{"id":8884,"date":"2020-03-29T17:02:00","date_gmt":"2020-03-29T21:02:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/?post_type=message&#038;p=8884"},"modified":"2020-04-02T17:05:51","modified_gmt":"2020-04-02T21:05:51","slug":"have-you-rejected-the-true-king","status":"publish","type":"message","link":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/message\/have-you-rejected-the-true-king","title":{"rendered":"Have You Rejected the True King?"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Below is an automated transcript of this message:<\/h3>\n\n\n\n<span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"3.83\">I&#8217;m <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> here with my son, pastor Jonathan Combs. He pastors at our Rocky Mount campus.  We&#8217;re here broadcasting to you live from our Wilson campus. We are  happy to be with you this morning. I thought, Jonathan, maybe I would just look online and see if I can see who&#8217;s with us right now. Let&#8217;s see; hey, Mark, good to see you. Hey, Jan.  Tyler&#8217;s here. Uh, Amy, nice to see you. Who else have we got here? There\u2019s Rhonda.  There&#8217;s Teresa. Hey, there&#8217;s a lot of people that&#8217;s just from the Wilson site, right? Let&#8217;s see if I can do this. I&#8217;m learning, Jonathan. We&#8217;re also broadcasting at our  Rocky map campus. Let&#8217;s see what we have here. So,  who do you see there that you can say hello to? I&#8217;ve got people sharing this <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"61.98\">stream <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>. We\u2019ve got Kendra,  Joanne, Jo Ellen.  What&#8217;s up, James? My wife&#8217;s on here. Your wife&#8217;s watching?  Yeah, that&#8217;s good. Right?  Invite some more friends because we&#8217;re just getting started right now. Give him a call;  give them  a text and say, Hey, check us out.  We are team preaching today; you can watch and  see if we  know what they&#8217;re doing. Because, Jonathan, I&#8217;m not used to doing this. I&#8217;m not used to sharing the stage, man. <br \/><br \/>\nWe&#8217;re concluding today in 1 Samuel, chapter 15 and concluding  there. The series is  entitled,  \u201cThe Original Game of Thrones.\u201d   Before we dig in, I want to just talk about something for a second. Then we&#8217;ll dig in, okay? I&#8217;m gonna ask you to pray for us.   I&#8217;m just thinking about you right now <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"110.2\">and <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> about all the different changes that are happening in our country right now.   I have  two thoughts I want to give you:  (1) If  you have a need in your life right now, there&#8217;s so many things changing, contact the church. We&#8217;re still here. We&#8217;re still answering calls. We&#8217;re still answering emails, etcetera. Contact us and let us know if you have a prayer need;  you can do it today, actually, online.   Also, any time during the week, leave us a message and you let us know if you have a need in your life.   Be aware of this; this  is not going to  last forever. Every season has a beginning,  a middle and an end. When this season passes, there&#8217;s going to be a lot of people,  all of a sudden,  trying to figure out how to get by. <br \/><br \/>\nThe church needs to be strong for a time like this.  We need to be prepared  in <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"165.18\">order <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> to be strong.   The church is what? It&#8217;s not the steeple, it&#8217;s the people.  The church is the people; that is us. So,  if you&#8217;re in need right now, let us know.  If  you&#8217;re able to give, don&#8217;t forget that we are the church and if the church is going to be strong, then we must give. A lot of you are in my age group;  I&#8217;m used to writing a check and turned it in on Sundays. I&#8217;m going to  have to learn how to give online during this season; I am  learning. Take some time during the message today or before the sun sets today if you&#8217;re able to give.  Help the church stay strong during the season when the church has a real need. <br \/><br \/>\nLet&#8217;s dig in now. Jonathan, we&#8217;re going to be closing up the chapter today, closing up our series today with Chapter 15.  We&#8217;ve entitled this series,  as we mentioned before,  \u201cThe Original <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"223.96\">Game <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> of Thrones.\u201d   I don&#8217;t know about you, but I&#8217;m kind of sad to see us finishing here. I guess we&#8217;ll come back, maybe,  in a year. Next year, we&#8217;ll come back and pick it up in chapter 16. We&#8217;ll pick up with David&#8217;s story.  <br \/><br \/>\nHere is just a reminder;  we&#8217;ve said this verse every week. The theme of this series has been 1 Samuel 8:7 (ESV) And the Lord said to Samuel, \u201cObey the voice of the people in all that they say to you, for they have not rejected you, but they have rejected me from being king over them.\u201d  From what we know,  this seems like something that happened in its time. But the truth is this; we have been playing this \u201cgame of thrones\u201d since the beginning of time. <br \/><br \/>\nIf we go back and read in our bible, in Genesis, we  will see Adam and Eve begin dethroning <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"273.33\">God <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> in chapter three. This is something we&#8217;ve struggled with for all of humanity;  we want to set up a king for ourselves other than King Jesus,  other than the king, who is God. We continue to struggle with this. It\u2019s fitting,  I think, that the end of our sermon series is titled, \u201cHave you rejected the true king?\u201d This  is something each and every one of us really struggle with.   We may not recognize it, but I think,  as we dig in today, we&#8217;re going to see just how true that is.  We all struggle with it. <br \/><br \/>\nLet me open us with a word of prayer.  Heavenly Father, thank you so much for everyone that has gathered online right now. Lord, I don&#8217;t know how they&#8217;ve showed up today. Perhaps they&#8217;re struggling with something in their own life. Perhaps things are going fairly smooth so far. We&#8217;re coming from all different places, all different walks of <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"327.87\">life <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>.  This is a unique way for us to do church, but God, we know we know one thing to be true. You are God of all things. You are Lord of all and you can take care of us, no matter what the situation. You can use any suffering,  You can use any pain for Your glory and for Your Name\u2019s sake. I&#8217;m praying right now, Lord, that as we discuss this final chapter that we&#8217;re wrestling with today,  that it will minister to someone that&#8217;s watching, that&#8217;s listening in right now.   That you will use the words of 1 Samuel to really encourage and also bring us back into alignment with your Son, Jesus.   That is your ultimate goal,  God, is that we would more than just prosper in a worldly sense, but that we would prosper in the sense that we would know who You are. We would know who we are through You and that,  God,  You would truly show us our life&#8217;s purpose and meaning <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"380.3\">through <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> Your Son,  Jesus. Help us now, as we wrestle with this text together,  that it will truly show off the cross and glorify Your name. We love you. In Jesus&#8217; name, we pray. Amen. <br \/><br \/>\nSo this question is the title of the last sermon.   This question is the title. We want you to think about it today. It&#8217;s this question, have you rejected the true King?  You might be thinking about that right now.  