Week 19 — Table of Contents
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May 8, 2026
1 Samuel 8:1–10:8; John 5:31–47; Proverbs 11:19–28
1 Samuel 8:1–10:8 The request for a king is presented in 1 Samuel with layers of complexity that resist simple reading. Samuel’s sons are corrupt judges, which gives Israel a legitimate grievance. But the elders frame their request not as a call for better judicial administration but as a desire to be like all the nations, and God names this for what it is: not a rejection of Samuel but a rejection of God as their king. The people want a visible human ruler, and God grants the request while making sure they understand exactly what they are choosing.
Samuel’s speech about the ways of a king is a precise and unsparing catalogue of what the monarchy will cost: sons taken for armies, daughters taken for kitchens, fields and vineyards taxed and distributed to officials, servants conscripted, and a day coming when they will cry out from the king they demanded and God will not answer. The people hear all of it and say: we want a king anyway. It is one of the clearest examples in Scripture of people choosing something with full information and choosing it anyway, because the desire is stronger than the warning.
Saul’s introduction is deliberately understated. He is tall and handsome, from a family of wealth and standing, and he is out looking for his father’s lost donkeys when Samuel finds him. God has already told Samuel that the man who is coming is the one who will restrain the Philistines and lead His people. Saul’s response to Samuel’s hospitality and prophetic words is genuinely humble: "Am I not a Benjaminite, from the least of the tribes of Israel? And is not my clan the humblest of all the clans of the tribe of Benjamin?" The humility is real, for now, and the anointing is real, for always.
John 5:31–47 Jesus addresses the question of testimony directly: He does not bear witness to Himself alone. He points to John the Baptist, whose testimony the leaders accepted at the time; to the works the Father has given Him to accomplish, which testify that the Father sent Him; to the Father’s own voice; and to the Scriptures, which the leaders search diligently, thinking that in them they have eternal life. All of these witnesses point to Jesus, and yet the leaders will not come to Him to have life.
The diagnosis He offers is sharp: they receive glory from one another but do not seek the glory that comes from the only God. Their entire framework for validation is horizontal, accountable to peer approval rather than to God’s judgment. That framework makes it impossible to receive someone who comes in the Father’s name rather than in the name of a recognized institution or tradition. They would receive someone who came in his own name, leveraging existing social capital; they cannot receive someone whose authority comes entirely from above.
Moses, whom they claim as their authority and their hope, is the one who will accuse them. Moses wrote about Jesus, and if they believed Moses they would believe Jesus. The irony is precise: the very source of authority they appeal to against Jesus is the source that testifies most insistently for Him. The problem is not a lack of evidence; it is a settled unwillingness to let the evidence lead where it leads, because the destination requires giving up the glory that comes from one another.
Proverbs 11:19–28 Whoever is steadfast in righteousness will live, but whoever pursues evil will die. The pursuit matters as much as the arrival; what a person moves toward consistently is what they become, and what they become is what they eventually inhabit. Proverbs does not offer a moralistic scoreboard but a description of how formation works: the direction of the heart, sustained over time, produces the person and ultimately the life that person will live.
The generous person will be enriched, and the one who waters will himself be watered. This is not a prosperity formula but an observation about the structure of a life oriented outward rather than inward. Generosity is not depletion but circulation: it moves what it gives and returns what it releases, because a life that hoards eventually stagnates while a life that gives remains in motion. The person who withholds grain is cursed, but blessing is on the head of the one who sells.
Whoever trusts in riches will fall, but the righteous will flourish like a green leaf. The contrast between the falling and the flourishing is the contrast between something that looks substantial but cannot sustain life and something that is genuinely alive because it is rooted in the right soil. Proverbs keeps returning to this image of organic life versus accumulated wealth, not because wealth is evil but because trust placed in wealth rather than in God is a misalignment that eventually shows itself.
