Thursday, June 25, 2026

Crawl into God

 

Crawl into God

Take a good look, friends, at who you were when you got called into this life. I don’t see many of “the brightest and the best” among you, not many influential, not many from high-society families. Isn’t it obvious that God deliberately chose men and women that the culture overlooks and exploits and abuses, chose these “nobodies” to expose the hollow pretensions of the “somebodies”? That makes it quite clear that none of you can get by with blowing your own horn before God. Everything that we have — right thinking and right living, a clean slate and a fresh start — comes from God by way of Jesus Christ. (1 Cor. 1:26-30)

The Dead Sea is dying. Sounds like an oxymoron but drop by drop it’s losing three feet of water a year. In other words, the Dead Sea’s shrinking. Galilee sends fresh water through the Jordanian Canal, water worthy of Jesus’ baptism, but the Dead Sea poisons it. Darkening and acidizing, it’s a saline cemetery. There’s little life in its waters, and its surroundings are equally lifeless. Ominous cliffs rise to the west, and erosion has scarred the land into a patchwork of caves and ruts and sparse canyons. It’s home for hyenas, lizards and buzzards. And it was home to David – for a decade. Not by choice, mind you. He didn’t want to swap the palace for the badlands. No one chooses the wilderness. It comes at you from all directions — heat and rain, sandstorms and hail – and sometimes we don’t have a vote. Calamity hits, the roof rips, the tornado lifts and drops us smack dab in the middle of the desert. Not the desert in Israel, but the desert of the soul.

More than anything else, isolation seems to mark these seasons. Saul had effectively and systematically isolated David from every source of stability. His half-dozen assassination attempts ended David’s military career. His murderous pursuit drove a wedge in David’s marriage. After David’s wife, Michal, helped him escape, Saul demanded an explanation from her. “I had to,” she lied. “He threatened to kill me if I didn’t help him.” (1 Sam. 19:17) David never trusted his wife again. They stayed married but slept in different beds.

David races from Saul’s court to Samuel’s house. But no sooner does he arrive than someone tells Saul, “Take note, David is at Naioth in Ramah!” (1 Sam. 19:19) So, David flees to Jonathan, his soul mate. Jonathan wants to help, but what can he do? Leave the court in the hands of a madman? No, Jonathan has to stay with Saul, and David can see the rope fraying on his lifeline. No place in the court. No position in the army. No wife, no priest, no friend. Nothing to do but run. And although the wilderness begins with disconnections, it often continues with deceit.

We see David’s deceit in Nob, the city of the priests. The city was holy; David was anything but. He lied each time he opened his mouth. In fact, David gets worse before he gets better. He escapes to Gath, the hometown of Goliath. He tries to forge a friendship based on a mutual adversary. If your enemy is Saul and my enemy is Saul, we can be friends, right? Wrong. The Gittites weren’t feeling very friendly. “Isn’t this David, the king of the land?” they asked. “Isn’t he the one the people honor with dances, singing, ‘Saul has killed his thousands, and David his ten thousands’?” (1 Sam. 21:11)

David panics. He’s a lamb in a pack of wolves. Penetrating glares; piercing spears. And right about now we’d like to hear a prayer to his Shepherd; we’d appreciate a pronouncement of God’s strength. But don’t hold your breath because David doesn’t see God. He sees trouble, instead. So, he takes matters into his own hands. He pretends to be insane, scratching on doors and drooling down his beard. Finally, the king of Gath says to his men, “‘Must you bring me a madman? We already have enough of them around here! Why should I let someone like this be my guest?’ So, David left Gath and escaped to the cave of Adullam.” (1 Sam. 21:14 – 22:1)

Can’t you just picture it? Staring with galvanized eyes and quivering like jelly. He sticks out his tongue, rolls in the dirt, grunts and grins, spits, shakes and foams. David feigns something like epilepsy. The Philistines, however, believed that Dagon’s devil possessed an epileptic and that he made husbands impotent, women barren, children die and animals vomit. Fearing that every drop of an epileptic’s blood created one more devil, the Philistines drove epileptics out of their towns and into the desert to die. And that’s what they do with David. They shove him out of the city gates and leave him with nowhere to go.

