The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 127: Kindness for the House of Saul (2025)
Episode Date: May 7, 2025Fr. Mike draws our attention to David's kindness towards the house of Saul, including Jonathan's lame son Mephibosheth. We learn that even though Saul persecuted David, David continued to honor his de...scendants. Today's readings are 2 Samuel 9, 1 Chronicles 12, and Psalm 28. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/bibleinayear. Please note: The Bible contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.
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Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Bible in a Year podcast,
where we encounter God's voice and live life through the lens of scripture.
The Bible in a Year podcast is brought to you by Ascension.
Using the Great Adventure Bible timeline, we'll read all the way from Genesis to Revelation,
discovering how the story of salvation unfolds and how we fit into that story today.
Today is Day 127.
We are reading from 2 Samuel 9 and 1 Chronicles 2. We're also that story today. Today is day 127. We are reading from 2 Samuel chapter nine
and 1 Chronicles chapter two.
We're also praying Psalm 28.
I know yesterday was kind of a long episode.
So shorten it down.
I mean, not that we did it on purpose,
but it is only three chapters basically today.
We're reading as always from the translation
called Revised Standard Version, Second Catholic Edition.
I'm using the Great Adventure Bible from Ascension.
Also, if you want to download your own Bible
in a year reading plan, you can visit ascensionpress.com slash Bible in a Year.
And if you've not yet subscribed to this podcast, you can subscribe to this podcast. Whenever you'd
like to subscribe to this podcast, subscribe to this podcast. It's day 127. We're reading 2 Samuel
chapter 9, 1 Chronicles chapter 12 and Psalm 28. The Second Book of Samuel, Chapter 9.
David's Kindness to Mephivisheth.
And David said, Is there still anyone left of the house of Saul, that I may show him
kindness for Jonathan's sake?
Now there was a servant of the house of Saul, whose name was Zeba, and they called him to
David, and the king said to him, Are you Zeba?
And he said, Your servant is he. And the king said, Is there not still some one of the house of Saul that I may show
the kindness of God to him? Zeba said to the king, There is still a son of Jonathan. He
is crippled in his feet. The king said to him, Where is he? And Zeba said to the king,
He is in the house of Machir, the son of Amiel, at Lo-de-Bar.
Then King David sent, and brought him from the house of Makir, the son of Amiel, at Lo-de-Bar.
And Mephibosheth, the son of Jonathan, son of Saul, came to David, and fell on his face,
and did obeisance.
And David said, Mephibosheth.
And he answered, Behold your servant.
And David said to him, Do not fear, for I will show you kindness
for the sake of your father Jonathan, and I will restore to you all the land of Saul
your father, and you shall eat at my table always.' And he did obeisance, and said,
What is your servant, that you should look upon a dead dog such as I? Then the king called
Zeba, Saul's servant, and said to him, All that belonged to Saul and to all his house I have given to your master's son.
And you and your sons and your servants shall till the land for him and shall bring in the
produce that your master's son may have bread to eat.
But Mephibosheth, your master's son, shall always eat at my table.
Now Zeba had fifteen sons and twenty servants.
Then Zeba said to the king, According to all that my lord the king commands his servant,
so will your servant do.
So Mephibosheth ate at David's table like one of the king's sons.
And Mephibosheth had a young son, whose name was Micah.
And all who dwelt in Zeba's house became Mephibosheth's servants.
So Mephibosheth dwelt in Jerusalem, for he ate always at the king's table. Now he was lame in both his feet.
The first book of Chronicles chapter 12 David's followers in the wilderness
Now these are the men who came to David at Zichleg while he could not move about freely because of Saul the son of Kish and
They were among the mighty men who helped him in war.
They were bowmen and could shoot arrows and sling stones with either the right or the left hand.
They were Benjaminites, Saul's kinsmen.
The chief was Ahiazar, then Joash, both sons of Shemaah of Gibeah,
also Jeziel and Pellet, the sons of Asmaveth,
Barakah, Jehu of Anathoth, Ishmael of Gibeon, a mighty man among the thirty and a leader over the thirty,
Jeremiah, Jehaziel, Johanan,
Jozebad of Gidara, Eluzei,
Jeremoth, Bealieh, Shemariah,
Shevatiah the Haruphite, Elkanah, Isshiah,
Azarel, Joazer, and
Al-Kana, Iss Shia, Azarel, Jo-Ezer, and Jasho-Baham, the Korahites, and Jo-Ela, and Zebediah, the sons of Jeruaham of Gidor.
