Unashamed with the Robertson Family - Ep 1249 | The Robertsons Confront the Myth That Forgiveness Erases Consequences

Episode Date: January 16, 2026

Al, Zach, John Luke, and Christian conclude their study of David by confronting the truth that forgiveness does not erase consequences. They trace how unaddressed sin and lingering guilt created a lea...dership vacuum that fractured David’s family, fueled rebellion, and led to civil war and the death of thousands. The guys show how private sin inevitably becomes public and why silence after repentance can be as destructive as the original failure. They close by pointing to Jesus as the true Shepherd-King who restores what sin deforms and leads with justice and mercy.  In this episode: Psalm 51; 2 Samuel 7, verses 12–16; 2 Samuel 12, verses 1–14; Genesis 4, verses 1–8; 1 Samuel 16, verses 1–13; 2 Samuel 21, verses 1–14; 2 Samuel 24, verses 15–25; Matthew 1, verses 1–17 Today's conversation is about Lessons 7 & 8 of The David Story: Shepherd, Father, King taught by Hillsdale Professor Justin Jackson. Take the course with us at no cost to you! Sign up at http://unashamedforhillsdale.com/ More about The David Story: Encounter the beauty of the Bible. The David Story: Shepherd, Father, King explores the lives of Israel's first two kings—Saul and David—to discover the Bible’s profound lessons about fatherhood, the nature of sin, and the consequences of sin on both a family and a nation. While David suffers great tragedies due to his own transgressions, he models a path to redemption through repentance. Join Professor Justin Jackson in a careful reading of First and Second Samuel to gain a deeper understanding of the meaning and beauty of this story that is not only fundamental to the Christian and Jewish faiths, but also a literary masterpiece. Join us today in this pursuit of a deeper understanding of the Bible in “The David Story.” Sign up at ⁠http://unashamedforhillsdale.com/ Check out At Home with Phil Robertson, nearly 800 episodes of Phil's unfiltered wisdom, humor, and biblical truth, available for free for the first time! Get it on Apple, Spotify, Amazon, and anywhere you listen to podcasts! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/at-home-with-phil-robertson/id1835224621 Listen to Not Yet Now with Zach Dasher on Apple, Spotify, iHeart, or anywhere you get podcasts. Chapters: 00:00-09:38 Private sin becomes public collapse 09:39-14:54 When forgiveness doesn’t erase consequences 14:55-22:21 Neutrality isn’t the same as innocence 22:22-30:26 Absolom’s hair becomes his downfall 30:27-39:55 David returns to his shepherd origins 39:56-49:31 Jesus fixes the world David broke — Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 I am unashamed. What about you? Welcome back to the Unashamed podcast Hillsdale Friday episode. We're going through the study of David, and it's been an emotional roller coaster, guys. I don't know how you are. How are y'all holding up with everything that we've been talking about? We're sitting here. So, Zach, I know you had to put your glasses on to see, but I can't see it. This is our, this is our, This is our last episode in the life of David. And so I have completed my course, the David story, Shepard Father and King. I printed it all for you to be able to see.
Starting point is 00:00:42 This is my sheepskin. It's a certificate. It's my certificate. Racking up accolades, boys. My third one from Hillsdale, I'm very proud of this moment. Yeah. How much if you pay for it? How much it cost you now?
Starting point is 00:00:54 It was completely free, Zach. Completely free. It was free. But I have been super blessed. by the discussion. Right. If you are listening, we're gonna do the last two episodes. That's why Al said his certificate from the last episode.
Starting point is 00:01:08 So this is seven and eight of the David series. Yeah, and it's been really good. And I feel like we just need to dive in because we were, we kind of left off at this kind of guilt-ridden David because now his children are beginning to follow his footsteps. And so we have a son raping, a daughter, who now is going to be vindicated with vengeance by Absalom, which is this going to send him down this spiral, which is, again, going to cause more angst to this family. And John Leuke asked the question when we were at the end of the last podcast about the power of guilt.
Starting point is 00:01:52 And it made me think about, because we've been talking about, like, Dad and the blind, we talked about that, that Lucene My movie we're working on. But I thought about this with Dad. You know, Dad understood healing. Same thing from Psalm 51. He embraced that, understood that he left that life he was in, although there was 10 years there. But there were consequences that still would play itself out over the course of his whole life, our whole lives, us having things we had to deal with as part of the
Starting point is 00:02:22 and I was a prodigal. It wasn't dad's fault. I made my own decisions, but you can't live life like outside of the vacuum of a family. You know, when things, bad things happen, you have to deal with it. But, you know, 44 years go by, and then dad finds out he has a daughter because Phyllis was just here this week, this week staying with us. And so last night we had some people over and Tony Phillips were there. And so we were telling this couple who had not heard their story. I was telling the story of how she discovered us and all this. But I thought, thought about it, dad had to relive the last few years of his life a lot of guilt because here's this daughter he never knew he had and she didn't grow up knowing her dad and she desperately
Starting point is 00:03:05 wanted to know who her dad was. And so the last five years of his life, she lived here to try to have a relationship with that. And they did. They bonded. It was great. But I saw dad deal with some guilt stuff that he hadn't dealt with in many, many years. And so it just gave me a picture here because we talk about how that David was so changed by the affair and the murder and the death of the child. And now it's almost like he's kind of vapor locked and not being able to deal with his kids because he handles everything badly, you know, like in terms of as they spiral out of control. He just, he doesn't have it in him to be the old David. So there is, there is something about even redeemed that consequence and guilt will always play a role. You just have to let it not
Starting point is 00:03:51 It lingers. It lingers. But I think, you know, Phil's story is interesting because that, that, when Phyllis came to light, you know, we found out about Phyllis. I remember when you were up here in Black Mountain and we were sitting at dinner and you told me about the whole thing and showed me the envelope. And I was like, ooh, this is something real.
