The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Introduction to the Royal Kingdom (with Jeff Cavins) - 2022
Episode Date: April 16, 2022Welcome to the Royal Kingdom period! Jeff Cavins joins Fr. Mike to set the scene for this time period. They review the major players, and why the people of Israel asked for a king. For the complete re...ading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/bibleinayear. Please note: The Bible contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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, we are once again joined by Jeff Cavins as we take our steps away
from this last checkpoint we had, the first checkpoint really, the Messianic checkpoint
of the Gospel of John. And now today we're taking that step into the royal kingdom. So
that encompasses 1 and 2 Samuel, that encompasses the beginning of 1 Kings, as well as the books
of Chronicles. And so I'm really excited to have Jeff here with us today as we take this next step
in this next time period. I hope and pray that the Messianic Checkpoint, those seven days we
just experienced of the Gospel of John, was a massive blessing to you. That sense of just being
able to kind of pop your head up and say, okay, this is the fulfillment. Jesus is the fulfillment
of everything that we've been hearing, everything we've been reading, everything
has been proclaimed to us. And now we're going back, back in time to 1 Samuel, 2 Samuel, 1 Kings, and the books of
Chronicles as we see what's happened now that David unites the tribes into one kingdom. So,
Jeff, to orient us as we take these next steps, what do we need to know?
Sure. Well, it's good to be with you once again.
Thanks. You just told us what we need to know? Sure. Well, it's good to be with you once again. Thanks. You just told us what we need to know. Go.
One, two, three. Well, we're entering now, Father, a period, which on your Bible timeline
chart is the purple period, and the purple stands for royalty, because we're going to make a major,
major shift here. And that's one of the reasons we're doing this is we don't want people to get lost. We want them to know exactly where they are at. And as you mentioned, the narrative books are
1 and 2 Samuel and part of 1 Kings. And in this period, as far as the big picture goes,
we're going to see that Israel is going to ask for a king, and we can talk about that.
But they're going to ask for a king, and during this talk about that. But they're going to ask for a king,
and during this period, we're going to see three kings. We're going to see the first king, Saul.
He's going to reign for roughly 40 years. And then David will be the second king, and he's
going to reign for 40 years. And Solomon, his son, will be the third king, and he's going to
reign for 40 years. And so we're going to be looking
particularly at these three kings, but most importantly, David. And something happens
between God and David, namely a covenant, and that's going to give us some structure for
the rest of the story. But I think it's really important, Father, for people to understand where we just
came from in the green period, the conquest and judges. We have to ask ourselves, why would they
want a king? Why would they want a king at this point? And if you remember back in Judges, we have
that spiral where they go from sin to servitude to supplication to salvation and then silence,
and then they continue it. And so in the book of Judges, we see a ever-spiraling,
out-of-control iniquity by the leaders of Israel. So in chapters 3 through 5, you have Othniel,
Ehud, and Deborah. They're pretty good. And then in chapters 6 through
9, we have Gideon, not so good. Then chapters 10 through 12, we have bad, Jephthah, the very
terrible story. And then we have in chapters 13 through 16, Samson, it gets worse. And then
chapters 17 and 18, Micah builds a private temple with his own priests and everything.
And then chapters 19 through 21 of Judges, it just gets plain ugly.
And it's at the end of this, after we have heard for four times in Judges that Israel did not have a king and everyone did what was right in their own eyes.
Yeah.
You know, it's so interesting because we did that, the intro to Conquest and Judges
together and talked about, yeah, it's going to get bad. It's going to get dark. It's going to,
that we talked about that cycle and that the devastation that people experienced and how,
how dark it would get. But I think a lot of people who have been journeying with us
didn't realize until the last couple of days that like, oh my gosh, yeah, you weren't kidding. And
they might've actually even forgotten that we had kind of prepped and said,
just heads up warning, it gets horrible.
I mean, it's absolutely devastating
where God's people had fallen, how far they had fallen.
And now that brings us to now.
