Gluten Free & God Seeking

Sunday, December 10, 2017

What is God Building in 2 Samuel 7:5?

    The Bible says that David was a man according to God's heart. It wasn't just that David was a godly king, but that his heart matched God's heart.  I learned from the Life-Study of 1 & 2 Samuel that  the main reason why he was called that was because he wanted God to have a permanent dwelling place on earth.

    Before this time God just had the tabernacle.  When the Israelites entered the land of Canaan, they set the tabernacle up in Shiloh, and it was there for around 300 years. But when David became king, he was troubled that although he lived in a house of wood, God still dwelt in the tabernacle of curtains. So he talked to Nathan about it, and this conversation is recorded in the Bible giving us a window into the desire of God's heart. 

  Go and say to My servant David, Thus says Jehovah, Is it you who will build Me a house for Me to dwell in?...Moreover Jehovah declares to you that Jehovah will make you a house. 2 Samuel 7:5, 11B

    I wouldn't have understood the significance of this conversation without chapter 23 of this Life-Study; this excerpt is from page 154-155:

When a sinner turns to God and believes in Christ, he may then have the heart to do something for God. However, to such a person God would say, "Do you intend to do something for Me? You have a great need for Me to do something for you. What I want to do for you is to constitute My Son into your being to be your treasure. Unless I do this for you, you will never have the capacity to do anything for Me"....In 2 Samuel 7:12 God was actually telling David that instead of building something for God, he needed God to build His Son into him...The genuine and intrinsic gospel is that God intends to work Himself in Christ into us (Lee, Witness. Life-Study of 1 & 2 Samuel.  Anaheim: Living Stream Ministry, 1994, Print).

    When I was in college, I read a book this author wrote called The Vision of God's Building, and in this book he traces the line of God's building throughout Scripture. But this building isn't according to our natural thought; it's not like the Sistine Chapel. Although believers do gather in a place of worship, the New Testament tells us clearly that the believers are God's actual dwelling place (Ephesians 2:22). 

    So two things stood out to me in this chapter--Today God is building Himself into our hearts for His spiritual dwelling place.  And the other is that David stopped.  He realized that only God could initiate the building of His house.  I'm sure it's a lot more challenging for God to build Himself into our souls than it is to build a temple of stone and wood!  I'm glad God's not afraid of that kind of challenge!!

 You can listen to excerpts of Witness Lee's speaking on the books of Samuel on the  Life Study of the Bible  with Witness Lee.   You can also read the online Life-Study of 1 & 2 Samuel and check out other resources available to enhance your study of the Bible on Living Stream Ministry's website.

Other Posts on 1 & 2 Samuel:

What We Can Learn From Hannah in Her Prayer in 1 Samuel 1
How God Used Samuel at a Degraded Time in Israel's History
Taking a Closer Look at David in 1 & 2 Samuel

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