WHY HE DIED

WHY HE DIED

Hebrews 2:14-15; 9:24-28 NET.

14 Therefore, since the children share in flesh and blood, he likewise shared in their humanity, so that through death he could destroy the one who holds the power of death (that is, the devil), 15 and set free those who were held in slavery all their lives by their fear of death.

24 For Christ has not entered the holy places made with hands, which are copies of the true, but into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for us; 25 not that He should offer Himself often, as the high priest enters the Most Holy Place every year with blood of another — 26 He then would have had to suffer often since the foundation of the world. Still, now, once at the end of the ages, He has appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself. 27 And as it is appointed for men to die once, but after this the judgment, 28 so Christ was offered once to bear the sins of many. To those who eagerly wait for Him, He will appear a second time, apart from sin, for salvation.

The joy of Palm Sunday

In Matthew 21:1–11, Jesus gives two of His disciples a simple but unusual job: find a donkey and her young colt and bring them to Him. They do exactly what He says. Soon, Jesus is riding into Jerusalem on the young donkey.

What happens next is amazing. People start taking off their coats—things that were very valuable back then—and laying them on the road like a carpet for a king. Others cut branches and wave them in the air to celebrate. When Jesus rides by, the whole crowd shouts with excitement: “Hosanna to the Son of David!” This isn’t quiet clapping. It’s the loud cheer of people who believe their long‑promised King has finally arrived.

Matthew stops to remind us that this moment was predicted long ago in Zechariah 9:9, where God told His people to rejoice because their King would come to them humbly, riding on a donkey. The joy of the crowd isn’t random. It’s exactly the kind of joy the prophet said would happen hundreds of years earlier.

In Mark 11:1–11, the story happens almost the same way—there’s the donkey, the coats on the road, and the branches waving in the air. But Mark focuses on what the people were hoping for. They shout, “Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!” Then they add something that shows what they’re expecting: “Blessed is the coming kingdom of our father David!”

They aren’t just cheering for a man who can do miracles. They believe Jesus is the King who will bring back the great kingdom David once ruled. Their excitement is huge. They think Jesus isn’t only going to help others—He is going to change their own lives in a big way.

In Luke 19:28–44, the feelings in the story are even stronger. As Jesus rides the young donkey, His disciples start praising God loudly because of all the amazing miracles they have seen Him do. They shout, “Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord!” They are excited and proud to follow Him.

But then Luke tells us something surprising. While the crowds are cheering, Jesus begins to cry. He knows something the people don’t. Even though everyone is happy right now, the city of Jerusalem will not accept the peace He brings. Their joy is real, but it doesn’t go very deep, and it won’t last.

This reminds us of something important. Even when we celebrate Palm Sunday and worship Jesus as our King, many people in the world still ignore Him or push Him away. Jesus feels that sadness, even in the middle of all the cheering.

In John 12:12–19, the celebration becomes the biggest and most excited of all the Gospel stories. John is the only one who mentions palm branches, which were symbols of victory and national pride. Huge crowds rush out to meet Jesus, shouting, “Hosanna! Blessed is the King of Israel!”

John also tells us why everyone is so thrilled. Just before this, Jesus had raised Lazarus from the dead. News of that miracle spread everywhere, and people couldn’t stop talking about it. So when Jesus arrived, they weren’t just welcoming a great teacher. They were welcoming the One who had shown power over death itself.

Their joy is the joy of people who feel like they are seeing the beginning of a brand‑new world—one filled with hope, life, and the promise that everything is about to change.

The irony of Palm Sunday

Right after the exciting Triumphal Entry, Jesus enters the temple and finds people cheating others and making dishonest money. He turns over the tables of the moneychangers to stop the corruption. This makes the religious leaders very angry. They challenge Him in front of everyone and ask, “Who gave you the right to do this?” Then they try to trap Him with tricky questions about paying taxes, the resurrection, and which commandment is the greatest. They aren’t looking for real answers. They want to catch Him saying something wrong. This is the first big rejection: they refuse to accept Jesus as the Messiah or even as a true teacher.

After Jesus tells several parables exposing the leaders’ hypocrisy, they become even angrier. They decide that Jesus must die. The chief priests and elders meet in secret and make a plan. They agree to arrest Him quietly so the crowds won’t find out. They look for the perfect moment when no one is watching. This is the strongest rejection of all: they choose, on purpose, to work together to kill Him.

One of Jesus’ own disciples becomes part of the leaders’ plan. Judas agrees to betray Jesus in exchange for a bag of coins. After that, he starts watching for the right time to hand Jesus over. This is a very personal kind of rejection—a painful betrayal from someone in Jesus’ closest group of friends.

When Jesus is arrested, His disciples become scared and run away. Even though they had promised to stay with Him no matter what, their fear is stronger in that moment. This is a painful kind of rejection: the people who loved Him most leave Him alone when He needs them.

