I was given a prophetic word for a
friend on New Year’s day and later realized it was specifically for her, but
also equally applicable to the body of Christ.
So what I offer here is an expanded form of that specific word for those
in the greater body who would receive it. Eat what applies and be blessed.
Read for your selves 1 Samuel
chapter 17, the story of David and Goliath and then consider with me the
following facets of the story and the applications we can make.
Verses 1-11 There was a battle
going on between the Philistines and the armies of Israel and the strongman of
the enemy was calling the shots. He was big, he was bad, and he was armored,
adorned, and arrogant. He brought dismay and fear to Saul and his armies.
What
battles is your church fighting? What’s happening in your city and your
country? For different groups of believers in different parts of the world the
battles are different. For many the battle is physical persecution. We know of
countries in the world where Christians are being killed for their faith on an
almost daily basis. In other countries, although physical death is not the
norm, political oppression reigns. Regulations are enforced to keep believers
from meeting together or from evangelizing. Although there are many examples of
outside persecution and oppression, there are just as many examples of
persecution and oppression happening from within the church against its own. Persecution
by misguided leadership citing the traditions of man against the anointing and
work of the Holy Spirit in the life of the body brings such devastation that
death is a proper description of the carnage.
That control sometimes opens the door to false teachers and teachings by
those who leave the church stifled, knowing there is more, but being refused in
their own churches. Leadership rebukes
them but doesn’t see their own actions as a factor in pushing the “rebels” into
the arms of every wind of doctrine that would reach out to embrace them. Also,
oppression against women in some churches many times seems to rival the
oppression of women in certain cultures around the world. Disallowing women to
be all they were meant to be in Christ and the resulting molding of men into
what they were never meant to be in Christ has crippled much of the church.
This has caused many men and women to give up on the notion that there is a
better, biblical way to function than the male dominant model of marriage and
Christian ministry.
Much
of the body is discouraged by the external persecution and oppression and
scared to rock the boat when it comes to the internal politics of the
church. Whether external or internal,
each of these situations has a strongman. And as Goliath, they present
themselves big, bad, ready for battle, and arrogant. We must remember Ephesians
6:10-18:
Finally,
my brethren, be strong in the Lord, and in the power of his might. Put on the
whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the
devil. For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities,
against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against
spiritual wickedness in high places. Wherefore take unto you the whole
armour of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having
done all, to stand. Stand therefore, having your loins girt about with truth,
and having on the breastplate of righteousness; And your feet shod with the
preparation of the gospel of peace; Above all, taking the shield of faith,
wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked. And
take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of
God: Praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit, and
watching thereunto with all perseverance and supplication for all saints;
We must learn again to recognize the battles and exercise our assaults
in a scriptural way. (A recommendation to view Dean Sherman’s Spiritual Warfare
Seminar)
Verses 12-15 We read that David was the youngest of the sons of Jesse and that David’s three eldest brothers (the Big 3 mentioned when Samuel went to Jesse’s house to anoint the next king in the previous chapter) went to war with Saul against the Philistines while David returned to Bethlehem to feed his father’s sheep.
We
are reminded several times that David was the youngest. Sometimes the youngest
has to do the chores that seem the lowest. He returned to be faithful in what
his station was. We see no sign that he did it grudgingly, but with humility. A
true leader will take the low spot and willingly serve his father and brothers.
As we serve our heavenly Father and our brothers and sisters in Christ, we
position ourselves for greatness when the appointed time comes. There is oftentimes
a time gap between the vision and the appointment. Going about your business
with a good attitude attracts the favor of God in your life. Don’t march with
the arrogant for they will defile you.
Verses 16-23 While Goliath
continued to taunt Israel, Jesse told David to visit his brothers with supplies
for them and cheese for the captains of thousands and take note of their
report. David was obedient to do just as his father requested and witnessed
Goliath taunting Israel.
David
was doing exactly what his father told him to do. His obedience and humility in
everyday life prepared him in so many ways to eventually wear the crown he had
been promised. We see his humility time and time again in his dealings with
Saul. Are you doing what the Father asks or are you doing as you want and
asking the Father to bless it? Do you know the Father’s heart? Are you praying
to God, or praying with God? Are your actions for God, or are your actions with
God? His yoke is light and burden easy.
Verses 24-30 Upon seeing and
hearing Goliath, the men of Israel flee and rehearse before David what great
honor would be bestowed upon the man that kills him. David doesn’t cower, but
vocally challenges the arrogance of this “uncircumcised Philistine” to defy the
armies of the living God. His elder brother rebukes him, reminding him of his rightful
place with the sheep and accusing him of pride in wanting to watch the battle.
