Daniel: The Sovereignty of God in the Humbling of the King
Release Date: 03/09/2025
Bethel Baptist Church
Scripture Reading: 2 Samuel 22 (Psalm 18) Someone once said, “There are two main things we need to learn . . . how to live and how to die.” Having conquered the fear of death, in Christ, sometimes it is life which defeats us . . . namely the multiplied sorrows, sicknesses, emotional turmoil, losses, anxieties we all experience. David knew the strains of life intimately. In his song in 2 Samuel 22:5,6 he describes his trouble in the following way . . . “waves of death ... torrents of destruction … cords of Sheol … snares of death." David’s experience was filled...
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Scripture Reading: 1 Chronicles 29:10-20 Near the end of his reign, King David desired to build a temple for the Lord. For 400 years, since the exodus from Egypt, the central place of worship in Israel had been the tabernacle. The tabernacle was a tent which the Jews carried through the wilderness. Now David wanted to build a permanent structure as the main place of worship for Israel. His desire was denied by God. David could make the plans, but could not be the builder of the temple because his reign had been characterized by the bloodshed of war (1 Chr 28:2-6). ...
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Scripture Reading: 2 Samuel 18 When David gave way to his lust for Bathsheba and his pride to cover his act through murder, there were some things he had not considered, namely the long term consequences of sin. Sinning against the living God is a more serious matter than we usually think it is and the dark effects of sin are both sure and destructive. David’s sin had terrible effects that he had not considered in the passions of his heart. First, his sin had an effect on God’s name. “. . . by this deed you have given occasion to the enemies of the LORD to...
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Scripture Reading: Psalm 3 (2 Samuel 13-16) Sometimes we can read the stories behind our hymns, like the loss of Horatio Spafford’s four daughters before he wrote “It Is Well With My Soul.” The stories enrich our understanding of these songs. One of the things that makes Psalm 3 interesting is the superscription before verse 1, which tells us the background behind the Psalm. It reads “A Psalm of David, when he fled from Absalom, his son.” The story is found in 2 Samuel 13-16 and it is the heartbreaking account of rape, revenge, and an extremely strained...
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Scripture Reading: 2 Samuel 12:26-31 With the daily reports of warfare in almost every corner of the world, we may not expect or desire to come to the Bible and read about wars. But the stories of Old Testament Israel are filled with accounts of the fierce fighting between the Israelites and their enemies. This is especially true of the reign of King David, who was described as a “man of war” (1 Chron 28:3). 2 Samuel 12:26-31 describes the battles between Israel and the Ammonites. It was the Ammonites that Israel was fighting when David committed his sin of adultery...
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Scripture Reading: Romans 3:9-20 This paragraph in Romans forms the climax of the argument of the first major section of the book. The thrust of the first section of Romans is that the entire human race stands guilty before a holy God. The pagan man is guilty (Rom 1:18-32); the moral man is guilty (Rom 2:1-16); the Jewish man is guilty (Rom 2:17-29). What we have in Romans 3:10-20 is a string of Old Testament quotations which, in unambiguous statements, concludes that every human being stands guilty before God’s awesome judgment. "None is righteous, no, not one; . . ....
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Scripture Reading: John 11:17-44 One of the most memorable of Jesus' miracles is His raising Lazarus from the dead. And the story includes one of Jesus' most magnificent declarations … "I am the resurrection and the life" (Jn 11:25). Certainly, this display of authority and power is meant to be an encouragement to believers, reminding them of their own resurrection one day. In addition to the idea of resurrection, the stunning promise of John 11:26 both takes our breath away and takes away our fear of death … "Everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die." ...
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Scripture Reading: 2 Samuel 12:13-21 In 2 Samuel 12:13, David heard the words he longed to hear more than any other words ... ”The LORD has taken away your sin; you shall not die.” This statement is a display of the indescribable mercy of God. But the next verse is a display of the holiness of God. In order to demonstrate that sin carries consequences and that God is a God of justice, David heard the following words ... “However, because by this deed [adultery] you have given occasion to the enemies of the LORD to blaspheme, the child also that is born to you shall...
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Scripture Reading: Psalm 32 It is not a pleasant task to look at ourselves as we really are. It is so difficult to do it honestly that, in fact, we usually do not do it at all, except when we are forced to. Our natural tendency is to deny anything within ourselves that is uncomplimentary. But confession of the darkness of our hearts is absolutely necessary. It is not only necessary for emotional health (even secular psychiatrists would tell us that), but for spiritual life. There is no forgiveness with the living God unless there is a sincere acknowledgment of...
info_outlineBethel Baptist Church
Scripture Reading: 2 Samuel 11, 12 The story of David’s adultery with Bathsheba and the murder of her husband Uriah cries out to us with great warning. If David, the man after God’s own heart (1 Sam 13:14), could get to the place in his life that he was capable of such blatant and rebellious sinning, then none of us is immune to the lure of lust and hatred. We tend to think that we will never be guilty of something like adultery or murder, but we all struggle with lust and hatred. In His sermon on the mount, Jesus said, “I say to you, that everyone who looks at a woman...
info_outlineScripture Reading: Daniel 4
King Nebuchadnezzar was the sovereign king who conquered the remaining kingdom of Israel in 605 B.C. (some 120 years after the northern 10 tribes had already been conquered by Assyria). Tempted to boast in his own strength and military conquests, Nebuchadnezzar had grown arrogant. God sends him a dream with urgent significance for his life, but the king (with all the wise men of Babylon) can’t understand the meaning and thus calls on Daniel to interpret the dream for him. In time, the dream comes true and Nebuchadnezzar is humbled by the sickness of insanity, from which he recovers only after he acknowledges the sovereign reign of the Most High God of Israel.
So today, our pride can blind us from seeing our own faults and the ultimate sources of our blessings. Pride blinds us to our own temporality or limitations and to the grandeur and eternality of God. There’s only room for one person to be on the saddle of your life: if you’re calling all the shots, there’s no room for God.
Today we need a new vision—Nebuchadnezzar’s vision—of the eternal sovereignty and glory of God. Replace your self-confidence with God-confidence (not me, my worth, my rights, my kingdom but God: God’s worth, God’s ability to work in this situation, God’s kingdom.) His works are true and faithful (whereas I’m tempted to lie, sugar-coat, exaggerate, tell half the story.) I can’t always keep my word; I can’t always fulfill my responsibilities. God can. He does. His ways are just: I’ve failed and sinned, but all his ways are just: both when he gives and when he takes away, as Job said, blessed be His name. He can humble the proud.
C.S. Lewis: “Humility is not thinking less of yourself, but thinking of yourself less.” - If you’re thinking “I’m horrible”, or “I’m ugly” and always harshly criticizing yourself, that’s not humility: you’re still thinking of “YOU”. Want to change? Admit you’re proud, and ask God for grace to change and grow. James 4:6 “God resists the proud and he gives grace to the humble.”