Starting point is 00:04:08 But that coincided with us writing the story, the blind. And so he was also reliving at three literally like the interviews that, you know, I was doing. And I think that when you watch the blind, because, I mean, David's story is, I mean, Phil, I mean, he's day. We're all David. That's the thing, right? But David's story.
Starting point is 00:04:27 Here's the man. Here's, you are the man. You are the man. And just kind of recapping that. Like, David's story, it just collapses in on itself. It really does. It collapses in on itself. But the story of God's covenant faithfulness does not collapse.
Starting point is 00:04:43 And that is the promise that the 2nd Samuel 7 identifies when it says that, you know, you're not going to build me a house. I'm going to build you a house, but that fulfillment was not found in David. It was found in Solomon. I'm sorry, I'm sorry. That fulfillment was, I would say that. That fulfillment was not found in David. It was not found in Solomon.
Starting point is 00:05:02 It was ultimately found in Jesus, the true shepherd king, who never, ever abdicates his responsibility, who never ever misuses power. And so when you look at David, because Jesus was in the line of David, but David took a woman. Well, Jesus gives himself for his bride. where David killed to hide his sin, Jesus dies to forgive sin. And where David built his house, Jesus will end up building an eternal house in the fact that he will be the cornerstone of a new temple. So all of this, this whole guilt stuff, it's real, it's there.
Starting point is 00:05:36 And I tell people, just because you're done with sin doesn't mean sin's done with you. We may have earthly consequences of the life that we used to live, the thing that we're repenting from. But ultimately, you may deal with that the rest of your life. But here's the promise. Ultimately, in Christ, all things will be made new, all things will be made right. In Jesus, it will all be fulfilled. And so that is the tension of kind of that not yet now, kingdom that we talk about a lot.
Starting point is 00:06:00 We're sitting in this, but that guilt, I mean, it may linger for a while. It may pop its head back up when you're 75 years old and want to make a movie and find out you have a daughter you didn't know about it. It may rear its ugly head again. And I think that's part of the point that going forward that we see. So just to continue the narrative of the story, Amnon, who has now raped the sister and cast her out and just demeaned her and treated her terribly. She goes to her brother Absalom and tells him what happens.
Starting point is 00:06:31 He says, put it out of your heart. Remember he's just like, don't worry about it. And he knows then he's going to do something about it. Oh, yeah. You know, he knows. In his heart right there, he's like, I will. He decides that he decides. He doesn't kill Amnon.
Starting point is 00:06:46 He's going to kill him. And it takes, what is it, two years? Yeah. that go by and he's still harpering this. So think about what a two years that was. Right. And then he, and then he once again,
Starting point is 00:06:56 David gets used as the messenger to lure now the brother out and all the other sons as well into a setting where Absalon is going to get his revenge. And he's going to murder his brother. And so now we're second generation murder in this family because now they're killing each other, raping each other. I mean, so now we see it. reminds me, Zach, of the garden where you have the fall, and then you get to Genesis 4,
Starting point is 00:07:25 and the fall has just happened, but we only go one chapter, and we got sons murdering each other. And then two chapters later, we got every person on the earth at that time thinking violence and wickedness. I mean, just that progressive. It got evil in a hurry. I don't think we don't realize how evil it got, but yeah, good point. Exactly. And so that's what you see here. And I think every step of the way, everything that happens, David, now as a father, is watching the failures, but also as a king, he's seeing failure as well. And he's just, he's just ignoring it, basically. I mean, he provides no justice for the rape, and now he provides no justice for the murder. It's just like, we just won't talk about it. Well, and that's, that's such a, that's
Starting point is 00:08:10 such a point, whereas David kind of just, like, gives up, and that's what I said in the last episode, he God forgives him and that's like David goes to God ask forgiveness and Nathan confirms like there will be these consequences but you're forgiven and David
Starting point is 00:08:28 doesn't really accept that like he he feels all that guilt and I might be reading myself into this but it seems like David just loses confidence like he just is like so paralyzed by what he did it's like he just doesn't want to make another mistake. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:48 So he just doesn't do anything. That's it. And like when David found out about Tamar and Amnon, if he had acted right then, nothing would have happened. Like, Absalom would have been like, oh, you did it. Like, I don't have to do anything. You took care of it after Absalom killed Amnon had David have acted. The next thing would have happened.
Starting point is 00:09:15 Right. After Joe of Bikil Absoom, the next day, like every point of the story, David just is, keeps falling back to that, just like, I'm out of it. I'm not, he's not sinning. He doesn't have another, like, I think he truly repents to God. It doesn't have another, like, moral failure, but he just loses his confidence in himself. Yeah, it seems like he just kind of like zones out. Because, you even have the, what's his name, Shemai, the guy that's curs,
Starting point is 00:09:45 seeing David. It's a similar story to earlier in the book where, what was Abigail's husband's name? And it's kind of a similar thing. And he's like, who is this guy? And now it's like a complete, he's like just, just letting the dude just hurl insults at him. And you kind of just picture this like man who's just kind of just beaten down and just, yeah, full of guilt. And he's just taking it. But David earlier in the story was like, someone killed him. Yeah. Who is this dog out here? Yeah, no, and you're right. I think it shows you, I think that probably the people around David were thinking, oh, this is, this is patient, David.
