Monday, May 18, 2026

Wrong Place, Wrong Time, Doing the Wrong Thing Text: 2 Samuel 11:1–5

 There’s a quiet sentence in 2 Samuel 11 that opens the door to one of the darkest chapters in David’s life:

“At the time when kings go forth to battle… David tarried still at Jerusalem.”

At first glance, it sounds like a simple historical note. But it is much more than that.

The writer is showing us that before David committed a great sin, he first drifted out of place.

The wrong place

David should have been with his men. The season of battle had come, yet the king remained home in comfort while others fought for him.

The danger began long before Bathsheba entered the story.

Many spiritual failures start quietly:

  • neglecting responsibility,
  • becoming spiritually idle,
  • drifting from where we ought to be.

Sometimes the safest place spiritually is simply the place of duty.

The wrong time

The verse says:

“at the time when kings go forth to battle…”

There was a proper season for action, responsibility, and leadership.

But David was detached from the moment he was called to step into.

Temptation often grows strongest when discipline weakens. A wandering schedule can become a wandering heart.

The chapter reminds us that timing matters spiritually.

Doing the wrong thing

David walks upon the roof. He sees Bathsheba. Then instead of turning away, he keeps moving toward temptation.

Sin rarely explodes all at once.

The chapter unfolds step by step:

  • lingering,
  • looking,
  • inquiring,
  • taking,
  • hiding.

One compromise leads to another until adultery becomes deception and deception becomes murder.

That is the terrifying progression of unchecked sin.

A warning hidden in an ordinary sentence

One ordinary sentence introduces the whole collapse:

“David tarried still at Jerusalem.”

No thunder.
No warning trumpet.
Just a king out of place.

That’s what makes the passage so searching. David was not a weak man. He was a giant killer, a worshipper, a king after God’s own heart. Yet even David became vulnerable when he drifted from where he should have been.

Reflection

How many temptations could be avoided simply by being where we are supposed to be?

The wrong place.
The wrong time.
Doing the wrong thing.

Sometimes spiritual danger begins long before the visible fall.


Prayer

Lord, help me stay faithful in the places and responsibilities I've taken to heart from studying your Word. Keep me from drifting into idleness, compromise, and temptation.
Teach me to turn away quickly from sin and walk in obedience before You. Amen.

Sunday, May 17, 2026

From Persecutor to Preacher

 Few stories in Scripture display the grace of God more clearly than the conversion of Saul of Tarsus.

Before he was known as Paul the apostle, he was something very different.

He was a persecutor.

Not merely a skeptic.
Not merely unconvinced.
He actively opposed the church of Jesus Christ.

The first time we encounter Saul in Scripture, he is standing near the execution of Stephen, the first Christian martyr. While angry men hurled stones at Stephen, their garments were laid at Saul’s feet. Scripture says Saul was “consenting unto his death.”

The man who would later preach Christ once approved the killing of those who followed Him.

Yet God was not finished with Saul.


Persecutor → Preacher

Saul hunted believers from city to city. He entered homes, dragged off men and women, and sought authority to imprison Christians wherever they could be found.

Then came the road to Damascus.

A light brighter than the sun interrupted his mission. The persecutor suddenly found himself confronted not by a movement, but by the risen Christ Himself.

“Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?”

In one moment everything changed.

The man who came to silence the name of Jesus became the man who could not stop preaching it.

The persecutor became the preacher.


Imprisoner → Imprisoned

Before his conversion, Saul imprisoned believers.

Afterward, he would spend much of his own ministry suffering imprisonment, beatings, and persecution for the very gospel he once opposed.

The irony is impossible to miss.

The chains he once helped place on others eventually rested on his own wrists.

Yet from prison cells came some of the most powerful words ever written:

  • Ephesians
  • Philippians
  • Colossians
  • 2 Timothy

Rome could bind the apostle, but it could not bind the word of God.


Enemy of the Church → Builder of Churches

Saul once tried to destroy the church.

Paul spent the rest of his life building it.

He traveled tirelessly, preaching Christ across the Roman world, strengthening believers, appointing elders, and writing letters that still instruct the church today.

The former enemy became a servant.

The destroyer became a builder.

And perhaps that is one reason Paul never seemed to get over the grace of God. Near the end of his life he wrote:

“Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners; of whom I am chief.”

Paul never forgot who he had been.

But he also never doubted what Christ had made him.


The Grace That Rewrites a Life

The story of Paul is more than a biography. It is a testimony to what God can do with a surrendered life.

Only God could transform:

  • a persecutor into a preacher
  • an imprisoner into a prisoner for Christ
  • an enemy of the church into a builder of churches

The gospel Paul preached was not theory to him. It was personal.

