Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Previously on the chosen people.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Now rise, fill your horn with oil, and go to
Jesse of Bethlehem. Among his sons, you will find the
king I have chosen.
Speaker 1 (00:17):
He was younger than Samuel had expected, no older than sixteen.
There was nothing outwardly remarkable about him, and yet he
played his instrument as if the sky itself was listening.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
Said come to me, giant, do your worst, and I
shall do mine. But today the Lord has called you
to stand for those who would never stand for you.
Speaker 4 (00:47):
That is who we are.
Speaker 3 (00:49):
We are the ones who answer Christ for mercy, even
when no mercy was given to us. We are chosen
by God to tread the path of righteousness.
Speaker 5 (01:00):
The giant slayer, the harpist of Bethlehem, the warrior who
would not lift his hand against the king, the out
law who guarded our borders when our king would not.
You have been chosen by God and confirmed by the
voice of the people. David, son of Jesse, rise now
(01:24):
as King of Judah, not by birthright, but by divine anointing.
Speaker 2 (01:32):
Man sees the strength of the arms and the bearing
of the shoulders, But I see the heart.
Speaker 6 (01:47):
Not every goodbye sounds like a song. Sometimes some sounds
like a verdict as well. Shell Oh my friends, from
here in the holy land of Israel, I'm you l
extein with international Fellowship of Christians and Jews, and welcome
to the Chosen People. There's a kind of silence you
only find in hospital rooms and on deathbeds, a silent
(02:10):
that settles as someone is about to speak their last words.
It's not always peaceful. Sometimes it's very tense. Sometimes the
past walks in before the soul walks out. In this
week's episode, drawn from First King's Chapter two, we meet
David at the end. What we hear is both blessing
and reckoning, and we ask, when we face our own
(02:34):
final moments, what will rise to the surface, praise or payback.
Speaker 1 (02:43):
The King's Great hole was empty but for one. Pillars loomed,
casting long shadows over Solomon's face. On the walls, woven
tapestries whispered the tales of King David, the warrior, King,
the singer of songs, the slayer of giants, the man
(03:04):
after God's own heart. His victories were stitched in crimson
and gold. Solomon stood over the fire in the center
of the hall alone. In his hands, he held his
father's crown. The firelight played across its surface, catching on
the intricate etchings of lions and olive branches. His fingers
(03:29):
moved over them, like a blind man reading a sacred text.
His lips did not move, but a question haunted the
hollow of his throat.
Speaker 4 (03:40):
Am I believe this?
Speaker 1 (03:43):
A voice cut the silence behind him like a drawn blade.
My King Solomon turned. Beniah stood in the doorway, his
armor brushed with soot and shadow, his expression unreadable. He
bowed low.
Speaker 7 (04:00):
Your brother has sent word.
Speaker 4 (04:03):
Where is he now?
Speaker 7 (04:04):
Sh still clinging to the altar, refusing to move an
inch until he has assurance you'll spare him.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
Solomon looked down at the crown in his hands, then
up again at the throne.
Speaker 4 (04:18):
King David was showing mercy he would, But what of
King Solomon? Will he be a king of mercy? Solomon
raised the king's crown. He wasn't David, and he didn't
want to be. Solomon was not his father, but he
worshiped the same god. Mercy and judgment must both be
(04:42):
yielded to wisdom. I'll not dole out a pardon without
proof of contrition. Ivada and Ija proves himself a man
of honor. Not one hair on his head shall fall.
But if wickedness is found in him, then he dies.
No deliberation, no margin. This is his only chance.
Speaker 1 (05:03):
Beniah bowed again his hand to his heart and turned
to go, But before he reached the door.
Speaker 7 (05:10):
He paused, there is another matter. David summons you to
his chamber.
Speaker 1 (05:16):
Solomon nodded, his face grave beneath the.
Speaker 4 (05:19):
Crown, Thank you, Binia and God.
Speaker 1 (05:23):
Once and the fire behind him burned on its flames,
casting the shadow of a crowned man across the stones.
The doors groaned open as Solomon stepped through. Slowly, A
breath of warmth greeted him, thick with the perfume of
(05:46):
spikenard and cedar wood. Firelight flickered from the hearth, its
glow brushing the chamber in shifting amber hues. Beside the
bed stood arbishag, lovely as spring rain and silent as snowfall.