Starting point is 00:10:24 This is like the guy that wouldn't turn on. So they're thinking like he's got something in the tank. Really, he's just ignoring the problem. And the problem is when you do this, you notice the other players, they fill that void. Because all of a sudden you see Joab rise up and all these other little advisors. And so now we're starting to see this division. and it's moved out of the personal into the political. Because now Absalom is thinking, well, I'm just going to be king.
Starting point is 00:10:50 And so he starts this deception. I mean, that's the, that's the story. That sin, how did you say it creeps out from the personal into the political? Because sin, what sin does is, I think this is so helpful first to understand it as this way. It creates a world that will eventually shape us in its own image. And so what happens with David's private collapse, actually becomes a public, like, fragmentation. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:18 It seeps into the kingdom, right? And this is something I think we think we can sin in isolation. Because the original sin was a sin of lust, isolation. Then he had the deal. But then the big sin was the killing of Uriah, which, again, I think that was inside of himself as he was figuring this out. But this seeps out into his world. And it reminds me of the story that someone at the church that you guys go to,
Starting point is 00:11:43 they talk about, like, they've gone through this whole period of marital, not it wasn't marital infidelity. They got into like swinging and all kind of crazy stuff. And they end up repenting and turning into Christ. But the, and you know who I'm talking about. Oh, yeah. When she tells her testimony, she talks about the fact that there were hidden sins in her parents' marriage that she never knew about until later that she attributes is that those sins seeped into my marriage.
Starting point is 00:12:11 Yeah. They seeped into my imagination. So I think what's happening here is you're seeing this. You're seeing that this is not, you know, like there's another fourfold prophecy that David gives. Remember the you remember the fourfold judgment that David cast on himself? Then there's a fourfold prophecy in Second Samuel 12. One, the sword's not going to depart from your household. Two, evil's going to rise from within your own household.
Starting point is 00:12:39 three, your wives will be taken publicly and four, what you did in secret will be exposed openly. But that's not God getting even. This is not God saying, okay, I'm going to get you now. This is just the nature of sin. It's an ontological reality of sin. It's the consequence of sin that's folding out here. And that is the nature of sin. It seeps out.
Starting point is 00:13:03 By the way, you want to take this course with us. It's absolutely free. We're finishing up the story of David. You go to Unashamed for Hillsdale.com. You can sign up and take the course for free. But I think that's a really big point, though, Al, that this is not something sin cannot just stay hidden. There's an ontological fallout from sin that you cannot avoid. I don't care who you are.
Starting point is 00:13:24 You cannot avoid it. And, Zach, you've heard this before. You and I have counseled a lot of people doing church work. And a lot of times people say, well, you know, this is something from my past. And, you know, I don't really think this is relevant to my life now or I should keep this from my spouse. I've had this many, many times. And it's this idea that somehow we can have secrets that would affect our relationships, whether it's our spouse or family or anything else. And that somehow that won't damage us or cause division.
Starting point is 00:13:58 It always will. The light of truth is there for a reason. And it's because light sanitizes. You know what I mean, Jesus, how many times he said, I'm light, I'm light, I'm light. We shine. We don't do what's done at night. We're in the day. You know, we're trying to get this out.
Starting point is 00:14:16 And they'll say, well, what if it causes problems? I say, oh, it's going to cause problems because truth does. But you can never get to healing without truth. This story proves what happens when you just ignore things and don't talk about it. And yet, how many times have you've been in a situation? where there'll be a big problem in a family. It could be an addiction or could be something else. And we're just not talking about it.
Starting point is 00:14:40 You know, everybody just ignores it. He's like, you walk through and we're whistling through the graveyard, like, we're not on talk about this problem. Does it fix itself? No, it doesn't fix itself. And all it does is create division and problems within that family unit. That's what I think for David himself, David does repent and God does forgive him,
Starting point is 00:15:02 but David gets stuck in that situation. That's right. And he doesn't take on his new role. That's right. To as king and shepherd for the rest of his family. Right. You know what I mean? I think that's what we're talking about.
Starting point is 00:15:14 Like Davidson does come to light. Everyone sees it. He does bring it to the Lord. He does talk to Nathan. David does all the right things for restoration. And then God is giving him that, but David isn't accepting it because he's stuck in that, like, guilt of his what he did. I mean, I think that's like part of the reason he doesn't take on these like these new challenges I think because he's just is so loses such confident himself of like, well, what can I say
Starting point is 00:15:51 like what can I, David, I mean, I'm told, this is totally just my own thoughts, but David looks at Amnon is like, well, how can I, made the same mistake. Yeah. Like David sees Absalom kill him. It's like, well, I made the same mistake. You know, like, instead of taking that fatherhood role of speaking into them and challenge them on it, he just is lost. Because aren't they scream an out loop for correction? Yes. I mean, I think they both were. I mean, it actually even says that in 14.
Starting point is 00:16:22 I mean, this is on our study guide notes. Absalom returns to Jerusalem after three years, but David refuses to speak to him. In an act of desperation, Absalom Burbs-Jubs, Burns, Jabs feels to get David's attention. Yeah. And we already know Joab is not a guy you want to mess with him. I cannot believe, yeah. Of all the people Joab killed for little things, I cannot believe he didn't. Like, but he was the son.
