THISDAY Style

COLOURS OF LIFE

- With Koko Kalango Tarari Kalango

We are happy to resume our series finding Jesus in the books of the bible, with my daughter. Today she takes us through 1 and 2 Samuel.

1 and 2 Samuel were written as one continuous book. The Hebrew language does not have any vowels, so when the Scriptures were translated to Greek, the inclusion of vowels meant that Samuel could no longer fit on to one scroll – hence it being in two parts. The same goes for 1 and 2 Kings and 1 and 2 Chronicles­Ezra-Nehemiah (these three books were originally written together). Our series will therefore treat the books concerned as one.

Samuel tells the tale of the first two kings of Israel – Saul and David. People often make the overarchin­g statement that Saul was a bad king and David was a good one. It is easy for us to generalise but Saul and David, like all human beings, were complicate­d. Yes, Saul disobeyed God and had the kingdom taken away from him and given to another, but he also started off as a man of faith. And yes, David was a man after God’s own heart. But, in addition to his infamous murder, David was an irresponsi­ble, indulgent father whose sin led to the downfall of the nation and civil war.

In short, neither one of these kings was truly good. What we see in Samuel is a gap that needs to be filled, which all kings after them will fail to do.

Enter Jesus.

Now I know I said that David wasn’t a truly good king, but I am back to admit that he was the best king Israel had – not just because the twelve tribes were finally united under him, or because he led them to military victory, but because he never strayed from God. Unlike Saul, when David sinned, he was quick to repent, with a contrite heart. This devotion to Yahweh is what earned him the promise of an eternal royal dynasty. Jesus is the fulfilment of that messianic promise. That is why He is often referred to as ‘Son of David’ in the New Testament.

“I will raise up your offspring to succeed you, who will come from your own body, and I will establish his kingdom…forever” 2 Samuel 7:1213

‘Ben’ in Hebrew means ‘son of’, so we can rewrite Jesus’ title as ‘ben David.’

In Judaism, two distinct messianic portraits have been drawn out by rabbis: Messiah ben Joseph, and Messiah ben David. This resulted from the contrastin­g pictures of the coming saviour painted by the prophets of Israel; sometimes He was a meek, peaceful king, whilst at other times He was a mighty man of war coming to subdue the earth. The former was coined Messiah ben Joseph; the latter Messiah ben David, after the king who had victory songs sung about his conquests.

“As they danced, they sang:

‘Saul has slain his thousands,

And David his tens of thousands.’ ”

1 Samuel 18:7

The consensus amongst Jewish rabbis is that these are two different Messiahs, and I don’t think they care too much for Messiah ben Joseph. But we would not address that until the books of Isaiah and Zechariah. Instead, we will look at how Jesus is Messiah ben David – the conquering king (But Jesus is both Messiah ben Joseph and Messiah ben David, if that wasn’t clear).

In Christiani­ty, we hear a lot of talk about how Jesus has conquered the grave, conquered death, conquered sin, and so on. That is very important, but it is equally important we not lose focus of the physical victories He will win as well. The Bible tells us that Jesus is coming again, this time to wage physical war on everything and everyone who opposes Him.

“I saw heaven standing open and there before me was a white horse, whose rider is called Faithful and True. With justice He judges and makes war.” Revelation 19:11

Reading Samuel ensures we have a balanced view of Jesus. He came first as the Lamb who takes away the sin of the world, but His second coming will be in an entirely different manner. He will return as the Lion of the Tribe of Judah, ready to take His place as King over the earth. Like David, Jesus will establish His kingdom in Jerusalem and unite the scattered tribes of Israel under Him.

“He will reign on David’s throne

And over his kingdom,

Establishi­ng and upholding it

With justice and righteousn­ess

From that time on and forever.” Isaiah 9:7 Amen.

People often make the overarchin­g statement that Saul was a bad king and David was a good one. It is easy for us to generalise but Saul and David, like all human beings, were complicate­d.

COLOURS OF LIFE SHOW

For inspiring stories, conversati­ons and testimonie­s that build faith and offer hope, tune into our Colours of Life show. The Colours of Life show airs on DOVE TV, DSTV channel 349. It is also available on you tube (colours of life TV). Follow us on Instagram (@coloursofl­ifeministr­y) for daily devotional­s. Reach us: contact@ coloursofl­ife.org

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria