Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Previously on the chosen people.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
Behow we are your king, your blood and your bone.
When Saul was king, it was you led us to walk,
you who slew giants, you who delivered us from the Philistines.
(00:27):
It was not Saul's spear we followed, but your voice,
your courage.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
And now the Lord has spoken. You shall be shepherd
of my people Israel. You shall be prince over this nation.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
The horn tilted and warm oil flowed over David's head.
It dripped into his hair, down his cheeks, and onto
the robe once worn by Jonathan.
Speaker 4 (00:59):
He did not wipe it away.
Speaker 1 (01:01):
A golden circlet was placed upon his brow, its weight
pressing into his temples. The moment held, the wind held
its breath, and all of Israel saw.
Speaker 4 (01:15):
A boy become king.
Speaker 1 (01:18):
He rose to his feet as the shout broke over.
Hebron long Live King David. David's eyes were closed for
a long moment, but when he opened them, he saw
not just the people, but the burden, the crown, the anointing,
the cries of celebration. These were not trophies. They were
(01:41):
a yoke. He was thirty years old, now, the same
age another king would be when his coronation came not
with a crown of gold, but with thorns. But that
was still to come. For now David of Bethlehem stood
in the shadow of giants and kings and prophets, a
(02:04):
warrior king, crowned in oil and hope his reign had begun.
Speaker 5 (02:15):
They said, even the blind and the lame could stop us.
But they forgot who leads us? Shelloh, my friends, from
here in the holy land of Israel, I'm l Extein
with international Fellowship of Christians and Jews, and welcome to
the Chosen People. It's one thing to fight an enemy
you can see, But what do you do when the
(02:35):
enemy is a city, when it's made of stone and
legacy and pride, when it goes back generations older than
your father, your grandfather, your entire people's freedom story. That's
where we find David today in tewod Samuel chapter five.
Our shepherd warrior has been crowned. But the crown means
little if the throne stands on unstable ground. And what
(03:00):
ground could be more contested, more defiant than the Holy
City of Jerusalem. Today's story asks what's the take to
reclaim what was always meant to be yours? Get ready
for a story that's more than a little surprising.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
The King's war chamber was warm, torches casting flickering shadows
across the rough walls, and the men gathered within. David
leaned over a worn map stretched across the table, his
fingers tapping a parchment with a slow, deliberate rhythm. Around
him stood his fiercest captains, Joab his commander, and the
(03:44):
captains under him, Habeshi and Uriah.
Speaker 6 (03:47):
Jerusalem, the Canaanite stronghold still resides in the heart of
our country.
Speaker 7 (03:54):
It's been centuries since.
Speaker 6 (03:55):
Our forefathers occupied this lamb, and we have had yet
to capture.
Speaker 1 (04:00):
The others said nothing. No one needed reminding of the
city's blight. For four hundred years, it had stood unbroken,
mocking Joshua, outlasting the judges, untouched by saw. The Jebbercites
had made it into a fortress of legend, walls like
(04:21):
the ribs of giants, gates barred with iron wood, and
murder slids carved to pour fire and arrows on anyone
foolish enough to climb. David tapped the map once more.
Speaker 7 (04:35):
We can't take it by storm. Is there a way
to coax them out.
Speaker 4 (04:40):
They won't come out.
Speaker 1 (04:41):
Joe AB's arms were crossed over his broad chest, brow furrowed.
Speaker 8 (04:47):
Why would they They know their walls are an ungodly advantage.
They mock us from behind them. They even said the
blind and the lane could beat us back.
Speaker 7 (04:58):
They're fools to mock us.
Speaker 1 (05:00):
That earned a grunt of approval from Abeshi, who spat
on the floor.
Speaker 8 (05:05):
So we climbed the walls then, or dig them down.
Speaker 9 (05:09):
Neither our spies have circled the entire stronghold.
Speaker 1 (05:14):
Uriah stepped forward. He circled a part of the city's
eastern slope with a calloused finger.
Speaker 9 (05:21):
They built a water shaft here. Rain floods down the mountain,
and then they drain it into the springs below the city.
A narrow tunnel stonework from centuries ago. My spies say
it's shallow enough to wade through. Narrow, yes, but passable.
Speaker 4 (05:38):
We'd be going and blind if we enter by night.
Speaker 9 (05:42):
We can pass beneath the wall and strike straight into
their gut. No trumpets, no siege letters, just steal.
Speaker 7 (05:48):
In the dark.
Speaker 1 (05:50):
David, straightened eyes gleaming with fire.
Speaker 7 (05:54):
We'll got them from within.
Speaker 8 (05:57):
It's mad, but it's nothing.
Speaker 6 (05:59):
We aren't used to it. Under your command, then prepare
the men. Only the best will go. No room for fools.
That leaves Abershi out.
Speaker 8 (06:10):
Are you sure your back's good to crawl through that
narrow space, old man?
Speaker 1 (06:15):
They all laughed and nodded to each other. No one
doubted the risk, but the reward was great. Jerusalem was
the key to the kingdom. It was the crown set
in stone. Whichever king held it held the heart of
the land. Uriah and Abishai departed, but Joab stayed behind
(06:37):
the commander, hovered by the map, silent speak in mind,
Joeb joe Ab shifted his eyes from the door to
David twice before speaking.
Speaker 8 (06:50):
We still haven't spoken about Abner.
Speaker 7 (06:53):
What is there to say? Why didn't you punish me?
Speaker 4 (06:57):
I've left justice to the lord.
Speaker 9 (07:00):
Hmmm?
Speaker 8 (07:00):
Is that your excuse for not making the hard decision
of confronting me.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
There was a long drawn out pause at that. David
took a deliberate step closer to Joab and leaned against
the table.
Speaker 7 (07:14):
You think I'm weak, don't you, Joab?
Speaker 8 (07:18):
I think you have weakness, weakness masked as virtue.
Speaker 6 (07:24):
Have never shied away from a battle against our enemies,
but I intend to rule our people with mercy.
Speaker 8 (07:32):
It may be a short rule.
Speaker 7 (07:34):
Is that a threat?
Speaker 6 (07:36):
Of course it isn't.
Speaker 1 (07:38):
There was another moment of tension. Joab scoffed and shook
his head, his brow softened.
Speaker 8 (07:45):
David, I am your fiercest champion.
Speaker 7 (07:49):
I would die for you. I would kill for you.
Speaker 8 (07:53):
I see your strength and the Lord's anointing on you,
but I fear you have a blind spot. Mercy and
compassion are wonderful qualities in a shepherd, a father, even
a tribal elder. But a king must be careful with
who he allows to sit beside him.
Speaker 4 (08:13):
David's tongue rolled in his mouth.
Speaker 6 (08:17):
There may be truth to that, but what you did
to Abner undermined our credibility with the North. They were
willing to yield the crown peacefully, and Abner could have
helped us.
Speaker 8 (08:29):
Abner would have sought power over you the same way
he did over Isbasheth.
Speaker 7 (08:34):
He wanted to retreat with the countryside to be at peace.
Do you really believe that, my king?
Speaker 8 (08:42):
You may have a heart of gold, but this country
is filled with more souls than there are David's.
Speaker 1 (08:49):
David wanted to protest Joabs's words, but knew there was
a tinge of truth to them. He drew a deep breath,
then nodded.
Speaker 6 (08:58):
I trust you, Joy, and I hear you. Go Gather
the men, Jerusalem awaits.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
Joe Ab bowed his head and left. Two days into
their march, David's men snaked through the cragged passes of
the Judean Highlands, boots scraping stone, blades at their hips,
silence in their throats. Sweat poured beneath the scarlet band
(09:28):
that kept David's curls from his brow. His eyes, sharp
as forged iron, stayed fixed on the ridge ahead. At last,
as they crested a ragged bluff, Jerusalem came into view,
high and haughty. Upon her hill, girded in stone and pride,
the wind carried no sound from within her walls. David
(09:52):
narrowed his gaze.
Speaker 7 (09:55):
Here it is Jerusalem.