You might be  thinking, I don&#8217;t get that,  I don&#8217;t understand. This is what the message is going to be about. It&#8217;s going to talk about how all of us, every single one of us have rejected the true King. <br \/><br \/>\nBefore we dig in, maybe you don&#8217;t understand the question yet, but I guarantee you understand what it means to feel rejection because,  at some point in their lives, every one of us has felt rejection. You&#8217;ve applied for <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"433.79\">a <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> job that you didn&#8217;t get.   You made a phone call to ask a girl out and she said no. Or maybe you hung up before she answered because you&#8217;re afraid.   Back in the day,  Jonathan, we used to have these rotary phones.   You had to be a real man to ask a girl out back in that day.  what I&#8217;m doing to you. It&#8217;s called Rotary Dial.   I sent girls letters with boxes, you know, to check; don&#8217;t ever put a \u201cmaybe\u201d  box because they will  always check \u201cmaybe.\u201d   Maybe it&#8217;s been more serious than that. Maybe <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"482.65\">you <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> felt rejected from the time you were born by your parents or your family or someone. All of us, at some point in our lives, have felt rejection. <br \/><br \/>\nWell, that&#8217;s the amazing thing about this message today.   Can you imagine that the God of the universe,  who made us and loves us,  actually feels pain? He actually feels sorrow. He actually feels our rejection. That&#8217;s what we&#8217;re going to get our minds around today. And by the way, you know, preaching through an Old Testament narrative is some of the heaviest lifting that a pastor will ever do. Wouldn\u2019t you agree, Jonathan?  Yes,  I would agree. We study together every Wednesday;  the first three or  four hours,  we go through the \u201cvalley of despair,\u201d  because we are trying to figure out what this is about.  This is hard; the Old Testament can be  that way. But it is God&#8217;s word and if we look for Jesus on every page and in every paragraph, itf helps us to turn the key of what <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"544.64\">this <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> is about. <br \/><br \/>\nAs we&#8217;re looking at Chapter 15 today, Jonathan, we uncovered something. There&#8217;s actually a book written by a certain author who entitled it, \u201cThe Hard Sayings of the Old Testament.\u201d   Two of these hard sayings  are in chapter 15 of 1 Samuel. That&#8217;s right. So, if there was any way possible, when we&#8217;re preaching through a book of the Bible, that we could&#8217;ve skipped chapter 15, maybe we would have voted  for that, right? But no, we&#8217;re not gonna skip anything, because that&#8217;s the kind of church we are. We believe that God&#8217;s word applies and we&#8217;re not going to skip over hard sayings.   We&#8217;re going to deal with them and look at them through the lens of Jesus. <br \/><br \/>\nToday we&#8217;re looking at 1 Samuel, chapter 15,  where the Lord rejected Saul from being king over Israel because king Saul rejected the Lord. And as we consider this, it really is true that since the time of Adam and Eve, all humanity has rejected God as the true king. We can recognize that we, <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"607.71\">too <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>, have rejected God as our  true king so that we may repent and follow Him as our true king. <br \/><br \/>\nAs we look at the text today, it shows three ways we&#8217;ve rejected God as our  true king. So we are able to repent and follow Him. Jonathan, why don\u2019t  you kick it off; we&#8217;re gonna take it in three portions of reading. You read and then we&#8217;ll talk about it.  <br \/><br \/>\n1 Samuel 14:47-15:9 (ESV) 14:47 \u201cWhen Saul had taken the kingship over Israel, he fought against all his enemies on every side, against Moab, against the Ammonites, against Edom, against the kings of Zobah, and against the Philistines. Wherever he turned he routed them. 48 And he did valiantly and struck the Amalekites and delivered Israel out of the hands of those who plundered them. 49 Now the sons of Saul were Jonathan, Ishvi, and Malchi-shua. And the names of his two daughters were these: the name of the firstborn was Merab, and the name of the younger Michal. 50 And the name of Saul&#8217;s wife was Ahinoam the daughter of Ahimaaz. And the name of the commander of his army was Abner the son of Ner, Saul&#8217;s uncle. 51 Kish was the father of Saul, and Ner the father of Abner was the son of Abiel. 52 There was hard fighting against the Philistines all the days of Saul. And when Saul saw any strong man, or any valiant man, he attached him to himself. 15:1 And Samuel said to Saul, \u201cThe Lord sent me to anoint you king over his people Israel; now therefore listen to the words of the Lord. 2 Thus says the Lord of hosts, \u2018I have noted what Amalek did to Israel in opposing them on the way when they came up out of Egypt. 3 Now go and strike Amalek and devote to destruction all that they have. Do not spare them, but kill both man and woman, child and infant, ox and sheep, camel and donkey.\u2019\u201d 4 So Saul summoned the people and numbered them in Telaim, two hundred thousand men on foot, and ten thousand men of Judah. 5 And Saul came to the city of Amalek and lay in wait in the valley. 6 Then Saul said to the Kenites, \u201cGo, depart; go down from among the Amalekites, lest I destroy you with them. For you showed kindness to all the people of Israel when they came up out of Egypt.\u201d So the Kenites departed from among the Amalekites. 7 And Saul defeated the Amalekites from Havilah as far as Shur, which is east of Egypt. 8 And he took Agag the king of the Amalekites alive and devoted to destruction all the people with the edge of the sword. 9 But Saul and the people spared Agag and the best of the sheep and of the oxen and of the fattened calves and the lambs, and all that was good, and would not utterly destroy them. All that was despised and worthless they devoted to destruction.\u201d<br \/><br \/>\nAll right, what&#8217;s this one about,  pastor?   So here&#8217;s what we&#8217;re talking about. We reject God as the true King in three different ways as we&#8217;ll see in this chapter. Here&#8217;s the first way.<br \/><br \/>\n1. By failing to fully hear and obey His Word.<br \/><br \/>\nThis is the first way that we reject God; we fail to hear and obey what it says in His word.  At the end of Chapter 14, we have  a summary of Saul&#8217;s life and of his reign.   It lists some of his sons, some of his daughters, some of the people that were around him.  Actually, his uncle was the commander of his army;  Abner was his name.   Throughout Saul\u2019s  life he was doing war on every side. <br \/><br \/>\nHere&#8217;s the truth. The people had asked for a king like the nations. That&#8217;s <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"859.84\">what <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> they asked for. Be careful what you  ask for, church. They asked  for a king like the nations, and boy, did they get one,   Yeah, that&#8217;s what they got in Saul.  Here&#8217;s how they specifically prayed. They said, Samuel, we want a king like the nations who will fight for us. Well, that&#8217;s what Saul  does his whole career. He fights all around. <br \/><br \/>\nCheck this map out. Take a look at this map; you&#8217;ll see that in the  north,  he&#8217;s fighting the nation of Iran. What was that guy&#8217;s name again, Jonathan,  that he mentions in the beginning?    Then,  you&#8217;ll see that to the east he fought the Ammonites, the Moabites to the south, the Edomites to the west and the Philistines. <br \/><br \/>\nToday, in Chapter 15,  we see <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"913.07\">that <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> God has,  through the prophet Samuel,  asked Saul to go and fight the Amalakites, which are southwest of Israel. The Amalakites  were the first people group that struck the people when Moses was leading the Israelites out oWf Egypt and out of slavery.  The Israelites  were weak;  they still had stragglers in the back.   They weren&#8217;t being fed by man; they were thirsty.  