King David’s Moral Crisis: Lessons in Repentance

King David had a moral crisis when he committed adultery with a beautiful woman named Bathsheba. He complicated and multiplied his sin by deceit and murder after it was revealed to him that she was pregnant with his child.

The husband of Bathsheba was Uriah. He was a trusted soldier of David and was numbered in the elite thirty-seven of 2 Samuel chapter 23. Uriah was ordered from the front lines for the sole purpose of obscuring his wife’s pregnancy as a product of adultery. Uriah refused to keep company with his wife out of concern for his fellow soldiers still on the battlefield.

David took the sin to an even lower level of murder. He wrote orders for Uriah to be put in the most dangerous position of battle guaranteeing his death. This strong faithful soldier faithfully carried his own death sentence to the commander of the army. He died in battle and David brought Bathsheba into his palace as his wife.

I am sure David’s guilt gnawed at his heart. The Prophet Nathan confronted David with an allegorical story of a wealthy man stealing a poor man’s only lamb. David was infuriated by the calloused act and ordered the man to be killed! Then Nathan’s pronouncement unveiled the true story, “You are the man” (2 Sam. 12:7 NLKJV)!

How David’s heart must have crumbled to the floor!  As King, he could have had Nathan executed but he repented with the words, “I have sinned against the Lord” (2 Sam. 12:13).

Psalm 51 was written by David after this incident. We hear the repentant heart of the king as he aspires to be renewed and righteous:

 Create in me a clean heart, O God, 
And renew a steadfast spirit within me.
Do not cast me away from Your presence,
And do not take Your Holy Spirit from me.
Restore to me the joy of Your salvation,
And uphold me by Your generous Spirit.
Psalm 51:10-12 (NKJV)

This Psalm is the proper response of someone who loves God, yet has failed Him miserably. The cries of the broken heart of God’s child who has disappointed His Heavenly Father is a wailing from the deep recesses of one’s soul. Disappointing others is one thing. Disappointing oneself is even harder to bear. Disappointing God is the deepest level of self-disdain. David experienced it and wrote about it.

Our culture has embraced sin. Sin is often glorified and at the very least tolerated. Societal standards can rise and fall but God’s standards are timeless. David knew he had allowed his heart to be pulled off-track by his own fleshly lust. We may use many excuses for our sinfulness but there are really no good excuses for sin. Excuses should never be our scapegoat. Like David, we need to confess and repent of our sins before God.

David cried out to God to “Create in me a clean heart, O God, And renew a steadfast spirit within me” (Ps. 51:10).  After he repented of his sin; he asked for a firewall of prevention from this happening again. He realized his departure from God wasn’t simply a ‘one night stand’ but his heart had surely veered off course before hitting the bottom of the ditch.

“Lord, create in me a clean heart!” A heart cleansed from lust, greed, and pride will never slide aimlessly into sin. None of us are perfect for sure. We should not allow ourselves to become perfected sinners either.

A heart that is continuously washed by the Word, constantly warmed through prayer and worship, and held accountable by righteous brothers and sisters will not find itself in contempt with God.

“Renew a steadfast spirit within me.” The acorns of steadfastness sown in the disciplines of discipleship will cause a steadfast oak to grow big and strong. When we are fortified by the Word and the power of Holy Spirit, we can weather the storms of temptation and attack.

We need to learn from the failures of others as well as the successes often celebrated. David’s failure does not have to be our failure. His prayer for a clean heart and a steadfast spirit are prayers we need to pray before we look over the balcony of a Bathsheba. The preparation of strength before the temptation is much better than the penitence prayed after the failure.

If we have sinned, we have an advocate with the Father—so repent. If we have no current major failures, let’s pray for clean hearts and steadfast spirits today, so we can be strong tomorrow.

My little children, these things I write to you, so that you may not sin. 
And if anyone sins, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous.
1 John 2:1 NKJV

Our Prayer: Lord, create in me a clean heart—one that is clean from outside influences and pure from wrongful inside motives. I ask for a steadfast spirit, so I am not swayed by every wisp of temptation that blows my way. Oh, my Father, I ask, at the very least to obey you and at the very best to please you.  In the Name of Jesus, Amen!

Yours on the Journey,

Harry L. Whitt

 

 

4 Replies to “King David’s Moral Crisis: Lessons in Repentance”

  1. If only David had just gone back inside. Sometimes we find ourselves on the roof and we see something tempting. Just go back inside. Walk away. We all need to take this message to heart. Don’t be that man.

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  2. If only we would forgive as God forgives! We are all sinners. When we fail to forgive, we endanger our own state of grace, but we cling to our grudges even as they damage us. That is so short-sighted. I pray that we can lean into the prayer, “Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors…”

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