Join us on an enlightening journey with Pastor Jack Hibbs as we explore the tale of David in the Book of 1 Samuel. In this episode of Real Life Radio, we delve into the depths of despair and the heights of faith, examining how David faced overwhelming loss and betrayal only to find strength in the Lord. Pastor Jack takes us through David’s journey, highlighting invaluable lessons about the power of faith and the necessity of spiritual resilience in our darkest times.
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Today on Real Life Radio. But when God gives us something in the Bible, oh man, that’s a great verse, I just read this today, isn’t it wonderful? You ever done that? You boasted in the Lord about how great this verse is, you read it, oh, you share it with a friend, and lo and behold, by the end of the week, God has you living that verse out.
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This is Real Life. Welcome to Real Life Radio with Pastor Jack Hibbs. I’m David Jay, thanking you for joining us today as we listen, learn, and are challenged by God’s Word, the Bible.
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Hey, everybody, have you ever thought about what’s afterlife? Do you know that the Bible teaches life is afterlife? If you know the Lord Jesus Christ, my good friend Philip DeCourcy has written a great book, and that’s the title, Life After Life, Exploring the Bible’s Wonderful Promises About Heaven and Eternity, published by Harrah’s House Publishers. Get a copy for yourself.
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Life After Life by Philip DeCourcy, Exploring the Bible’s Promises About Heaven and Eternity. It’s available for a gift of any amount at jackhibbs.com. That’s jackhibbs.com.
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On today’s edition of Real Life Radio, Pastor Jack continues his series, now called 1 Samuel, and a message titled, Making a Comeback. Now, Samuel of the Old Testament was the last judge of Israel and the first of her prophets. So here, as we continue in chapter 30, we’ll consider how David reacted when everything he had was gone. You see, while David and his men are away, the enemy burns everything to the ground and their wives and children are taken as prisoners. When David returns, he quickly sees that he has lost everything, including his family, his position, and the support of his closest followers. So today, Pastor Jack teaches us that David could easily just have given up, but he finds that God is still there even in his poor choices and failures. And like David, a true comeback begins when we put God first through our faith and obedience. Now with his message called Making a Comeback, here’s pastor and Bible teacher, Jack Hibbs.
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Looking back in review, look with me at verse 1. It says there, 1 Samuel 30, Now it happened when David and his men had come to Ziklag on the third day that the Amalekites had invaded the south of Ziklag, attacked Ziklag, and burned it with fire. And he had taken captive the women and those who were there from small to great. They did not kill anyone but carried them away and they went on their way. So David and his men came to the city and there it was burned with fire. And their wives, their sons, and their daughters had been taken captive. Then David, verse 4. And the people who were with him lifted up their voices and wept until they had no more power to weep. And David’s two wives, Ahinoam the Jezreelite and Abigail, the widow of Nabal the Carmelite, had been taken captive. Then David was greatly distressed, for the people spoke. This is his own people, his people. his men. They spoke of stoning him because the soul of the people were grieved, every man for his sons and his daughters. But, mark it in your Bible, David strengthened himself in the Lord his God. Let’s pray. Father, we ask Lord that as we look to this chapter, tremendous things out of it. We pray Lord God that you would anoint us to be receiving all that you would have us to receive out of it tonight. And Lord, may it not just be for tonight. May we not spend the next few moments together just looking at the Bible open and hearing the message and maybe thinking a few thoughts. But Lord, in fact, may our lives be changed as a result of us being here together tonight. As we seek your spirit through the word of God. In Jesus’ name and all God’s people said, amen. If you’re taking notes tonight, jot it down if you would. The title of the message this evening is Making a Comeback in the Walk of Faith. Making a comeback. That’s what we see David doing. And boy, is it refreshing to see him making a comeback. Because if you remember in our last few times together, David had become radically discouraged. He had now been a fugitive nearly 10 years from Saul. He had been on the run, spending most of his days, most of his years in the Negev, down in southern Israel on the western side of the Dead Sea, very barren area, and it’s difficult. And so David had