From the Gadites there went over to David at the stronghold in the wilderness mighty
and experienced warriors, expert with shield and spear, whose faces were like the faces
of lions, and who were swift as gazelles upon the mountains. Ezer the chief, Obadiah the second, Eliab third, Mishmina fourth, Jeremiah fifth, Atai sixth,
Eliel seventh, Jokhanan eighth, Elzebad ninth, Jeremiah tenth, Makbanai eleventh.
These Gadites were officers of the army, the lesser over a hundred and the greater over a thousand.
These are the men who crossed the Jordan at the first month, when it was overflowing all
its banks, and put to flight all those in the valleys, to the east and to the west.
And some of the men of Benjamin and Judah came to the stronghold to David.
David went out to meet them and said to them, If you have come to me in friendship to help
me, my heart will be knit to you.
But if to betray me to my adversaries, although there is no wrong in my hands, then may the
God of our fathers see and rebuke you.
Then the Spirit came upon Amasai chief of the thirty, and he said, We are yours, O David,
and with you, O son of Jesse.
Peace, peace to you, and peace to your helpers, for your God helps you."
Then David received them, and made them officers of his troops.
Some of the men of Manasseh deserted to David when he came with the Philistines for the
battle against Saul.
Yet he did not help them, for the rulers of the Philistines took counsel and sent him
away, saying, At peril to our heads he will desert to his master Saul.
As he went to Ziklag, these men of Manasseh deserted to him.
Adna, Josabed, Jadaiya El, Michael, Josabed, Elihu, and Zelethai,
chiefs of thousands in Manasseh.
They helped David against the band of raiders,
for they were all mighty men of valor, and were commanders in the army.
For from day to day men kept coming to David to help him, until there was a great army,
like an army of God.
David's Army at Hebron
These are the numbers of the divisions of the armed troops who came to David in Hebron,
to turn the kingdom of Saul over to him according to the word of the Lord.
The men of Judah bearing shield and, were 6,800 armed troops.
Of the Simeonites, mighty men of valor for war, 7,100.
Of the Levites, 4,600.
The Prince Jehoiada of the house of Aaron, and with him 3,700.
Zadok, a young man, mighty in valor, and twenty-two commanders from his own father's house.
Of the Benjaminites, the kinsmen of Saul, three thousand, of whom the majority had hitherto
kept their allegiance to the house of Saul.
Of the Ephraimites, twenty thousand eight hundred, mighty men of valor, famous men in
their father's houses.
Of the Haft tribe of Manasseh, eighteen thousand, who were expressly named to come and make David king.
Evisakhar, men who had understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do,
two hundred chiefs, and all their kinsmen under their command. Of Zebulun,
fifty thousand seasoned troops, equipped for battle with all the weapons of war, to help David with singleness of purpose.
Of Naphtali, a thousand commanders with whom
were thirty-seven thousand men armed with shield and spear. Of the Danites, twenty-eight
thousand six hundred men equipped for battle. Of Asher, forty thousand seasoned troops ready
for battle. Of the Rubinites and Gaddites and the half-tribe of Manasseh from beyond
the Jordan, one hundred and twenty thousand men, armed with all the weapons of war.
All these, men of war, arrayed in battle order, came to Hebron with full intent to make David
king over all Israel.
Likewise, all the rest of Israel were of a single mind to make David king.
And they were there with David for three days, eating and drinking, for their brethren had
made preparations for them.
And also their neighbors, from as far as Issachar and Zebulun and Naphtali,
came bringing food on donkeys and on camels and on mules and on oxen,
abundant provisions of meal, cakes of figs, clusters of raisins,
and wine and oil, oxen and sheep, for there was joy in Israel.
Psalm 28.
Prayer for Help and Thanksgiving for it.
A Psalm of David.
To you, O Lord, I call.
My rock, be not deaf to me, lest if you be silent to me, I become like those who go down
to the pit.