Together Israel’s demand for a king and the Jewish leaders’ demand for horizontal validation are expressions of the same underlying problem: the preference for visible, manageable, peer-endorsed authority over the living God. Israel wants a king like the nations because a human king is legible, accountable, and controllable in ways that God is not. The leaders in John 5 receive glory from one another because peer approval is measurable and reciprocal in ways that divine glory is not. Both groups are choosing the comprehensible over the real.
Proverbs names the mechanism: whoever trusts in riches will fall. The "riches" in view are not only financial; they include the social capital of peer approval, the security of conventional religious authority, the comfort of being like everyone else. Israel trusted the form of a monarchy; the leaders trusted the form of Mosaic scholarship. Both forms are real and have value, but when they become the object of trust rather than the vehicle of encounter with God, they become the thing that prevents the very life they were meant to facilitate.
Saul’s initial humility and the leaders’ initial attention to John’s testimony both suggest that the capacity for genuine response is present. What erodes it, in both cases, is the accumulating weight of choosing the visible over the real, the peer-approved over the God-given. Proverbs offers the image of the green leaf precisely because life is not a single decision but a sustained orientation, tended day by day, rooted in something deep enough to hold through drought. The question is not what Israel or the leaders decided on one particular day but what they were consistently moving toward.
May 9, 2026
1 Samuel 10:9–12:25; John 6:1–24; Psalm 58:1–11
1 Samuel 10:9–12:25 Saul prophesies among the prophets and the people ask their famous question: "Is Saul also among the prophets?" It is a question about category disruption: this man does not fit the expected profile of a prophet, and the Spirit working through him challenges everyone’s assumptions about who God uses and how. God can do this, apparently, with anyone. The question the crowd asks in surprise is one the whole narrative of 1 Samuel will continue to press from unexpected angles.
The public selection of Saul by lot at Mizpah finds him hiding among the baggage, which is both genuinely humble and a small premonition of a pattern that will develop. When he is drawn out and stands among the people, he is head and shoulders above everyone, and the people shout "Long live the king." Samuel writes the rights and duties of the kingship in a book and lays it before the LORD. The institution is given structure and accountability from the beginning; the king is not above the law but bound by a written covenant, and this writing before the LORD is the first check on the power being granted.
Samuel’s farewell speech at Gilgal is one of the great valedictory addresses of the Old Testament. He rehearses the history of God’s faithfulness and his own integrity of service, challenges the people to name any wrong he has done them, and then delivers the covenant terms plainly: if you and your king fear the LORD and serve Him, it will go well; if you rebel, the hand of the LORD will be against you. The thunderstorm God sends during the wheat harvest as a sign of His seriousness terrifies the people into asking Samuel to pray for them, and Samuel’s response is characteristic of the man: "Far be it from me to sin against the LORD by ceasing to pray for you."
John 6:1–24 The feeding of the five thousand is the only miracle of Jesus recorded in all four Gospels, and John’s account includes details the others omit. Jesus tests Philip by asking where they can buy bread, knowing what He is about to do: the question is pedagogical, designed to surface what Philip actually believes about resources and possibility. Philip calculates; Andrew finds a boy with five loaves and two fish and brings him forward, then immediately qualifies the offering as obviously insufficient. Both responses are reasonable. Neither is the answer Jesus is looking for.
He takes the loaves, gives thanks, and distributes them, and the crowd eats until they are satisfied. Twelve baskets of fragments remain, more left over than was present at the start. The people recognize that something significant has happened and want to make Jesus king by force, which is precisely the kind of kingship He did not come to establish. He withdraws to the mountain alone, which is its own answer to their ambition: the one who can feed a multitude with a child’s lunch is not interested in the throne they are offering.
The disciples set out across the lake without Him and encounter a storm. Jesus comes to them walking on the water, and they are frightened. His words to them, "It is I; do not be afraid," use the same phrasing as God’s self-identification throughout the Old Testament. He gets into the boat and immediately they are at the land where they were going. John records no extended scene of the walking; the emphasis falls entirely on the arrival. The one who is present with them brings them where they need to go, without drama, without fanfare.
