“And what shall I more say? for the time would fail me to tell…of David" Hebrews 11:32
It was not Paul’s purpose here to direct our attention to all the
wonders of David’s remarkable life, but to the remarkable conquests of his
faith in Christ. David alone is that man who is described by the Lord God as a
man after his own heart (1 Sam 13:14; Acts 13:22). That which made David a man
after God’s own heart was not his personal righteousness, but his faith in
Christ, who “is the Lord our Righteousness.”
There is no need, here, for me to mention David’s great sin. That
matter is recorded plainly in the Scriptures and is well known by almost all
men the world over. Even the man after God’s own heart, while he lived in this
world, was a sinner. He was, like all God’s elect, a man blessed of God, to
whom the Lord would not impute sin, redeemed and forgiven by the blood of
Christ (Rom. 4:8). Like you and me, David’s only righteousness was the
righteousness of God imputed to him. As with us, the Lord God wisely and
graciously overruled David’s sin for his good, the glory of his own great name,
the accomplishment of his purpose, and the everlasting salvation of his elect.
It must never be forgotten that Solomon, through whom Christ came into the world,
was the son of David and Bathsheba (Ps. 76:10). David’s experience of God’s
grace in forgiving his sin made his sin bitter to him and made his Savior
precious (Ps. 32 and 51).
Perhaps the Holy Spirit has particular reference to
David’s victory over Goliath (1 Sam. 17). When David was just a teenage boy,
totally inexperienced in combat of any kind, he engaged Goliath in the name of
God. Armed with nothing but a sling and a few small rocks, David went to war
with the mighty giant of the Philistines, and cut off Goliath’s head with his
own sword
How did he accomplish this? How do we explain his courage, his
boldness, and his victory? David had the revelation of God’s own Word of
promise (1 Sam. 17:46-47). He believed God’s Word, resting upon it with implicit
confidence, and acted accordingly. By faith he ventured; by faith he overcame.
David was, in this, as in many other acts of his life, an eminent type
of Christ. David stood on the field of battle representing the whole nation of
Israel, conquered Goliath, and delivered Israel out of the hand of the
Philistines single handedly. Our Lord Jesus Christ, representing the whole of
God’s spiritual Israel, conquered Satan as our Representative and saved all the
hosts of God’s elect from all their souls’ enemies single handedly. As David
used Goliath’s own sword to cut off his head, so our omnipotent Redeemer, by
his death upon the cross, defeated Satan. As David said of Goliath’s sword, “Give
me it, there is none like it” (1 Sam. 21:9-10), we ought to say concerning
the message of the cross. By the preaching of Christ crucified, our God still
defeats his foes and saves his people.