“Go Home In Peace. I Have Heard Your
Words And Granted Your Request.”
David
had just said, “It’s been useless—all my watching over this fellow’s property
in the wilderness so that nothing of his was missing. He has paid me back evil
for good. May God deal with David, be it ever so severely, if
by morning I leave alive one male of all who belong to him!”
When
Abigail saw David, she quickly got off her donkey and bowed down before David
with her face to the ground. She fell at his feet and said: “Pardon your
servant, my lord, and let me speak to you; hear what your servant has to say. Please
pay no attention, my lord, to that wicked man Nabal.
He is just like his name—his name means Fool, and folly goes with him. And as
for me, your servant, I did not see the men my lord sent. And now, my lord, as
surely as the Lord your God lives
and as you live, since the Lord
has kept you from bloodshed and from avenging yourself with your own hands, may
your enemies and all who are intent on harming my lord be like Nabal. And let this gift, which your servant has brought to
my lord, be given to the men who follow you.
“Please
forgive your servant’s presumption. The Lord
your God will certainly make a lasting dynasty for my lord, because you fight
the Lord’s battles, and no
wrongdoing will be found in you as long as you live. Even
though someone is pursuing you to take your life, the life of my lord will be
bound securely in the bundle of the living by the Lord your God, but the lives of your enemies he will hurl
away as from the pocket of a sling. When the Lord
has fulfilled for my lord every good thing he promised
concerning him and has appointed him ruler over Israel, my lord will not have
on his conscience the staggering burden of needless bloodshed or of having
avenged himself. And when the Lord
your God has brought my lord success, remember your servant.”
David
said to Abigail, “Praise be to the Lord,
the God of Israel, who has sent you today to meet me. May you be blessed for
your good judgment and for keeping me from bloodshed this day and from avenging
myself with my own hands. Otherwise, as surely as the Lord, the God of Israel, lives, who has kept me from harming
you, if you had not come quickly to meet me, not one male belonging to Nabal would have been left alive by daybreak.”
Then David accepted from her hand what she had brought him
and said, “Go home in peace. I have heard your words and granted your request.”
1 Samuel 25:21-35
Abigail was not married David. She was one of his servants. So it was not easy for her to come to David.
She sent donkeys loaded with food to satisfy David and his
men to settle a debt. She wisely reminded David of God’s call on his life. If
he resisted his desire for revenge, when God made him King, he wouldn’t “have
on his conscience the staggering burden of bloodshed.”
You may also know someone dangerously close to a mistake
that could harm others and compromise their own future effectiveness for God.
Like Abigail, might God be calling you to a hard conversation?
Sometimes following God means
difficult conversations.
Our Daily Bread – November 19, 2018