Psalm 58:1–11 The psalm opens with a confrontation of unjust rulers: do you indeed decree what is right, you gods? Do you judge the children of man uprightly? The answer the psalmist gives is no: they devise wrongs in their hearts, their venom is like the venom of a serpent, they are deaf to the voice of charmers. The indictment is specific and the imagery is vivid. Injustice in the hands of those with power is not merely a social problem but a theological one; it is a perversion of what authority is given for.
The psalmist calls on God to break the teeth of the wicked, to let them vanish like water that runs away, to let them be like the snail that dissolves into slime. The violence of the imagery is the violence of someone who has watched injustice operate without consequence and is crying out from the underside of power. This is not personal vindictiveness but theological conviction: a world in which wickedness operates without accountability is a world in which God’s character has not yet been fully expressed in history, and the psalmist is crying out for the gap to be closed.
The closing verses declare that the righteous will rejoice when they see God’s vengeance, not because they delight in suffering but because justice is the expression of God’s own character. People will say: "Surely there is a reward for the righteous; surely there is a God who judges on earth." The affirmation that God judges on earth is not a threat aimed at the wicked but a comfort extended to everyone who has ever watched wickedness prosper and wondered whether the moral arc of the universe is real.
Together Samuel’s farewell and Jesus’ feeding of the multitude are both moments where abundance flows through a faithful intermediary who consistently deflects attention from himself toward God. Samuel says plainly that he has not taken anything from anyone, that his hands are clean, and then turns the conversation immediately to what God has done. Jesus gives thanks before distributing the loaves and then withdraws when the crowd tries to make the miracle about His political potential. Both men are instruments of God’s generosity who understand that the gift belongs to the giver.
The psalm’s cry for justice sits in productive tension with the crowd’s attempt to make Jesus king by force. The people in John 6 want a king who will solve their material problems; they have just been fed and they want more of what that feels like, institutionalized. What the psalmist wants is something deeper: a God who judges on earth, who vindicates the righteous and exposes the wicked, who ensures that the moral architecture of the universe is not merely theoretical. The crowd is looking for bread; the psalmist is looking for righteousness. Jesus provides the first as a sign pointing to the second.
Saul’s public selection and Jesus’ withdrawal from the crowd who want to crown Him by force illuminate the difference between the kingship Israel chose and the kingship God was always preparing. Saul is chosen because he is tall and handsome and because the people need someone visible to rally around. Jesus walks away from the crowd’s kingmaking because the crown He will wear will not be placed by popular demand but by the Father’s own appointment, on a hill outside Jerusalem, in a form no one in John 6 is yet prepared to understand.
May 10, 2026
1 Samuel 13:1–14:23; John 6:25–59; Psalm 59:1–8
1 Samuel 13:1–14:23 The first crack in Saul’s kingship appears early and in a moment of pressure. Facing a massive Philistine force and watching his own army melt away in fear, Saul waits seven days for Samuel as instructed, and then does not wait quite long enough. He offers the burnt offering himself, and Samuel arrives just as he finishes. The rebuke is precise: you have not kept the command of the LORD your God. Because of this, Saul’s kingdom will not continue. The kingdom that was just beginning is already beginning to end, and it ends over a matter of timing, of waiting one more hour.
What makes this so instructive is that Saul’s reasoning was entirely sensible. His men were scattering, the Philistines were massing, and Samuel had not arrived. The decision to act looked, from every practical angle, like the responsible thing to do. But the command was not a suggestion calibrated to comfortable circumstances; it was an absolute tied to trust, and trust is precisely what Saul’s action violated. He could not wait because he did not actually believe that God’s presence was more decisive than the size of the opposing army.