So now what? He can’t go to the court of Saul or the house of Michal, the city of Samuel or the safety of Nob. So, he goes to the only place he can — the place where no one goes because nothing survives. He goes to the desert; the wilderness. To the honeycombed canyons that overlook the Dead Sea and there he finds a cave, the cave called Adullam. In it he finds shade, silence and safety. He stretches on the cool dirt, closes his eyes, and begins his decade in the wilderness.

Can you relate to David’s story? Has your Saul cut you off from the position you had and the people you love? In an effort to land on your feet, have you stretched the truth or distorted the facts? Are you seeking refuge in Gath? Under normal circumstances you’d never go there, but these aren’t normal circumstances, so you loiter in the breeding ground of giants; the hometown of trouble. You walk shady streets and frequent shadier places. And, while you’re  there, you go crazy. So the crowd will accept you, and so the stress won’t kill you, you go wild. You wake up in a Dead Sea cave, in the grottoes of Adullam, at the lowest point of your life and feeling as dumb as a roomful of anvils. You stare out at an arid, harsh, unpeopled future and ask, “What do I do now?”

Well, let this same David be your teacher, also. Sure, he goes wacko for a few verses but in the cave of Adullam he gathers himself. The faithful shepherd boy surfaces once again. The giant-killer rediscovers courage. Yes, he has a price on his head, and yes he has no place to lay his head, but somehow he keeps his head. He returns his focus on God and finds refuge.

Refuge surfaces as a favorite word of David’s. Circle its appearances in the book of Psalms and you’ll count as many as forty-plus appearances in some versions. But never did David use the word more poignantly than in Psalm 57. Even the introduction to the passage explains its background: “A song of David when he fled from Saul into the cave.” So, close your eyes and envision Jesse’s son in the dimness: on his knees, perhaps on his face, lost in shadows and thought. He has nowhere to turn. Go home, he endangers his family; go to the tabernacle, he imperils the priests. Saul will kill him; Gath won’t take him. He lied in the sanctuary, and went crazy with the Philistines, and here he sits. All alone.

But then he remembers: he’s not. He’s not alone. And from the recesses of the cave a sweet voice floats: Be merciful to me, O God, be merciful to me! For my soul trusts in you; and in the shadow of your wings, I will make my refuge. (Psalm 57:1) Make God your refuge. Not your job, your reputation or your retirement account. Make God your refuge. Let him, not Saul, encircle you. Let him be the ceiling that breaks the sunshine, the walls that stop the wind, the foundation upon which you stand. The truth is that most of us, like David, will never know that Jesus is all we need until Jesus is all we have.

Wilderness survivors find refuge in God’s presence. They also discover community among God’s people. “Soon [David’s] brothers and other relatives joined him there. Then others began coming — men who were in trouble or in debt or who were just discontented — until David was the leader of about four hundred men.” (1 Sam. 22:1–2)

Not exactly a corps of West Point cadets, they were in trouble, in debt or discontent. Quite a crew. Misfits, yes. Dregs from the bottom of the barrel, no doubt. Rejects. Losers. Dropouts. Just like the church. (No, that’s not a typo) Because if we’re honest with ourselves, aren’t most of us the distressed, the debtors and the discontent? The Apostle Paul, talking to the church in Corinth, certainly thought so: “Take a good look, friends, at who you were when you got called into this life. I don’t see many of ‘the brightest and the best’ among you, not many influential, not many from high-society families. Isn’t it obvious that God deliberately chose men and women that the culture overlooks and exploits and abuses, chose these “nobodies” to expose the hollow pretensions of the “somebodies”? (1 Cor. 1:26–28) Strong congregations are populated with current and former cave dwellers, people who know the terrain of Adullam. They’ve told a few lies in Nob. They’ve gone loopy in Gath. And they haven’t forgotten it. And because they haven’t, they imitate David: they make room for people like you and me.