Jesus is taken to the high priest’s house for a trial in the middle of the night, even though this was against Jewish law. People are brought in to lie about Him, but their stories don’t match. Some accuse Jesus of saying He would destroy the temple. When Jesus says clearly that He is the Messiah, the Son of Man, the council becomes furious. They say He is guilty of blasphemy. Then they spit on Him, hit Him, and make fun of Him. This is a terrible kind of rejection: the religious court wrongly condemns the true Judge of Israel.

While Jesus is being mocked inside, Peter is outside in the courtyard. Three different times, people ask him if he knows Jesus, and each time Peter says he doesn’t. When the rooster crows, Peter suddenly remembers Jesus’ warning. He realizes what he has done and begins to cry bitterly. This is an emotional kind of rejection: fear makes even Jesus’ bravest disciple deny knowing Him.

Jesus is taken to Pilate, the Roman governor. The religious leaders accuse Him of claiming to be a king. Pilate looks into the charges and says he can’t find anything Jesus has done wrong. But the crowd, pushed by the leaders, begins shouting for Jesus to be crucified. Pilate doesn’t want trouble, so he gives in to the pressure and hands Jesus over to be killed. This is a kind of public, government rejection: Rome chooses to punish an innocent man to keep the peace.

The same city that cheered for Jesus with palm branches now chooses someone else instead of Him. Pilate offers to let Jesus go free, but the crowd shouts for Barabbas, a man who had committed serious crimes. Then the crowd begins to yell, “Crucify Him!” This is a public rejection: the people choose a criminal over their true King.

Everyone around Him rejects Jesus. The Roman soldiers make fun of Him and pretend He is a fake king. People walking by the cross shout insults at Him. The religious leaders laugh at Him and challenge Him to save Himself. Even one of the criminals being crucified next to Him joins in the mocking. This is complete rejection: leaders, crowds, soldiers, and criminals all turn against Him.

Between Palm Sunday and Good Friday, Jesus is rejected again and again. The religious leaders turn against Him. One of His own disciples betrays Him. His friends run away. False witnesses lie about Him. Peter denies knowing Him. The Jewish council hands Him over to the Romans. Rome sentences Him even though He is innocent. And the same crowds that once cheered for Him now shout for His death.

Why did Jesus have to die?

After seeing the huge, joyful crowd on Palm Sunday, it’s hard to understand how everything went so wrong so fast. One day, the people are cheering for Jesus, and only a few days later, He is rejected and killed. It doesn’t seem to make sense. So we naturally ask, Why was Jesus rejected? And why did He have to die?

But we don’t have to stay confused. God never gives us a question without giving us an answer in His Word. When we look at today’s passage, we find many reasons that explain why Jesus was rejected and why His death was necessary.

Today’s passage in the Book of Hebrews gives us three big reasons why Jesus had to die on the cross. To make them easy to remember, we can use three words that all start with the same letter: slavery, sacrifice, and salvation.

These three words help us understand that the cross was not an accident. It wasn’t a mistake or a surprise. It was part of God’s perfect plan. God chose to send His one and only Son to die on a cruel cross so that His people could be set free, forgiven, and saved forever.

The first reason Jesus had to die is connected to the word slavery. The writer of Hebrews explains that God’s children are human—they have flesh and blood—so Jesus became human too. He did this so that through His own death, He could break the power of the devil, the one who uses death to scare people. By dying, Jesus set people free from being slaves to the fear of death their whole lives.

In other words, Jesus died to break our chains. He died so we wouldn’t have to live scared of death anymore.

One of the big problems Jesus came to fix by dying on the cross was the slavery problem. This problem began with Satan. In the Garden of Eden, Satan appeared to Adam and Eve as a serpent. He tempted them to disobey God’s command and eat the fruit God had forbidden. When they listened to him, sin entered the world, and people became trapped—like slaves—under the power of sin and death.

Jesus came to break that slavery. He came to undo what Satan started and to set people free from the fear and power of death.

Satan knew exactly why God told Adam and Eve not to eat the forbidden fruit. God wanted to protect them from the power of sin and from the pain of death. God had warned them that if they disobeyed, they would become mortal—their bodies would grow old, break down, and eventually die.

Satan understood this. He knew that if he could get them to disobey, they would fall under the power of sin and death. And that is exactly what happened. By tempting them, Satan helped bring death into the human story, and people became trapped in fear and brokenness.

We don’t have to look far to see that this is exactly what happened. The world around us shows the results of that first terrible choice in the Garden. We know we are mortal—we are flesh‑and‑blood people who live only for a short time. Our lives are fragile, and every breath reminds us that one day our bodies will stop working.

Because of this, many people live with a quiet fear of dying. That fear follows us through life like a shadow. The writer of Hebrews calls this slavery—being trapped by the fear of death and unable to escape it on our own.

