David as King of Israel: David's adventures as King of Israel plus stories about Solomon and his other sons. Thirteen fully-dramatized stories with music and sound effects. Includes a bonus story. A special collection selected from Your Story Hour's Old Testament Series. Stories include: A Tunnel to Success; The King and the Ark; The Crippled Prince; A Prophecy Fulfilled; David's Great Sin and His Repentance; Absalom, the Rebellious Prince (Parts 1 & 2), A Victory Turned to Mourning; The Fourth Son of David; The Last Days of David; The Three Transgressors; The Wise King; The Kingdom Divided; and a bonus story: The Hermit and the King. 6 cassettes.
David was a good king and made sure his people were treated
right fairly. Since he would not get to build the temple for God himself, he
began to gather materials for the time when his son would build it. David was
famous with the people because of the victories God gave him over their enemies.
These wars were not just fought for glory, though. God was using his people to
punish those who had turned away from him to worship idols. Finally the nations
nearby were conquered; Israel included all the land God had promised to Abraham.
During one of the wars, however, David stayed behind in Jerusalem when his
soldiers went off to fight. It was at this time that David fell into grievous
sin, which would haunt him for the rest of his life.
As David walked on the roof of his house one evening, he saw a
beautiful woman taking a bath. Someone told him she was Bathsheba, the wife of
Uriah, a Hittite soldier off fighting with David’s army. David should have put
Bathsheba out of his mind when he heard she was married, but he didn’t. Instead
he had her brought to the palace and sinned with her there. Sometime later
Bathsheba sent David word she was going to have his baby.
David the king over all Israel had committed adultery with one
of his soldiers’ wives and now there was going to be a child! Desperately he
tried to think of a way to cover his sin. Finally David had a plan; he would
bring Uriah home from the battlefront and let him visit his wife. Then everyone
would think he was the baby’s father.
But David’s plan didn’t work. Uriah came back to Jerusalem, but
he wouldn’t go down to his house, not even after David got him drunk. He slept
with the king’s servants instead. He wouldn’t let himself enjoy being home with
his wife while the other soldiers were having a hard time on the battlefield.
What could David do now? Soon Uriah would hear Bathsheba was
going to have a baby, a baby that was not his. He must never know that David was
its father!
David did a terrible thing. He wrote to Joab, the leader of his
army, commanding him, “Set Uriah in the forefront of the hottest battle, and
retreat from him, that he may be struck down and die.” Then he had Uriah take
the letter back with him.
Was David actually trying to get Uriah killed? Yes, he was! And
that was just what happened. When David heard Uriah was dead he told Joab not to
feel guilty. “The sword devours one as well as another.” David said, just as if
Uriah’s death had been an ordinary casualty of war.
After about a year God sent Nathan the prophet to talk with
David. He had been a wise judge over his people so Nathan told a parable that
would let the king himself judge. In the parable there was a rich man with many
sheep and a poor man with only one little lamb. This little lamb was so special
to the poor man that he treated it like his own child.
This rich man did an awful thing. One day a traveler came by and
he killed the poor man’s little lamb to feed the visitor. When David heard what
the rich man had done, his anger was hot. “As the Lord lives, the man who has
done this shall die!” he declared indignantly, not knowing he was talking about
himself!
“You are the man,” Nathan told the king. Then he delivered God’s
message. “I anointed you king over Israel, and I delivered you from the hand of
Saul. I gave you the house of Israel and Judah. And if that had not been too
little, I also would have given you much more,” God said. Yet David had broken
God’s law and had done evil in his sight. Not only had he killed Uriah with the
sword, he had taken his wife for himself.
As punishment Nathan said David’s family would have trouble for
the rest of his life. “I have sinned against the Lord,” David confessed and God
saw he has repented. But sad consequences would still follow.