She looked upon the young king with kindness and sorrow
(06:07):
mingled in her gaze. She kissed David's with a cheek,
then passed Solomon with a soft hand on his arm.
She said nothing. David lay still beneath his woven blankets,
his body shriveled and pale, his breath drawn in slow,
stuttering poles. The warrior king of Israel. He had felled
(06:31):
giants and written psalms, taken crowns and broken them. David
wasn't an extraordinarily old man. He was no older than seventy,
but the life he had lived, the battles he had fought,
and the weight he had carried had aged him rapidly.
Solomon approached and knelt at his side, taking the old
(06:54):
man's hand into his own. Hello, Father, David opened his
eyes and smiled. His lips moved like wind through dry grass.
Speaker 4 (07:07):
Solomon, I am about to go the way of all
the earth.
Speaker 1 (07:13):
Solomon felt his throat tighten. The tears threatened, but he
held them back. David's fingers closed around his sons with
surprising strength.
Speaker 4 (07:25):
You're wise, Solomon, but you must also be strong, strong
enough to overcome the tongue of power. Show yourself a man.
Keep the charge of the Lord your God. Walk in
his ways, keep his laws and commandments. Guard your heart
(07:49):
with his testimonies. As Moses wrote them, if you hold
fast to the word of God, you will prosper in
all you do.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
The fire cracked. David turned his face toward the open window,
the wind teasing the silver strands of his hair.
Speaker 4 (08:12):
For all my triumphs, there were many failures. I took
what I should not have taken. I killed where I
should have shown mercy. I stained the sword God placed
in my hand in it. He never left me.
Speaker 1 (08:36):
He turned back, eyes glistening with memory and regret.
Speaker 4 (08:42):
He promised me, if my son walks at his ways,
Israel will never lack a man on the throne.
Speaker 1 (08:52):
David gripped Solomon's arm and tugged him closer. Solomon bent
low beside the bed, placed a trembling hand on his head,
and spoke a prayer. Then he pressed his lips to
Solomon's brow.
Speaker 4 (09:09):
The Lord does not see his man sees Solomon. He
does not see the outward appearance, but the heart.
Speaker 1 (09:19):
From beneath the blankets. David drew a scroll and pressed
it into Solomon's hand. His eyes fluttered, How tired, I
think I shall rest now? And with that the King
(09:43):
closed his eyes. Solomon kissed his father's forehead and ran
his fingers through his hair, trying to memorize his father's
face before time erased it. He knew David would not
wake again. Solomon descended the steps like a man in
(10:05):
a dream, the scroll clutched to his chest. He entered
the library in silence, save for the whisper of his robes.
He sat at the desk, the scroll unfurled beneath his fingers.
The handwriting was David's. These were the last words of
David's son of Jesse, the oracle of the Shepherd, maid King,
(10:30):
the man raised on high, anointed by the God of Jacob,
the sweetest Psalmist of Israel. Solomon read the.
Speaker 4 (10:41):
Final inspired words of David, son of Jesse. The spirit
of the Lord spoke through me. His word was on
my tongue. The God of Israel spoke. The Rock of
Israel sent to me. When one rules over people and righteousness,
(11:01):
when he roars in the fear of God, he's like
the light of morning, that sunrise in a cloudless morning,
like the brightness after rain that brings grass from the earth.
If my house were not right with God, surely he
would not have made with me an everlasting covenant, arranged
(11:24):
and secured in every part. Surely he would not bring
to fruition my salvation and grasped me my my every desire,
but evil men not to be cast aside back the thorns,
which are not gathered with a hand. Whoever touches thorn's
uses a tool of iron or the shaft of a spear.
(11:48):
They are burned up where they lie.
Speaker 1 (11:52):
Solomon ran his hand over the words. He smiled. He
rolled the scroll and placed it within him cloak, close
to his heart. Then he leaned over the desk and
blew out the candle. Darkness swallowed the room. That evening
(12:12):
the king slept. David, son of Jesse, went to rest
with his forefathers. He was buried in Jerusalem, the city
of his triumphs, the duel of his crown. He did
not live to see the temple rise from stone, but
from the grave he would witness a glory far greater.