Jesus came to break that slavery. He came to set us free.

The worst part of this slavery is that we can’t fix it ourselves. There is nothing we can do to stop being mortal. Doctors can help us for a while, but eventually, even they reach a point where they can’t repair our bodies anymore. Science tries to make our lives longer, but even then, it can only stretch out the time, not remove death. Sometimes people live longer in their bodies while their minds fade away.

No matter what we try, slavery continues. We cannot free ourselves from death or the fear that comes with it.

The writer of Hebrews says that the devil holds the power of death. He has this power because our first ancestors gave it to him. When Adam and Eve listened to Satan’s temptation and chose to disobey God, they handed themselves—and all of us—over to the power of sin and death.

By following Satan’s lie instead of God’s truth, they placed themselves under his control. In that moment, we became like slaves, trapped by sin.

Since we are slaves to sin and death, we cannot free ourselves. No matter how hard we try, we cannot pay the price needed to break our chains. For us to be set free, one of us would have to pay the price for all of us. But none of us qualifies, because we are all sinners and all mortal.

So God sent Jesus.

Jesus is God’s only begotten Son, but He came into the world and became one of us. He took on our humanity—our flesh and blood—so that He could die a sinless death in our place. His perfect life and His willing death became the ransom that frees us from our slavery to sin and death.

Jesus did what none of us could ever do. He paid the price to set us free.

Because we were slaves to sin and death, we also had a sacrifice problem. We knew we were sinners, and we knew that sin needed a perfect, spotless sacrifice to make things right with God. But none of us could make that sacrifice. Even the best people in the world are still touched by the failure that began in the Garden of Eden.

No human being is completely pure. No one is without sin. So none of us could offer the perfect sacrifice God required. We needed someone who was truly without sin—someone who could stand in our place.

Under the old covenant, God told the Israelites to offer sacrifices as part of their worship. These sacrifices were important, but they did not solve the problem of sin forever. They were more like a temporary fix—something to hold things together until a better, final sacrifice would come.

People could bring an animal to the altar, but that didn’t always mean their hearts were truly changed. Someone could offer a sacrifice without real repentance or without turning away from their sin. So even though the sacrifices were part of God’s plan, they could not remove sin completely or change the human heart.

They pointed forward to a greater sacrifice that was still to come.

The writer of Hebrews explains this in chapter 9, verses 24–26. He says that Jesus did something no other priest or sacrifice could ever do. Instead of bringing an animal into an earthly temple, Jesus brought His own life as the perfect sacrifice into the heavenly sanctuary—God’s true presence.

All the sacrifices in the Old Testament were pointing forward to this one moment. They were like signs showing that a greater sacrifice was coming. And when Jesus came, He offered Himself once for all. Hebrews says He appeared “at the end of the ages” to put away sin by giving His own life.

In other words, Jesus didn’t need to be sacrificed again and again. His one sacrifice was enough to deal with sin forever.

The last problem we face is our need for salvation. We needed someone to rescue us from slavery to death. We needed a perfect, sinless sacrifice to take our place. But we also needed someone who could save us forever.

The writer of Hebrews explains this in chapter 9, verses 27–28. He says that every person is appointed to die once, and after that comes judgment. That means we will all stand before God one day. But here is the good news: Jesus has already been offered once to carry the sins of many people. He died once, and that sacrifice was enough.

And Hebrews says something even better. Jesus will come again—not to deal with sin, because He already did that—but to bring salvation to everyone who is waiting for Him with hope.

In other words, Jesus’ first coming took away our sin. His second coming will restore his universe.

For our salvation to be complete, we needed two things. First, we needed our sins to be paid for, and Jesus did that when He died on the cross. His death provided the atonement we could never earn on our own.

But even after our sins are forgiven, we still face another problem: we still die. Our bodies still grow old, break down, and eventually stop working. That’s because our first death comes from Adam’s sin, not our own. The Bible says, “In Adam, all die.” Jesus’ death on the cross paid for our sins, but it did not remove the physical death that comes from being part of Adam’s family.

So even forgiven people still experience the first death. That’s why we need something more—something only Jesus can give.

For our salvation to be complete, we needed more than a perfect sacrifice. Jesus’ death on the cross paid for our sins, and that was essential. But even after our sins are forgiven, we still face physical death. That first death comes from Adam’s sin, and Jesus’ sacrifice did not remove that part of our human condition.

So we needed something else.

We needed a Savior who would come back and rescue us from our graves. We needed someone who had already defeated death to come and pull us out of it. Until that happens, our salvation is not finished. We can say we are saved because we trust Jesus to complete the work He began.

That’s why the Bible talks about salvation in three tenses:

  • We have been saved — Jesus paid for our sins on the cross.
  • We are being saved — Jesus is changing us and keeping us in faith.
  • We will be saved — Jesus will return and raise us from the dead.