Speaker 8 (09:58):
Four hundred years they've and they've grown bold for it, said,
even their blind and lame could keep us out.
Speaker 7 (10:08):
We'll put that to the test. Rest up, men, we
strike At twilight.
Speaker 1 (10:14):
The men collapsed into the shade, chewing dried figs and
cold bread, sharpening blades and steadying nerves. Dusk brought with
it a burning sky, the red of blood, of warning
of wrath yet to come. When the sun began its descent,
David stood.
Speaker 7 (10:35):
Arm yourselves.
Speaker 6 (10:37):
We go to claim what should have been hours from
the beginning. We'll not scale her walls, We'll drown her
from beneath.
Speaker 1 (10:45):
David split his force in two.
Speaker 4 (10:48):
Joe app would take.
Speaker 1 (10:49):
The bulk of the army around the front. David, with
only a score of chosen men, would vanish beneath the earth.
They reached the shaft by dusk. Entrance was narrow and
slick with moss. The king crouched, steel glinting across his back,
and stepped inside. The tunnel was black and close, the
(11:11):
water rising to their waists. Echoes of dripping stone answered
each splash as they pressed on. The shaft narrowed, forcing
the men to crawl to slither like serpents. They moved
by touch alone, their king always at the fore. Then
David halted before him, the stone dropped away, an old floodschute,
(11:36):
leading deeper into the city. He looked into the abyss
and smiled.
Speaker 7 (11:43):
Jonathan would have loved this.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
He turned to his men, eyes glinting in the dark.
Speaker 7 (11:50):
If you've got the stomach for adventure and follow me.
Speaker 1 (11:55):
David jumped, sliding down the chute slicked with moss and mud.
The splash rang through the shaft, followed by David's childlike laughter.
Moments later, one by one, the others followed, twenty blades
crashing into the darkness. The shafts filled them into a
deep cistern inside the city's underbelly. A sliver of orange
(12:19):
light glowed ahead torch light guards. The guards all turned
to the cistern, seeing David emerge with a ferocious, beaming.
Speaker 4 (12:29):
Smile, sword in hand.
Speaker 7 (12:32):
Hello there.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
The Jebbosides barely had time to draw breath before David
launched himself forward.
Speaker 4 (12:41):
His steel ripped through them.
Speaker 1 (12:43):
David struck one of them low, slicing at the hamstring.
He kicked the other in the knee, then stabbed downward
into the enemy's back.
Speaker 4 (12:51):
While he was keeled over.
Speaker 1 (12:53):
The warriors of Israel poured from the tunnel with roars.
Their blades danced, cleaving through enemy ranks with a brutal rhythm.
The streets screened, men tumbled from towers.
Speaker 4 (13:07):
Walls ran slick with gore.
Speaker 1 (13:10):
Joe ab and his company were hiding in the shadows
near the gate.
Speaker 4 (13:14):
Finally, David and.
Speaker 1 (13:16):
His men were able to seize control of the gate
and open it wide for Joe abb and his men.
The army flooded in like a tidal wave. Four Jevasides
circled David with spears. David lunged, disarmed one, then swung
back to lop off his arm. Another enemy parried David's blow,
(13:36):
then struck it in the jaw, sending David staggering back.
Two Jevasides rose their spears to end David, but Uriah
stepped in just in time.
Speaker 4 (13:47):
Uriah tackled one into the other. Tumbling on the floor.
Speaker 1 (13:51):
Uriah was able to jab one with the blade and
then strangle the other.
Speaker 9 (13:56):
I owe you one, Uriah, a hefty gift at my wedding.
Speaker 1 (14:02):
Uriah caught a fist and pivoted to throw another enemy
over his shoulder. Uriah was a fierce warrior and loyal friend.
He and David danced through the city with their blades.
What followed was swift and merciless. The soldiers of the
Jebosites fought with blind pride, but Israel's blades were baptized
(14:24):
in Wilderness War One by one, the defenders fell. David's
captains carved a path through stone and sinew, Blood ran
in rivers, Victory arrived with the last gasp of daylight.
