Skip to main content

David #9

 [DAVID] Facing temptation_ 

2 Samuel 11 

 
In the book Lake Wobegon Days, author Garrison Keillor describes a priest named Father Emil, who presides over Our Lady of Perpetual Responsibility Catholic Church. Every year Father Emil faithfully delivers a sermon on the evils of birth control. He titles it “If You Didn’t Want to Go to Minneapolis, Why Did You Get on the Train?” 
His point, of course, is that if we want to avoid certain consequences, we must avoid certain actions. 

 

[Group discussion starter] How do you respond when you hear that a respected Christian leader has committed a serious sin? 

 

The story of David and Bathsheba reveals how a series of smaller sins can build to tragic and devastating results. We also discover what forces can lead “a man after God’s own heart” to commit adultery and murder... 

 
[Read 2 Samuel 11] 

 

Sin often begins with a series of temptations, each one leading to the next.  
In verses 1-5, what steps led to David’s sin with Bathsheba? 
 

 
At each stage of his temptation, what might David have done to keep from taking the next step? 

 
 

Why do you think Satan often entices us with a series of temptations rather than offering us one “big” temptation? 

 

At what point does a temptation become sin? 

In verses 6-13, what plan does David devise to cover up his sin? 
 

 
How does Uriah thwart David’s plan – at least initially? 
 

 
Why are we tempted to cover up our sins rather than to confess them? 
 

 
In verses 14-15, when deceit fails to work, how does David’s plan become vicious? 
 

 
What other people does David draw into the wake of his sin? 
 

 
As you look back over this chapter, how would you explain what led “a man after God’s own heart” to commit adultery and murder? 
 

 
In what specific ways can David’s experience be a warning to us? 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

{SEVEN CHURCHES} #1

  The Lord Who Speaks_   Revelation 1:9-20   We  don’t  tend to get many letters these days. We get emails, text messages,  WhatsApp  and other electronic messages, but rarely  a handwritten, pen-and-paper letter.    I tend to save any good ones I get... notes from when Leah was little. Letters that encourage or bless me.   I’ll keep them in my  bedside  drawer or  tucked  into books on our shelves. Then I get to read them again and feel loved and blessed by their words. ..     [Discussion starter]    Tell the group about a significant letter you have received and why it meant so much to you.     Revelation 2-3 records seven letters written by Jesus to seven churches.   It must have been a thrill for an early church congregation to receive a letter from the apostles Paul, Peter, or James... but here were letters from Jesus himself . And we all get to read everyone else’s ma...

{SEVEN CHURCHES} #3

  {SEVEN LETTERS}    The Attractiveness of Suffering_   Revelation 2:8-11     In the year AD 177 persecution broke out against the Christians living in what is today the French city of Lyon. Christianity had raised the suspicions and hatred of the Roman  bureaucrats who governed the city. The vicious persecution that raged, touched Christians at every level of society. After the persecuti on subsided, church father Irenaeus, arranged for a letter to be written to Christians in other parts of the Roman Empire describing the faithfulness of the  martyrs...   We  can’t  even begin to put into words, much less describe in detail, the  magnitude  of the persecution here: how the pagans raged so terribly against the saints, and how the ble ssed martyrs endured so patiently... To begin with, they nobly endured all the abuse the whole mob collectively piled on: screaming  at them, punching them, dragging them through the stre...

PARABLE: the rich man and Lazarus

  {PARABLE} the rich man and Lazarus_   Luke 16:19-31   Have you ever heard someone say that religion is just  a ‘crutch’ or just a source of comfort for the weak?   Have you ever heard someone say that religious people pay no attention to those who are hungry or suffering?   Christianity doesn’t teach passive suffering in the face of injustice and oppression. Jesus calls us to serve those who are in need.     [Discussion starter] Have you ever been asked for money by someone homeless?   How did you react?     The final parable in this study reminds us that suffering in this life can be replaced by bliss in the next ...     [Read Luke 16:19-31]     In verses 19-21, how does the parable reveal the rich man’s lack of concern for Lazarus?       How would you account for the rich man’s indifference towards Lazarus?       What are some of the ways that you have heard people explain why ...