Chapter 21:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 2 Kings 2 Chronicles
1 Chronicles 21
Prosperity
and temptation: sin, chastisement and grace
But prosperity exposes
David to the temptations of the enemy. Head over Israel,
and conqueror of all his enemies, he wishes to know the
strength of Israel, which was his glory, forgetting the
strength of God, who had given him all this and had
multiplied Israel. This sin, always a great one and still
more so in David's case, did not fail to bring
chastisement from Goda chastisement however, which
was the occasion of a fresh development of His grace, and
of the accomplishment of His purposes. David, in his
heart, knew God although for a moment he had forgotten
Him, and He commits himself to Him, choosing rather to
fall into the hands of God than to hope anything from man;
and the pestilence is sent by God. This, by the grace of
God, gives occasion for another element of David's gloryfor
the honour which God gave him of being the instrument to
fix the spot, where the altar of God was to be the means
of the daily connection between the people and Himself.
Jerusalem was beloved of God. This election on His part
is now manifested. The spot of ground in question was the
threshing-floor of a stranger; the moment was one in
which the people were suffering under the consequences of
sin. But here all is grace; and God stays the angel's
hand when stretched out to smite Jerusalem. Grace
anticipates all movement in David's heart [
1]; for it acts and has its source in
the heart of God. Moved by this same grace, David on his
part intercedes for the people, taking the sin on himself;
and God hears his prayer, and sends His prophet to direct
him in offering the atoning victim, which in fact formed
the foundation of all subsequent relationship between the
people and God. One cannot but feeldefective as the
type is [
2] , in comparison with the realityhow
much this calls Him to mind who took upon Himself, and
even in behalf of this very people, the sin which was not
His own.
Acceptance of the
atoning sacrifice
David having offered the
sacrifice according to God's ordinance, God marks His
acceptance of it by sending fire from heaven; and at God's
command the angel sheathes his sword.
Here all is evidently
grace. It is not the kingly power which interposes to
deliver Israel from their enemies, and gives them rest.
The ark of the covenant being there through the energy of
faith, out of its regular place which is now desolate in
consequence of the people's sin, it is Israel's own sin [
3] (for all depends upon the king)
which is in question. God acts in grace, ordains and
accepts the atoning sacrifice; David, in sackcloth with
his elders, presenting himself before Him in intercession.
A new order of
things
In the place where God has
heard his prayer, David offers his sacrifices; and of
this place it is said, "This is the house of Jehovah-Elohim,
and this is the altar of the burnt-offering for Israel."
In the presence of the sin, God acts in grace, and
institutes, by means of sacrifice, the regular order of
the religious relationship between Himself and His people
who are accepted in grace, and the place of His own
habitation in which they were to draw nigh unto Him [
4]. It was a new order of things. The
former presented no resource against the judgment of God:
on the contrary, David himself feared to go to the
tabernacle; it was all over with it as a means of
approach to God. David's sin became the occasion of
putting an end to it, by shewing the impossibility of
using it in such a case, and by being thus made the
occasion of founding everything upon sovereign grace.
[1] It is interesting
to see the order unfolded here in the establishment of
the relations of sovereign grace: first of all, the heart
of God and His sovereign grace in election, suspending
the execution of the deserved and pronounced judgment (ver.
15); next, the revelation of this judgment, a revelation
which produces humiliation before God and a full
confession of sin before His face. David, and the elders
of Israel, clothed in sackcloth, fall upon their faces,
and David presents himself as the guilty one. Then,
instruction comes from God, as to that which must be done
to cause the pestilence judicially and definitively to
cease, namely, the sacrifice in Ornan's threshing-floor.
God accepts the sacrifice, sending fire to consume it,
and then He commands the angel to sheathe his sword. And
sovereign grace, thus carried out in righteousness
through sacrifice, becomes the means of Israel's approach
to their God, and establishes the place of their access
to Him. The tabernacle, a testimony to the conditions
under which the people had failed, offered, as we have
seen, no resource in such a case. On the contrary, it
occasioned fear. He was afraid to go to Gibeon. Nothing
would do but the definitive intervention of God according
to His own grace (the circumstance of the sin, on the
king's own part, leaving no room for any other means).
The whole system and principle of the tabernacle as a
legal institution is set aside, and the worship of Israel
founded on grace, by sacrifice coming in where all, even
the king as responsible, had failed. Such was Israel's
position for him who understood it.
[2] And even
historically quite opposed; for it is the king's own sin
that has brought chastisement on the people. Christ,
however, made the sin His own. Nevertheless, this shews
us how everything depended now on the throne. It is not
the priest who brings in the remedy. David intercedes and
David offers. The fact that the king, in whom the
promises were, had sinned, made sovereign grace necessary.
[3] This difference
between Israel's deliverance from their enemies, and the
sense of their own sin before God, in the last day, is
found in the psalms of degrees: see Psalm 130.
[4] Observe too here,
how sin gives occasion to the bringing out of the
counsels of God, though the responsibility was also met
in what did so. So the cross. Compare Titus 1: 2, 3, and
2 Timothy 1: 9, 10; Ephesians 3; Colossians 1.
Chapter 21:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 2 Kings 2 Chronicles
This version of Darby's Synopsis of the Old Testament is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1995 by L. Hodgett. Used by permission. The files of the Synopsis found on this site may not be reproduced without permission from L. J. L. Hodgett, Stem Publishing. A special thanks to L. J. L. Hodgett and Stem Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Darby's Synopsis of the Old Testament.
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