Jonathan’s raid on the Philistine garrison is everything Saul’s sacrifice was not: a bold act of genuine faith. He says to his armor-bearer, "It may be that the LORD will work for us, for nothing can hinder the LORD from saving by many or by few." The hedge of "it may be" is not doubt but appropriate humility before a God who is not obligated to perform on demand; the action that follows is genuine trust that God’s character makes the attempt worth making. God routs the Philistines with a panic, and the whole army turns the rout into a victory that Saul’s fearful offering never could have produced.
John 6:25–59 The crowd finds Jesus on the other side of the lake and He confronts them directly: you are seeking me not because you saw signs but because you ate your fill of the loaves. They are following the effect rather than reading the cause; they want the bread, not the one who gave it, and Jesus will not pretend the distinction does not matter. He tells them to work not for the food that perishes but for the food that endures to eternal life, which the Son of Man will give them.
When they ask what work they must do, He tells them that the work of God is to believe in the one He has sent. They immediately ask for a sign, invoking the manna in the wilderness, which is a remarkable move given that they were just fed miraculously. Jesus corrects their memory: it was not Moses who gave the bread from heaven but the Father, and the true bread from heaven is not a substance but a person. "I am the bread of life; whoever comes to me shall not hunger, and whoever believes in me shall never thirst."
The discourse intensifies as Jesus says that His flesh is true food and His blood is true drink, and that whoever feeds on His flesh and drinks His blood abides in Him and He in them. The language is deliberately difficult, designed to surface what people are actually willing to hear and follow. Many disciples find it too hard and turn back. Jesus does not call after them with a clarification or a softened version; He turns to the twelve and asks whether they want to leave too. Peter’s answer is one of the most honest in the Gospels: "Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life."
Psalm 59:1–8 David cries out for deliverance from his enemies, who lie in wait for his life without any transgression on his part. The description of the enemy is almost animalistic: they return at evening, howling like dogs and prowling about the city. The sensory vividness of the image captures what it feels like to be hunted, the sound of threat circling in the dark before dawn. David does not minimize what he is facing; he names it in full before turning to God.
But you, O LORD, laugh at them; you hold all the nations in derision. The shift is vertiginous and deliberate. The same God before whom David is crying out in genuine terror is also the God who laughs at the powers that threaten him, not because the threats are not real but because they are so entirely disproportionate to the God they are operating against. The laugh is not cruelty toward David’s enemies but perspective on their ultimate significance. David’s fear and God’s laughter coexist in the same prayer, and neither cancels the other out.
Together Saul’s failure and the crowd’s departure in John 6 are portraits of the same underlying problem: an unwillingness to trust God when trust becomes costly. Saul trusts his own calculation of the military situation over the command he was given; the disciples who turn back find the bread-of-life discourse too demanding for continued allegiance. In both cases, the moment of testing reveals what was always underneath the surface. The outward commitment held as long as the terms were manageable, and no longer.
Jonathan and Peter represent the alternative. Jonathan acts on the character of God rather than the visible odds: nothing can hinder the LORD from saving by many or by few. Peter stays not because the discourse makes comfortable sense but because there is nowhere else to go that has the words of eternal life. Both men are anchored in something that costs them the safety of the obvious decision, and both of them find that what they trusted holds.
Psalm 59 provides the emotional honesty that undergirds both responses. David is genuinely afraid, names the threat with precision, and then holds it alongside the reality of a God who laughs at what threatens His people. That double vision, taking the danger seriously and taking God more seriously still, is what allows Jonathan to step toward the Philistine garrison and Peter to stay when everyone else is leaving. The howling dogs are real. God’s laughter is more real. Living from that conviction is what the life of faith looks like from the inside.
May 11, 2026
1 Samuel 14:24–15:35; John 6:60–7:13; Psalm 59:9–17
1 Samuel 14:24–15:35 Saul’s rash oath in the heat of battle, forbidding any man to eat until evening, is the kind of command that reveals a leader more concerned with demonstrating authority than with the welfare of those he leads. Jonathan, who did not hear the oath, eats honey from a comb and is immediately refreshed; when told of his father’s command he responds with the clarity of someone who has not been trained in self-protective thinking: "My father has troubled the land." The oath costs Israel momentum and nearly costs Jonathan his life, saved only by the people who refuse to let Saul execute his own son.