Yeah, so what we're doing now
is we're gonna pick up in 1 Samuel
and the very first thing that people are going to encounter
is that Samuel comes on the scene. He's a young boy. He grows up. And there is, in the background,
a division in the country that is taking place, because back in Judges, a civil war really broke
out, and the tribes were against Benjamin because of what he did. And then we have Samuel being
really the leader, or some would say the
13th judge. And the people come to Samuel in chapter 8, and they said, now appoint for us
a king. They said this to Samuel, appoint for us a king to govern us like all other nations.
And at that point, Samuel was very upset. that uh that the thing displeased Samuel when
they said give us a king to govern us and Samuel prayed to the Lord and the Lord said to Samuel
no listen listen to the voice of the people and all that they say to you for they have not rejected
you but they have rejected me from being king over them now I would I would have said, if I were God, I'd say, that's it. I'm done.
I've tried. But God is saying, no, no, give them what they want. And they want a king like all the
other nations. But there's been some warnings about this. If, you know, way back when you were
reading in Deuteronomy chapter 17, it actually said, and you read this, it said that when you come into the land, which the Lord your God gives you and you possess it, you're going to say, I want a king to rule over us.
And he says that a king should not have many horses, a king should not have many wives, and a king should not multiply silver and gold.
And then when you read in 1 Samuel,
after they ask for a king, God gives them sort of a warning. Again, he says, well,
if you want a king, I want you to know something. This is the way of a king. They're going to take
your sons and appoint them to his chariots. They're going to take your daughters and your
sons, put them to work. They're going to take your fields. They're going to tax you.
And the people said, in Hebrew, bring it on.
They said, whatever, whatever.
We want a king.
Yeah, and it doesn't matter.
Yeah, right.
We want a king.
And so they ended up with their first king, who is Saul.
And of all places, he is from the midst of the civil war.
He is from the tribe of Benjamin.
Yeah.
And so he becomes the first king and he reigns for 40 years.
Well, that's remarkable too, because of the fact that at the end of Judges,
what we heard was here's the horror of the tribe of Benjamin,
and that it was happening in the midst of the tribe of Benjamin.
And here, the first king is coming from that tribe.
Now, when it comes to, you mentioned the three kings, Saul, David, and Solomon.
I just need to say it.
It's burning inside of me.
Which one brought gold?
Which one brought frankincense?
And which one brought myrrh?
Is that, those are the same, those are not the same three kings?
Okay.
Sorry.
I just had to do it.
I don't know.
I just, it was, it was it was there yeah that kind of landed flat
anyways um so you know it's remarkable that that even with that warning of here's what's going to
happen um and then if we just see it we see it play out in real time not only with saul but also
with david and with solomon even the highlight you the highlight, David being the prototype king for
the Messiah, he even also has this tendency towards doing exactly what God said he didn't
want to happen, but was going to happen. Right. Well, what happens is it looks like
Saul is going to be the king. And you have to remember clear back in Genesis chapter 12,
this seems like a long time ago now, doesn't it? Where God promised
three things. He said, you're going to receive land, there's going to be a royal dynasty,
and there's going to be worldwide blessing. Well, we're at the point now where they're in the land,
first promise, check, but now there's going to be a royal dynasty that it's going to be created,
and it looks like it could be Saul, but it's not,
because Saul was disobedient a couple of times to the Lord, and it was literally ripped from him
and given to this young David from Bethlehem. And the next key point in our reading here is going to
be 2 Samuel chapter 7, because 2 Samuel chapter 7 is where God is going to make a covenant with David.
And David comes to the Lord and says, hey, you've been traveling around in this tent all this time.
I want to make you a permanent, beautiful structure. And it's almost humorous how God says,
did I say I wasn't doing okay in the tent? Did I ask you to build this structure? And God says something interesting
to David. He says, I'm going to make your name great, which is a way in Hebrew of saying,
I'm starting a royal dynasty. And you know, Father, who ends up on that seat of David later on.
Right, right.