At that point was  when the Amalekites struck. God never forgot that the people did that. <br \/><br \/>\nLet\u2019s dig down at  a couple of thoughts. One is the son of  Saul; he mentions this fella named Ishvi.   We don&#8217;t know who that is, but apparently a lot of people had nicknames in those times.  Jonathan, we all have nicknames, right? We call you \u201cFini,\u201d because when you were little,  your older <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"979.04\">brother, <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> Stephen,  couldn&#8217;t say Jonathan.  He would say \u201cJonafin.\u201d   Finally,  it went  from \u201cJonafin\u201d  to \u201cFini.\u201d  \u201cFini\u201d became your nickname.  I don&#8217;t know what my nickname is. I&#8217;m not sure if you ever gave me one.  You are  \u201cThe Dad,\u201d says Jonathan.  You are the definite article. Yeah. I don&#8217;t know. I think maybe I intimidate people or something. <br \/><br \/>\nThere&#8217;s a son not named here because we have the oldest son, Jonathan. There is a son named Abinadab  or his nickname is Ishvi. We also have another son named here. What was the other son\u2019s name?   Malchi-shua. Oh boy, Jonathan, that was right on the tip of your tongue. I&#8217;m proud of you. But the one that&#8217;s not named is Ishbosheth, who must have been the youngest son. And he actually survives, as we&#8217;ll see later in Saul&#8217;s life and becomes king for the eight years before David is king over all of Israel. So that son is unnamed. You also see that Michal  is named; she is  the princess that king David later earns by being  a great warrior against the Philistines. He earns her as his wife; David gets the princess. Her name was Michal. <br \/><br \/>\nDo you  know something I really like?  In chapter 15,  verse one, it opens up with Samuel reminding  Saul of who he is. He tells Saul to remember  it&#8217;s the Lord who anointed you king. You wouldn&#8217;t even be here if it weren&#8217;t for the Lord;  remember that. Therefore, listen to the words of the Lord.  Obey. Listen.  The Hebrew word there is Shema; that&#8217;s one of the most popular words in perhaps all <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1097.38\">of <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> the Hebrew language, because that&#8217;s the prayer that you teach a child to pray when they get up in the morning and when they go to bed at night.  It  is the prayer of \u201chere, o, Israel, the Lord thy God is one God.\u201d  (says in Hebrew, \u201cShema\u2026.)  It&#8217;s a prayer that every child would know in the Hebrew language.  He says to listen.  <br \/><br \/>\n Then,  he says, remember what Amalek did? Look at  Deuteronomy 25:17-19 (NLT) \u201cNever forget what the Amalekites did to you as you came from Egypt. They attacked you when you were exhausted and weary, and they struck down those who were straggling behind. They had no fear of God. Therefore, when the Lord your God has given you rest from all your enemies in the land he is giving you as a special possession, you must destroy the Amalekites and erase their memory from under heaven. Never forget this!  That was several 100 years before Saul,  but God had told Moses to put that in the book of Deuteronomy. Never forget that!   When we were at our weakest,  the Amalekites  struck down our old people and their young people as they were leaving Egypt. <br \/><br \/>\nHe says again, in Exodus 17:16 (NLT) \u201cHe [Moses] said, \u201cThey have raised their fist against the Lord\u2019s throne, so now the Lord will be at war with Amalek generation after generation.\u201d  Moses tells the people they have raised their fist against the Lord&#8217;s throne. You see, that&#8217;s what it looks like when you reject the Lord.  It\u2019s  like you&#8217;re saying,  I&#8217;m rebelling against you, Lord.   So now,  the Lord will be at war with Amalek  generation after generation. <br \/><br \/>\nJonathan,  I told the congregation that two of the hardest sayings in the Bible are  in chapter 15.   I&#8217;ll take on the first one and I&#8217;m gonna give you the second one.  I actually feel like the first one is  harder. It&#8217;s this phrase in  verse three is when we first see it.   <span It is when Samuel is talking to Saul.   \u201cNow go and strike Amalek and devote to destruction all that they have. Do not spare them, but kill both man and woman, child and infant, ox and sheep, camel and donkey.\u201d  He says to  go and  strike Amalek and devote to destruction all that they have. Do not spare them; men, women, children, infants and  animals  devote to destruction. This phrase is in chapter 15 seven  times.   Devote,   in the Hebrew,  is  not three words; it\u2019s one word. It's kh\u00e4\u00b7ram'; it's this idea of turning a place of people and all their possessions, utterly devoting them to the Lord.  This acts as agents of God's justice and completely turning  them over to the Lord. <br \/><br \/>\nWe see that Hebrew word,  kh\u00e4\u00b7ram&#8217;, back when Joshua was first bringing the people into Israel. They&#8217;re getting ready to go against the city called Jericho and  they marched around the walls.  There was a man there that  God had said the same thing. I want you to do kh\u00e4\u00b7ram&#8217; against Jericho;  the only exception was a woman named Rahab  who had hidden the spies of Israel. Don&#8217;t kill her or anyone in<span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1303.49\">her <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> house; rescue them.  But kill everyone else. Don&#8217;t take any of the silver or gold. It belongs to the Lord. <br \/><br \/>\nThere was a man named Achan; remember that story?   He  took some of the devoted things and hid them  under his tent. When they went to battle against a city called Ai, they were defeated.  We see what is  going on here. It&#8217;s the same phrase,  kh\u00e4\u00b7ram&#8217;,  devoted to destruction devoted to judgment. <br \/><br \/>\nGod is really, in a way, testing things all here. He&#8217;s saying that  I&#8217;ve waited all these hundreds of years now, and the sin of the Amelikites  has risen and risen and risen. I&#8217;ve shown them  mercy, but they haven&#8217;t turned away and it&#8217;s risen and risen and  risen.  Now,  Saul,  you&#8217;re the first King of Israel. I&#8217;m going to trust you with this. I want you to be an agent of my judgment, like a surgeon with a scalpel cutting out a cancer,  so <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1367.71\">that <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> it won&#8217;t destroy the the country of Israel there with all the ugliness of the sinfulness of the Amelikites.   God says, I want you to excise this cancer from Israel.<br \/><br \/>\nNow, to modern ears, that&#8217;s hard to hear.  It&#8217;s hard to hear that  God would say to wipe out a nation like that. And yet,  we see early on that God repented of making man back in the Book of Genesis and he sent a flood but he also rescued a people through Noah. You see, God is serious about His Holiness. When we look at Genesis 18:25, it says, \u201cWill not the Judge of all the earth do right.\u201d   God visits Abraham and he says things were going bad down in Sodom and Gomorrah, right? I&#8217;m going to go down and judge Sodom and Gomorrah. Abraham has a nephew down <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1440.76\">there <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> named Lot.  Abraham  says,  \u201cWill not the Judge of all the earth do right.\u201d   Abraham is  a man of faith, but he&#8217;s questioning  God&#8217;s righteousness and His  judgment. That&#8217;s something we do as well, isn&#8217;t it?  In a way, that&#8217;s what Saul does here, too.  We think we know better; judgment is better than God\u2019s judgment.  <br \/><br \/>\nAbraham does this. It&#8217;s really an amusing thing that he does. He says, Lord, would you destroy Sodom and Gomorrah  if there were 50 righteous?  The Lord says if I can find 50, I will not destroy it. Abraham then asks, Lord, forgive me for saying this, but what if there were 45? What if there were 40?  