All three are true because of what Jesus did on the cross and what He will do when He comes again.

So now we come back to the cries of the crowds on that first Palm Sunday. They shouted “Hosanna!” Many people today think of that word as a kind of praise, but at first it wasn’t praise at all. It was a prayer. The word comes from the Hebrew phrase hôshîʿah-nnaʾ, which means “Save us, please!” or “Please rescue us!” Over time, the meaning of the word changed. It became a way of celebrating the salvation God had already given. That’s why we often use it as a joyful word of praise today. But it is still right—and very fitting—for us to use the word in its original meaning too. We still need God to save us. We still need Jesus to finish the salvation He began. So when we cry out “Hosanna,” we are both praising God for what He has done and praying for Him to complete His work when Christ returns. “Hosanna” is both a shout of joy and a cry for help. It is the perfect word for people who trust Jesus to save them completely.

We still live in a world that is trapped in the slavery of fearing death. So we pray, “Save us, Christ, we pray!” We still need forgiveness for our sins and rescue from the damage they cause. So again we cry, “Save us, Christ, we pray!”

And we still wait for the day when our salvation will be complete—when the One who conquered death will return and pull us out of our graves. Our hearts long for that day, so we say once more, “Save us, Christ, we pray!”

This is the true meaning of Hosanna. It is the cry of people who trust Jesus to finish what He started. It is the prayer of those who believe He will come again to save us fully and forever.

2 Samuel 15

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2 Samuel 15

2 Samuel 15:1 It happened after this, Absalom got himself a chariot, horses, and fifty men to run before him.

2 Samuel 15:2 He would get up early and stand beside the road leading to the city gate. Whenever anyone had a grievance to bring before the king for settlement, Absalom called out to him and asked, “What city are you from?” If he replied, “Your servant is from one of the tribes of Israel,”

2 Samuel 15:3 Absalom said to him, “Look, your claims are good and right, but the king does not have anyone to listen to you.”

2 Samuel 15:4 He added, “If only someone would appoint me judge in the land. Then anyone who had a grievance or dispute could come to me, and I would make sure he received justice.”

2 Samuel 15:5 When a person approached to pay homage to him, Absalom reached out his hand, took hold of him, and kissed him.

2 Samuel 15:6 Absalom did this to all the Israelites who came to the king for a settlement. So, Absalom stole the hearts of the men of Israel.

2 Samuel 15:7 When four years had passed, Absalom said to the king, “Please let me go to Hebron to fulfill a vow I made to the Lord.

2 Samuel 15:8 For your servant made a vow when I lived in Geshur of Aram, saying: If Yahveh really brings me back to Jerusalem, I will worship Yahveh in Hebron.”

2 Samuel 15:9 “Go in peace,” the king said to him. So, he went to Hebron.

2 Samuel 15:10 Then Absalom sent agents throughout the tribes of Israel with this message: “When you hear the sound of the ram’s horn, you are to say, ‘Absalom has become king in Hebron! ‘”

2 Samuel 15:11 Two hundred men from Jerusalem went with Absalom. They had been invited and were going innocently, because they did not know the whole situation.

2 Samuel 15:12 While he was offering the sacrifices, Absalom sent for David’s adviser Ahithophel the Gilonite, from his city of Giloh. So, the conspiracy grew strong, and the people supporting Absalom continued to increase.

2 Samuel 15:13 Then an messenger came to David and reported, “The hearts of the men of Israel are with Absalom.”

2 Samuel 15:14 David said to all the servants with him in Jerusalem, “Get up. We must flee, or we will not escape from Absalom! Leave quickly, or he will overtake us quickly, heap disaster on us, and strike the city with the edge of the sword.”

2 Samuel 15:15 The king’s servants said to the king, “Whatever my lord the king decides, we are your servants.”

2 Samuel 15:16 Then the king set out, and his entire household followed him. But he left behind ten concubines to take care of the palace.

2 Samuel 15:17 So the king set out, and all the people followed him. They stopped at the last house

2 Samuel 15:18 while all his servants marched past him. Then all the Cherethites, the Pelethites, and those from Gath — six hundred men who came with him from there — marched past the king.

2 Samuel 15:19 The king said to Ittai of Gath, “Why are you also going with us? Go back and stay with the new king since you’re both a foreigner and an exile from your homeland.

2 Samuel 15:20 Besides, you only arrived yesterday; should I make you wander around with us today while I go wherever I can? Go back and take your brothers with you. May Yahveh show you kindness and faithfulness.”

2 Samuel 15:21 But in response, Ittai vowed to the king, “As Yahveh lives and as my lord the king lives, wherever my lord the king is, whether it means life or death, your servant will be there!”

2 Samuel 15:22 “March on,” David replied to Ittai. So Ittai of Gath marched past with all his men and the dependents who were with him.