The command to destroy the Amalekites completely is absolute, and Saul’s incomplete obedience is presented as the decisive turning point of his kingship. He keeps King Agag alive and spares the best of the livestock, explaining to Samuel that the people saved the animals to sacrifice to the LORD. Samuel’s response has echoed through centuries of theological reflection: "Has the LORD as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the LORD? Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to listen than the fat of rams." Saul has given God the second-best thing while keeping the first-best thing for himself and then dressed it up in religious language.
Samuel tells Saul that the LORD has rejected him as king, and then turns to go. Saul grabs his robe and tears it, and Samuel turns the torn robe into a sign: the LORD has torn the kingdom of Israel from Saul this day. Saul’s response to the rejection is telling: he asks Samuel to honor him before the elders and the people. He is thinking about his reputation, not about God. He does not ask Samuel to intercede for his restoration to favor; he asks to be seen well by the people watching. And Samuel grieves for Saul, and the LORD regrets that He made Saul king over Israel. The grief on both sides is real and the rupture is permanent.
John 6:60–7:13 When many of His disciples grumble that the teaching is too hard and begin to depart, Jesus asks whether this offends them, and then raises the stakes rather than lowering them: "What if you were to see the Son of Man ascending to where he was before?" He is telling them that the discourse about flesh and blood was not the most demanding thing He will ask them to receive. The Spirit gives life; the flesh is no help. The words He speaks are spirit and life, and yet He knows that some of those present do not believe and that one of them will betray Him.
He has chosen twelve, and yet one is a devil. He knows this and does not remove Judas from the inner circle; He continues to invest in the group with full knowledge of its composition. That detail is unsettling and important: Jesus’ purposes are not derailed by the presence of a betrayer. His investment in the eleven is not wasted because the twelfth will defect. He works with what is given and His faithfulness to the group does not depend on the group’s collective faithfulness to Him.
Jesus’ brothers urge Him to go up to the Feast of Tabernacles publicly, and their reasoning has the practical logic of a modern PR strategy: if you want a following, perform where the audience is. John notes that even His brothers did not believe in Him. Jesus tells them that His time has not yet come and that the world hates Him because He testifies that its works are evil. He then goes up to the feast secretly, and the people are divided and murmuring about Him. The public man who withdrew from the crowd trying to make Him king is the same man who attends the feast quietly, on His own terms and His own timetable, not anyone else’s.
Psalm 59:9–17 David declares that he will watch for God, because God is his fortress. He asks that the wicked not be killed too quickly but be made to wander and be brought low so that God’s rule will be seen in their downfall. This is an unusual petition and an honest one: David wants the judgment to be legible, visible, comprehensible to the watching world, not just an abstract exercise of divine authority. He wants people to know what happened and why. The desire for God’s justice to be seen is not vindictiveness but theological passion for His name to be known.
He contrasts the howling, wandering enemies with his own morning song: "I will sing of your strength; I will sing aloud of your steadfast love in the morning." The morning is the specific time because it is when the night’s threat has passed and what God has done in the darkness becomes visible in the light. The song does not wait for the threat to be permanently resolved but for the morning to come, which is enough. God has been his fortress in the night, and that is the material of the morning song.
Together Saul’s partial obedience dressed in religious justification and the disciples’ departure when the teaching becomes too demanding are both portraits of a faith that has found its limit. The limit, in both cases, is the point at which what God asks conflicts with what the person wants. Saul wants the best livestock and King Agag’s life; the disciples want a teacher who does not ask them to eat His flesh and drink His blood. Both groups make their accounting at the margin where cost exceeds willingness, and both discover that God does not adjust His terms to fit the accounting.