Starting point is 00:16:43 He does later. He does later. I know, but I'm saying I just would fit. Yeah, but he, but Joab kills the commander. I mean, he does some shady things. He, he is, I mean, Abslon is showing. He's like, he's a grown man, but he's still trapped as a child. And he's screaming for discipline.
Starting point is 00:16:59 Right. He's saying, David, hear me, here I am. How many times have we said that? Our own little small children, they're wanting to know you're there. You're putting the guardrails up. You're putting the boundaries up. And when it happens with grown people, the results are devastating. So the kingdom becomes divided over this because now Absalom, in his last act of rebellion,
Starting point is 00:17:21 basically causes civil war. And 20,000 Israelites are going to lose their life in the civil war, all because one dad won't discipline his son. Right. I mean, that's what we're down to. And won't discipline his son because his son's patterns of lust repeats his own pattern. Correct.
Starting point is 00:17:40 I see and I take. I see me wants, me takes. And so David in this picture, his neutrality is not, he's not neutral. He's actually participating in it even. So this is supposed repentance, but this is the thing about sin, though. We're so obsessed with our justification that we're not seeing this thing. how, like, that's, the way you take sin serious is, is, it's not fixating on damnation because damnation will be, I mean, God will forgive, right?
Starting point is 00:18:10 We know that. And we tell ourselves that, I can do this sin and surely God will forgive me. And you know what? Yes, he will forgive you. But the problem with sin and the fear that I'm learning in my older age, the older I get every single year, I gain a greater fear of sin because I'm starting to understand. that a disordered desire, I can't love.
Starting point is 00:18:33 I can only consume with that. And so you see that this, what happens in God's economy is that sin can never remain private. It's always going to act like a cancer and it's going to metastasize through your entire life. You're in, in David's case, his entire kingdom.
Starting point is 00:18:50 I mean, this started out as him on a roof. No, this started out as him not going to war. Yeah. Right? And now we're talking about 20,000 people being killed in a civil war in his own kingdom simply because it started out with just one, and then just being lazy. I'm going to hang out on this one. It's interesting because, yeah, David, that happens at David's at the house, at the palace, and you know, you have Genesis,
Starting point is 00:19:17 beginning of Genesis. It's the first time that, you know, that sin is used as a, I think it's a verb where it talks about sin is crashing at the door looking for someone to devour. You must master it. And it's interesting that kind of that language, And then you have David on the rooftop looking at Bashiba, bathing on the roof. It was just a parallelism. It's the same rooftop that now Absalom, when he takes briefly the kingdom from David and runs him out of town, guess what he's doing on the same rooftop, having sex with all of David's wives in public on the roof. I mean, that's where this story.
Starting point is 00:19:54 It's the flip. It's the flip. Now David's Uriah. That's right. I mean, it's being played out. That's such a good point. I mean, Absalon's plan actually mirrors the strategy with your eye,
Starting point is 00:20:03 one, getting him isolated, wait till his heart's married with wine, get him drunk, and then let others do the killing. That's his plan. That was David's plan. Remember, let's get,
Starting point is 00:20:13 bring him home, let him be merry, let him, yeah, and then he ends of getting somebody else to kill him. Quick callback, this does not do anything with, it just made me thinking about when you said that,
Starting point is 00:20:21 but he made the point too in the last lecture with, with, whether it's Michael or McCah, I watched the House of David, they call their McCaw. So whatever. Whatever. You say potato.
Starting point is 00:20:32 Yeah. But when she was in the window helping David escape. And then the next time she's in the window, it's when she looks at him and basically despises him. So all those callbacks are so interesting. The rooftop with Absalom and then David and then her with looking out the window helping David escape from Zol. And then the next time it's the window with her and David, it's her despising him because of the game. And even the idea of being barren the rest of her life is thrown in there. to Zach's earlier point from another podcast about that idea about multiply.
Starting point is 00:21:04 I mean, even in her marriage to David, but not only is it a now a loveless marriage, a hate-filled marriage, but it won't even produce any children any future for them as well. So it's just a sad part of the story. If you could go to Unashamed for Hillsdale.com, and you guys can sign up and take this course with us. It's absolutely free. We're in the story of David.
Starting point is 00:21:23 But to your point, Al, that is the nature of sin. I think that's what we're seeing here. that sin, what we're seeing here is David's refusal to get involved in this, all of the, everything. So it's, what it reveals is a deformation that sin causes. And particularly in David's case here, he's like letting all this happen. And John, like you said this earlier, but I want to just reiterate it. This is the consequence of his own sin, that now he doesn't feel like he has the moral
Starting point is 00:21:53 authority to actually lead his family. And the reason that he doesn't feel like he has the moral authority is because what he's, what the sin that he's committed. And so then now you start to see the deformation of sin, how deforms the soul. And so David, is he forgiven? Yes. Is he deformed? Yes. The point is we're all deformed in some degree or another.