Hear the voice of my supplication as I cry to you for help, as I lift up my hands toward
your most holy sanctuary
Take me not off with the wicked with those who are workers of evil who speak peace with their neighbors while mischief is in their hearts
Repay them according to their work and according to the evil of their deeds repay them according to the work of their hands
Render them their due reward
Because they do not regard the works of the Lord or the work of His hands, they will break them down and build them up no more.
Blessed be the Lord, for He has heard the voice of my supplications.
The Lord is my strength and my shield.
In Him my heart trusts.
So I am helped, and my heart exalts, and with my song I give thanks to Him.
The Lord is the strength of his people.
He is the saving refuge of his anointed.
Oh, save your people and bless your heritage.
Be their shepherd and carry them forever.
Father in heaven, we give you praise and thank you so much.
Lord God, we thank you for this day.
We thank you for this season of our lives.
We thank you for guiding us and speaking to us
for the last 127 days and shaping our eyes,
our hearts, our minds by your word
and by who you truly are, who you are calling us to be.
We ask you to please fill us with the spirit of courage,
fill us with a singleness of purpose, fill us with the wisdom to be able to know which
actions to take and to know which actions to refrain from taking. We make
this prayer in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen, in the name of the Father
and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Okay, here we go. Gosh, this is so good. Okay,
so in 2nd Samuel chapter 9 we have this this young man named Mephibosheth. So
Mephibosheth, right, we know who that is.
This is the grandson of King Saul.
He is the son of Jonathan.
And even just this chapter, chapter 9, starts off with David asking this really important
question.
Now, we just had, in 2 Samuel chapter 7, we just had David ask the question, what can
I do for God?
Right?
And he says, I want to build a temple.
Here I am, living in Jerusalem.
I live in this really nice house, a house of cedar and the Ark of God is dwelling in a tent.
So what can I do for God? I want to build him a temple. And of course Nathan says no,
someone else is gonna do that. So TBD on that one. But here in 2nd Samuel chapter 9, David's asking the question,
okay, what can I do? What kind of kindness, not can I show to the Lord,
but what kind of kindness can I show to others right now? And he wants to honor
the covenant that he made with his blood brother, right, his covenantal brother,
this friend of his, this deep friend of his, Jonathan. And so he asked, you know,
are there any sons, any family of Jonathan left? And there's one son,
Mephibosheth. And so if you remember that story, we kind of glossed, not glossed
over it, but we just, we didn't touch on it a couple weeks ago when we read the story
where
Mephibosheth with the family of Saul family of Jonathan
They're all racing away and Mephibosheth's nurse dropped him and he became lame in both feet
so unable to walk well he was hurting and
Yet here's David who says no restore to to him, restore to this young man,
even though he is the grandson of my enemy,
he is the son of my blood brother,
he's the son of my friend with whom I made this covenant.
And so, you know, Mephibosheth would think
that here is David, if this is gonna be dynasty,
if Saul is gonna have a dynasty at all,
that would mean that Mephibosheth
would be David's natural born,, like literally born, enemy.
And yet David did not treat him like an enemy in the same way that David so often did not
treat Saul like an enemy and definitely did not treat Jonathan like an enemy.
But he treated him like a friend.
In fact, he treated him like his own son.
He said he would eat at the king's table as one of the king's sons.
Now Mephibosheth would come before the king David with the notion that,
okay, here it is. This is the last day of my life on this planet.
Because it makes sense. The new king would kill any descendant of the old king. David shows his wisdom here.
He just shows so much wisdom and so much compassion.
He shows the kindness of the Lord by saying, no, I do not want to do that.
I want to destroy you. In fact, I want to elevate you and honor you.
No, I've heard people, other people talk about here's David, you know,
keep your friends close, keep your enemies closer.
And that's what David is doing here with Mephisheth keeping him in his
household basically, and letting him be moved around and have some honor.
But you know, keeping him under his thumb, but that doesn't strike
me as David's MO, right?
That's not his modus operandi.
David's MO here is I'm gonna honor King Saul because he was anointed.
I'm gonna honor Jonathan as my friend.
And so of course I'm gonna honor in a real way, not in a kind of duplicitous or manipulative way, this young man Mephibosheth.