Jesus’ knowledge that one of the twelve is a devil and His continued investment in the group anyway is the direct contrast to Saul’s pattern of managing his circumstances toward the outcome he prefers. Saul cannot submit to a command that asks him to destroy what he could use; Jesus cannot be deterred from investing in people He knows will fail and betray Him. The difference is not just strategic but constitutive: one man is oriented toward his own consolidation of power, and the other is oriented entirely toward the Father’s will and the people the Father has given Him.
Psalm 59’s morning song is the posture that makes the difference between Saul’s trajectory and Jonathan’s, between the departing disciples and the twelve who stay. The morning song does not require that every threat be resolved; it requires only that the night has passed and God has been the fortress in it. David sings in the morning because he watched in the night and found that God held. That watching and singing, that faith sustained through the darkness until the light, is what Saul could not manage and what the departing disciples were not yet willing to attempt.
May 12, 2026
1 Samuel 16:1–17:37; John 7:14–44; Proverbs 11:29–12:7
1 Samuel 16:1–17:37 God’s instruction to Samuel to stop grieving over Saul and go anoint the next king is one of the most intimate moments between God and His prophet in the entire narrative. Samuel’s grief is real and appropriate; God does not rebuke it. He simply says: how long? There is a time for grief, and there is a time to move. God points him toward Jesse’s house in Bethlehem, and Samuel goes, but when he sees Eliab’s impressive height and bearing he thinks: surely this is the LORD’s anointed. The rebuke he receives is the defining hermeneutical principle of the whole Samuel narrative: "The LORD sees not as man sees; man looks on the outward appearance, but the LORD looks on the heart."
Seven sons pass before Samuel and none of them is the one, and Samuel asks whether Jesse has another. The youngest is out keeping sheep, and David is brought in, and the LORD says "Arise, anoint him; this is he." The Spirit of the LORD rushes upon David from that day forward, and the Spirit departs from Saul, replaced by a harmful spirit. The transfer is not just political but spiritual, and the juxtaposition of David anointed in secret and Saul tormented in his palace sets up the entire arc of what follows.
Goliath’s challenge to Israel spans forty days, and the army’s fear in the face of it is presented without softening. David arrives to bring food to his brothers and hears the challenge, and his response is instinctive: "Who is this uncircumcised Philistine, that he should defy the armies of the living God?" He is not performing courage; he is genuinely confused that the question is still open. His brother Eliab rebukes him with contempt, reading his presence as arrogance rather than faith, but David simply asks, "Is there not a cause?" before Saul, who agrees to let him go after explaining why the match is obviously impossible. David’s response is the clearest statement of the whole narrative’s theology: the LORD who delivered me from the lion and the bear will deliver me from this Philistine. He has a track record with God, and that track record is his actual equipment.
John 7:14–44 Jesus teaches in the temple in the middle of the feast and the people marvel at His learning, since He has not studied in the formal rabbinic tradition. He redirects immediately: His teaching is not His own but comes from the one who sent Him, and anyone who is willing to do God’s will can know whether the teaching comes from God or whether He speaks on His own authority. The test He offers for discerning true teaching is not academic credential but orientation of will: the person who genuinely wants to do God’s will is positioned to recognize God’s voice.
He challenges the crowd about their desire to kill Him and they deny it, but the attempt to arrest Him runs through the entire chapter. He speaks of going where they cannot find Him, and they debate where He could possibly go: to the diaspora Jews, to the Greeks? They do not understand that He is speaking of returning to the Father who sent Him. The misunderstandings are consistent throughout John’s Gospel: His words are taken at the most literal and earthly level when He is always speaking of something that originates above and descends.
The crowd is divided: some say He is the Prophet, some say He is the Christ, others object that the Christ will not come from Galilee. No one has done a careful enough investigation to know that He was born in Bethlehem; they are arguing from assumptions they have not verified. John allows the irony to sit without comment: the people debating whether Jesus meets the messianic criteria from Galilee are arguing about a man who was born exactly where Micah said the ruler of Israel would come from, and they do not know it.