Starting point is 00:22:15 And so like you can't get like too bad out of shape on the deformation because we're all deformed. The question is, do you want to be more deformed? I don't. So I'm like, man, whatever deformation I'm, I'm. experiencing now. I don't want any more of that. In fact, I want the redemption of it. And I want to move back to the other direction. So I'm learning a healthy fear of sin that sin deforms the soul. And it has consequences to go far beyond my own personal inner thought life. And that's the sin, right? Because that's too. It's, it's, you commit the sin, right? Then you're forgiven. And then
Starting point is 00:22:49 you have this internal struggle with the enemy of, because then, because then the, he, he kind of flips it, right? Then it's like, but then who are you? Because then you have that call back to your sentence. So then you, because I experience this sometimes too. It's like if I do something terrible, if I do something bad and I repent of it, the last thing I want to do is go try to instruct someone else. And yeah, I love he said that the moral authority because you do kind of feel like a
Starting point is 00:23:15 self-righteousness or you feel this weird feeling of I know what I've done, but now I'm trying to lead this and call this out. It feels hypocritical, and that's the lie that the enemy wants you to believe is that you actually can't, you know, live that out. So it's twofold. It's the deception at the beginning, but then it's also the lie afterwards that you can't move forward from here. Which is why I personally think this, because you mentioned the curses of Shemai. And remember what he kept calling the man of blood? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:51 And I think this civil war, and this is just my. opinion, but I think that's why God wouldn't allow David to build a temple. It wasn't just, because, you know, all the wars that were fought up until, you know, the fall here of David, were all on God's behalf. I mean, he was being called to do it. So you think the man of blood is because of your eye, not because of it. I think the curse he got from this guy, because he said, remember the guy wanted to kill him? And he's like, hey, if the curses are coming from this guy, it's coming from God. So that's some more of this fatalism thinking. But it's also. him recognizing that he deserves it.
Starting point is 00:24:28 And because because of the fallout of his family, 20,000 of his countrymen are dying. That's a pointless war. That makes no sense. Because, I mean, Absalom winds up hanging in a tree, right? Right. So in this setting, I think that's exactly why God told him too much blood. Interesting. You know, that's just my opinion.
Starting point is 00:24:50 No, I agree. I think there's two different, two different sins and two different consequences. going on and that's why I just keep bringing out, I feel so strongly about this, that the, what happens with the Civil War was not inevitable. That was not the consequences of David's sin with Ashiba. The consequence of David's sin with Ashiba was the death of his son, the rape of Tamar, the death of Amnon, and the death of Absalom. The consequences of the Civil War is the sin of not punishing Amnon right in the beginning. Justice. Remember he was about it, just not providing justice.
Starting point is 00:25:31 Yeah, his refusal to participate in the justice, and by doing so, he participated in the demise of the kingdom. Right. And so what you're seeing here, this is a study of a leadership vacuum. Yes. That's what this looks like. And so in the absence of leadership, what's going to happen, somebody's going to step in and do it. And in this case, it happens to be Absalon. And it, and it, and it, and it, absolutely, literally devastates and splits the kingdom eventually. And so that's the thing that when the shepherd refuses to shepherd, guess what? Somebody's going to rise up to fill the void. And that is a man, that'll preach for all of us.
Starting point is 00:26:07 You know, that's a good point, John. And then that even brings out the thought. So the Civil War happens and all this battle is going on. And so Absalom is confident he's going to win. I mean, he's up sleeping with the while. He's got the, he's in charge now. He's growing his hair out. Growing his hair out.
Starting point is 00:26:25 He's back to his five-pound hairdo. He's got that flowing mane. He's in condition. He's riding the donkey, and we could tell him about the donkey. He's riding the donkey, which we know means, and Dr. Jay brings this out, you ride the donkey after you win. That's when you ride it into the, you know, military victory as a symbol of strength and peace. But he's riding donkey in the battle. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:49 And then his hair, this five pounds. beautiful hair gets caught in a tree, pulls him off the donkey, and Christian brought this up. It's like a desert and it's like a sunset and he's just looking at the mule. He's Fabio, right? Slowly galloping out and he's just like, my kingdom. And then he just gets rusted in the heart. That's just the whole point on his hair is that was like the pride. It taught, Dr. Jackson talked about earlier, like his pride was in his hair.
Starting point is 00:27:16 And in this battle, like, I've never been to war, but I've watched a lot of movies. and either their... You've read a lot of books. I've read a lot of books, and either their heads are shaved or they've got, like, even the Vikings had some kind of braid situation going on. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:27:31 Because, like, the hair is a vulnerable spot. It's the reason why you don't want the long hair coming out of a football helmet. Yeah, you don't want people to pull their hair. Adaptism is just letting it flow in the wind, and that's what is his downfall. And then he's, as he's hanging, as Christian says,
Starting point is 00:27:46 the donkey is riding away. And literally the kingdom is going with it because they're losing. because they underestimate. Remember, he made a point about some advisors came and said, look, this David's scrappy. I mean, his people, Joab, these guys, these are killers. We don't want to take these or granted.
Starting point is 00:28:04 What, he didn't listen? Because he thought by now that he knew everything. And again, I keep going back to I see a young man who is not matured past his own hate-filled sense of needing justice. and that's where you're seeing now. He's so blinded by it. And look, and I can say that because I was that young man myself. I was 16 years old.
Starting point is 00:28:29 I thought I knew everything, but I knew nothing. And all it took was about two years of me in a prodigal wandering to figure out that I better get back to dear old dad and make things right. And that's exactly what Absalom is wanting. Instead, Zach, to your point, the power vacuum is filled because now the politicians and the war step in. And you remember, David is only concerned. He said, may be gentle with absin.