By nightfall, the stronghold was taken. Jerusalem was finally in
(14:46):
Israel's grasp. The kings of the Jebocites bowed low before David,
bloodied and trembling. The shepherd, who once dodged Saul's spear,
now stood with a crown above the s city they
could never conquer. David raised his voice before the gathered,
captain's smoke, still rising from the streets behind him.
Speaker 6 (15:10):
This great city, once a stronghold for the wicked, shall
be a fortress for righteousness.
Speaker 7 (15:16):
No longer shall it be the bastion of our shame.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
From this day forth, let it be known as Scion,
the City of David.
Speaker 4 (15:25):
And so it was.
Speaker 1 (15:27):
In the months that followed, Kings from beyond the desert
sent cedar and gold. Craftsmen came with stones and hammers.
Palaces rose where ruins once stood, and a throne was
set upon Mount Zion. The lord was with David, and
his reign stretched wider with each passing them. David took
(15:51):
more wives and bore more children, expanding his house and
his name. The city of David was a monument to
what Israel could be should be, But it was missing something.
David knew that this place, Jerusalem, ought to house the
presence of God. It was time to bring back the
(16:15):
arc of the Covenant.
Speaker 5 (16:22):
Let's ask the question that most of us, if we're honest,
try not to ask too loud. Why Jerusalem? Why that
city so proud, so hard to take, so full of
the residue of pagan blood and idolatry. Why not headbron
Why not a fresh start somewhere else without the weight
of history ah Our tradition actually teaches that holiness often
(16:49):
hides in the difficult places, in the most fought over places.
That which is contested actually has value. That which is
difficult to obtain often guard something that's so sacred and
Jewish tradition tells us that man didn't choose Jerusalem, it
was actually chosen by God. Abraham saw it from Afar,
(17:12):
Isaac was bound upon it. Jacob dreamed there, Melchrizedek ruled
it long before Israel had a king, and still it
remained out of reach until this moment. It had to
be claimed, not just geographically but spiritually. The Jebusite smocked David,
and they said, the blind and the lame will repel you.
(17:35):
It was a taunt, yes, but it was also a mirror,
for sometimes we are blind, sometimes we are lame. Sometimes
we can't see what God is doing. We can't move
towards what he has declared ours. But David did. David
refused to let pride or his history stop him. And Jerusalem,
(17:56):
oh Jerusalem, it was always meant to be ours, but
first it had to be redeemed. When we hear a
story like this, it's easy to get swept up in
the heroism of David, the stealth, the strategy, the sword play.
But beneath all of that is something much older, something
(18:16):
written into the fabric of the chosen people's identity. It's
this Redemption takes courage, and redemption takes risk, not the
risk of bravado, but the kind that humbles you, the
kind that asks you to move through the places no
one else wants to go. Jerusalem was more than a city.
(18:37):
It was a symbol. C. S. Lewis once wrote, courage
is not simply one of the virtues, but the form
of every virtue at the testing point. I believe he
was right. The courage to love, the courage to forgive,
the courage to obey. David had that kind of courage
because he trusted God to make something holy. So what
(19:02):
about you? What are the jerusalems in your life? The
things that were always meant to be yours but somehow
got locked behind walls of fear of failure. Sometimes the
journey back is messy. Sometimes we don't get to march
in through the front gates. Sometimes we have to enter
through the old places, the places we thought we'd never revisit.
(19:23):
But hear me, my friends, if God has called it yours,
then no wall, no macker, no memory can keep it
from you. Just take the first step. He will do
the rest. With blessings from the Holy Land, am ye Elle.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
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Steve Katina, Max bod Zach Shellavaga and Ben Gammon are
the executive producers of the Chosen People with Yile Eckstein,
(20:01):
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voiced by Jonathan Cotton, Aaron Salvado, Sarah Seltz, Mike Reagan,
Stephen Ringwold, Sylvia Zaradoc, Thomas Copeland Junior, Rosanna Pilcher, and
the opening prayer is voiced by John Moore. Music by
Andrew Morgan Smith, written by Aaron Salvado, bre Rosalie and
(20:25):
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(20:47):
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