2 Samuel 15:23 Everyone in the countryside was weeping loudly while all the people were marching out of the city. As the king was crossing the Kidron Valley, all the people were marching past on the road that leads to the wilderness.

2 Samuel 15:24 Zadok was also there, and all the Levites with him were carrying the ark of the covenant of God. They set the ark of God down, and Abiathar offered sacrifices until the people had finished marching past.

2 Samuel 15:25 Then the king instructed Zadok, “Return the ark of God to the city. If I find favor with Yahveh, he will bring me back and allow me to see both it and its dwelling place.

2 Samuel 15:26 However, if he should say, ‘I do not delight in you,’ then here I am — he can do with me whatever pleases him.”

2 Samuel 15:27 The king also said to the priest Zadok, “Look, return to the city in peace and your two sons with you: your son Ahimaaz and Abiathar’s son Jonathan.

2 Samuel 15:28 Remember, I’ll wait at the fords of the wilderness until word comes from you to inform me.”

2 Samuel 15:29 So Zadok and Abiathar returned the ark of God to Jerusalem and stayed there.

2 Samuel 15:30 David was climbing the slope of the Mount of Olives, weeping as he ascended. His head was covered, and he was walking barefoot. All the people with him covered their heads and went up, weeping as they ascended.

2 Samuel 15:31 Then someone reported to David: “Ahithophel is among the conspirators with Absalom.” “Yahveh,” David pleaded, “please turn the advice of Ahithophel into foolishness!”

2 Samuel 15:32 When David came to the summit where he used to worship God, Hushai the Archite was there to meet him with his robe torn and dust on his head.

2 Samuel 15:33 David said to him, “If you go away with me, you’ll be a burden to me,

2 Samuel 15:34 but if you return to the city and tell Absalom, ‘I will be your servant, Your Majesty! Previously, I was your father’s servant, but now I will be your servant,’ then you can counteract Ahithophel’s advice for me.

2 Samuel 15:35 Won’t the priests Zadok and Abiathar be there with you? Report everything you hear from the palace to the priests Zadok and Abiathar.

2 Samuel 15:36 Take note: their two sons are there with them– Zadok’s son Ahimaaz and Abiathar’s son Jonathan. Send them to tell me everything you hear.”

2 Samuel 15:37 So Hushai, David’s personal adviser, entered Jerusalem just as Absalom was entering the city.

links:

kissing conspiracy
Maranatha Daily Devotional – Thursday, September 26, 2019
Maranatha Daily Devotional – Wednesday, September 27, 2023
seeing the devil
the best and the worst
transition

The 2 SAMUEL shelf in Jeff’s library

2 Samuel 14

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2 Samuel 14

2 Samuel 14:1 Joab son of Zeruiah knew that the king’s heart was on Absalom.

2 Samuel 14:2 So Joab sent someone to Tekoa to bring a wise woman from there. He told her, “Pretend to be in mourning: dress in mourning clothes and don’t put on any oil. Act like a woman who has been mourning for the dead for a long time.

2 Samuel 14:3 Go to the king and speak these words to him.” Then Joab told her exactly what to say.

2 Samuel 14:4 When the woman from Tekoa came to the king, she fell facedown to the ground, paid homage, and said, “Help me, O king!”

2 Samuel 14:5 “What’s the matter?” the king asked her. “Sadly, I am a widow; my husband died,” she said.

2 Samuel 14:6 “Your servant had two sons. They were fighting in the field with no one to separate them, and one struck the other and killed him.

2 Samuel 14:7 Now the whole clan has revolted against your servant and said, ‘Hand over the one who struck his brother down so we may put him to death for the throat of the brother he murdered. We will exterminate[1] the heir! ‘ They would extinguish my one remaining ember by not preserving my husband’s name or posterity on the land.”

2 Samuel 14:8 The king told the woman, “Go home. I will issue a command on your behalf.”

2 Samuel 14:9 Then the woman of Tekoa said to the king, “My lord the king, may any blame be on me and my father’s family, and may the king and his throne be innocent.”

2 Samuel 14:10 “Whoever speaks to you,” the king said, “bring him to me. He will not trouble you again!”

2 Samuel 14:11 She replied, “Please, may the king invoke Yahveh your God, so that the avenger of blood will not keep putting an end to them, and they will not exterminate my son!” “As Yahveh lives,” he vowed, “not a hair of your son will fall to the ground.”

2 Samuel 14:12 Then the woman said, “Please, may your servant speak a word to my lord the king?” “Speak,” he replied.

2 Samuel 14:13 The woman asked, “Why have you devised something similar against the people of God? When the king spoke as he did about this matter, he has pronounced his own guilt. The king has not brought back his own banished one.

2 Samuel 14:14 We will certainly die and be like water poured out on the ground, which can’t be gathered again. But God would not take away a life; he would devise plans so that the one banished from him does not remain banished.