Starting point is 00:28:57 In other words, we got a civil war going on. We got 20,000 people dying. And he says, don't make him pay. Yeah. Yeah, that's what shows that his, David, the father, eclipses David the King in this moment. And David the guilt. Yeah, and then, yeah, because that,
Starting point is 00:29:12 you really see the personal and political thread throughout really this whole story. Yeah, because then him and Joab get into it because Joab's like, we're out here, giving our life, you know, for the battle. And the battle's won. And you're shame of us. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:25 Yeah. So it's, you see that riff just continued throughout the story. And again, it's so convoluted. And I really love the, what would you call it? When Dr. Jackson was dealing with this on this lecture, on this last lecture, it was almost an angst he was having by having to say Joab was right. Well, he said he wasn't wrong. Yeah, he said, you don't want to be on the side where you like, you don't want to be on,
Starting point is 00:29:48 yeah, where you side with Joab. Yeah. You don't want to be in that camp. And yet you have to because you see this void of leadership that Zach was talking about. In other words, here's this conniving, murdering, terrible person who is having to now confront David yet again. And even does, tries to pull a Nathan and has like a story about a woman member and all this stuff. And he has this whole situation and he's right because David won't do the right thing. I mean, he's still, you know.
Starting point is 00:30:19 And he killed him. I mean, he started the murder of him when he stabbed him three times. And then he gets murdered. It's terrible. Don't forget to go to unashamed for Hillsdale.com to sign up, take the courses for free, and then join us on the podcast. Go ahead. It's interesting, this line, too, when Absalom gets hung in the tree by his hair, the language dangling between heaven and earth are suspended. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:42 Between heaven and earth. And it's such a picture, right, of this identity that's been. just really suspended. It's like he's not quite, where does he end up at? Where does the whole sin end up at? You end up in this place. I'm not, I'm suspended between the two. And it is an identity that's not rooted and connected. And I think that's the downstream consequence of the sin, of any of our sin, is it does lead to that fragmented, ruptured, suspended identity of our own But what Christ offers us is to root our identity in something real, someone who is real, which is him. And I think that's the story that this whole story of David, you can see Jesus being woven all the way through it.
Starting point is 00:31:31 It's funny you mention that because when you think about Jesus riding into Jerusalem on that donkey as the king and the people are saying, Hosanna, blessed, you know, the king is arriving because he is in that moment. and he's riding that donkey in and to his death that will then be his resurrection and his ascension, which is the setting up of the eternal kingdom. So you see that picture that's right there, and this donkey's not riding off without Jesus on it. But this confrontation, or maybe it's like a clash between the different roles of David, of a shepherd, of king and a father. see he's wrestling with all of that. And you can understand that when you kind of read this whole
Starting point is 00:32:23 story, as we kind of, as we kind of move through the story, the confrontation or the clash, it's like it is inevitable based on the decisions that he's continued to make. Like this, this, this clash is going to happen. But the reason why the clash is going to happen is because David, in his own choices, this is what send us. It fragments us. So his role of, of, of, of is now separate from his role of king and is now separate from his role of father because he's done all these things now. So now he's, it's all fragmented. And so now it's all clashing together. And now he goes to the speak to the identity of what, of what sin, how it distorts that identity. And so Dave is dealing with that and to the point where, you know, he basically gets rebuked by Joab, who's like, what do you do in
Starting point is 00:33:10 like mourning in this way? You're, you know, David's grief. It's my son, my son, Absalon, and Joe up's like, what are you doing? You're demoralizing the troops. Do you don't understand what's happening here? This guy's starting a civil war, and David just can't go there as king because he's stuck in the father role. But then he's also trying to shepherd the kingdom. Then he's also trying to be the shepherd. He's like, all of his responsibilities now, they're separated because his son is now an enemy of the kingdom. And there's no way to his words. Because think about it, he told Joav and all the commanders to go easy on Absalon. So we were saying is, don't kill him. You're just, That's what he told him.
Starting point is 00:33:48 And this is the king. So at one point, if David would have said that, everybody would have listened. Right. Now, when Joab hears he's hanging in the tree, guess what? He goes right down there with the javelins and says, we're going to kill him. And he does. And word gets back to David. And remember, that was kind of a funny story because the first guy comes up and it's like,
Starting point is 00:34:06 I don't know. I know not what. He doesn't even, the translation was just a gar. I don't have the message. Then the Kushite comes along and says, oh, no, he's gone. He's been killed. But once again, David has an opportunity to provide justice. He should have killed Joav.
Starting point is 00:34:25 He should have died for that. He went against direct orders of the commander-in-chief and killed the son. Instead, out of against shame and guilt, he fires him. Which, like, that's going to make him go away. Like, you know, we're on, we got the apprentice, you know, you're fired. Yeah. Because all he does is goes and kills the guy. who was the replacement.
Starting point is 00:34:49 Well, of course he did. He's Joab. That's the way he does things. Yeah. You know, here's the replacement that David has put in. He's dead. And Joab is right back to pulling his shenanigans.
Starting point is 00:34:59 He's not killed until Solomon comes to power. So again, I think it shows this impotence motif. There's one, Zach. There's a new motif for you. This impotence motif that we find David at at the end of his reign because by now he just can't seem to get it right. But how did that say, But how did he start?
Starting point is 00:35:20 I mean, think about David's story at the very beginning. When he was called by God, what was he doing? Shepherding sheep. Shepherding sheep. So what you do see, the beauty of this story, is you do see a full arc at the end of his reign, as king. And as he's turning over the kingdom, he says, it is I who has sinned. These sheep, what have they done? And so David's offering himself up for the people, kind of a foreshadowing of the son of David, right?