It truly scripture just seems to indicate that David's intention was to give honor or to give kindness, you know
As he says is there anyone still left in the house of Saul that I may show him kindness for Jonathan's sake
And this is the question we get to ask ourselves as well
Is there anyone around me right now that I can show kindness to for the Lord's sake now last quick thing in
First Chronicles chapter 12 with all these numbers
I turned her out but in First Chronicles chapter 12
One of the things that we see is we of course were being introduced to David's army in these these continued these mighty men of
David
Now this is his anointing. This is David's being made king and in First Chronicles
It's kind of summing up the story kind of remember if we talked about when we talked about Deuteronomy and Exodus happening at the same time
where we have sorry Deuteronomy and Numbers happening at the same time where
and Deuteronomy is looking back over the story and kind of giving a bird's-eye
view of this. First Chronicles is kind of giving us a little bit of a bird's-eye
view of these of the events that we heard just a couple days ago when it
came to David being named king and David bringing together all
Of the tribes of israel into one united kingdom not no longer a loose confederation of tribes
But actually a united kingdom, but it talks about these men who were part of david's army at hebron
And the the if they have anything in common they have in common their bravery
Their valor they have in common their bravery, their valor,
they have in common their singleness of purpose
and their wisdom.
Now, every one of them is described as being brave, right?
They're all described as having valor.
Their faces were like lions.
They have character, right?
But they're also wise.
This is an interesting thing.
It says that, of the tribes of Benjamin,
it says, of the Benjaminites, the kinsmen of Saul, 3000, of whom the majority had hitherto kept their allegiance
to the house of Saul.
And that makes sense.
And David, you see how David would value that.
Benjaminites, Saul was a Benjaminite.
And David would value the fact that, no,
these Benjaminites were hitherto faithful
to the house of Saul,
because David also recognized the legitimacy
of the house of Saul. And so it makes so much sense that David would not
Only notice this but would honor that kind of thing later on in verse 32 in chapter 12
It also says of is a car men who had understanding of the times to know what Israel ought to do
Again the same kind of thing these men of wisdom
They're not only brave and and have valor
They're men of wisdom the men who could I had understanding understanding of the times meaning that the men of Issachar also
Were faithful to Saul while Saul was king and now they're faithful to David while David is king and again
Keep that in mind that this isn't just someone saving their own skin at least not as is
chronicled in first Chronicles this are a people the people of Issachar who
Have wisdom and they knew when Saul was king will be faithful to the king
When David's king will be faithful to the king and that's so good last little quality that these these soldiers these this army had
Not only were they brave and had valor not only did they have wisdom
But they also had a single mindedness of purpose it goes on does scripture says here that they have this
of purpose. It goes on that scripture says here that they have this dedication and perseverance where they are able to focus in on here is what my job is to do
here. My job is to defend the king. My job is to defend and fight against those
who are enemies of the people of Israel and they had that singleness of purpose.
Not only that, I guess the one last quality, they were very good at what they did, right? There were men of valor who were good
with spear and shield. In fact, some of them are described as being able to
do a bow and arrow and a sling with both their left and their right, which is just
pretty awesome. They can not only sing a stone with their right hands, but also
with their left hands ambidextrous when it comes to battle, which you can see how that would be so,
so incredibly important as they move forward
and have to defend Israel against the Philistines
and those other nations around them.
So here we are on day 127 with Second Samuel
and First Chronicles and just getting the story
and getting the story of David the King going,
because the story of David the King is now going to unfold for the majority of the rest of at second Samuel and
the rest of first Chronicles as we
Learn the story here the story of King David and then in the story of King Solomon as we move forward on this journey
Through the Bible you guys. Oh my goodness. What a what incredible gift
It is to be able to journey with you. That's why I'm praying for you every day because it is an honor
It's an honor to be part of this community this Bible in a year community
I know that you're praying for each other and that is massively important because if we're not praying for each other
We're just we just happen to be a bunch of people who are listening to one podcast on a regular basis
But that's this community is more than that. It is a community because we don't just listen to the same word, the word of God.
We're also lifting each other up before that same God, that God who loves
everyone who's listening to these words. If you're here these words right now,
that means that God is reminding you of how much he loves you and there are
people in this world right now who are praying for you and you are not alone.
I am praying for you, please pray for me.
My name's Father Mike, I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.