And who’s David to turn these men away? He’s no candidate for archbishop, that’s for sure. He’s a magnet for marginal people. So, David creates a community of God-seeking misfits, and God forges a mighty group out of them: “(t)hey came to David day by day to help him, until it was a great army, like the army of God.” (1 Chron. 12:22) Gath. Wilderness. Adullam. Folly. Loneliness. Restoration. David found all three. So did Whit Criswell.

Whit was raised in a Christian home. As a young man, he served as an officer in a Christian church, but he got hooked on gambling, daily risking his income on baseball games. Over the course of time, he lost $200,000.00 and found himself in deep and desperate debt to his bookie. So, he decided to embezzle funds from the bank where he worked. Welcome to Gath.

Of course, it was only a matter of time until the auditors detected a problem and called him in for an appointment. Criswell knew he’d been caught. But the night before the meeting he couldn’t sleep. So, he resolved to take the path of Judas. Leaving his wife with a suicide note, he drove outside of Lexington, parked the car and put a gun to his head. But he couldn’t pull the trigger, so he took a practice shot out the car window. He pressed the nose of the barrel back on his forehead and mumbled, “Go ahead and pull the trigger. This is what you deserve.” But he couldn’t do it. The fear that he might go to hell kept him from taking his life. Finally, at dawn, he went home, a very broken man.

Meanwhile, his wife had found the note and called the police. She embraced him, and the officers cuffed him. He was, at once, humiliated and liberated: humiliated to be arrested in front of family and neighbors but liberated from the chains of mistruth. He didn’t have to lie anymore. Whit Criswell’s Adullam was a prison cell. In it, he came to his senses; he turned back to his faith. Upon release, he plunged into the work of a local church, doing whatever needed to be done. Over a period of years, he was added to the staff of the congregation. He’s now a minister at Mt. Zion Christian Church in Lexington, Kentucky. Another David restored.

Are you in the wilderness? Crawl into God the way a fugitive would a cave. Find refuge in God’s presence and comfort in his people. Cast your hat in a congregation of folks who are one gift of grace removed from tragedy, addiction and disaster. Seek community in the church of Adullam. Refuge in God’s presence. Comfort in God’s people. Your keys for wilderness survival. Do this and who knows? In the midst of the desert, you may write your sweetest psalms, and in the midst of a cave find God.

Grace,

Randy

Thursday, June 18, 2026

A Promise, a Wardrobe and Protection

 

A Promise, a Wardrobe and Protection

A Promise, a Wardrobe and Protection - Audio/Visual 

After David had finished talking with Saul, he met Jonathan, the king’s son. There was an immediate bond between them, for Jonathan loved David. From that day on Saul kept David with him and wouldn’t let him return home. And Jonathan made a solemn pact with David because he loved him as he loved himself. Jonathan sealed the pact by taking off his robe and giving it to David, together with his tunic, sword, bow, and belt. (1 Samuel 18:1-4)

Sharon checks her rearview mirror . . . again. She studies the many faces of the other drivers . . .  again. She keeps an eye out because she knows he’ll come after her . . . again. “Nothing will keep me from you,” was the message Tony had left on her voicemail. “I’m your husband.” Her ex-husband’s fits of anger and flying fists and her black eyes had led to their divorce. Still, he neglected warnings, ignored restraining orders and scoffed at the law. So, Sharon checks the rearview mirror . . . again.

Down the road, around the corner, an attorney named Adam does some checking of his own. He peeks in the door of his boss’ office, sees the empty chair and sighs with relief. With any luck, he’ll have an hour, maybe two, before the managing partner appears in his doorway, likely hung over, angry and disoriented. Mouthpiece, Jr. inherited the firm from Mouthpiece, Sr. But managing the law firm frustrates Junior. So, he reroutes his stress toward employees that he needs the most – like Adam. Junior rants and raves, gives daily tongue-lashings, and compliments staff about as frequently as the 76-year orbit of Halley’s comet.

Sharon ducks her ex, Adam avoids his boss, and you? What ogres roam your world? Coaches from the school of Stalin? The pit-bull math teacher? The self-appointed cubicle commandant? The king who resolves to spear the shepherd boy to the wall?