been there. And just when you would think that perhaps maybe the promise of God is going to come through and David’s going to write it out and he’s going to receive the kingdom. David, if you remember, had it within his heart and he counseled within himself. He feared and he said. It’s just a matter of time before I fall into the hands of Saul and I perish. And so the Bible told us in these preceding chapters, chapters 26 on to chapter 29, that David began to seek shelter and comfort among those of the Philistines. He went and sought comfort among the flesh as a Philistine, as that nation, as that tribal group of people represents the flesh. David, in his lack of faith, struggling now goes and in fact becomes in an alliance with the enemy, where the Philistines now are making plans to attack Israel. Do you remember that David was going to go to war with them, him and his men? And Achish was all excited about it. Oh, we’ve got David on our side, a giant killer. We’ve got David on our side, a man who’s invincible at war, a man who was with King Saul but has since defected. Now we’ve got him and we are going to really, really get the score back and even regarding the loss of our giant so many years ago. We’ve got David. Imagine what they must have been thinking. Achish was all excited about it. But when he gave word to his other leaders in the Philistia region, they said, no way are we going to go to battle with David among our ranks. Because what if it’s a ploy? Or what if he gets into battle with us and he turns on us? We don’t want to take that chance. So listen, church, David was walking in the camp of the enemy. He had fallen out of fellowship with God, so to speak, by virtue of caving into fear. And now he’s in a panic. And he even says, I’ll go to war with you guys against my own people, Israel. But now even the Philistines don’t want him because perhaps he’s a man of compromise now. They see something maybe weak in him. He’s not altogether trusted. And it’s interesting to note before we get into this how when we begin to compromise as Christians, how we begin to blur the lines, we don’t find happiness in the camp or any camp that we might seek shelter in. And so David, if you remember last time, was actually being asked by Achish in a very polite way, can you sit this one out? The guys don’t want you to go to war with us. And so David, in a sense, has no battle to go to at all. But a great thing is going to happen. He’s going to make a comeback in the faith. In the midst of all of David’s difficulties and pressures in life. And by the way, you know where this book heads. If you go into 2 Samuel or some of the other records, you all know, and you read the book of Psalms, you all know where David’s heading. There’s going to come a time when he is king. There’s going to come a time when the kingdom is so powerful and everything is so prosperous that the Bible says that when springtime came and it was time for men to go to war, isn’t that funny? They had seasons. Hey, look, the rains are over. It’s time to go to war. See you, honey. Pack me a lunch. I got to go to war now. It says there in Scripture that when spring came and it was time for men to go to war, David stayed home while his men went to battle. And it’s while he was staying home, and scholars estimate David to be somewhere around 50 years of age, that he encountered the Bathsheba blunder. where he gets up late in the day sleeping in not the protocol of a king by the way he sleeps in that means he went to bed late gets up late he’s walking around on the roof because he’s got nothing to do he looks over and peers under the rooftop of Bathsheba and she’s taking a bath and you know the rest of the story he gets in trouble You would think after a blunder like that, God would absolutely remove his spirit from David. That God would no longer use David. That God would no longer want David. Maybe you’re thinking in this portion of scripture, as we shall see, that David having sided with the Philistines, that God would not want him back anymore. Maybe this evening you have… given your heart to Christ but you’ve walked a different path maybe you’ve sought shelter like Peter did in the camp of the unbeliever as Jesus had been arrested and he was being prepared for crucifixion where’s Peter the Bible says that he was following Jesus at a distance that’s always a dangerous thing To follow Christ afar off. And then the Bible says that he went among the non-believers and they began to question him. We know who you are. You’re one of his followers. And there he goes into his denial of Christ. And the Bible says there that he sat by a fire and he warmed himself in the enemy’s camp. Would God have given up on Peter? God did not give up on Peter. God did not give up on David. And God is not going to give up on you. If you are a Christian tonight and you’ve walked away from God, maybe you’ve come in here tonight and God is calling you back to walk with him again and to experience his goodness again. Maybe your faith tonight’s being stretched. David’s