But David turned to others and continued to voice his assessment of Goliath.
David
saw the natural circumstances and the foe before them, but He saw the greater
reality by faith. The facts didn’t matter to David, the truth did. David rose
up in faith and Eliab rebuked him for it. Oftentimes the closest people to us
are the ones who try to shut us down when we rise up in faith. David saw that
Goliath’s vibrato was directed primarily at God and knew the God who would
bring the giant down. This wasn’t some untried truth David read in a book or
got at the latest ministry conference. No, David knew God in relationship. Don’t
boast in a truth you haven’t the faith to test and make your own.
Verses 31-37 Word gets to Saul of
David’s defiance of Goliath and Saul sends for David. David states the facts as
he sees them to Saul, but Saul reminds David of his youth and Goliath’s
superior fighting abilities. David then recounts the victories he had over the
lion and the bear that came against the flock and tells Saul that Goliath will
meet the same fate. When David asserts it was the Lord that delivered him in
battle, Saul then gives permission for David to battle.
Your
personal encounters with lions and bears are to prepare you for greater attacks
against the body of Christ. Don’t forget in the midst of your hand-to-hand
combat concerning your life, your marriage, your economic condition, etc., that
there is a bigger war waging that needs the skills you are learning. As we
fight trials, temptation, and tribulation in this world, we must know Jesus
overcame. Don’t be so focused on your
own wars, as emotionally and physically tiring as they can be, to forget the
corporate warfare we must enter into. That day is not coming, it is here. We
are not getting out of this fight. There are no rapture furloughs in God’s
army. Sorry, it’s just not going to happen. So buck up and get yourself
prepared.
Verses 38-40 Saul determined that
David would need his armor to fight the giant, but David would not use it, it
being not his way of battle, and took his sling and gathered five smooth stones
with which to face Goliath.
I
write this section primarily to my brothers and sisters in The Dalles, OR. Over
the last few years many have come from afar telling us they have the superior
way to worship, the superior way to pray, and the superior way to prophesy. And
when their armor didn’t fit, they got offended and belittled us. It’s not that
they had bad armor. It was shiny, adorned with lots of glitz and glitter,
worked in their world, but it was not ours to wear. They forgot that we have
slain a few lions and bears ourselves along the way. We have deep wells here that
were dug long before megachurches and international teaching ministries
overtook us like a one world government.
David knew who he was, where he had come from, and what he had been
through. Even more so, David knew where he was going and how he was going to
get there. Be thankful for the offer, but if the armor doesn’t fit, pick up
your Gorge slingshot and gather five smooth stones from the mighty Columbia and
let’s go to war.
Verses 41-48 David and Goliath draw
near to one another. Goliath is insulted than a youth yielding a shepherd’s
staff and slingshot would come to battle him, and preceded to tell David what
his fate would be at his hand. David did not retreat, but told Goliath what the
Lord would do in delivering the Giant into his hand as a testimony that there
is a God in Israel.
Goliath,
in his arrogance and defiance was put down by David’s humility and reliance.
David did not back down because he knew his God and knew who he was in God. He
approached Goliath much the same way as Jesus did Satan in the wilderness, with
his total reliance on the God who had commissioned him. Don’t let your commissioning
come by the whims of man. Men may do well to confirm your call, but their hands
laid on you can never replace your own character building wilderness experience.
Verses 49-51 David prevailed over
Goliath just as he had said and used Goliath’s own sword to severe his head. We
notice that Goliath unnaturally fell forward, a prostrating of his might before
the humility of the shepherd. When the Philistines saw their strongman
defeated, they fled.
Don’t
settle for wounding the strongman in your battle. Cut off his head! The battle your
church faces right now has a strongman behind it. Be sure the job gets done in
not only the spiritual realm, but in cutting off the stinking thinking that
allowed the bull to bellow in the first place. Romans 12:1-2 gives us keys to
this transformation that may be bloody and hard to cut through. But God’s word is sharp enough to do the
cutting.
Verses 52-58 The victory over
Goliath and retreat of the remaining enemy gave great courage to Israel. They
pursued and slaughtered them in every place they went and then returned to the
Philistine camp and spoiled their tents. David returned Goliath’s head to
Jerusalem but put Goliath’s armor in his own tent.
When you’ve routed
the enemy, go back to his camp and get back some stuff. Get back your strength, your resolve, your humble
swagger back. Spoil his camp. Hang Goliath’s armor in your own tent to remind
you what you can do in God.
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