That last one – the one about the king and the murder weapon – comes after David. Poor David. The Valley of Elah proved to be his boot camp for the king’s court. When Goliath lost his head, the Hebrews made David their hero. People threw him a ticker-tape parade and sang, “Saul has slain his thousands, and David his ten thousands.” (1 Sam. 18:7) The result? Saul explodes like the Vesuvius that he is and keeps an eye on David “from that day forward.” (18:9) The king is already a troubled soul, prone to angry eruptions and crazy enough to eat bees. So, David’s popularity splashes gasoline on Saul’s temper. “I will pin David to the wall!” (18:11)

Saul tries to kill Bethlehem’s golden boy on six different occasions. First, he invites David to marry his daughter Michal. Seems like a nice gesture, until you read the crude dowry that Saul required. One hundred Philistine foreskins. “Surely one of the Philistines will kill David,” Saul hopes. They don’t. David doubles the demand and returns with the proof. (18:25–27) Saul doesn’t give up though. He orders his servants and his son, Jonathan, to kill David, but they refuse. (1 Sam. 19:1) He tries with the spear another time but misses. (19:10) Saul then sends messengers to David’s house to kill him, but his wife, Michal (Saul’s own daughter), lowers him through a window. David the Roadrunner stays one step ahead of Saul the Coyote. Saul’s anger puzzles David. What has he done? He’s brought musical healing to Saul’s tortured spirit and hope to an enfeebled nation. He’s the Abraham Lincoln of the Hebrew calamity, saving the republic and doing it with modesty and honesty. He behaves “wisely in all his ways.” (1 Sam. 18:14) “All Israel and Judah loved David.” (18:16) David behaves “more wisely than all the servants of Saul, so that his name became highly esteemed.” (18:30)

Yet, Mount Saul keeps erupting, rewarding David’s deeds with flying spears and murderous plots. So, it’s not hard to understand David’s question of Jonathan: “What have I done? What is my crime? How have I offended your father that he is so determined to kill me?” (1 Sam. 20:1) But Jonathan doesn’t have an answer. No answer exists. Who can justify the rage of a Saul? Who knows why a father torments a child, a husband abuses his wife, or a boss pits employees against one another? But they do. Sauls still rage on our planet. Dictators torture, employers seduce, ministers abuse, priests molest, the strong and mighty control and cajole the vulnerable and the innocent. Sauls still stalk Davids in this world. So how does God respond in these cases? Nuke the nemesis? We’d like him to since he’s been known to extract a few Herods and Pharaohs from the world. But how will he treat yours? I don’t know. But how he will treat you, I can. He will send you a Jonathan.

God counters Saul’s cruelty with Jonathan’s loyalty. Jonathan could have been as jealous as Saul. As Saul’s son, he stood to inherit the throne. A noble soldier himself, he was fighting Philistines while David was still feeding sheep. Jonathan had every reason to despise David, but he didn’t. He was gracious. Gracious because the hand of the Master Weaver took Jonathan’s and David’s hearts and stitched a seam between them. “The soul of Jonathan was knit to the soul of David, and Jonathan loved him as his own soul.” (1 Sam. 18:1) It’s as if the two hearts were two fabrics that God needle-and-threaded together. So interwoven were they that when one moved, the other felt it. When one was stretched, the other knew it.

On the very day David defeats Goliath, Jonathan pledges his loyalty to David and then Jonathan and David made a covenant, because Jonathan loved David as his own soul. So, as part of the pledge, Jonathan took off the robe that was on him and gave it to David, including his armor, even his sword and his bow and his belt. (18:3-4) Jonathan replaces David’s rancher’s overalls with his own purple robe: the robe of a prince. He presents his own sword to David. He effectively crowns young David. The heir to the throne surrenders his throne.

