Summary: By trusting God in the past and experiencing victories, David could be assured of confidence and success overcoming succeeding problems. A lesson for each of us.

THE IMPOSSIBLE THING

I Samuel 17:4-11, 16, 20-25

Virg Hurley

Sermon, March 6, 2016

Christy Brown was born in 1933 with cerebral palsy. His parents were told that nothing could be done for him. They should put him in an institution. Instead they took him home and loved him. In time Christy Brown became a world-renowned artist and the object of an Academy Award winning film My Left Foot. The impossible being done.

In the late 1870's, a practical nurse diagnosed herself as having breast cancer. When she sought a physician to perform the surgery she couldn't afford his $25 fee. She rented a room in her town and, without anesthetics, cut off her own breast. She somehow endured the shock and pain, stanched the blood and lived...many years. The impossible happening.

All aerodynamic evidence suggests that the bumblebee can't fly. Its body weight, compared to its wing spread, makes that impossible. Not aware of its misfortune, the bumblebee flies anyway and manages to make a little honey in the process. The impossible happening.

Our chapter offers another example of the impossible happening—of a youth with unspoiled faith in God, who didn't know it couldn't be done, doing it! Faith in God's deliverance gave David victory over Goliath. This is evident from three decisions David made.

The Decision To Consider Himself God's Chosen Vessel In The Battle

David had been commuting between the army and sheepfold. On that day he arrived in the valley of Elah as the warriors tromped from their bivouac to the battle lines. There they stood, each on opposite hills, brandishing their spears and shouting epithets at the opposite hill.

In the valley below David heard the a Philistine bellowing. He strutted back and forth, taunting Israel, boasting of his exploits, daring anyone to descend the hill for one to one contest, winner take all. He could make such a dare, standing at least three feet higher and weighing hundreds of pounds heavier than anyone in Israel—a Super Heavy against a Fly Weight. Daily, for forty days, he barked his challenge. Daily, for forty days, Israelite warriors fled in consternation when he appeared.

But on that day David appeared and stayed. He had left the supplies for his brothers with the quartermaster, and hurried to the lines just in time to hear the men talking wistfully of the great rewards for anyone able to kill the giant: riches, the king's daughter in marriage and exemption from taxes for the family.

David couldn't believe his ears: all those rewards for the warrior besting Goliath, and no one even tried? He even requested clarification—to be sure he heard right. And it was given.

David reproached the entire Israelite warrior caste. Given the rewards...more importantly, given the insults to Israel and Almighty God, why had no one risked his life in Israel's defense? With all the brave warriors in Israel, was no one brave enough to try?

David's oldest brother Eliab happened by and, in the time honored way of older with younger siblings, scolded and berated the lad as cheeky and irresponsible. Who was he to reproach gallant warriors—he, a lowly shepherd and the youngest in the family and spoiled rotten by dad?

Contrary to custom, however, David refused to be cowed into silence and repeated his willingness to fight. His belligerence soon filtered through the lines into Saul's tent. "Sir, a young man's here who says he'll fight Goliath."

Brought before the king David repeated his willingness. Undoubtedly amused, Saul saw before him a youth promising to best a man hardened in battle from his youth, a stripling promising to fell an oak!

David remained resolute. His previous encounters with danger and death rendered Goliath unimpressive. He had faced life threatening hazards before, out in the wilderness, all by himself. He remembered clearly, and related it persuasively, how the lion and the bear had attacked his sheep, and how he attacked them bare-handed. "The Lord who delivered me from the paw of the lion and the paw of the bear will deliver me from the hand of this Philistine."

(When did he have these experiences? It could have been anytime as a shepherd, since such danger always hovered over the flock. However, could his anointing by the Holy Spirit have occasioned such reckless courage? David was a naturally brave man: but other brave warriors, Jonathan included, refused to test Goliath. David sought the opportunity precisely because he felt chosen by God, not just brave.)

Applications:

One, past victories give us confidence of future success. David's experiences protecting sheep from predators emboldened him to deliver Israel from her enemy. The God who had empowered him previously would enable him in the contest with Goliath. “I can tell by my past experience with God that he will help me now.” Do we learn God's faithfulness from past experiences, so we can trust his faithfulness in present and future difficulties? If past experiences with God teach anything it should be his unfailing faithfulness!

Billy Graham once complained of God’s delay in answering a prayer. His wife Ruth asked him: he hasn’t failed you yet, has he? Billy replied: no, but he’s come close. That’s the point. God can come close to failing us without failing because his timing isn’t ours. But he’s always on time.

Israel in the wilderness never learned that lesson. The Pharisees during Christ’s ministry didn’t either. On his first cleansing of the temple they asked: where did you get the authority to do this? After 3 ½ years of hearing him preach and watching him perform miracles and exorcisms, in the last week their question remained: Where did you get the authority to do all this?

They had learned nothing about Jesus in those three years because they didn’t want to be taught by him.

How many past victories do we need from God to be assured he’ll provide whatever victory we need now: job, housing, health, etc.? How many times does God have to prove himself before we say, “I believe God!”? Let our past experience with God reinforce with faith any uncertainty we face now.

Two, victories over enormous problems shrink all succeeding problems. To Israel, Goliath seemed the invincible obstacle. To David, he seemed no more dangerous than the lion and bear he had already killed. Goliath was manageable to David because David had faced and conquered greater challenges than Goliath presented.

He had such confidence by first viewing God's power, then the problem—never vice-Trustversa. He first put trust in God and consequently feared nothing.

Faith in God, then, provides the answer to those "Goliath sized" problems we face; even those "impossible" situations for which no solution exists; even those man killing tasks that everyone else avoids. The Goliaths of life attempt to intimidate: David's faith urges us to be unafraid. The Goliaths warn us never to try against them: David's faith encourages us to try and try again, trusting God to give the eventual conquest.

Goliath is a warning to us: alone, we cannot cope with what we face. David is an assurance: filled with God, we cannot fail to overcome.

Thus, by fearing God we lose our fear of others and of circumstances. By trusting God, we find faith that conquers life. By accepting God's truth we're saved from confidence in every lie that says we can’t do it. May we be willing to be kept from any victory until we learn to trust God for every victory.

By 1917 America and her Allies were producing more war materiel and ships to ferry them to Europe than German U-boats could sink. Yet, Germany put their hope for victory in the U-Boats. A German industrialist warned Ludendorff that the U-Boats couldn’t sink as many ships as America was building. Therefore, Germany shouldn’t put its hopes in the U-Boats.

Ludendorff thanked the man for his opinion but remained satisfied with his feeling that the U-Boats would turn the tide of battle. His feeling collided with reality, and reality won. The First World War, p. 346.

Believers don’t trust their feelings. They trust the Living God who is the One and Only and Original Reality, who gives substance to every promise he ever made, including the Master’s stirring promise, “And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age” Matthew 28:20.

- End Part I -