Starting point is 00:35:46 And that, but that is the picture. He begins his shepherd and he ultimately does end his shepherd. He comes a long way from, you know, when he was like beautiful David playing the harp, that picture in the early days in his rise to, you know, prominence. And he was a great warrior. But he doesn't end, so he doesn't end with him as the great warrior or the great poet. The story of David ends with him, I'm returning back to the humble origins. I'm still shepherding people.
Starting point is 00:36:14 It's really good. I think towards the end, I think his David shift back to, I kind of shift back to righteousness, I guess you could say, happens in Second Samuel 21 whenever David goes back to war. And I think this is like, I mean, this is what I think is amazing about. Yeah, back what he's supposed to be doing. This is the amazing part of this whole story and this whole literature is you see David start as a shepherd, and then he's annoyed by God,
Starting point is 00:36:48 and then he becomes king, and then he loses that kingdom, and then he's in this, like, mix of tragedy, and then he starts to make his way back to Shepherd. Yeah. And that first step is back on his king roll. He goes back to war. And through this, I think his instincts are right.
Starting point is 00:37:08 I actually think, you know, thinking about it, I think that whole time where he wasn't acting it was in a sense he was doing the right thing leaning more towards forgiveness but it was perverse because he wasn't enacting justice and like he had the right instinct he was forgiving even after Absalom he was forgiving his enemies
Starting point is 00:37:34 he was trying to I think in his mind stop the fight fighting he just didn't want any more blood but that then he wasn't doing his job as king and then in 21 after all this happens he sought the name of the Lord he sought God and God said there was a blood guilt on Saul and on his house because he put the Gideonite
Starting point is 00:37:57 Gibbonites to death so the king called them and then he eventually begins this new justice for Saul and then goes to war with the Philistines and is kind of like taking back on this like calling of God, this like power king move. And then after that war, he then starts to go, like, wind his years down back to where he started as a shepherd. Well, and even, even the close of 24 when we talked about in building an altar, he couldn't build the temple of God. But he does have a priestly moment here where the people are suffering, his people, the sheep of Israel,
Starting point is 00:38:46 and there's these plagues there. And then he builds this altar and says, because he said, David Saul the angel who was striking down the people, this verse 17. And he said to the Lord, I am the one who has sinned and done wrong. So he kind of returns back to that idea. There are, these are but sheep. So, Zach, there he is, back to being a shepherd. What if they done. Let your hand fall up on me and my family. I think about Moses. Remember Moses was like, you know, these people. I don't know. But he's like, look, these are people that you brought out of Egypt. We need, because God was like, I'll just kill them all and start over with you. And he said, no, Moses remembered the sheep, right? Because he was a shepherd. Because he spent 40 years being a shepherd
Starting point is 00:39:29 before he was ready to go get the people out of Israel. You see the same thing here. It's like that returns. Well, you see the force, and that's why you see Jesus, the good shepherd in this too, David says, it is I who have sinned, these sheep, what have they done, let their sin fall on me. Christ says, it is they who have sin, these sheep, what have they done, let their sins fall on me. So you see what Jesus accomplishes what David never could. Jesus actually heals the world that David broke. And so I think this is interesting because when David ends his reign, one of the last things that he says is, very simple, just walk in the ways of the Lord.
Starting point is 00:40:04 You know, when he hands the kingdom over to Solomon, just walk in the way. ways of the Lord. And I get this as a 47-year-old man. Like, I'm getting this now. I'm starting to get this. It's like, what has sin taught me that it never works out like I thought it would? And the older I get, the more I'm kind of like, man, just walk in the ways of the Lord. Just like, Phil used to say this and it would drive me nuts when he would say it. I would think, you know, 10 years ago when he would say it would say it would say, just do the right thing. Do good. Just do the right. And I would just do good. What is the downside of doing good?
Starting point is 00:40:44 I would hear that, though, and I would think, let me sit you down and talk to you about your theology, Phil. And at the end of, now that I'm 10 years out of that, I'm like, no, Phil got it. At the end of his life, he's just like, for crying out loud, just do the right thing. Just walk in the ways of God. This is what this is the promise. This is what's good. And so, David has that so bright. news flash, do good.
Starting point is 00:41:09 What is the downside of loving God and loving your neighbor, Christian? That's it, right? I mean, but you think about how David finishes. He doesn't finish as a perfect man, but how David does finish is he finishes as a man who learned that the kingdom of God will only come through presence and the mercy of God. It's not going to come through strength, their charisma, or like a sort of. superior strategy, none of that. It's going to come through the presence and the mercy of God. That's how the kingdom's going to come. And David gets this at the very end of his life.
Starting point is 00:41:46 Dr. Jackson didn't talk about this, but I think I've heard people mention this, but wasn't, like when David did the census, like wasn't that frowned upon? Like, wasn't he, like, why was that a bad thing? Well, you know, God had always said, even way back and before the Israelites went into the promised land that don't count your horses, don't count your arms. armies because you need to rely on me because when you start counting the armies means that your power you got the power Yeah, so that was kind of the idea about census and you know somehow taking credit for what God has built up Yeah, that was kind of the idea But I thought it was I thought it was interesting
Starting point is 00:42:22 I love that dr. Jay painted this picture with the at the end as a positive with the young woman that comes in with David as It's necessarily a negative like he's in such bad shape that you know he can't stay warm that the idea was is that kind of that lamb has returned to the lap of the guy and the story you know that that was the picture he painted it and that's a beautiful picture because then he goes into this next thing with solomon about following god to zack's point which will make him a great king don't forget to go to unashamed for hillsdale.com to sign up for the course which is free by the way and then it's interesting because david had all these kind of left undone things in the kingdom. And then Solomon's going to come in. And I mean, he's going to kick down doors and take care
Starting point is 00:43:11 of business within the first two chapters of First Kings. I mean, he does it. And it reminded me of the end of the godfather, you know, whenever the Don has died and now, you know, all these people are rising up. And, you know, there's this conniving going on. And so the son, Michael, on the baptism of his God child, just kills everybody. It's like, you know, Everybody thought they were safe and everybody's forgiven. And it was like, no, I'm killing you all because we're going to go to Godfather too. I'm the man. So from a mob perspective, Solomon does this in a kingdom perspective because he has no qualm about justice.