What if there were 30? Lord, I hate <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1500.6\">to <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> ask  this, but what if there were 20? Finally,  he asks, what if they were 10,  Lord?   The  Lord says,  if there ad\\re  10 righteous, I will not destroy it for their sake. You can&#8217;t say that the Lord isn&#8217;t merciful. But as you look at this, it&#8217;s very difficult. <br \/><br \/>\nDr. Walter C. Kaiser, Jr., Old Testament scholar and President of Gordon Conwell Seminary, wrote: \u201cGod was acting through Israel like a surgeon who at times must remove some healthy flesh in order to be certain that all of the contaminated flesh is excised. This is not doing evil [so that] good may come; it is removing the cancer that could infect all of society and eventually destroy the remaining good. God could have used hurricanes, pestilence, famines, diseases or a host of other \u201cnatural\u201d judgments on the Canaanites. In this case, however, he chose to reveal his judgment directly through the Israelites.\u201d That&#8217;s from a book that Dr Kaiser wrote called,  \u201cHard Sayings in the Old Testament.\u201d   <br \/><br \/>\nWhen we go through the Bible, we must not <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1566.88\">skip <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> over the hard sayings.  We must recognize that  God is holy;  He&#8217;s serious about righteousness but he&#8217;s also merciful.   That&#8217;s why He gives us Jesus.  <br \/><br \/>\nWe will look through now a couple of other details and then   we will need to read some more. One detail  is in verse six.  Saul here says to the Kenites  in verse six, he says, \u201cGo, depart; go down from among the Amalekites, lest I destroy you with them. For you showed kindness to all the people of Israel when they came up out of Egypt.\u201d   Look, you need to get out of the land of the Amalekites  because I&#8217;m getting ready to come in there and destroy and we don&#8217;t want to kill you. This is  because  the Kenites  have been friends of Israel. In fact, Moses\u2019 father in law,  Jethro, (you know, I always kind of felt like that was ruined for me because of \u201cThe Beverly Hillbillies.\u201d Everything doesn&#8217;t really fit in the Bible. Jethro, really?  And I&#8217;m looking for Ellie May.)  was a Kenite.  They were a people who lived in tents and traveled. They were a people that moved around a lot so you would find them in a  lot of the lands of the Middle East.  So, in verse six, he says to them to move, and they do. They move out.  He says to them, you have shown kindness to Israel so they move out so he doesn&#8217;t touch them. <br \/><br \/>\nBut here&#8217;s the real problem. It&#8217;s all the way down in verse nine,\u201dBut Saul and the people spared Agag and the best of the sheep and of the oxen and of the fattened calves and the lambs, and all that was good, and would not utterly destroy them. All that was despised and worthless they devoted to destruction.\u201d   The people spared Agag and the best of the sheep, and they only destroyed that which was worthless.   So that&#8217;s the problem. They listened a little bit; it was partial listening,  right?<br \/><br \/>\nJonathan, when your older brother,  Stephen,  was about the age of your Kinzie; she\u2019s three years old, right?   No,  she&#8217;s four. How did that happen? <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1683.67\">But <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> when he was her age, he was such a daddy&#8217;s boy. If I started telling him to do something, he would take off running before I could complete the sentence. I remember one time I was trying to ask him to go to the garage and get a tool because I was working on something in the house. I said, Steohen, go to the garage and get my screwdriver. Before I even got the word, screwdriver,  out, he was running.   I turned to Robin and I said, let&#8217;s see what he brings back because this will be interesting. Stephen goes  out to the garage.   I look out the window and he seems to be standing in the garage with  this blank look on his face.   He comes running back and says,  Daddy, I can&#8217;t remember what you told me to get. It\u2019s  because he took off running. He had quick obedience, but he hadn&#8217;t yet learned to listen to all the instructions. <br \/><br \/>\nYou know, we can be like <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1732.72\">that <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>. Stephen\u2019s  problem was that he was young and he wanted to please me. Usually, our problem is,  we pick and choose the parts we want to listen to. That&#8217;s what Saul did. He chose the parts he wanted to listen to and ignored the rest. Stephen was young, but that wasn&#8217;t Saul\u2019s  problem. He had an obedience problem, right? That&#8217;s what we have. We have a hearing and obeying problem. That&#8217;s one of the ways that we reject God as king. <br \/><br \/>\nLet me keep reading, and then I&#8217;ll let you pick up the baton here, Jonathan.  I can tell you&#8217;re ready to preach.   <br \/><br \/>\n1 Samuel 15:10-23 (ESV) \u201c10 The word of the Lord came to Samuel: 11 \u201cI regret that I have made Saul king, for he has turned back from following me and has not performed my commandments.\u201d And Samuel was angry, and he cried to the Lord all night. 12 And Samuel rose early to meet Saul in the morning. And it was told Samuel, \u201cSaul came to Carmel, and behold, he set up a monument for himself and turned and passed on and went down to Gilgal.\u201d 13 And Samuel came to Saul, and Saul said to him, \u201cBlessed be you to the Lord. I have performed the commandment of the Lord.\u201d 14 And Samuel said, \u201cWhat then is this bleating of the sheep in my ears and the lowing of the oxen that I hear?\u201d 15 Saul said, \u201cThey have brought them from the Amalekites, for the people spared the best of the sheep and of the oxen to sacrifice to the Lord your God, and the rest we have devoted to destruction.\u201d 16 Then Samuel said to Saul, \u201cStop! I will tell you what the Lord said to me this night.\u201d And he said to him, \u201cSpeak.\u201d 17 And Samuel said, \u201cThough you are little in your own eyes, are you not the head of the tribes of Israel? The Lord anointed you king over Israel. 18 And the Lord sent you on a mission and said, \u2018Go, devote to destruction the sinners, the Amalekites, and fight against them until they are consumed.\u2019 19 Why then did you not obey the voice of the Lord? Why did you pounce on the spoil and do what was evil in the sight of the Lord?\u201d 20 And Saul said to Samuel, \u201cI have obeyed the voice of the Lord. I have gone on the mission on which the Lord sent me. I have brought Agag the king of Amalek, and I have devoted the Amalekites to destruction. 21 But the people took of the spoil, sheep and oxen, the best of the things devoted to destruction, to sacrifice to the Lord your God in Gilgal.\u201d 22 And Samuel said, \u201cHas the Lord as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the Lord? Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to listen than the fat of rams. 23 For rebellion is as the sin of divination, and presumption is as iniquity and idolatry. Because you have rejected the word of the Lord, he has also rejected you from being king.\u201d<br \/><br \/>\nThe second way we reject God as the true king is this. <br \/><br \/>\n2. By presuming to put our own desires ahead of God\u2019s.<br \/><br \/>\nFirst of all, we&#8217;ve got the second hard saying in this passage, right  off the bat.  Look at  verse 11; we&#8217;re going to see it three times in this text.  We  might look at it and try to gloss over and say, well, this is something odd in the text,  Yet,  it says it three times, so we gotta deal with it. But I&#8217;m going to  get to that a little later. But just so you know right there, Verse 11 says,  God regretted. It&#8217;s the Hebrew word, nacham,  and it means to repent, to be sorry,  maybe to lament. But regret is a good translation. <br \/><br \/>\nSo this is the second hard saying, right? How does God regret  something?    