Proverbs 11:29–12:7 Whoever troubles his own household will inherit the wind, and the fool will be servant to the wise. The household, in Proverbs, is not just a domestic unit but the primary institution through which a life is built and a legacy is formed. The person who disrupts it through selfishness or foolishness does not just damage a family; they dismantle the structure through which blessing was meant to flow to the next generation. The inheritance of wind is a devastatingly precise image: the appearance of possession with no actual substance.
The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life, and whoever captures souls is wise. The imagery of trees and fruit and capturing connects wisdom to organic, relational abundance: the wise person’s life produces something that others can draw life from, and their engagement with others results in genuine gain rather than exploitation. Proverbs consistently describes wisdom not as an isolated personal achievement but as something that flows outward into benefit for others.
Whoever loves discipline loves knowledge, but whoever hates reproof is stupid. The bluntness is characteristic of Proverbs and intentional: the inability to receive correction is not presented as a personality type to be accommodated but as a form of stupidity that leads to ruin. A good man obtains favor from the LORD, but a man of evil devices He condemns. The root of the righteous will never be moved; the wicked will be overthrown and are no more. The deep rootedness of the righteous versus the overthrow of the wicked is Proverbs’ consistent answer to the apparent prosperity of those who live without reference to God.
Together God’s declaration that He looks on the heart rather than the outward appearance is the hermeneutical key not only to David’s anointing but to everything Jesus is doing in John 7. The crowd in the temple is evaluating Him by outward criteria: where did He study, where is He from, does He fit the geographical and genealogical profile they expect. God chose David over seven older and more impressive brothers because He saw what they could not see. Jesus teaches with authority that no recognized school produced because His teaching comes from the Father, which is a source no human credentialing system can verify or confer.
Proverbs provides the underlying principle: the fruit of the righteous is a tree of life, and the roots of the righteous will never be moved. The person formed from the inside outward, whose character is shaped by genuine wisdom and genuine fear of the LORD, does not need outward markers to validate what is real. David needs no armor; Jonathan needs no advantage; Jesus needs no rabbinic pedigree. What each of them carries is of a different order than what the evaluating eye can see.
The crowd arguing about Jesus’ origins and the brothers evaluating Jesse’s sons by height and bearing are making the same mistake: they are looking where they have always looked, using the criteria they have always used, and missing the one God has already chosen. The invitation of all three passages is toward a different kind of seeing, toward the willingness to let God’s assessment override the obvious read, to trust that what He has anointed and what He has sent will bear fruit that no merely outward inspection could have predicted.
May 13, 2026
1 Samuel 17:38–18:30; John 7:45–8:11; Psalm 60:1–4
1 Samuel 17:38–18:30 David declines Saul’s armor because he has not tested it, and that refusal is more than practical: he is declining to fight on Saul’s terms with Saul’s equipment, choosing instead the tools he has already learned to trust in God’s service. He picks up five smooth stones and approaches Goliath, who is insulted by the sight of him. David’s response to Goliath’s contempt is one of the great speeches of the Old Testament: "You come to me with a sword and with a spear and with a javelin, but I come to you in the name of the LORD of hosts." He then promises a specific and comprehensive defeat, not for his own glory but so that all the earth may know that there is a God in Israel.
The stone hits, Goliath falls, David cuts off his head with Goliath’s own sword, and the Philistines flee. Jonathan’s soul is knit to David’s soul from the moment they meet after the battle, and the covenant they make is the beginning of one of the most extraordinary friendships in Scripture. Jonathan gives David his robe, his armor, his sword, his bow, and his belt, which is a symbolic transfer of the royal identity that Jonathan might have been expected to inherit. He gives David everything that marks him as the king’s son, seemingly without calculation or grief.