2 Samuel 14:15 “Now therefore, I’ve come to present this matter to my lord the king because the people have made me afraid. Your servant thought: I must speak to the king. Perhaps the king will grant his servant’s request.

2 Samuel 14:16 The king will surely listen to keep his servant from the grasp of this man who would exterminate both me and my son from God’s inheritance.

2 Samuel 14:17 Your servant thought: May the word of my lord the king bring relief, for my lord the king is able to discern the good and the bad like the angel of God. May Yahveh your God be with you.”

2 Samuel 14:18 Then the king answered the woman, “I’m going to ask you something; don’t conceal it from me!” “Let my lord the king speak,” the woman replied.

2 Samuel 14:19 The king asked, “Did Joab put you up to all this?” The woman answered. “As your throat lives, my lord the king, no one can turn to the right or left from all my lord the king says. Yes, your servant Joab is the one who gave orders to me; he told your servant exactly what to say.

2 Samuel 14:20 Joab your servant has done this to address the issue indirectly, but my lord has wisdom like the wisdom of the angel of God, knowing everything on land.”

2 Samuel 14:21 Then the king said to Joab, “I hereby grant this request. Go, bring back the boy Absalom.”

2 Samuel 14:22 Joab fell with his face to the ground in homage and blessed the king. “Today,” Joab said, “your servant knows I have found favor with you, my lord the king, because the king has granted the request of your servant.”

2 Samuel 14:23 So Joab got up, went to Geshur, and brought Absalom to Jerusalem.

2 Samuel 14:24 However, the king added, “He may return to his house, but he may not see my face.” So, Absalom returned to his house, but he did not see the king.

2 Samuel 14:25 No man in all Israel was as handsome and highly praised as Absalom. From the sole of his foot to the top of his head, he did not have a single flaw.

2 Samuel 14:26 When he shaved his head — he shaved it at the end of every year because his hair got so heavy for him that he had to shave it off– he would weigh the hair from his head, and it would be five pounds according to the royal standard.

2 Samuel 14:27 Three sons were born to Absalom, and a daughter named Tamar, who was a beautiful woman.

2 Samuel 14:28 Absalom resided in Jerusalem two years but never saw the king.

2 Samuel 14:29 Then Absalom sent for Joab to send him to the king, but Joab was unwilling to come to him. So, he sent again, a second time, but he still would not come.

2 Samuel 14:30 Then Absalom said to his servants, “See, Joab has a field right next to mine, and he has barley there. Go and set fire to it!” So, Absalom’s servants set the field on fire.

2 Samuel 14:31 Then Joab came to Absalom’s house and demanded, “Why did your servants set my field on fire?”

2 Samuel 14:32 “Look,” Absalom explained to Joab, “I sent for you and said, ‘Come here. I want to send you to the king to ask: Why have I come back from Geshur? I’d be better off if I were still there.’ So now, let me see the king. If I am guilty, let him kill me.”

2 Samuel 14:33 Joab went to the king and told him. So, David summoned Absalom, who came to the king and paid homage with his face to the ground before him. Then the king kissed Absalom.


[1] שָׁמַד = exterminate. 2 Samuel 14:7, 11, 16; 21:5; 22:38.

links:

changing the course of things
Life is…
Maranatha Daily Devotional – Tuesday, September 28, 2021
partial fix
seeing the devil

The 2 SAMUEL shelf in Jeff’s library

2 Samuel 13

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2 Samuel 13

2 Samuel 13:1 After this, David’s son Absalom had a beautiful sister named Tamar, and David’s son Amnon loved with her.

2 Samuel 13:2 Amnon was frustrated to the point of making himself sick over his sister Tamar because she was a virgin, but it seemed impossible to do anything to her.

2 Samuel 13:3 Amnon had a friend named Jonadab, a son of David’s brother Shimeah. Jonadab was a very shrewd man,

2 Samuel 13:4 and he asked Amnon, “Why are you, the king’s son, so miserable every morning? Won’t you tell me?” Amnon replied, “I’m in love with Tamar, my brother Absalom’s sister.”

2 Samuel 13:5 Jonadab said to him, “Lie down on your bed and pretend you’re sick. When your father comes to see you, say to him, ‘Please let my sister Tamar come and give me something to eat. Let her prepare a meal in my presence so I can watch and eat from her hand.'”

2 Samuel 13:6 So Amnon lay down and pretended to be sick. When the king came to see him, Amnon said to him, “Please let my sister Tamar come and make a couple of cakes in my presence so I can eat from her hand.”

2 Samuel 13:7 David sent word to Tamar at the palace: “Please go to your brother Amnon’s house and prepare a meal for him.”

2 Samuel 13:8 Then Tamar went to his house while Amnon was lying down. She took dough, kneaded it, made cakes in his presence, and baked them.