He can see the future;  he never makes a mistake.   So here we are. Two hard sayings in this scripture. I&#8217;m going to cheat a little bit. I&#8217;m gonna push this off to the next point. I will deal with this in a minute. <br \/><br \/>\nIn verse 11, God tells us why.   He doesn&#8217;t just say he  regrets  making him king. He tells us why,  which I appreciate. He says, here&#8217;s what Saul is doing. He&#8217;s turned back from following Me. He&#8217;s a rebel. He&#8217;s doing His own thing. And not only that, He&#8217;s not obeying me. He heard me clearly. He heard <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2042.38\">me <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>and yet he chose to  not follow the instructions. He only partially did it. Partial obedience is no good. This causes Samuel to  have a reaction That tells us a lot about who Samuel is. I think,  in the text, he cries all night. He weeps, pleading before God. He&#8217;s mourning that Saul  has not lived up to his expectations.   I really think Samuel must have thought that Saul would be the guy. I think he was somewhat enamored by Saul, too. Even though he gives Saul to the people, this king is going to do some things you don&#8217;t like. He gives them all the bad news. And yet, I think in his heart, Samuel&#8217;s still really hoping Saul would be a king after God\u2019s own heart . Samuel is  like a father to Saul. He&#8217;s an older man and he anointed Saul. I think he loves him, right? <br \/><br \/>\nHere&#8217;s a question. It just popped in my head.   It didn&#8217;t occur to me <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2099.54\">when <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> we were studying. Is it possible,  as Samuel is crying all night long,  that he is also feeling God&#8217;s spirit, that his weeping is also as Jesus wept? It&#8217;s this idea of God regretting.  I&#8217;m just adding some fuel to the fire here. What if Samuel is feeling what God felt? I think that&#8217;s fair to make that assumption where we&#8217;re seeing a picture of Samuel&#8217;s heart and certainly a picture of God&#8217;s heart. And it seems they share that heart together. <br \/><br \/>\nWhat we see in Verse 12 is this <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2158.33\">; <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> if we were confused about what Soul has done wrong here, hopefully you&#8217;ve gotten the part where he&#8217;s partially obeyed. He&#8217;s kept some stuff he wasn&#8217;t supposed to keep, but not just that; we see that Saul is about Saul. He&#8217;s a guy after his  own heart if you could say that.  He goes out of his way to build a monument to himself in verse 12.   One writer, Robert D. Bergen,  in  the New American commentary says,  \u201cThe sequencing of Saul\u2019s actions \u2013\u2013performing acts of self-interest prior to those of devotion to God\u2013\u2013was reflective of his entire life\u201d.   This really is reflective of his entire life,  his self interest.  We saw that in the last chapter that you preached that he makes these laws. He makes these oaths that have nothing to do with the people fighting.  He wants to avenge himself, and here he builds a monument. Look how good I am;  that tells us a lot about Saul.   <br \/><br \/>\nHave you ever noticed that people, who have a low self esteem,  often try to take credit for things that belong to others? Their low self esteem ends up being pride. It&#8217;s like the flip side of the same coin, right? We see this in Saul. Samuel shows up there. Saul makes an excuse, we did what we were supposed to do. And yet,  Samuel shows up and says, \u201cHey, wait a minute, what is this bleating and lowing of cattle that I hear?  It&#8217;s a really hilarious question to me because Saul is trying to say, Hey, we did exactly what we were supposed to do.   I heard this as I was approaching and then, of course, Saul does  what Saul does best; he  makes an excuse. It wasn&#8217;t me. I don&#8217;t know if anyone else is reading this text and you buy Saul. I&#8217;m not buying it. I think he&#8217;s trying to say, face both in front of Samuel and  in front of the people. I think we&#8217;re going to see that more, as we continue to read.  <br \/><br \/>\nHave any  of you ever played this game, are there any parents in this  room that have  ever played,  any parents online ever played this game called,  who got into the candy? It&#8217;s not a hard game with little kids. I think that&#8217;s what Samuel&#8217;s dealing with here. He hears the bleating and lowing of cattle. If you ask the question, who got into the candy at my house, it&#8217;s almost always one person, and I&#8217;m not gonna call Kinzie  out or anything, but she&#8217;s funny because she&#8217;ll say it wasn&#8217;t me. In fact, the other day she blamed it on the baby,    who is  only a little over a year old.   She  <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2319.18\">blamed <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> the baby for getting into the candy, which is really high up on the shelf. It&#8217;s pretty impressive, actually, that Kinsey can get in it. But here&#8217;s the problem with the game, who got into the candy;  if you ask a little one, there&#8217;s already chocolate all over their face. Who got  into the Kit Kat candy? No, it wasn&#8217;t me;  the baby  made me do it.  The baby did it. This is what we do.  We grow up but  we still act like infants. We still do the same thing. God looks at us so we don&#8217;t grow up. We don&#8217;t grow up. God  asks,  who got into the candy, and your whole face is covered in chocolate. We say, it wasn&#8217;t me; God, it wasn&#8217;t me, but  you were caught red handed. <br \/><br \/>\nThis is the sacrifice that Saul  threw in because he thought that it would impress the prophet Samuel. This sacrifice would&#8217;ve been what&#8217;s called a peace offering and you get to eat the peace offerings. It wasn\u2019t  a burnt offering. A burnt offering is an offering where the  whole thing is burned up, and so it all belongs to God.  But what they were going to have,  basically,  is  they were getting ready to have a big barbecue. Yeah, they saved all the good stuff. I saved all the goods for God. Who saved the filet mignon? Right? Because we&#8217;re going to do a peace offering to God;  it&#8217;s pretty ridiculous.   <br \/><br \/>\nWe see in verse 18, really clearly, if you&#8217;ve ever felt the sense that God gave you a mission.   It says in verse 18 that Saul had received a mission from God; yet,  he didn&#8217;t follow through on that mission. Instead, he pounced on the spoil.   I don&#8217;t think there&#8217;s any irony in this that the writer here is really comparing the two things you&#8217;re supposed <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2422.24\">to <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> devote to destruction just like Jericho. And it shouldn&#8217;t shock you that since you&#8217;re rejecting God, he&#8217;s rejecting you. That shouldn&#8217;t surprise you at all. That&#8217;s what we see here; he has a mission.   I think this  is really the heart of today&#8217;s text.<br \/><br \/>\nIn  verses 22  and 23, it\u2019s good news to me if you look at it in the right way. This is good news that Samuel tells us that the heart of worship is more important than  the worship itself. We could get on stage and make all the cool movements to put it in modern terms.   We could pray a certain way;  we could do all this cool stuff. But if the heart&#8217;s not in it, then it&#8217;s not  at all what God wants. It&#8217;s not obedience, it&#8217;s not listening.   I really appreciate this <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2475.47\">passage <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> of scripture. I think it could be used all over the text of scripture. Obedience  is better than sacrifice, and he tells us again why.  <br \/><br \/>\nHonestly as we see Saul&#8217;s life come into play here, we get why this is the accusation that God makes on Saul. He says rebellion is like the sin of divination.   