Of all the vices, lust is the one many people seem to find
the most difficult to control. This story
of Patriarch David and Bathsheba is from the second book of Samuel in the Bible.
When David first became king he went with his army upon the wars
against the enemies of Israel. But there
came a time when the cares of his kingdom were many, and David left Joab, his
general, to lead his warriors, while he stayed in his palace on Mount Zion.
One evening, about sunset, David was walking upon the roof of
his palace. He looked down into a garden
nearby, and saw a woman who was very beautiful.
David asked one of his servants who this woman was, and he said to him,
“Her name is Bathsheba, and she is the wife of Uriah.”
Now Uriah was an officer in David’s army, under Joab; and at
that time he was fighting in David’s war against the Ammonites, at Rabbah, near
the desert, on the east of Jordan. David
sent for Uriah’s wife, Bathsheba, and talked with her. He loved her, and greatly longed to take her
as one of his own wives. But David could
not marry Bathsheba while her husband, Uriah, was living. Then a wicked thought came into David’s
heart, and he formed a plan to have Uriah killed, so that he could then take
Bathsheba into his own house.
David wrote a letter to Joab, the commander of his army. And in the letter he said, “When there is to
be a fight with the Ammonites, send Uriah into the middle of it, where it will
be the hottest; and manage to leave him there, so that he may be slain by the
Ammonites.”
And Joab did as David had commanded him. He sent Uriah with some brave men to a place
near the wall of the city, where he knew that the enemies would rush out of the city upon them; there
was a fierce fight beside the wall; Uriah was slain, and other brave men with
him. Then Joab sent a messenger to tell
King David how the war was being carried on, and especially that Uriah, one of
his brave officers, had been killed in the fighting.
When David heard this, he said to the messenger, “Say to
Joab, ‘Do not feel troubled at the loss of the men slain in battle. The sword must strike down some. Keep up the siege; press forward and you will
take the city.’”
And after Bathsheba had mourned over her husband’s death for
a time, then David took her into his palace, and she became his wife. And a little child was born to them, whom
David loved greatly. Only Joab, and
David, and perhaps a few others, knew that David has caused the death of Uriah;
but God knew it, and God was displeased with David for this wicked deed.
Then the Lord sent Nathan, the prophet, to David to tell him
that though men knew not that David had done wickedly, God had seen it, and
would surely punish David for his sin.
Nathan came to David, and he spoke to him thus:
“There were two men in one city; one was rich, and the other
poor. The rich man had great flocks of
sheep and herds of cattle; but the poor man had only one little lamb that he
had bought. It grew up in his home with
his children, and drank out of his cup, and lay upon his lap, and was like a
little daughter to him.
“One day a visitor came to the rich man’s house to
dinner. The rich man did not take one of
hgis own sheep to kill for his guest. He
robbed the poor man of his lamb, and killed it, and cooked it for a meal with his
friend.”
“When David heard this, he was very angry. He said to Nathan, “The man who did this
thing deserves to die! He shall give back to his poor neighbor fourfold for the
lamb taken from him. How cruel to treat
a poor man thus, without pity for him!”
And Nathan said to David, “You are the man who has done this
deed. The Lord made you king in place of
Saul, and gave you a kingdom. You have a
great house, and many wives. Why, then,
have you done this wickedness in the sight of the Lord? You have slain Uriah with the sword of the
men of Ammon; and you have taken his wife to be your wife. For this there shall be a sword drawn against
your house; you shall suffer for it, and your wives shall suffer, and your children
shall suffer, because you have done this.”
When David heard all this, he saw, as he had not seen before,
how great was his wickedness. He was
exceedingly sorry; and said to Nathan, “I have sinned against the Lord.” And David showed such sorrow for his sin that
Nathan said to him, “The Lord has forgiven your sin; and you shall not die on
account of it. But the child that
Uriah’s wife has given to you shall surely die.”
Soon after this the little child of David and Bathsheba, whom
David loved greatly, was taken very ill.
David prayed to God for the child’s life; and David took no food, but
lay in sorrow, with his face upon the floor of his house. The nobles of his palace came to him, and
urged him to rise up and take food, but he would not. For seven days the child grew worse and worse
and David remained in sorrow. Then the
child died; and the nobles were afraid to tell David, for they said to each
other, “If he was in such grief while the child was living, what will he do
when he hears that the child is dead?”
But when King David saw the people whispering to one another
with sad faces, he asked, “Is he dead?”
And they said to him, “Yes, O king, the child is dead.”
Then David rose up from the floor where he had been
lying. He washed his face, and put on
his kingly robes. He went first to the
house of the Lord, and worshipped; then he came to his own house, and sat down
to his table, and took food. His
servants wondered at this, and David said to them, “While the child was still
alive, I fasted, and prayed, and wept; for I hoped that by prayer to the Lord,
and by the mercy of the Lord, his life might be spared. But now that he is dead, my prayers can do no
more for him. I cannot bring him back
again. He will not come back to me, but
I shall go to him.”
And after this God gave to David and to Bathsheba, his wife,
another son, whom they named Solomon.
The Lord loved Solomon, and he grew up to be a wise man.
After God had forgiven David’s great sin, David wrote the
Fifty-first Psalm, in memory of his sin and of God’s forgiveness. (See Bible:
Psalms 51:1-19; Prayer of Repentance).
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