Saul’s increasing jealousy of David is presented as the direct consequence of David’s success, which is the direct consequence of the LORD being with him. The women’s song after the battle, "Saul has struck down his thousands, and David his ten thousands," is simply a numerical comparison that Saul cannot bear, and from that day he eyes David with suspicion. His attempts to kill David by pinning him to the wall with a spear, his schemes to use his daughters as snares, his offers of marriage conditional on David’s military service: all of them misfire because the LORD is with David and Saul’s plans keep producing the opposite of what he intends.
John 7:45–8:11 The officers sent to arrest Jesus return to the chief priests and Pharisees empty-handed, and their explanation is remarkable: "No one ever spoke like this man." They are not making a theological claim but an aesthetic and moral one; they have encountered something in His words that they cannot classify or dismiss, and they know it. Nicodemus, appearing briefly and obliquely, asks whether their law judges a man without first hearing him, and is rebuffed with contempt: "Are you from Galilee too?" The leaders’ certainty is sealed against any process that might genuinely evaluate the evidence.
The woman caught in adultery is one of the most carefully constructed scenes in the Gospels. The scribes and Pharisees bring her as a trap, not because they care about the law’s integrity but because they want to catch Jesus between the law’s demand and His reputation for mercy. He crouches down and writes in the dirt, a detail that has generated endless speculation about its content, and then delivers the line that collapses the trap: "Let him who is without sin among you be the first to throw a stone at her." He crouches again and writes again, and they leave one by one, the eldest first.
What remains is only Jesus and the woman, and He asks her where her accusers are. She says there are none. "Neither do I condemn you; go, and from now on sin no more." The mercy and the moral seriousness belong together in a single sentence. He does not excuse what she has done; He refuses to be her executioner while making clear that what she has been doing is not what she should continue to do. The woman who was brought as a weapon against Jesus leaves as someone encountered by grace, which is the opposite of what her accusers intended.
Psalm 60:1–4 The psalm opens with a stark acknowledgment that God has rejected and broken and been angry with His people. This is not a comfortable opening, and it is not softened: O God, you have rejected us, broken our defenses, you have been angry; restore us. David does not explain away the difficulty or reframe it into something more spiritually palatable. He names what has happened and brings it directly to God, which is itself an act of faith: only someone who still believes God is present and responsive cries out to Him in the moment of His apparent absence.
He has made the land quake and torn it open and now he asks God to repair its breaches. The people have seen hard things and drunk the wine of staggering. But then he declares: you have set up a banner for those who fear you, that they may flee to it. Even in the psalm of national loss and divine rejection, there is a banner, a rallying point, a place to run. The banner does not mean the battle is over or the wound is healed; it means there is still a God to run toward even when running toward Him requires acknowledging that He is the one who broke what needs to be repaired.
Together David’s refusal of Saul’s armor and Jesus’ refusal to be trapped by the Pharisees’ use of the woman both reveal the same quality: they operate from a different set of resources than the situation seems to call for. David fights with five stones and the name of the LORD of hosts. Jesus defeats a legal trap by crouching in the dirt and writing, then speaking one sentence. Neither response is what anyone in the scene is expecting, and neither response is available to someone who is operating within the conventional logic of the moment. Both require the kind of unhurried clarity that comes from knowing who you are and who sent you.
Jonathan’s gift of his robe and armor to David and Jesus’ gift of mercy and moral seriousness to the woman are both acts of radical generosity toward someone who has not earned them and cannot repay them. Jonathan gives David everything that marks him as heir to the throne; Jesus gives the woman the one thing her accusers were not offering: the possibility of a different future. In both cases, the gift is costly to the giver and transformative for the receiver, and in both cases it is given without calculation.
Psalm 60’s honest acknowledgment of divine rejection alongside its declaration of a banner to run toward describes the interior landscape of every faithful person who has stood where David stood before Goliath, or where the woman stood before her accusers: knowing that things have gone badly, that the visible situation is against them, and yet finding that there is still a God to run toward and still a name to fight in. That combination of honest lament and stubborn hope is not naivety; it is the posture that God keeps vindicating, one smooth stone at a time.