2 Samuel 13:9 She brought the pan and set it down in front of him, but he refused to eat. Amnon said, “Everyone leave me!” And everyone left him.

2 Samuel 13:10 “Bring the meal to the bedroom,” Amnon told Tamar, “so I can eat from your hand.” Tamar took the cakes she had made and went to her brother Amnon’s bedroom.

2 Samuel 13:11 When she brought them to him to eat, he grabbed her and said, “Come sleep with me, my sister!”

2 Samuel 13:12 “Don’t, my brother!” she cried. “Don’t disgrace me, for such a thing should never be done in Israel. Don’t commit this outrage!

2 Samuel 13:13 Where could I ever go with my humiliation? And you– you would be like one of the outrageous fools in Israel! Please, speak to the king, for he won’t keep me from you.”

2 Samuel 13:14 But he refused to listen to her, and because he was stronger than she was, he disgraced her by raping her.

2 Samuel 13:15 So Amnon hated Tamar with such intensity that the hatred he hated her with was greater than the love he had loved her with. “Get out of here!” he said.

2 Samuel 13:16 “No,” she cried, “sending me away is much worse than the great wrong you’ve already done to me!” But he refused to listen to her.

2 Samuel 13:17 Instead, he called to the boy who waited on him: “Get this away from me, throw her out, and bolt the door behind her!”

2 Samuel 13:18 Amnon’s servant threw her out and bolted the door behind her. Now Tamar was wearing a long-sleeved garment, because this is what the king’s virgin daughters wore.

2 Samuel 13:19 Tamar put ashes on her head and tore the long-sleeved garment she was wearing. She put her hand on her head and went away crying out.

2 Samuel 13:20 Her brother Absalom said to her: “Has your brother Amnon been with you? Be quiet for now, my sister. He is your brother. Don’t take this thing to heart.” So, Tamar lived as a desolate woman in the house of her brother Absalom.

2 Samuel 13:21 When King David heard about all these things, he was furious.

2 Samuel 13:22 Absalom didn’t say anything to Amnon, either good or bad, because he hated Amnon since he disgraced his sister Tamar.

2 Samuel 13:23 Two years later, Absalom’s sheepshearers were at Baal-hazor near Ephraim, and Absalom invited all the king’s sons.

2 Samuel 13:24 Then he went to the king and said, “Your servant has just hired sheepshearers. Will the king and his servants please come with your servant?”

2 Samuel 13:25 The king replied to Absalom, “No, my son, we should not all go, or we would be a burden to you.” Although Absalom urged him, he wasn’t willing to go, though he did bless him.

2 Samuel 13:26 “If not,” Absalom said, “please let my brother Amnon go with us.” The king asked him, “Why should he go with you?”

2 Samuel 13:27 But Absalom urged him, so he sent Amnon and all the king’s sons.

2 Samuel 13:28 Now Absalom commanded his boys, “Watch Amnon until he is in a good heart from the wine. When I order you to strike Amnon, then kill him. Don’t be afraid. Am I not the one who has commanded you? Be strong and valiant!”

2 Samuel 13:29 So Absalom’s boys did to Amnon just as Absalom had commanded. Then all the rest of the king’s sons got up, and each fled on his mule.

2 Samuel 13:30 While they were on the way, a report reached David: “Absalom struck down all the king’s sons; not even one of them survived!”

2 Samuel 13:31 In response the king stood up, tore his clothes, and lay down on the ground, and all his servants stood by with their clothes torn.

2 Samuel 13:32 But Jonadab, son of David’s brother Shimeah, spoke up: “My lord must not think they have killed all the boys, the king’s sons, because only Amnon is dead. In fact, Absalom has planned this ever since the day Amnon disgraced his sister Tamar.

2 Samuel 13:33 So now, my lord the king, don’t take to heart the report that says all the king’s sons are dead. Only Amnon is dead.”

2 Samuel 13:34 Meanwhile, Absalom had fled. When the boy who was standing watch looked up, there were many people coming from the road west of him from the side of the mountain.

2 Samuel 13:35 Jonadab said to the king, “Look, the king’s sons have come! It’s exactly like your servant said.”

2 Samuel 13:36 Just as he finished speaking, the king’s sons entered and wept loudly. Then the king and all his servants also wept very bitterly.

2 Samuel 13:37 But Absalom fled and went to Talmai son of Ammihud, king of Geshur. And David mourned for his son every day.

2 Samuel 13:38 After Absalom had fled to Geshur and had been there three years,

2 Samuel 13:39 King David longed to go to Absalom, for David had finished grieving over Amnon’s death.

links:

a spiraling world
page from Daddy’s playbook
results of indiscretion

The 2 SAMUEL shelf in Jeff’s library

2 Samuel 12

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2 Samuel 12

2 Samuel 12:1 So Yahveh sent Nathan to David. When he arrived, he said to him: There were two men in a certain city, one rich and the other poor.