faith is in the stretch. Maybe it’s physical challenges. Maybe it’s financial squeeze that’s on you. Or maybe it’s a relationship that’s wayward. And you find yourself in a stretch when it comes to your faith. Or perhaps you’re in a spiritual lesson. I don’t know about you, but spiritual lessons stretch us. You know, they’re supposed to do that. I don’t like that part. of my Christian faith, but when God gives us something in the Bible, you go, oh man, that’s a great verse, I just read this today, isn’t it wonderful? Have you ever done that? You boasted in the Lord about how great this verse is, you read it, oh, you share it with a friend, and lo and behold, by the end of the week, God has you living that verse out. That’s the way it is. He’s not interested in us getting a PhD, PhD piled higher and deeper in knowledge, but what it means is to actually be doing what we do know. And I became convinced a long time ago, whenever you and I watched an NFL football game, I don’t think that guy’s allowed into stadiums anymore, but remember when he was? They would kick a field goal, or there’d be a touchdown, and right behind the field goal bars, there’d be John 316. Remember that? For 10, 15 years, that guy was there. And then they began to outlaw that guy and try to take away his banner. And they began to check people’s backpacks because the John 3.16 man might be there. And so he’d put his sign of John 3.16. I’m convinced that if we just did Bible studies on John 3.16 until the Lord came back, we would be doing great. Because if one verse out of the Bible, take one verse out of Scripture and apply it to our lives, and how much more do we cover just in one week’s time that we fail to put into practice? If we decide and if we determine to put into practice what we hear, what we read, what we learn about God, we too will make a comeback in our faith.
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You’re listening to Real Life with Pastor Jack Hibbs. To learn more about this ministry or to catch up on some previous episodes, go to jackhibbs.com. That’s jackhibbs.com. And now let’s get back to today’s message. Once again, here’s Pastor Jack.
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Tonight, we are either on our way to a funeral or we’re on our way to a revival. We will either grow as a church in depth, not in breadth, Not in size. God’s not impressed with size, but in depth. And are we nurturing and are we growing, as the Bible put it, in the knowledge of God? This is God’s intent for us to experience this stretching. And maybe you’re in that place of being stretched. David was in that place of being stretched. Before we dive into the remainder of this chapter, verses 7-11, Down to the end, again, verse 6, it says, Now David was greatly distressed, extremely discouraged. He’s at the end. For the people spoke of stoning him. Those are his closest allies. Because the soul of all the people were grieved, and every man for his son and for his daughters. But, and here it is, mark it, but David strengthened himself in the Lord his God. And that word strengthened, maybe some of your Bibles say encouraged, encouraged. Jot it down if you would. This is such a precious word in the Hebrew. It means to fasten yourself or to place yourself upon someone’s strength that’s greater than yourself. It means to glue or to bind yourself to someone who is like a pillar. It means to fortify yourself in the power of another. I’m going to say that one again. To fortify yourself in the power of another. To behave valiantly because of the presence of another. When I read that, I immediately thought how we were when we were kids. We might have been scared to step up to the plate. Maybe that pitcher was really fast when we were little or maybe that football team. Remember when we were like nine years old and we played either Junior All-American or Pop Warner football and the other team was getting ready. We were out there and maybe you guys played and you had helmets that were two times the size of your head. You could spin that helmet on the top of your head. Your pads were too big, and it used to look like a little flea carrying around a bunch of plastic. It was hilarious. And we would look across the field, and at that time, those guys looked like they had hair coming out of their socks back in those days. And, you know, coach, I think the guy’s got hair on his legs. He’s only supposed to be nine years old. They always looked so big and so gigantic, and you were scared to death. Petrified. And then you would hear from the sidelines, your mom or your dad, go get him, Jack. And you know what? Just for pride’s sake, you got to go get him. But there was some sort of an encouragement there. I was fortified. I became valiant because I knew my parents were watching. And if my parents were there, then my brother was there. And if my brother was there, then maybe my sister was there and there would be people there and I got to go out there. And so you’d run out there and you clank out there in your