Now, I don&#8217;t know if you&#8217;re like me and you read the word,  divination, and you wonder what&#8217;s this one about? We kind of had to wrestle with divination. It&#8217;s, in a sense, witchcraft.    What does this have to do with rebellion? I mean, we read that initially and you probably heard that as we were reading along and you thought that this is where the Bible gets weird and you  don&#8217;t understand it. But if you dig a little deeper, I think you understand how rebellion is as divination when we hunt for answers through witchcraft\/ divination.   <br \/><br \/>\nWhat you might could say,  in modern terms,  is if you were going to go see a soothsayer and  you ask him,  show me my cards Tell me my horoscope or what does it say on the Ouija board.  You are looking for signs from anything but God&#8217;s word.  That would be divination in a sense.   <br \/><br \/>\nHow was that like rebellion? It  shows that you will go to anybody else to find answers other than God. What an ultimate heart of rebellion. That is to say, I don&#8217;t really care what God has said. I don&#8217;t care what His word says. I will look for news anywhere else. That really is at the heart of rebellion. So it makes so much sense that he said this. \nThen he goes on to say presumption; the word here is the idea of stubborn insolence to push back. We even say that. Do you have any push backs? That&#8217;s what he says here; presumption is like idolatry. This is the idea here.   It&#8217;s so cool that we&#8217;re ending today, talking about this idea.   Here&#8217;s what Saul has done, he&#8217;s dethroned God and put himself on the throne<span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2599.59\">. <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> He has presumed to know better than God; presumed to have superior wisdom than God. He decided, You know, God said to kill all this stuff, but wouldn&#8217;t it be better, God, if we brought this back as a peace offering and had us a big barbecue sacrifice?  Wouldn&#8217;t that be way better? And to keep Agag,  who we&#8217;ve not mentioned.   He kept the king;   maybe they were friends. Who knows? Maybe he wanted him there to make fun of him; he was a spoil of war.  I don&#8217;t know.   But,  he presumed to know better than God. <br \/><br \/>\nBefore we sit here and beat Saul up,  let&#8217;s just think about this for a second. Are there times in our lives where we presume that we know better than God? In fact, we would presume,  just reading this story, reading that God has judged the Amalakites  and has told them what to do. We, with our modern minds, say,  I&#8217;m better than God. I&#8217;m <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2651.7\">a <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> better judge than God. How could he know? These cattle, these infants, these women&#8230;how could He know that they need judgment? I&#8217;m a better judge than God. We presume that even now. So let&#8217;s not think ourselves greater than Saul. Let&#8217;s be humbled by the text.  <br \/><br \/>\nYou know, how often do the people of God decide to take the throne of God for themselves? How often and what is it that I&#8217;m doing? Let me put myself in the story for a second and go, what is it that I&#8217;m doing that shows rebellion? God has given me a mission; He has given  the great commission.   Go and make disciples of all nations. But you might say that&#8217;s for certain people. That is a clear mission from God to all believers. And we would make the excuse and say, well, you know, I know better than that. I&#8217;m going to rebel against that.   We make a holy example and say,  well, there&#8217;s evangelists that are better.   I don&#8217;t have the gift.   I&#8217;m an introvert or, I mean, whatever personality, whatever. But it&#8217;s a command. <br \/><br \/>\nWe try to say we agree with this page , but we do not agree with that page.  The Old Testament is  too hard; I&#8217;m a New Testament person. But we need the whole book to gather points to Jesus,  to the wisdom that we need in Christ. We want to  pick and choose, and we presume that it&#8217;s under us instead of over us, right? We presume that we can decide instead of saying God is the king. So we enthrone ourselves. We would very much like a bible of our choosing, with words of our choosing and a God of our choosing.   Yet,  it&#8217;s not so. <br \/><br \/>\nThis is what Saul  is suffering from and,  therefore,  God rejects him. That&#8217;s what we see in Verse 23. The reason God rejects Saul is because Saul rejects God.   It&#8217;s very interesting here that God is responding with regret and grief;  it&#8217;s fascinating. We&#8217;re going to talk more about that. We are going to read in just a moment about repentance. Saul really doesn&#8217;t get it. We&#8217;re gonna learn, when we get to this text again next year in 1 Samuel,   about this person named David who understood what it meant to want what God wanted, not what he wanted. David  made some massive mistakes. Perhaps a worse mistake than Saul made his whole life,  yet David&#8217;s approach was the way that God desired. He cared more about what God wanted than what he wanted and  his own desires. <br \/><br \/>\nPsalm 51:16-19 (NLT) \u201c  16 You do not desire a sacrifice, or I would offer one. You do not want a burnt offering. 17 The sacrifice you desire is a broken spirit. You will not reject a broken and repentant heart, O God. \u2026 19 Then you will be pleased with sacrifices offered in the right spirit\u2014with burnt offerings and whole burnt offerings\u2026\u201d  This is after David was confronted by the prophet Nathan for committing adultery and for killing the woman&#8217;s husband. I can&#8217;t really think of <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2821.35\">a <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> worse thing. Nathan comes and says that a son  is going to be taken and you know you&#8217;re being judged for this. What does David write? Here&#8217;s what David writes.  A  reflection; such a reflection. All for Samuel.   <br \/><br \/>\nIf you&#8217;re watching this right now, I want you to understand that  there&#8217;s a lot of things you can get out of our reading and  our study together, but understand this, God desires your obedience for you to hear Him.   Really hear Him and obey His word.  He desires that  more than he does some outward show of affection. He cares more about your heart than He does the actions that will follow a true heart change. We get this out of order alot. We <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2883.73\">want <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> to show signs that  we&#8217;ve done something. But the sign starts in the heart. <br \/><br \/>\nSo Gary, if you&#8217;ll continue here.  I mean,  you&#8217;re my dad. This is hard for me. You know this is pastor Gary but he is also  my father.  So, father, continue reading, please. Yes, thank you. I shall do so. <br \/><br \/>\n1 Samuel 15:24-35 (ESV) 24 Saul said to Samuel, \u201cI have sinned, for I have transgressed the commandment of the Lord and your words, because I feared the people and obeyed their voice. 25 Now therefore, please pardon my sin and return with me that I may bow before the Lord.\u201d 26 And Samuel said to Saul, \u201cI will not return with you. For you have rejected the word of the Lord, and the Lord has rejected you from being king over Israel.\u201d 27 As Samuel turned to go away, Saul seized the skirt of his robe, and it tore. 28 And Samuel said to him, \u201cThe Lord has torn the kingdom of Israel from you this day and has given it to a neighbor of yours, who is better than you. 29 And also the Glory of Israel will not lie or have regret, for he is not a man, that he should have regret.\u201d 30 Then he said, \u201cI have sinned; yet honor me now before the elders of my people and before Israel, and return with me, that I may bow before the Lord your God.\u201d 31 So Samuel turned back after Saul, and Saul bowed before the Lord. 32 Then Samuel said, \u201cBring here to me Agag the king of the Amalekites.\u201d And Agag came to him cheerfully. Agag said, \u201cSurely the bitterness of death is past.