Jesus.
Jesus. Yeah, sorry. I should fill it in. That look in your eyes. I was like I should fill it in. Oh, we should say it out loud.
Yeah, Solomon. No, wait, more to come after Solomon. You know, there is, with this royal
kingdom, there's so much promise. And there is truly promise. As you mentioned, here's the three
promises in that covenant with Abraham. And here's the fulfillment. Well, a partial fulfillment.
Here's the land. Here's the beginning of this royal dynasty. And ultimately, again, through
Jesus Christ, who is the ultimate Messiah. I know that we're mostly following 1 and 2 Samuel and 1
Kings here. But also, would you mind just giving us a little taste or peek into Chronicles? So
here's what I mean. In Chronicles, I've been doing some reading on this
to kind of get brushed up
on getting my lens right,
that Chronicles written
even after the Babylonian exile.
And so Chronicles is pointing out,
written by people who say Ezra the scribe,
that you would say it's pointing out
here is David as the prototype Messiah
or the prototype anointed one we're
waiting for to reestablish that kingdom, as well as the role of temple worship.
Because here, you know, is after the Babylonian exile, we need to recapture and remember our
history.
And so, yes, we have first and second Samuel.
We have the kings.
But also here's Ezra saying, OK, let's go back and be reminded of
the unfaithfulness. And that could be us again, because that's why we were brought into exile in
the first place. And so here's a recapitulation in some ways. I guess maybe my question would be
two questions. One is what's one way that people can read Chronicles concurrently with Samuel and
kings and not be like, oh my gosh, this is the same story
retold over again. And then secondly, what is, yeah, I guess the same question, what's a good
way to approach what seems redundant, but we know that it's not being redundant. It's telling us
another layer of truth. Right. It's exactly right. And it's such a good question because
it's something that we receive a lot. And that is, wait a minute, wait, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Didn't we read this before? Yeah, you did, but it was a different version of it. Here's the easy
way to remember it. You have 1 and 2 Samuel and the first part of 1 Kings as the narrative of the
United Kingdom. At the end of the United Kingdom, you're going to be taking readers through the
divided kingdom. That's going to take place, that's the Black Period Kingdom, you're going to be taking readers through the divided kingdom. That's going to take place.
That's the Black Period, where you're going to have a country called Israel to the north
and Judah down in Jerusalem to the south.
David will always be linked to the south in Jerusalem to Judah.
So if you're going to read Chronicles, along with 1 and 2 Samuel and Kings, you have to understand that it is a revisiting of history, but it focuses on the southern kingdom of Judah, the kingdom that Jesus is going to be coming from.
And the Chronicler has a way of telling all of the really good stuff about David and the king.
And because when you read 1 and 2 Samuel, you find the good and the bad about Saul,
the good and the bad about David, and the good and bad about Solomon.
But Chronicles sticks to the South and gives you kind of another perspective,
another camera shot at all that you're going through in the South.
Yeah.
And so some of those elements in Samuel, as well as beginning of 1 Kings, that do highlight
the fact that even though these men are chosen by God, even though they are anointed, they're
not perfect.
And we've seen that consistently.
I mean, the whole story right now has demonstrated so consistently that a person can be anointed
by God, they can be called by God.
Even the book of Judges, again, here is the Spirit of God upon Samson, who was not a good
judge.
Sorry, he was a good judge, wasn't necessarily a good man.
And yeah, is there any kind of thing we can draw out from that when it comes to not just
our own moral lives, but also paying attention to that as an element of Scripture,
an element of God's story that we should be not forgetting, that we should remember.
Yeah. Well, I think that one thing that our followers here in Bible in a Year are realizing
is that the Bible is not a candy-coated story. It is telling it from every angle, the good,
bad, and the ugly, and that is life. And if you took the United States
right now in history, and it's the greatest nation, some would argue, in the history of the
world, the richest, the most sophisticated, and so forth, well, we can tell you a lot of stories
that are not so good if you really want to know the whole history. And that's what you're getting
when you look at the United Kingdom. You're seeing Saul for 40 years, and Saul's role was really
to unite the tribes, and he actually did a good job. But he was disobedient twice,
and God takes the kingdom, gives it to David, and David now is expanding the kingdom. He's a warrior,
and he expands the kingdom, and God makes a covenant with him where they are one holy kingdom. He's a warrior and he expands the kingdom and God makes a covenant with him where
they are one holy kingdom. They were a nation before that. Now they are a kingdom made up of
a larger bit of property and people. And then after that, Solomon is going to be the builder.
So they all have different functions. We have a uniter in
Saul. We have an expander in David with the covenant being made with David. A royal dynasty
is established, meaning that someone from him, from his life, will be on the throne forever.
And that means that Solomon is the next king. One of Solomon's boys will be the next, the next, the next, the next, all the way to Jesus.
And you can follow that in the genealogy.
But every single one of these three kings had their downfalls, and Solomon perhaps was the worst.
Because as he began his reign, what do we know Solomon for?
We know him for his wisdom.
Wisdom, yeah. Solomon for? We know him for his wisdom. We have the Proverbs and the wisdom of Solomon and the
Ecclesiastes and so many wonderful books that we're going to be going through, but he disobeyed
what was told earlier that a king should not do. A king should not have many chariots, much gold and silver, and many wives.
And all three of those things are related to foreign alliances.
And what God is saying in this kingdom that is established is that the king of Israel should reflect how God rules and reigns.
So you can read some of the Psalms here, and they are the kingly Psalms where
God is saying, this is the way a king should rule. Well, after David, Solomon takes the reigns,
and he is not ruling the way God would rule. And you can find all of this in 1 Kings 10-11, we're going to see that the people have had it with Solomon,
and they want some reform. And they go to Solomon, they say, look, we've had it. This is not good.
The 10 tribes to the north are going to say, this is not good for us at all. And we want to know,
how are you going to rule? They're going to say to Solomon's son, Rehoboam, are you going to rule like Solomon did?
Because Solomon was a mean ruler at the end.
You can read about this in 1 Kings 10 and 11.
It says he had 700 wives and 300 concubines.
He had 1,400 chariots, and he had 666 talents of gold.
All three things that a king should not do, he had all of them in spades.
And his wives, they turned his heart away from God into worshiping the gods of the Canaanites,
the people in the land, Baal and so forth.
And the people had had it with him. And so that brings on the next period,
the divided kingdom. And so as Solomon started out so well, he ended so bad, and that is going
to lead to the next period where the kingdom is going to divide. So in all three kings, you see the good, you see the bad,
and the consequences of it. David, he was a great king, and probably we would consider him the
prototype of a king until Jesus, who is called, interestingly enough, the son of David. But even
David got into trouble with Bathsheba. But here's the difference. Saul got
into trouble, and his heart was unrepentant. He basically said, okay, yeah, all right,
the prophet called me on this. I did it. Let's not make a big deal out of it. No reason to put
it on Facebook, okay? And David, he got into trouble, and Nathan the prophet nailed him with
a message. And what was David's response?
Repentance.
Exactly. Psalm 51, which is, by the way, a great psalm before you go to confession.
Yeah. And after.
And after.
So many times.
Yeah. So you have a tremendous display here of the struggle to rule and reign like God. And then eventually, Jesus is the one who completely does
this. He is the King, and the King of kings and the Lord, the Lord of lords. So it's an action-packed
segment that you're going to be going through. And you just have to follow the narrative from Saul
to David to Solomon. And then towards the end of it, right as you get to 1 Kings
10, 11, and 12, that's where you're going to see the next big change that you got to get a hold of
if you're going to follow the narrative in the Bible. Yeah, it's so important, especially just
recognizing that every one of these kings, the downfall in so many ways was disobedience.
That here was Saul disobedient, here's David disobedient, here was Solomon who was disobedient.
And then we have Christ, right, who is fully made himself obedient.