He knew firsthand that salvation is not earned by good works, religious zeal, or human effort. If anyone could have claimed religious credentials, it was Saul of Tarsus. Yet all of it failed to produce righteousness.

Grace did what religion could not.

And maybe that is why Paul’s writings still carry such weight today. They were not written by a man pretending to be good. They were written by a man who knew he had been rescued.

The same Word of God who changed Saul is still changing lives today.

Monday, April 27, 2026

The Manifold Wisdom of God: Seeing the Pattern (Part 2)

 Last time, I mentioned a pattern that seems to run through Scripture:

Truth is often given in seed form… and then revealed more clearly over time.

This time I want to look at how that plays out with the prophets.


The Prophets Saw Clearly… and Yet Not Completely

When we read the prophets, it can feel like they saw everything plainly.

They spoke about:

  • a coming Messiah
  • suffering
  • glory
  • a kingdom on Earth

But when you slow down, something interesting shows up.

They saw real things—but not always how those things fit together.


Two Pictures, Side by Side

Take this for example:

  • A suffering servant
  • A reigning king

Both are described.

Both are true.

But they’re often presented right next to each other, almost like they’re part of the same moment.

There’s no clear gap between them.


Looking Back, We See the Gap

Now, from where we stand, we can see:

  • Christ suffered
  • Time passed
  • Glory is still unfolding

But the prophets didn’t always see that separation.

It’s like looking at mountains from a distance:

  • You see multiple peaks
  • But you can’t see the valleys between them

They Knew Something Was There

What’s even more interesting is that they seemed to know they didn’t have the full picture.

They searched.

They asked questions.

They looked into what they were being shown.

They weren’t just writing—they were trying to understand what they were seeing.


Why This Matters

This explains why some passages feel compressed.

Things that we now understand as:

  • separate events
  • different time periods

can appear blended together.

Not because they’re wrong—but because they were seen from a distance.


A Shift in Perspective

Instead of asking:

“Why didn’t they explain this more clearly?”

It might be better to ask:

“Were they being shown something real, but not the full timeline?”

That question changes how you read a lot of passages.


Bringing It Back to the Pattern

This fits right into what we talked about before:

  • Truth is introduced
  • It’s partially seen
  • It’s later revealed more fully

The prophets sit right in the middle of that process.


Final Thought

The prophets weren’t confused—they were seeing what they were given to see.

But what they saw wasn’t always the complete picture.

And that’s part of the manifold wisdom of God:

He reveals truth in a way that becomes clearer over time, without losing what was given at the beginning.

Friday, April 24, 2026

The Manifold Wisdom of God: Seeing the Pattern (Part 1)

 There’s a thought that’s been growing on me as I read through Scripture, and it didn’t come all at once. It’s more like something you start to notice after seeing the same pattern show up in different places.

Not everything is revealed all at once.

That might sound obvious, but it changes the way you read the Bible.


A Pattern Begins to Show

When I started paying attention, I noticed something:

  • In the beginning, truth is often given in a seed form
  • Later, it’s expanded
  • Eventually, it’s clearly revealed

It’s not random—it’s consistent.

A simple example is right at the start. There’s a promise given early on, but it’s not fully explained. You’re told what will happen, but not how, not when, and not all the details in between.

That’s the pattern.


Not Everything at Once

We tend to want everything laid out clearly:

  • full explanation
  • exact timeline
  • no questions left

But Scripture doesn’t usually work that way.

Instead, it gives:

  • enough to understand the direction
  • enough to recognize fulfillment later
  • but not always the full inner workings

And that’s where the phrase “manifold wisdom” really starts to make sense.

It’s like looking at something with many sides. You don’t see it all at once—you turn it, and more comes into view.


Why This Matters

This changes how you read difficult passages.

Instead of thinking:

“This doesn’t make sense”

You start asking:

“Is this something that wasn’t fully revealed yet?”

That shift alone clears up a lot of confusion.

Because sometimes the issue isn’t that the text is unclear—it’s that we’re expecting it to say more than it was meant to say at that point.


A Better Way to Read

What I’m learning (still working on it) is to separate:

  • what is clearly stated
  • what is implied
  • what I might be adding without realizing it

That last one is where I usually trip up.

It’s easy to fill in gaps and then treat those assumptions like they were always there.


Where This Leads

If this pattern is real—and it seems to be—it means:

  • earlier parts of Scripture may not show the full picture
  • later parts don’t replace earlier truth—they reveal it more clearly

So instead of forcing everything to be fully explained at the beginning, it might be better to let it unfold the way it was given.


Final Thought

This isn’t about having all the answers.

It’s about recognizing that:

We’re often given the outcome and the promise…
but not always every step in between.

And maybe that’s intentional.