plastic armor and you get on the gridiron to do battle, you know. Valiant. Why? Because of the presence of another. David strengthened himself. Listen, not in his friends. He didn’t have any anymore. He didn’t strengthen himself in his wealth. He had none. He didn’t strengthen himself in Saul’s army. They were against him. He didn’t have the Philistines. He didn’t have the Israelis. He didn’t have his own men. He had nobody. David had no one. And here’s where the dividing rod snaps between the person who plays spirituality and the real believer. It says that David strengthened himself in the Lord. He built up a fortification of hope because he turned to God. You may not think much of it, but that last sentence of verse 6 is David’s turning point in his life, and things will never be the same from that moment on. David strengthened himself in the Lord. Everything changes from here on out. So making a comeback, verses 7 through 10 of chapter 30, we consider this. It all changes for you and I when we call out to the Lord. It all changes for you and I when we make a call out unto the Lord. Look at verse 7 with me. It says, Then David said… Then David said, based upon what? Based upon verse 6. Not only verse 6, but the end of verse 6. But David strengthened himself in the Lord his God. Then David said to Abathar the priest, Ahimelech said, please bring the ephod here to me. Remember, we don’t need to go back to belabor it. The ephod was what was used to communicate to God. You might say, well, I wish I had an ephod. Where do you get those things? You know what? There’s one sitting on your lap. We have the Bible now. It’s better than any ephod the priest ever wore. Yeah, but pastor, I read somewhere they would put the stones in there. The Aram and Thummim and God would speak and then they would kind of light up and you could bring it out. You could get a yes or a no out of the… Yeah, that’s true. You got a yes or a no. And in that religious economy in the Old Testament period, in God’s working with men, that’s all you needed was a yes or a no. In fact, as we shall see, you had to know how to ask God in such a way to get the yes or the no. I’m wondering if we could even handle that today because we’re so used to the Lord. We pray, we talk to the Lord. Sometimes we pray and it’s like he’s got to scratch his head. What is he asking? What does he mean by that? Aren’t you glad that God knows what’s in our heart before we ask? I don’t know how you are about putting words together. I find myself as I… See? I find myself, as I’m getting older, I wind up saying the thing that I want to say last. That’s the thing up front. And the thing that I want to say first, it’s the actual thing that winds up at the end of the sentence. And it’s like, why did it come out that way? What’s wrong? I begin to check my pulse. What am I having? A stroke? God knows what’s in our heart before we say it. Very clearly. David is going to ask certain questions. God will give specific answers. Why? Because he knew how to talk to God. For you and I today, how much more wealthy are we in the faith when we can talk to God and we have the Bible to consult? Much more than David. what the priest had. So David says, please bring the ephod here to me. And Abathar brought the ephod to David, verse 8. So David inquired of the Lord, asking or saying this. Number one, shall I pursue this troop? That’s a yes or no question. You and I get to say, Lord, what do you want to say to me? Isn’t it fun? Lord, what do you want to say to me today? Then you open up the Bible and read it. And God speaks whatever he wants to speak to you. Well, shall I pursue this troop? Number two. Number two question. Shall I overtake them? That’s a good question. Shall I pursue this troop and am I going to be a success at it? I don’t know what he would have said if God would have said pursue the troop and no, you’re not going to be successful at it. Then can we go back to question number one? I’d like to talk to you about that for a little bit, kind of, you know, find out more about this. No, God says to him, look, God answers, the Lord answers and says, number one, pursue, for you shall surely overtake them. And number two, without fail, recover all. The moment you and I determined to make a comeback, that is to return back to the Lord in our faith. Christian, listen, God will restore all that was taken and he’ll even bless you more. And I don’t know about you, let me speak for me personally. When I get away from God, when I feel distant from the Lord, maybe for all kinds of reasons, who knows what and where, the lie that I begin to hear from myself first is, the Lord’s not going to take you back, Jack. The Lord’s not going to be talking to you anymore. You didn’t pray today. You didn’t read today. You didn’t witness to somebody today. You know all that stuff. And it begins to build up on you. And then the thought enters your head. I’m not even worthy for God to speak to me. I’ve made a blunder here. I’ve made a blunder there. Why would God speak to me? David had