And by that was exalted, right?
And that sense of that faithfulness and that faithful obedience to his father.
Last thing, just kind of the last minute or two.
Jeff, what are some lenses or what's some things we should be focusing on or paying attention to as we go through this next section
on the royal kingdom?
Sure.
Well, I think one of the things, Father, that people can do is to be reminded once again
that all of the texts that they're going through right now, all of the books they're
reading with you right now are Christocentric. And I would encourage people to continually read it and think about it through the lens of Jesus.
And how would, you know, it's like that bracelet, you know, what would Jesus do?
And to compare that constantly with Saul and David and Solomon, and then I think you will
grow an appreciation for Jesus, the obedient son
and the king of kings. And you can get an idea of how a king should not rule and how a king should
rule. And I think you can translate that into everyday life. For example, how should you be
a father today? How should you be a mother today who's a leader in your home? Or if you have a
business, how do you conduct yourself as someone who is a leader and responsible for other people?
And so we can learn so much from these three kings as far as what not to do and what to do,
but I think also to keep track of those three things that were given in Genesis 12, the land, a royal dynasty,
and a worldwide blessing. And God is showing you through these stories in 1 and 2 Samuel and 1
Kings, he's showing you his heart. That's the second thing that I would encourage people to
read with that lens, that God is showing you his fatherly heart and he is revealing his plan.
And that plan will find its fulfillment in Jesus.
But it's sort of like taking a vacation trip as a family.
Everyone gets packed in the car.
They're getting excited.
They've got their books.
They've got things to drink in the car.
And they're just, oh, it's got to be so great.
And they're going to go to that destination, whether it's Jellystone Park or Black Hills
or the Grand Canyon.
And everyone's in the car ready to go.
And three days later, they get there.
But those three days were a little bit rocky.
I mean, they had some fights in the car.
Don't touch me.
Don't touch me. Don't touch me.
He took my book.
They stopped.
I need to stop at a gas station.
And they ended up getting there.
But the journey there that they were so excited about did have its ups and downs.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's so, I mean, and that's the, I love, as you even mentioned, not just the journey,
but also there's stuff in here about fatherhood.
There's stuff in here about being a good parent.
Again, here's the land, the dynasty, the worldwide blessing.
But even the day-to-day decisions that these people had made, they affect ultimately the
way the kingdom goes.
They affect that blessing.
They affect all these things.
I think sometimes we fail to see the ways in which
some are like, oh, this is just my life. These are my decisions. How those can affect God's ultimate
efficacy in the world and the way that God wants to actually bless the people around us. Because
as part of the church, we're part of that worldwide blessing that God wants to extend
to the entire world through us and in us. And yeah, it's so good. Like you said,
there are so many details that are not neat and
are not clean, but are part of the story. And we're so grateful. I think some people have
experience when they're growing up as like, okay, don't ask questions. When it comes to the Bible,
when it comes to church, when it comes to God, we don't ask questions. And yet we want to encourage
that because theology is faith seeking understanding. And we have to ask questions if
we're going to
seek understanding. So grateful for you, and also for this introduction to the royal kingdom. Every
single time we have this new time period, I know that every one of us who is joining the Bible in
a year, we just are so blessed every time you walk alongside with us, Jeff, and so grateful.
Well, it's a privilege to be with you, Father. You're doing a great job, and it's so fun to
follow along with you and to hear the Word of God. And faith comes by hearing, it's a privilege to be with you, Father. You're doing a great job, and it's so fun to follow along with you and to hear the Word
of God.
And faith comes by hearing and hearing by the Word of God.
So many people are being blessed.
Yeah, so good.
So, and speaking of, we're praying for you all who are walking with us.
And this is more than just a bunch of people listening to a podcast.
This is a community of people who aren't just listening to God's Word, but we're also praying
with God's Word, and we're praying for each other.
So please keep that up. Keep praying for each other. I know you're praying for me and for Jeff. We are praying for you. My name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you
tomorrow. God bless.