Hi all,
Today
we look at the first of two men, one successful in never believing lies
about him but rather believed what God said about him, resulting in
maintaining good emotional and mental health, and the other who refused
to enter the process of un-believing the lie, leading to demonic
oppression, paranoia, depression, sudden fits of rage, and end up
committing suicide. Both were kings in Israel!
The future king David
David
grew up as the 8th son - 7 older brothers! By the time he was a
teenager and as the youngest, he was given the relatively simple task of
watching a few sheep. We have this romantic picture of teenager David
with the sheep, worshipping God on his lyre - the sun is shining,
flowers blooming, the sheep are happy, lambs are jumping around the
field, water from a brook flows gently along...
There
may have been days like that, and it is probably in those times David
countered his family culture and lies his family accused him of with
what the Lord said about him, what he knew in his spirit was a larger
purpose and call on his life. It was this refusing to believe the family
culture of lies about him that built the emotional and mental
foundation that enabled David to fulfill his destiny. And it was a
process over years.
Consider this fact about his family life
Samuel
was the Judge of Israel, the Head of State, and when he came to Jesse's
house neither Jesse nor David's mom nor his brothers even considered
that he might like to be there, or should be included!
Can
you imagine hosting in your home the Head of State for your nation and
not a single family member thinks enough of the teenaged youngest child
to let them know of the visit?!
When
the Lord kept telling Samuel each of the 7 brothers were not who He had
chosen to be king, Samuel had to ask if that was all Jesse's sons. Only
when pressed did the family mention David, the youngest, 'who keeps the
sheep'. It wasn't that David was out of town and couldn't be contacted,
for Samuel said, "Go get him, for I will not even sit down until he
arrives." He was nearby, yet left out. (I Samuel 16:5-11)
Consider the family culture
We
are told in I Samuel 16:18 that David was good looking, a worshipper,
and capable as a soldier, yet in his family's eyes he didn't even exist!
Look at the reaction David's oldest brother had towards him when David
in obedience to his father, brings his brothers supplies at the front
lines of the army:
"Why
did you come here? Why did you leave those few sheep in the wilderness?
I know your pride and your evil* heart! You just came here to see the
battle!" (*Hebrew: Badness, to be so wicked, evil) I Samuel 17:28
We
can tell from Eliab's accusations he felt his little brother was
prideful and did things with ulterior motives, and thought he had an
insignificant job of watching a few sheep. Here again David had
been left out, as his 7 brothers were considered worthy of fighting for
their country, but David had been rejected! And when he heard Goliath
and was moved to join the fight, even then he had to argue his case
before King Saul.
How
many children and teens grow up in a family culture in which they do
not count! A culture of accusation of having ulterior motives even
when they are doing the right and proper thing! Where every effort
to only try and help is met with anger, disgust, and rejection!
How
many grow up in a family where they aren't even noticed, or at the
least not considered to be an important enough member of the family to
be included! How many grew up constantly being given menial tasks just
to keep them busy and away from the family so the family could go and do
their thing?!
Emotionally damaged?
David
had every reason to be at least emotionally damaged, and at the worst
a dangerously depressed loner, angry enough to explode in violence like a
ticking time bomb. Bullied, rejected, family outcast - he was rejected
on all levels! Yet we know David's walk with the Lord was strong,
solidified in the wilderness, from his own heart and in his own words
expressing songs of worship and praise to the Lord.
Why
didn't his family see these good things in him? How many children grow
up longing for a family member or anyone, to see the good in them, to
see the potential in them, but that longing is only met with
condescension, accusation, and a family culture that screams at them,
'Your life doesn't count!' Or perhaps it is just that they were too busy
with careers and church and sports to even notice them.
David
could have gone the other way, believing in the rejection presented
him, believing he had no hope, no future, and that maybe he was in
fact evil and did things with ulterior motives. But he didn't. He
believed the Lord's opinion of him over and above what his own dad and
brothers thought of him.
The down and dirty on how to reject a lie
David
knew himself and what good was in him. That is the first step. Often
even before a person meets the Lord, He (unknown to them) tries to get
them to know themselves, to know their potential and believe in
themselves even when no one else does, by putting in them a knowing that
they are called to a bigger and better purpose than what everyone says
about them. Satan tries to squash that inner knowing however.
What
David believed about himself was confirmed when alone in the
wilderness, for he told King Saul that he had fought off both a lion and
a bear - he knew himself, and he knew what he was capable of.
I
know our righteousness is as filthy rags before we were born again, but
this isn't about righteousness, it is about knowing oneself, knowing
and believing in the call to put off those filthy rags and fulfill the
Lord's plan in our lives. To do that we first must know and believe we
have a divine purpose even when we don't see it.
Satan
gets people to reject even the good they know about themselves - he
gets them to believe what the family culture says about them. David
however, rejected that opportunity to believe the lies, and instead knew
himself and knew areas of his life in which he had been successful. He
remembered the successes.
But I'm way older than a teenager
You
may think it is too late for you because, "I've lived my life believing
a lie(s)." But I can tell you the process of un-believing the lie is
the same path David took in rejecting lies about him from the start.
You
have to take stock of yourself, of your successes, of your gifts, of
your talents, of your character, and know yourself. Stop focusing on the
failures and look at the good the Lord has put inside you, and the
successes He has given you. Get that inside you by spending time
thinking on these things. I know, Satan makes you immediately feel
guilty for praising yourself or finding something good about yourself -
such is the depth of the lie(s) you have believed these many years!
But
you have to break through that - to say that yes, it is ok to see the
good things God put in you, of the good things you have done, of the
successes you have made - even if people or circumstances outside your
control destroyed or ruined your good efforts - acknowledge the good!
When
confronted by King Saul - King Saul is like the devil confronting David
about his youth and inexperience - David stood up to him and told how
he knew himself, how he knew his past successes with the lion and the
bear, and that Goliath would therefore end up like them. You must do
that. Know yourself, and know the good in you and the little successes
you've had. And remember, those aren't successes the world saw and
applauded - when David killed the lion and bear no one saw him but the
Lord.
The
final part of this week's Thoughts is this - David approached Goliath
with confidence because he not only knew himself, he not only knew his
successes, but he knew God was for him. He knew unconditional love from
the Father and our Lord even when he received only hatred from his
family and he believed in the love more than, and rather than, the hate
and rejection.
So
start talking to the Father, worship, soak in His presence, let Him
take you in His arms and tell you how much He loves you. Then let Him
bring up the good things in your memory, and the memories of successes
you have accomplished in this life - no man saw these things or knows
your heart, but the Father does...so let them bring them to remembrance
and let Him affirm you in this way.
More next week...until then, blessings!
John Fenn
cwowi.org and email me at cwowi@aol.com
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar