The Righteous Find Refreshment in Christ.
The Sixth Sunday after Trinity – Pr. Faugstad sermon
Text: 2 Samuel 16:5-14
In Christ Jesus, who accepted the curse of God’s Law and suffered death in our place, so we would be declared righteous before God, dear fellow redeemed:
Have you ever been cursed out before? Have you had someone attack you with words, bitter words, words that cut deep? Perhaps this has happened to you, and it came as no surprise. It was a reaction to something hurtful or harmful you had said or done. Or maybe this happened to you, and you didn’t see it coming. You became a target of someone’s anger when you didn’t deserve it.
Today’s reading describes a difficult time in King David’s life, when his son Absalom was seeking to take his throne and David was on the run. As David hurried away from Jerusalem and toward the Jordan River, a relative of King Saul named Shimei met him with continuous cursing. He accused David of having blood on his hands with regard to the house of Saul. He blamed David for the downfall of Saul, even though Saul’s unfaithfulness to the LORD was the reason he lost the throne.
While Shimei called down curses from the LORD on David, he also threw stones at him and flung dust in the air. He was making a very bad day even worse. The military men around David offered to dispatch the head of this troublesome man. Why should they have to put up with his cursing and stone throwing? David was the king; the king should be respected. All David had to do was give the order, and Shimei would be permanently silenced.
But even though Shimei was wrong in his accusations of David, David did nothing to stop him. He accepted the cursing as a chastening from the Lord. He recognized that his present troubles had come upon him from his own house because of his sin with a married woman named Bathsheba. He had seduced her, conceived a child with her, and then plotted to have her husband killed, so that he could marry her. When the LORD sent the prophet Nathan to confront David about his sin, He said, “The sword shall never depart from your house,” and “I will raise up evil against you out of your own house” (2Sa. 12:10,11).
The condemnation of God’s Law hit home. David repented of his sin. And Nathan told him, “The LORD also has put away your sin; you shall not die” (v. 13). But the consequences remained. Most immediately, the child David conceived with Bathsheba died. And now evil had come out of David’s own house, with his son Absalom seeking to kill him. As he listened to Shimei’s curses, David acknowledged that this was a consequence for his sin.
Sin always has consequences, some more severe and some less. If you steal from someone and get caught, or if you drive recklessly and harm someone, those sins will have the consequence of criminal charges and possibly jail time. If you are caught in a lie, that sin will have the consequence of people not trusting you. If you give way to wicked or lustful thoughts or contemplate things you know are wrong, those sins may not have obvious, tangible consequences, but they will contribute to a burden of guilt on your conscience.
But saying that sin has consequences is different than saying that sin is not forgiven. Every sin you have committed, no matter what it is, is forgiven by God. God the Father placed all your sin on His Son, and Jesus paid for every one of your trespasses. He suffered and died for your sin as though He is the one who committed it. So when God sends or allows consequences for your sin, this is not to punish you. These consequences are intended to keep you humble and train you in righteous living.
We are so stubborn in our sin that if there were never consequences for bad behavior or wicked words, we would just be more emboldened to keep sinning. Why should I stop doing something bad if I never have to answer for it? We must be taught from our youth that there is a difference between right and wrong. We must be required to answer for our bad behavior. We shouldn’t get away with talking back to our parents, harming others physically or verbally, or taking what doesn’t belong to us.
By learning this discipline in our youth, we are more willing to receive correction and accept consequences for sin when we are older. When a family member, a friend, or a fellow Christian calls us out for our selfishness or greed, our judgmental attitude or unkind words, we recognize in their voice the voice of God. We remember the Ten Commandments which clearly reveal the will of God for us. If we refuse to hear correction from His Word, we are saying that we are not really as bad as God says we are. We are saying that we are righteous even while our actions, words, and thoughts conflict with God’s Word.