\u201d 33 And Samuel said, \u201cAs your sword has made women childless, so shall your mother be childless among women.\u201d And Samuel hacked Agag to pieces before the Lord in Gilgal. 34 Then Samuel went to Ramah, and Saul went up to his house in Gibeah of Saul. 35 And Samuel did not see Saul again until the day of his death, but Samuel grieved over Saul. And the Lord regretted that he had made Saul king over Israel.<br \/><br \/>\nWow <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"3028.42\">. <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> So here&#8217;s the third way that we see we reject God as our true king.<br \/><br \/>\n3. By caring more for what others think of us than God.<br \/><br \/>\nThis moment that Saul  has of repentance sounds good. It sounds like my repentance at times, which concerns me.   Yet in the middle of it, I did notice an excuse. And as we see that story continue, I see where Saul&#8217;s heart is  really at. You&#8217;ll notice in Verse 24 he says,  I feared the people. Part of his repentance is  he did it because the people made him. His repentance  was not do with  me as you will God; it was not You are God and I am not.   Instead of fearing God, he feared man.  I <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> almost wish he would have said, pardon me, God, but no.  Again, he cares about people. He cares about what Samuel thinks.   You&#8217;re walking away saying the exact same thing over. No,  God has rejected you, and here&#8217;s why. <br \/><br \/>\nWhile Samuel is walking away is when Saul  rips a tassel off of  his clothes.   You know, the priests of that day, the prophets  of that day would be wearing symbolic  tassels.  They  were symbolic reminders of God&#8217;s commands. We may have not seen that irony, but when you picture it, he&#8217;s wearing something with like, tassels, and each one of those tassels has meaning.  When Saul rips that off, it has meaning to it.   It has this irony to it,  that  he broke a command.  <br \/><br \/>\nIf you&#8217;re a Hebrew reader during that day and it&#8217;s always our challenge, isn&#8217;t it, Jonathan, that we first have to understand what it meant to the hearers of that day before you <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"3146.91\">bring <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> it across the Bible Bridge to the modern reader. But it literally says that he tore the wing or the edge off of his robe, which would have had those tassels representing the commands of the Torah. He ripped the commandments. He ripped the symbol of the commandments.  He breaks a command; he rips a command. He rips off a corner and so God rejects him as king. It has a picture, a clear picture there. <br \/><br \/>\nNow, in the middle of this text, I&#8217;ve gotta deal with it. There&#8217;s no getting around it.   What I saw was  like bookends.   Before,  God tells Samuel,  I regret that I made Saul King.  Now, He rejects Saul. He rejects him as King.  I regret that I made him king.   Then in the middle,  in verse 29, all this. We could have, if we were titling a sermon that had book ends like this,  we could have titled it, \u201cThe God who regrets.\u201d   It would have scared all of us to death to title it that; it  still kind of bothers us.  It still bothers me a lot because in the middle of verse 29 he says,  \u201cfor he is not a man, that he should have regret.\u201d  This is God; He  is not a man who egrets, he&#8217;s not a man that he would regret. God says to Samuel back verse 11,  \u201cI regret that I&#8217;ve made Saul King.  Then he closes chapter 15 and  in verse 35 it says,   \u201cAnd the Lord regretted that he had made Saul king over Israel.\u201d  It begins with He regretted; it ends with He regretted.  In the middle,  Samuel gives us a theological understanding of who God is. <br \/><br \/>\nSo,  Pastor Jonathan, that seems like such a clear contradiction right there in the same chapter. Normally, we&#8217;d have to stretch it out  but it&#8217;s right there in the same chapter. So what do we do with it? That word means repent; the King James Version says he repented. That sounds even worse. He repented that he made Saul king. That&#8217;s strange. <br \/><br \/>\nHonestly, though, verse 29 helps us. It helps us in that Samuel tells us what God&#8217;s regretting is. The regret that he mentions in 11 and 35 is not like a man because God doesn&#8217;t regret like a man. He is not a man that he should regret. Okay, this is good. I see where you are going with this. So what if  the possibility here is not that God is  somehow changing His mind, because if we believe rightly about God.   He&#8217;s unchanging. He doesn&#8217;t change His mind. In fact, He <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"3321.54\">has <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> foreknowledge. He knows. He stands outside of time, so he knows what has happened in the past and  in our future. He knows that He is  creator, He is creator of all of that. <br \/><br \/>\nSo if that&#8217;s true about God, that He cannot change. The idea of regret is that we would go back and change it.  To repent is that we would go back and change what we did. We would feel that sense. But perhaps that&#8217;s not the kind of regret that God has. Rather, His is one of grief,  of lamentation.  You mentioned Genesis six, where he said this before. \u201cI regret that I made man, I&#8217;m gonna wipe them off the face of the Earth with the flood except for Noah.\u201d  He said this before. <br \/><br \/>\nI appreciate what Pastor John Piper said about this, and this really helped my thinking.   He said, \u201cGod may also be capable of looking back on the very act of bringing something about and lamenting that act in one regard, while affirming it as best in another regard \u2026 God is able to feel sorrow for an act in view of foreknown evil and pain, and yet go ahead and will to do it for wise reasons.\u201d   What that means is God knew exactly when He made Saul King,  He knew what Saul would be, and yet it was still the right choice, although it grieved Him to do it. When he feels that sense of regret, it&#8217;s not like you and I  feel regret.   He has his own form. Let&#8217;s not limit God.  He has a whole range of emotions that we may not really be able to understand or attain because he&#8217;s God. He feels a sense here that He knew that He had to make Saul King to prepare the way for David to prepare the way for Jesus. I&#8217;m going to give them their king.   I&#8217;m gonna give them the <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"3437.09\">king <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> that they wanted,  the one that they desired, the one that&#8217;s like the other nations.  Even though it grieves me to do it, I&#8217;m gonna do it for their own good.   I think that&#8217;s His kind of regret. <br \/><br \/>\nHere&#8217;s what I&#8217;ve noticed about the way you got at this, and it&#8217;s that anyone who believes in the Scripture should  look at what&#8217;s really going on. We don&#8217;t believe the Bible ever contradicts itself. This is what we believe. We believe it&#8217;s God&#8217;s word. And since it&#8217;s God&#8217;s word,  and as Paul wrote to Timothy, it&#8217;s God breathed.  Samuel says, God&#8217;s not like a man, that he should grieve or that he should repent on that. That apparent contradiction has to <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"3499.41\">be <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> solved. <br \/><br \/>\n I hope for you as you&#8217;re listening, you have a deeper understanding of God.   He feels our rejection, and it grieved Him.  Yet,  at the same time, not the way it would grieve us.  This  paints an even better picture of who God is to us in the light of salvation. God decided to make people like me and you;  to make people like you watching,  to make Adam and Eve, who He knew beforehand would sin and  would decide to choose something other than Him. And yet God, who we know in Genesis six, regretted that in the sense of His regret, at the same time, he was planning all along a rescue.   A rescue that tells us a lot about who God  is.  that God was sacrificial from day one.  