2 Samuel 12:2 The rich man had very large flocks and herds,

2 Samuel 12:3 but the poor man had nothing except one small ewe lamb that he had bought. He raised her, and she grew up with him and with his children. From his meager food she would eat, from his cup she would drink, and in his arms she would sleep. She was like a daughter to him.

2 Samuel 12:4 Now a traveler came to the rich man, but the rich man did not want to take one of his own sheep or cattle to prepare for the traveler who had come to him. Instead, he took the poor man’s lamb and prepared it for his guest.

2 Samuel 12:5 David was infuriated with the man and said to Nathan: “As Yahveh lives, the man who did this deserves to die!

2 Samuel 12:6 Because he has done this thing and shown no pity, he must pay four lambs for that lamb.”

2 Samuel 12:7 Nathan replied to David, “You are the man! This is what Yahveh God of Israel says: ‘I anointed you king over Israel, and I rescued you from Saul.

2 Samuel 12:8 I gave your master’s house to you and your master’s wives into your arms, and I gave you the house of Israel and Judah, and if that was not enough, I would have given you even more.

2 Samuel 12:9 Why then have you despised Yahveh’s command by doing what I consider evil? You struck down Uriah the Hethite with the sword and took his wife as your own wife — you murdered him with the Ammonite’s sword.

2 Samuel 12:10 Now therefore, the sword will never leave your house because you despised me and took the wife of Uriah the Hethite to be your own wife.’

2 Samuel 12:11 “This is what Yahveh says, ‘I am going to bring disaster on you from your own family: I will take your wives and give them to another before your very eyes, and he will sleep with them in broad daylight.

2 Samuel 12:12 You acted in secret, but I will do this before all Israel and in broad daylight.'”

2 Samuel 12:13 David responded to Nathan, “I have sinned against Yahveh.” Then Nathan replied to David, “And Yahveh has taken away your sin; you will not die.

2 Samuel 12:14 However, because you treated Yahveh with such contempt in this matter, the son born to you will die.”

2 Samuel 12:15 Then Nathan went home. Yahveh struck the baby that Uriah’s wife had borne to David, and he became deathly ill.

2 Samuel 12:16 David pleaded with God for the boy. He fasted, went home, and spent the night lying on the ground.

2 Samuel 12:17 The elders of his house stood beside him to get him up from the ground, but he was unwilling and would not eat anything with them.

2 Samuel 12:18 On the seventh day the baby died. But David’s servants were afraid to tell him the baby was dead. They said, “Notice, while the baby was alive, we spoke to him, and he wouldn’t listen to us. So how can we tell him the baby is dead? He may do something desperate.”

2 Samuel 12:19 When David saw that his servants were whispering to each other, he guessed that the baby was dead. So, he asked his servants, “Is the baby dead?” “He is dead,” they replied.

2 Samuel 12:20 Then David got up from the ground. He washed, anointed himself, changed his clothes, went to Yahveh’s house, and worshiped. Then he went home and requested something to eat. So, they served him food, and he ate.

2 Samuel 12:21 His servants asked him, “Why have you done this? While the baby was alive, you fasted and wept, but when he died, you got up and ate food.”

2 Samuel 12:22 He answered, “While the baby was alive, I fasted and wept because I thought, ‘Who knows? Yahveh may be gracious to me and let him live.’

2 Samuel 12:23 But now that he is dead, why should I fast? Can I bring him back again? I’ll go to him, but he will never return to me.”

2 Samuel 12:24 Then David comforted his wife Bathsheba; he went to her and slept with her. She gave birth to a son and named him Solomon. Yahveh loved him,

2 Samuel 12:25 and he sent a message through the prophet Nathan, who named him Jedidiah, loved by the Lord.

2 Samuel 12:26 Joab fought against Rabbah of the Ammonites and captured the royal city.

2 Samuel 12:27 Then Joab sent messengers to David and said, “I have fought against Rabbah and have also captured its water supply.

2 Samuel 12:28 Now therefore, gather the rest of the troops, lay siege to the city, and capture it. Otherwise, I will be the one to capture the city, and it will be named after me.”

2 Samuel 12:29 So David gathered all the people and went to Rabbah; he fought against it and captured it.

2 Samuel 12:30 He took the crown from the head of their king, and it was placed on David’s head. The crown weighed seventy-five pounds of gold, and it had a precious stone in it. In addition, David took away a large quantity of plunder from the city.

2 Samuel 12:31 He removed the people who were in the city and put them to work with saws, iron picks, and iron axes, and to labor at brickmaking. He did the same to all the Ammonite cities. Then he and all his people returned to Jerusalem.

links:

great mercy, severe judgment
Maranatha Daily Devotional – Tuesday, September 26, 2023
mercy and judgment
three principles for interpreting parables
to the king

The 2 SAMUEL shelf in Jeff’s library