David acknowledged his sin, and he accepted the cursing of Shimei as a wholesome chastening from the LORD. Shimei was not correct in his accusations, but instead of acting out in anger toward him, David in humility accepted the verbal attack. He left justice to the LORD. He said, “It may be that the LORD will look on the wrong done to me, and that the LORD will repay me with good for his cursing today.”
In our litigious culture, where everyone wants to counter-attack and sue as soon as they feel offended about something or wronged in some way, David’s example is important for us Christians. He was willing to receive chastening for his imperfect life. He was willing to endure a fiery trial for the testing and strengthening of his faith. He was willing to suffer out of love for God.
Jesus teaches all His followers to do this. In His Sermon on the Mount, He teaches us to “turn the other cheek” when we are attacked (Mat. 5:39). He says that we should remember that even our enemies are our neighbors, and that we should love all our neighbors as we love ourselves (v. 44). This is the teaching of the Law, which is summarized by perfect love for Him and perfect love for one another (v. 48). That is what a righteous life looks like.
Sometimes our life resembles this, but often it does not. Because we have not perfectly kept God’s Law, we can’t put any trust in what we do. In today’s Holy Gospel, Jesus says, “Unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven” (Mat. 5:20). Unless your righteousness is a million times better than the people who are considered the most holy and good, you cannot get yourself to heaven. That is why your confidence must be in Jesus, the holy Son of God and Son of Man, who did perfectly keep the holy Law.
In David, you see a picture of what Jesus would later endure for your salvation. David was the true king, but he was forced out of Jerusalem where he was met with wrongful cursing by his enemies. Jesus was the king of all creation, but He was forced out of Jerusalem wearing a crown of thorns and carrying a cross. When He was crucified on Calvary, he was met with all sorts of cursing and reviling from His enemies. “Let the Christ, the King of Israel, come down now from the cross that we may see and believe” (Mar. 15:32), they said in mockery. “He trusts in God; let God deliver him now, if he desires him” (Mat. 27:43).
If anyone had the right to defend Himself and call down curses on His enemies, it was Jesus. He had done no wrong. No court committed to justice would have ever found Him guilty. We are quick to cry out whenever some little wrong is done to us. We hold grudges. We plot our revenge. But look at Jesus! His apostle Peter wrote, “He committed no sin, neither was deceit found in his mouth. When he was reviled, he did not revile in return; when he suffered, he did not threaten, but continued entrusting himself to him who judges justly” (1Pe. 2:22-23).
That is righteousness. That is a holy life before God. He lived a perfect life of love toward God and neighbor. That perfect life is the reason you have confidence before God today. Jesus lived His holy, righteous life for you. He willingly suffered every injustice for you. He went to the cross for you, to pay for your sins. His righteous life and His sacrifice in your place now give you the courage and strength to endure afflictions in your life.
When you are unjustly attacked like David was, you can remember how Jesus humbly suffered for you. You may not receive justice in this life, but you are right with the God of heaven. Trouble may meet you at every turn, but your faithful God promises to hold you up by His grace. Peace may elude you in the world, but you have “peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ” (Rom. 5:1).
At the end of today’s reading, we hear that David arrived weary at the Jordan River, where “he refreshed himself.” The Jordan River is where 1,000 years later, Jesus was baptized “to fulfill all righteousness” (Mat. 3:15). Your Baptism brought His righteousness to you. Your Baptism is where the “great exchange” happened for you, the exchange described by St. Paul, “For our sake [God] made [Christ] to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God” (2Co. 5:21).
You are righteous “in him,” by faith in Him—the faith brought to you at your Baptism. In Him, you have the forgiveness of all your sins, strength for every difficulty, and the promise of eternal life. No matter what trials you have to go through, whether as consequences for your sin that the Lord works for your good, or as training in righteousness that the Lord gives for the strengthening of your faith, He will at the same time provide refreshment through His Word and Sacraments. “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden,” He says, “and I will give you rest” (Mat. 11:28).
Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost; as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, forevermore. Amen.
+ + +
(picture from stained glass at Redeemer Lutheran Church)