Starting point is 00:43:51 He doesn't have the guilt-ridden thing of his dad. So when he comes to power, he just goes and kicks down doors and says, here's the way we're going to do the kingdom. And it's very interesting then that he's the one that winds up building the temple. later, but I think it's because the blood had been shed, and now there's unity in the kingdom. But it was brought about even at David's end with the right thing in mind. And so I love that he returns to the heart to Zach's point that we saw way back in 1st, Samuel 16, when they had to go get him out of the field because he was taking care of sheep. And he wasn't even going to get picked.
Starting point is 00:44:30 Yeah, yeah, yeah. But he was the guy. It's cool, too, because Dr. Jackson pointed out the redemption part with, you know, with the young virgin when David's old. But I think, too, the redemption and the restoration of the fact that Solomon is king and Solomon is, you know, the son of Bathsheba, which is this whole debacle started with Second Samuel 11. So I think there's even a full redemption in that of Solomon becoming the next king.
Starting point is 00:44:54 And it's on the hinge of David's worst mistake of his life. It's a great insight. And I've said the same thing. when you go and you read the genealogy in Matthew 1, and there you see Bashiba in that, and the physical lineage of Jesus, along with Tamar back in Genesis 38, and a lot of other scandalous situations. And you see the idea that God has always known that through flawed people, the perfect Savior would come. And so that's a great point that, you know, there were other sons.
Starting point is 00:45:29 In fact, when you go read the lineage in Luke, which I think is the difference in the father and the mother and the father, you see the lineage line come through another son of David and not Solomon. But the royal line, that's the line that was chosen. And I think there was reason for that. And I think it's a one that's full of all these flawed people and terrible decisions. Because God has always known our shortcomings from the Garden Christ, which is why he came. So I don't know, Zach. I can't think of a better way to, is Zach there?
Starting point is 00:46:03 Oh, okay. Well, I won't carry it back to him then. So I can't think of a better way like to wrap this whole thing of David than the idea that it was always towards the eternal covenant promise that God never left. Yeah. No matter what happened. And in spite of now, I don't know how many decades we're talking about here over this last part of David's life. but this was a long stretch of this like non-confidence, insecurity.
Starting point is 00:46:32 I mean, this was a big chunk of David's life, and yet you see him come back to his roots of having this heart for God. So I do think it's a great story of redemption and renewal and everything we talked about from Psalm 51. But I also think it's a cautionary tale that we made the point of the roof, rooftop, what do you call it? Rooftop scrolling, that the idea is that if you start down a progressive trail with the evil one, he will lead you to places you do not want to go.
Starting point is 00:47:05 And you remember when Satan went after Jesus directly, he tried to appeal to the same things. Basic desire, oh, you're hungry. You hadn't eaten for 40 days? Well, don't you just make some bread? There's stones everywhere. You got the power. You can do this. And then every time Jesus rebuffed him by saying, no, God,
Starting point is 00:47:25 only, God only. When you got it down the end, look at all the kingdoms of the earth. Aren't they great? They belong to me. And Jesus didn't even dispute that. What do he say? Worship the Lord your God and serve him only. So I think the pathway to the peace we're looking for is in the little decisions every day because they're the ones that the evil one sets the trap for you. And then one bad decision can lead to the next, can lead to the next. And that's when you see the tale here. So it's more than just a tale of redemption. It's a cautionary tale as well. So I don't know. Any final thoughts y'all have before we wrap it?
Starting point is 00:47:57 No, I thought it was awesome. I mean, David's one of my favorite characters in the Bible, and I thought Darth Jackson did a great job articulating his life. And even starting, you know, before that, with First Samuel, with, oh gosh, Eli and Hannah. Yeah. Right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:14 But I thought it was awesome. I learned so much, and I really love looking at it from that lens of the personal and political. That was something that I really took away. So looking forward to whatever our next study is, I thought the David one was awesome. I know. I feel like these just keep getting better. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:29 Well, we're still discussing on where we're headed from here, so it'll be a surprise to you guys next week. We want to hear from you guys on what we should do. Yeah. Well, well, you know, we kind of followed the plan of our audience, but we love having you guys along for the ride. Just as a reminder, unashamed for Hillsdale.com is where you go to sign up for the course. It's free.
Starting point is 00:48:51 You get to not only get some great teaching, from the folks at Hillsdale, but you get our discussion on it as well. So we love that you're taking the journey with us. It's been a lot of fun for us, too. So we'll see you next week on the Unashamed for Hillsdale podcast. Join us every Friday for Unashamed Academy Powered by Hillsdale College. Make sure to go to Unashamed for Hillsdale.com and sign up. It's no calls to you.
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