(12:36):
The man after God's own heart would at last rest
near the heart of God. His throne would yield to
a greater throne, His songs would be joined by choir's eternal,
and his hope a kingdom everlasting, ruled by a perfect king,
(12:57):
would be fulfilled.
Speaker 6 (13:03):
There's something powerful about watching a man who sing to
God also speak like a soldier. Once again, about seeing
the man who danced before the ark now listing names
like debts, joab she Ma, Barzillai, some to punish, one
to reward. David's death was like his life. It wasn't
always gentle, but his words were always profound and they
(13:26):
were always beautiful. Now on his deathbed, David found himself
instructing his son Solomon how to rule the nation of Israel,
a nation steeped in the Bible and it's laws, the Torah,
and the chosen people who deserved a godly king. First,
I want to read you those beautiful verses. I'm using
(13:47):
the King James version because it comes the closest to
the original Hebrew. This is what it says, I go
the way of all the earth. Be thou strong therefore,
and show thyself a man, and keep the charge of
the Lord thy God, to walk in his ways, to
keep his statutes and his commandments, and his judgments and
(14:09):
his testimony as it is written in the Law of Moses.
And I actually want to go through these words and
share each one of them means in Jewish tradition. First,
he says the charge of God. This is a warning
to Solomon that as wise as he might be, he
shouldn't rely on his own wisdom, but only on the
commandments of God. Then it says to walk in his ways. Well,
(14:33):
this means to be compassionate and show grace to people,
not just as man would act, but as God acts
towards us. Next, it says to keep his statutes. Here
David is referring to the laws of the Torah. Sometimes
we don't know God's reasons, but we observe them simply
(14:54):
because He commands us too. And his commandments. Well, it
refers to the laws and practice, says that are just
between us and God, things like prayer, things like Bible study.
We need to keep those sacred. And as I said,
with these words, David isn't passing on a harp and
a flock. He's handing Solomon a kingdom and a sword.
(15:16):
As in life. There's something holy amid David's humanness and death. David,
like Jacob before, and blesses and exposes in the same breath,
And in doing so he teaches us something that we
rarely hear in sermons. Not everything gets resolved, not every
wound closes clean. David dies in prayer, but also in
(15:36):
memory and gratitude and grief. He hands Solomon, the kingdom. Yes,
and the wisdom, but also the wounds. And here's the grace, David,
lets go. That's rare, and my friends, that's holy. In
our modern world, getting older is frowned upon or worse.
(16:00):
The booming cosmetics and plastic surgery industries tell us that.
But the Bible values older people and teaches us that
old age is actually something to aspire to, that we
should all look at them and want to be like them.
All the way back in Genesis twenty four, the first
time we read about old age in the Bible, it
says Abraham was very old. Now our sages note that
(16:21):
this was the very first time that old age was
introduced to the world, and according to Jewish tradition, Abraham
came before God with the request. As the sage is say,
Abraham asked Master of the universe, a venushebasha maim A
man and his son walk together, and no one knows
until who to give honor. I beg of you make
(16:41):
a distinction between us. God fulfilled Abraham's request with the
gift of old age as a sort of crown to
honor those who have earned it. Later, Leviticus commands us
to rise in the presence of the aged to show
respect for the elderly. If we don't honor the elderly,
(17:02):
we're going directly against the word of God, and we're
also robbing ourselves of one of the most precious natural resources.
The elderly or a rich source of wisdom, of knowledge
and guidance that we shouldn't take for granted. I know,
as I bring aid and food to elderly in Israel
who the Fellowship helps, I always receive more from my
(17:23):
visits than I give, and that is true with today's story.
David was a man after God's own heart, and he
left us with many things, some holy, some heavy, and
some unresolved. Jewish tradition holds that David was not allowed
to build the Temple because his hands had shed too
(17:44):
much blood. But instead of resenting that, he used his
last years to prepare plans, resources, legacy, and I think
that that is what's most profound. He didn't get to
build it, but he made sure that Salomon could. And
maybe that's the deepest kind of faith. Doing the work
that you will never see finished.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
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(18:31):
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(18:51):
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(19:13):
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