Monday, April 20, 2026

The Sacrifices of the Law: Shadows That Point Forward

The sacrificial system in the Law of Moses can feel complex at first glance, but beneath the details is a structured picture of how God taught Israel about sin, holiness, worship, and relationship with Him. In the books of Leviticus and Numbers, these offerings are not random rituals—they form a carefully ordered language of worship.

1. The Burnt Offering — Total Surrender

The burnt offering was completely consumed on the altar. Nothing was kept back for the priest or the worshiper.

It represented full dedication to God—a life wholly given, not partially reserved. Everything was placed on the altar as an act of surrender.

2. The Meat Offering — Daily Dependence

It consisted of fine flour, oil, and frankincense. It contained no blood.

This offering expressed gratitude and dependence—acknowledging that daily provision comes from God. It was often given alongside other sacrifices, reflecting worship in ordinary life, not just at moments of crisis.

3. The Peace Offering — Fellowship and Communion

The peace offering was unique because it was shared. Part was burned, part was given to the priests, and part was eaten by the worshiper.

It symbolized peace with God and fellowship restored. Worship here is not only about atonement but about relationship—sharing a meal in the presence of God.

4. The Sin Offering — Dealing with Unintentional Sin

The sin offering addressed unintentional wrongdoing and ritual impurity. It emphasized that sin, even when not deliberate, still breaks fellowship with God and must be dealt with.

Blood played a central role, highlighting that atonement involves life being given in place of guilt.

5. The Trespass Offering — Restoring What Was Wrong

The trespass (or guilt) offering dealt with specific acts of wrongdoing, especially when something was taken, damaged, or misused.

Unlike the sin offering, it often included restitution—making things right plus additional compensation. It shows that repentance involves both forgiveness and restoration.

6. Voluntary Offerings — The Heart Response

Alongside these commanded offerings were voluntary or “freewill” offerings. These were not required for atonement but were given willingly out of devotion, gratitude, or desire to honor God.

They reveal that worship was not only obligation—it also included joyful response.

7. What the System Was Teaching

Taken together, these offerings form a picture:

  • God is holy

  • Sin is serious

  • Worship involves both surrender and gratitude

  • Fellowship with God is possible but not casual

  • Restoration includes both forgiveness and responsibility

8. Shadows That Point Forward

While the system is detailed, it is also forward-looking. It prepares the way for a fuller fulfillment—where sacrifice is not repeated endlessly, but completed in one sufficient work.

In the New Testament, this finds its fulfillment in Christ, who becomes the final and complete sacrifice, bringing together what the Law pointed toward.

Conclusion

So if you hear someone say no one could have kept the do that would be a misnomer. A person could keep the law by being obedient to what it says to do. That doesn't mean a person was perfect it meant that you were obedient to the law.

Jesus said in Matthew 5:17

Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil. 

The sacrifices of the Law are not merely ancient rituals. They are a structured teaching system—showing the weight of sin, the holiness of God, and the desire of God to dwell among His people.

What begins as repeated offerings ultimately points forward to a completed work, where relationship is no longer maintained through repeated sacrifice, but established through His FINISHED work on the Cross. fulfilling the sacrifices in Himself yet without sin Hebrews 4:15.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Not One Jot or Tittle: Fulfilled and Finished

In Matthew 5:18, Jesus makes a remarkable statement:

“Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled.”

That phrase—jot and tittle—speaks of the smallest marks in the Hebrew Scriptures, showing that nothing in God’s Word is accidental or unfinished.


Fulfilled, Not Abolished

Jesus did not come to destroy the Law or the prophets. He came to fulfill them.

The Tanakh—the Law, the Prophets, and the Writings—finds its completion in Him:

  • The Law reveals righteousness → He lives it perfectly
  • The sacrifices deal with sin → He becomes the final sacrifice
  • The promises point forward → He is the fulfillment

Nothing is discarded. Everything is completed.


The Cross and the Grave

But Jesus does more than fulfill Scripture in life—He also conquers what humanity cannot:

Through His death on the cross and His resurrection, He defeats:

  • Sin
  • Death
  • The grave itself

What the Law exposed, the cross answers. What death claimed, the resurrection overturns.


One Unified Work

These are not separate achievements—they are one unified work:

The same Christ who fulfilled every jot and tittle of Scripture is the One who rose in victory over death.

The Law was not broken.
Death was not ignored.
Everything was fulfilled.


Final Thought

Jesus does not leave Scripture half-finished or promises unfulfilled.

He completes what was written, and He conquers what stands against life.

Not one jot or tittle remains undone—because in Christ, everything is fulfilled.

Wrong Place, Wrong Time, Doing the Wrong Thing Text: 2 Samuel 11:1–5

 There’s a quiet sentence in 2 Samuel 11 that opens the door to one of the darkest chapters in David’s life: “At the time when kings go f...