This sermon was preached at The Church of the Holy Comforter in Drexel Hill, Pa on June 16th, 2013
2 Samuel 11:26-12:10,13-15
In 1972 John Lennon and Yoko Ono
appeared on the Mike Douglas Show for a full week as co-host. I of course did
not see the program when it first aired—I wouldn’t be born for another 10
years!—but I did see a re-broadcast of the week long appearance years later. During
their time on the show, John and Yoko shared with Mike Douglas the story of how
they first met. Yoko Ono was exhibiting some of her avant-garde artwork at a
swank London gallery, and John Lennon was an incredulous guest. He really
didn’t know what to make of the work. One piece in particular caught his eye,
however: a ladder leading up to a white canvas suspended from the ceiling with
a spy glass dangling from it attached to a chain. Lennon cautiously climbed the
ladder to peer through the glass. What it revealed was the word “Yes” written
on the canvas.
Lennon said, if it had said “No” or something else negative or insulting he would have walked out. Because it said, “Yes” he decided to stay and give this woman a chance, and the rest is history.
Lennon said, if it had said “No” or something else negative or insulting he would have walked out. Because it said, “Yes” he decided to stay and give this woman a chance, and the rest is history.
I think this story reveals
something profound about human nature. We all long for acceptance and
affirmation. We desperately want to see “Yes” under that spyglass. What we live
in constant fear and anxiety of, is the awful possibility of the “No,” the terrible
verdict of rejection.
The Bible teaches us that all have
sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. We cannot escape this fact. We
live out our lives in the shadow of judgment. We cannot face the truth and so
we avoid and rationalize. We live in denial. It is easy for us to recognize the
fault in others but much harder for us to be honest with ourselves.
In today’s Old Testament reading from 2 Samuel, King David is confronted with the horrifying reality of his own sinfulness. David coveted the wife of Uriah, a soldier in his army. He saw Uriah’s wife, Bathsheba, bathing on the roof and lusted for her. David was the King and had his choice of all the most beautiful women in the kingdom, but he wanted this one who belonged to another. He took her to his bed and made her pregnant. To cover up his crime, he sent Uriah into the front lines of battle knowing that he would be killed and took Bathsheba as his own wife. She bore him a son.
The thing that David did was repugnant to the Lord and so he sent his Prophet Nathan to David. Nathan told him the story of a rich man who rather than killing one of his own flock to feed a guest, took the beloved pet of a poor man, slaughtered it, and served it to his guest.
In today’s Old Testament reading from 2 Samuel, King David is confronted with the horrifying reality of his own sinfulness. David coveted the wife of Uriah, a soldier in his army. He saw Uriah’s wife, Bathsheba, bathing on the roof and lusted for her. David was the King and had his choice of all the most beautiful women in the kingdom, but he wanted this one who belonged to another. He took her to his bed and made her pregnant. To cover up his crime, he sent Uriah into the front lines of battle knowing that he would be killed and took Bathsheba as his own wife. She bore him a son.
The thing that David did was repugnant to the Lord and so he sent his Prophet Nathan to David. Nathan told him the story of a rich man who rather than killing one of his own flock to feed a guest, took the beloved pet of a poor man, slaughtered it, and served it to his guest.
When we hear this story we are
outraged. Maybe we think of a pet of our own that is dear to us. We want to see
the guy who would do such an awful thing pay. David is no different, he says
that this man deserves to die and demands harsh punishment. The man that Nathan
spoke of though was David. David was disassociated from the magnitude of the
evil he had done. It was only when it was presented to him as the story of
another man that he could recognize it.
A favorite preacher of mine, Tim Keller, summarizes the implications of the gospel in this way, “You are more
desperately wicked than you ever dared to imagine, yet you are more loved,
forgiven, and accepted in Christ than you ever dared hope.” God is relentlessly
opposed to sin and unwavering in his condemnation of it. He pronounces an
uncompromising “No” to all human evil, but his “No” is never his final word.
God is also abounding in mercy and grace, and while never condoning sin or
ceasing in his opposition to evil, all is Yes and Amen in Christ Jesus (2 Corinthians 1:20).
There will indeed be deadly
consequences for David’s sin. Because he struck down Uriah with the sword of
the Ammonites, the sword will never depart from his house. David’s line is
under the curse of his own wickedness. Despite this, David’s own life will be
spared. Although by his own admission he deserves death, the Lord has taken
away his Sin and showed mercy to him. Nevertheless there is still awful
consequences. Why is this so? Couldn’t God just forgive and forget?
God cannot wink at sin. What would
it say if God were to let David get away with murder? Would that be justice? No
way! Like we said a moment ago, God is relentlessly opposed to sin and
unwavering in his opposition. God’s mercy cannot rob his justice. It would go
against his very nature to be unjust.
God’s wrath against David’s sin is
expressed in the death of the child he conceived with Bathsheba. How is this
just you ask? This child is an innocent! Why should he pay for what David has
done? These are indeed troubling questions! If we are appalled that this should
be so, we have begun to feel something of the scandal of the Cross. A murderer was set free, and Christ, the one truly innocent person who ever lived, the
perfectly righteous Son of God, was handed over to the shameful and ignominious
death of a criminal. The iniquity of us all was laid upon his head! The Son in
whom the Father was well pleased, received the awful condemnation of God’s
“No”!
It was our sin, and not any
injustice or cruelty in God, that sent Jesus to the cross. He bore the
punishment that we so justly deserve. In the same way, it was David’s
wickedness that brought down curses on his family. It is important to remember
that David receives the consequences he himself has decreed. Remember, he said
“This man deserves to die, he shall pay four fold for the evil thing he has
done!”
Someone once said that, the righteous requirements of God’s
law aside, if all the words we had spoken in judgment of others were played
back for us on the day of our own judgment, our own words would condemn us!
Meaning, we can’t even live up to our own standards!
David will indeed pay fourfold for what he has done. He will live to see the death of four of his sons beginning with the baby born to Bathsheba and continuing onto Amnon, Absalom, and Adonijah. Not only that, but the years ahead will see terrible rebellion and division in his own house.
Is this terrible sentence of
judgment the last word? Can we at last expect nothing but irredeemable tragedy
in this life? It would be absolutely intolerable for the gospel story to end
with the cross. Our forgiveness at so terrible a price could never be a source
of joy but only sorrow at the meaningless injustice of it all. On that Friday,
the goodness and justice of God itself was blacked out. It was hidden from us.
We know the story doesn’t end
there, however, Jesus rose from the dead conquering sin and death and
destroying the curse of condemnation that hung over humankind. God’s “Yes,” the
gospel proclamation of restoration, peace, and acceptance with God, is his
final word! All shall be well, all shall be well, and all manner of thingsshall be well! How can we help but shout in astonished wonder like Sam Gamgee
in Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings, “Is everything sad becoming untrue?!”
Even in David’s situation, God’s “No” is not his final word. Unlike Saul, who lost the kingdom because of his unfaithfulness, God remains faithful to David despite David’s unfaithfulness. He remains faithful to us too! The second son of David and Bathsheba, Solomon, will take the throne of his father. Solomon’s name comes from the Hebrew word that means “Peace,” particularly the peace that comes through restoration or atonement.
This act of grace, mercy, and
restoration shown to David points us forward to the ultimate act of grace,
mercy, and restoration shown to all humankind in Jesus Christ. In the life
death and resurrection of Christ all of our sins our taken away and atoned for.
The Son of God himself receives the horrible sentence of condemnation in our
place. God’s people need not fear, the answer is “Yes!”