’s song, and 2 Samuel ends with David’s song. The two songs are bookends to the story of Samuel, Saul, and David. Hannah’s song celebrates what God has done, how he reverses situations, and looks forward to what He will do in the future. David’s song celebrates what God has done and how he powerfully saved him, looking back on the past. The point is that the two songs creatively bookend the whole story, Hannah’s looks forward with a prophecy of an anointed king and David’s looks back on the fulfillment of this prophecy.
The author uses the songs in another creative way. There is another song in the beginning of 2 Samuel which place is right in the middle of the other 2 songs. It is David’s song of lament for the death of Saul and Jonathan. If we string all three songs together: Hannah’s Song begins as a series of reversals.
- God brings death and life.
- He humbles and exalts
- He guards the faithful and silences the wicked
Then Hannah ends with a prophecy:
2:10 “He will give strength to his king and exalt the horn of his anointed.”
Hannah sings of a king to come, for there was no king at that time. Recall, the book of Judges ended with...
Judges 21:25 In those days Israel had no king; everyone did as they saw fit.
Everyone sinned because there was no king. Hannah has caught a vision of a time when God will reverse the situation, an anointed king will overcome the evil. Then we read David’s song of lament for Saul 2 Samuel 1. David sang about how the mighty have fallen...meaning Saul. A king had come but he was not the king God had wanted. Saul was wicked and God humbled him and he and his descendants died. In the 3rd song, David sings of the reverse. David was faithful, and God exalted him, and his descendants will live and reign forever. The point is that what Hannah foresaw was fulfilled.
Thank you for being a part of the club.
Show Notes
- Blog
- The Path to Good or Evil
- The Tribal Allotments of Israel
- Jerusalem in the Time of David and Solomon
- David's Wars of Conquest
- The Old Testament Books
- The New Testament Books
- Bible Timeline
Contact Bible Book Club
Like, comment, or message us through Bible Book Club's Instagram
Like or comment on Susan's Facebook or Instagram
Leave us an Apple review
Contact us through our website form
Thanks for listening and happy podcasting!
197 つのエピソード
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