And then he protects David. When Jonathan hears the plots of Saul, he informs his new friend. When Saul comes after David, Jonathan hides him. He commonly issues warnings like, “My father Saul seeks to kill you. Therefore, please be on your guard until morning, and stay in a secret place and hide.” (1 Sam. 19:2) Jonathan gives David a promise, a wardrobe and protection. Perhaps that’s why David’s son, Solomon, writes much later, “There is a friend who sticks closer than a brother.” (Prov. 18:24) David had found such a friend in the son of Saul. And wouldn’t you like to have a friend like Jonathan? A soul mate who protects you, who seeks nothing but your best interests and wants nothing but your happiness; an ally who lets you be you. You feel safe with that person. No need to weigh your thoughts or measure your words. You know his or her faithful hand will sift the chaff from the grain – keep what matters, and with a breath of kindness blow the rest away. God gave David such a friend.

He gave you one as well. David found a companion in a prince of Israel, but you can find a friend in the King of Israel, Jesus Christ. And hasn’t he made a promise to you? Among his final words were these: “I am with you always, even to the end of the age.” (Matt. 28:20) And, like Jonathan, hasn’t he clothed you? He offers you “white garments, that you may be clothed, that the shame of your nakedness may not be revealed.” (Rev. 3:18) Christ fits you with clothing suitable for heaven.

In fact, he outdoes Jonathan. He not only gives you his robe; he puts on your rags. “God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.” (2 Cor. 5:21) Jesus dresses you. And, like Jonathan, he equips you. You are invited to “put on all of God’s armor so that you will be able to stand firm against all strategies and tricks of the Devil.” (Eph. 6:11) From his armory he hands you the belt of truth, the body armor of righteousness, the shield of faith and the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God (vv. 13-17). And just as Jonathan protected David, Jesus vows to protect you. “I give them eternal life, and they will never perish. No one will snatch them away from me.” (John 10:28) Do you long for one true friend? You have one. And because you do, you have a choice. You can focus on your Saul, or you can focus on your Jonathan; you can ponder the malice of your monster, or the kindness of your Christ.

“Beverly” chose the latter, but it wasn’t easy. How can you shift your focus away from the man who raped you? He entered Beverly’s home under the guise of official business. She had every reason to trust him because he was a personal acquaintance and professional associate. He worked for the state and asked to meet with Beverly, but when he arrived, he took more than her time. And when confronted, he denied and successfully covered up the deed. And as he continued to move up the political ladder, Beverly would spot him on the evening news. And while he feigned innocence, she churned within. But not like she used to.

Two years after the rape she met her Jonathan. A friend told her about Christ — his protection, his provision and his invitation. She accepted it. And although memories of the rape are unavoidable, they don’t control her. She isn’t left alone with her Saul anymore. She seeks Christ rather than revenge; she measures choices against his mercy, not her violator’s cruelty. Beverly ponders and praises the living presence of Jesus. And doing so heals her soul. So, major in your evil emperor if you wish. Paint horns on his picture. Throw darts at her portrait. Make and memorize a list of everything the Spam-brain took: your childhood, career, marriage, health. Live a Saul-saturated life. Wallow in the sludge of pain. You’ll feel better, won’t you? Or will you? Because if you linger too long in the stench of your hurt, you’ll smell like the very toxin you despise. The better option? Hang out with your Jonathan.

Bemoan your Sauls less and worship Christ more. Join with David as he announces: “The Lord lives! Blessed be my Rock! . . . It is God who avenges me and subdues the peoples under me; he delivers me from my enemies. . . . you have delivered me from the violent man. Therefore, I will give thanks to you, O Lord, among the Gentiles, and sing praises to your name. (Ps. 18:46–49) Wander freely and daily through the gallery of God’s goodness. Catalog his kindnesses. Everything from sunsets to salvation — look at what you have. Your Saul took a lot, but Christ gave you more. Let Jesus be the friend you need. Talk to him. Spare no detail. Disclose your fear and describe your dread.

Will your Saul disappear? I don’t know. Beverly’s did. He eventually resigned in ignominy. But, in a sense, does it really matter? You just found a friend for life who gave you a promise, a wardrobe and protection. What more could you ask?

Happy Father’s Day,

Randy