been in a place of discouragement, but he strengthened himself in the Lord. And the next thing he does is he consults God and God gives the answer. You will recover everything and it will happen without fail. Verse 9, so David went, he and the 600 men who were with him and came to the brook Besor where those stayed who were left behind. Verse 10, but David pursued he and the 400 men For the 200 men who stayed behind were so weary that they could not cross the brook Besor. Mark this down. Number one of verse seven, we learn this, that when you and I call out to God, that is a good thing. We must do that. And what’s powerful about it, perhaps David, we can say, when you and I feel like we’ve reached the end, David had reached the end and he calls out to the Lord. There are people who reach the end and they call out for a gun. There are people who reach the end and they call out for a bottle. The truth is that they haven’t reached the end. You may be listening right now. You’re not even a Christian, but you happen to stumble across this and you’re listening to this. But you’re at your end. You can’t think of going another day. You can’t think of facing another person, another commitment, another requirement of your life. You feel like everybody’s pulling from you and you’re at your end. You are not at your end. Brother, if you were at your end, God would take you out of this world. You don’t run your life. You may not even believe in God, and you think you’re in control. You are not in control. God is sovereign, even over the most wayward, godless person. God is speaking and pleading. When you and I feel like we’ve reached our end, David felt like that, but David now is back online. He’s called out to God, and God is going to be speaking to him. That’s a real danger for us because here’s David, a great psalm writer, a great soldier, a great man. I mean, look at him. We look at him with adoration. We look at him, look, a tremendous man of God. I mean, come on, honestly, men, wouldn’t you like to be like David? David picks up the stone, slings it around, hits Goliath, stuns him. The guy falls down, knocks him out, and then David kills him with the guy’s own sword. He talks about great battles, and we did this, and we went up, you know, and the Lord led us up on this ridge, and we came down upon them, and God was with us, and it’s all right. It’s like, oh, man. And we can write those psalms, too. The enemy fled from us. Oh, God, thou art great and mighty, and we love thee, for thou art strong on our behalf. And it’s like, hoorah. But then there’s those times of David when he writes, and he says, Lord, I cry all night long like a dove in the wilderness. And it’s like, what is that? Well, he wrote those tremendously emotional things because David felt everything. He was a real man’s man. And he wasn’t afraid to cry. He wasn’t afraid to go to battle. He wasn’t afraid of anything, I think, except himself. When David got his eyes off the Lord, though, like many of us, when we got our eyes off the Lord, we become afraid of everything.
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pastor and Bible teacher, Jack Hibbs, here on Real Life Radio and his message called Making a Comeback. You know, this message is part of Pastor Jack’s series called First Samuel, a series that highlights the prophet Samuel, who was called by God during one of Israel’s darkest times to bring the people back to a heart of true worship. And we’ll continue on the next edition of Real Life Radio.
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Hey, Christian, I’m speaking to you. Listen to this. You and I are not allowed to give up. I have to confess, many times in my life, I’ve thought about giving up. But God has put people around me in life. They wouldn’t let me do that. And I’m here to tell you, you’re not allowed to give up either. God’s not done with your story. He’s still writing it. He loves you, and He’s going to complete it. Father God, in Jesus’ name, may we not get in the way of what you’re wanting to do. If we wiggle, if we try to jump, Lord, hold us tight because you and you alone have the words of eternal life. In Jesus’ name, amen. Hey, thank you again so much for listening. And if you’d like to hear or see more of what we do here, you can always go to jackhibbs.com for all the latest on what’s going on with this ministry. And please, if you’re ever in the Southern California area, come see us at Calvary Chapel Chino Hills. We’d love to see you there in person. It has been so good to be with you today, and I pray you find yourself in the grace and mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ.
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See you on the next episode. This program is made possible by the generous contributions of you, our listeners. Visit us at jackhibbs.com. That’s jackhibbs.com. Until next time, Pastor Jack Hibbs and all of us here at Real Life Radio wish for you solid and steady growth in Christ and in His Word. We’ll see you next time here on Real Life Radio.