For most people in the Bible, their commitment
wavered—at some point they faltered. Think of Abraham in Egypt; think of Jacob
with his father-in-law; think of Peter at the high priest’s palace; think of
Mark, going home from the gospel work in Asia Minor. But there are several
people whom we never hear backed down, even under the severest resistance and
even when it seemed that God Himself was against them. We might mention Job, or
Ruth, or Elisha, for starters.
When David was on the run from Saul, his only refuge was with Achish (aka Abimelech), king of Gath. David and his men were given Ziklag as their town, but from there they secretly raided other Philistine towns. The story is sordid but we believe that at some time during these years Ittai learned of David’s God. He could no longer stay with his own people and, like Ruth in an earlier day, he joined the Israelites, along with his 600 men and their families.
The real test of his commitment came
years later when Absalom rebelled. As David evacuated Jerusalem, he told Ittai
to go back to Absalom. Ittai’s response:—“As surely as the LORD lives, and as
my lord the king lives, wherever my lord the king may be, whether it means life
or death, there will your servant be.”
Ittai is a hero from God’s word—Peter
made exactly the same promise to his
King only a few meters from the same spot, and failed miserably (John 13:37).
Let’s remain faithful and claim David’s blessing on Ittai for ourselves, as
well, “May the LORD show you kindness and faithfulness.”
No comments:
Post a Comment