He was loving from day one. His mercy was great from then on. He didn&#8217;t become this. He&#8217;s always been this. He&#8217;s always loved. And so this salvation through Jesus has <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"3563.24\">been <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> planned from the moment of creation. This  gives such wonderful new meaning to me;  that God loved me before, long before,  I ever existed. He already had a plan to save me. I&#8217;m so thankful for that.  <br \/><br \/>\nI can&#8217;t help but notice that  ends with this idea of old man Samuel getting the job done. His story is kind of coming to an end. Samuel is still a guy who follows after the Lord. He doesn&#8217;t care how old he gets. He doesn&#8217;t care. In verse 33, he finishes the mission. It&#8217;s a little graphic. It says he hacked Agag  into pieces. They should make this stuff into a movie or something. It would be fascinating.   Samuel follows through on the mission that Saul couldn&#8217;t do.   Saul <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"3616.67\">was <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> unwilling to do it. But Samuel finishes the task.   <br \/><br \/>\nI appreciate old Samuel. He&#8217;s probably a very old man at this point but he has not slowed down a bit following God.   We see that he&#8217;s grieved, hearing that Saul is more concerned  about what others think over what God thinks.  It&#8217;s always a trap. It leads us to be like Saul, where even in the midst of his repentance, he can&#8217;t fully repent. He excuses himself, and he just wants Samuel to show up. Do you see it? He rips that tassel. He says, honor me before men.   All I ever wanted,  Samuel,  was for you to be the guy that shows up and tells everybody that you endorse me as king . That&#8217;s all he wanted. He didn&#8217;t really want Samuel. He didn&#8217;t really want God as king. <br \/><br \/>\nProverbs 29:25 (ESV) The fear of man lays a snare, but whoever trusts in the Lord is safe.\nI&#8217;m wondering, have you put your desire to please others over pleasing God? <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"3677.58\">It <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> is so easy to do. Will you repent of that today and turned to him? Will  you turn to God with all of your heart?<br \/><br \/>\nJonathan, this is part 8. It&#8217;s the last part of our series,  \u201cThe Original Game of Thrones.\u201d I would ask the viewer today, have you been playing the game of Thrones?   Have you  made yourself or some other person or some other wisdom on the throne of your heart rather than the Lord Jesus?<br \/><br \/>\nYou might say,  I don&#8217;t think I have. Have you gone against obeying God&#8217;s word? If you have, you&#8217;ve rejected God. Have you cared more about what someone else thinks of you rather than what God thinks of you?  Well, then,  you&#8217;ve rejected God from His throne. Have you presumed that what you want is more important than what God wants? Well, you&#8217;ve rejected God. You don&#8217;t have to check all three of these boxes off. Just check one of them off and you&#8217;ve rejected <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"3743.12\">God <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>. <br \/><br \/>\nAs we summarize today, I want you to take note of something that is happening in the Old Testament. It happens over and over again. There&#8217;s Adam and then later we&#8217;ll have the second Adam,  Jesus. We have the first version that we see doesn&#8217;t fulfill God&#8217;s plan. We have Cain,  the first born,  and then the second born,  Abel.  Abel  pleases God and Cain doesn&#8217;t please  God.   We have the twins, born to  Isaac. We  have Esau  and Jacob. Esau was born first; he doesn&#8217;t please God. But Jacob pleases God. We have the twins born to Judah,  Zerah and Perez. Zerah  doesn&#8217;t please God but Perez  pleases God. Eli comes first in the book of first Samuel;  he doesn&#8217;t please God,  so God sends  Samuel, who&#8217;s a foreshadowing of Christ and then God gives the people their king. They asked for Saul, but Saul  rejected God. <br \/><br \/>\nWe will get to  <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"3814.09\">the <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> chapter 16 maybe  next year.  Maybe it&#8217;ll be live instead of online. Praise the Lord. I hope so. When we get there, he gives us David. What we&#8217;re looking at here is all along in the Old Testament. He&#8217;s getting us ready for the second Adam,  for King Jesus. That&#8217;s what He&#8217;s been doing all along. <br \/><br \/>\nCan I pray for us right now? Can I pray about coming to Jesus? Dear Lord, we just pray first of all for the person right now that&#8217;s here today listening that they would make You king, that they would say, Jesus, I believe in my heart right now that You died for my sins,  that you raised from the grave on the third day and that  You live today Come and live in me and make me the person You want me to be. My friend, if you&#8217;re praying that prayer right now,  you&#8217;re making King Jesus the king of your heart, the king of your life. Others may be here today <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"3869.85\">and <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> you&#8217;re listening right now and you&#8217;re a believer, but you&#8217;ve been making excuses or you&#8217;ve been putting others opinions ahead of God&#8217;s opinion. You&#8217;ve been putting the wisdom of others over God&#8217;s wisdom in His word.   Right now, I pray with you that you would repent of that and say, God, I want to put You first. I want You on the throne in my life. We pray all these things now in Jesus\u2019  name and for His sake, Amen.\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>You may not yet understand how you have rejected God as your True King, but I\u2019m sure you know how rejection feels. You love someone and they betray you or leave you. They act one way to your face, but another behind your back. They say they love you back, but they don\u2019t mean it. Or someone has rejected you for a place on a team, a part in a play, or a position of employment. Rejection hurts! And that\u2019s how God feels toward us.<\/p>\n<p>As we conclude our 1 Samuel study, we\u2019ll see that our rejection grieves the Lord. nclude our 1 Samuel study, we\u2019ll see that our rejection grieves the Lord.<br \/>\nBODY: In 1 Samuel 15, the LORD rejected Saul from being king of Israel because he had rejected the Word of the LORD God who is the true King over all. Saul represents all of us. For all humanity since the time of Adam has been in rebellion against God as its true King. We can recognize that we have rejected God as our True King, so that we may repent and follow Him as our True King.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":8777,"template":"","tags":[2019],"series":[2747],"scripture-book":[1276],"scripture-chapter":[1348],"speaker":[2007,2013],"class_list":["post-8884","message","type-message","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","tag-exposition","series-the-original-game-of-thrones","scripture-book-1-samuel","scripture-chapter-1348","speaker-gary-combs","speaker-jonathan-combs"],"jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/message\/8884","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/message"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/message"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/message\/8884\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/8777"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=8884"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=8884"},{"taxonomy":"series","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/series?post=8884"},{"taxonomy":"scripture-book","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/scripture-book?post=8884"},{"taxonomy":"scripture-chapter","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/scripture-chapter?post=8884"},{"taxonomy":"speaker","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/speaker?post=8884"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}