MaryLynne Wrye MaryLynne Wrye

Sin in the First Person Singular

David said to Nathan, 'I have sinned against the lord.' And Nathan said to David, 'The lord also has put away your sin; you shall not die.’ (II Samuel 12:13)

David said to Nathan, 'I have sinned against the lord.' And Nathan said to David, 'The lord also has put away your sin; you shall not die.’ (2 Samuel 12:13)

2 Sam. 11 and 12:1-13; 1 Sam. 13:14, 22; Prov. 13:15; Isa. 43:25 and 55:7; Rom. 8:1

copyright marylynne wrye

What Is God Saying?

Even though David was a ‘man after God's own heart’ (1 Sam. 13:4 and 22), he sinned greatly. He took another man's wife, and, in the process, another man's life (2 Sam. 12:9). He paid dearly. The way of transgressors is always hard (Prov. 13:15). God told him that the sword would never depart from his house. From that time on, tragedy stalked the house of David: the death of a child, a rebellious son killed in the act of trying to dethrone his father, and the desertion of his officers.

Yet all this did not alter the fact that David was greatly loved and used by God. God forgave him when David confessed before Nathan, with genuine sorrow, that he had sinned against the Lord. Just as genuine was Nathan's response, ‘David, you have utterly scorned the Lord, but He has put away your sin.’ Nathan’s words were a relief to his troubled heart, and a psalm was born. The 51st Psalm is a part of our treasury, a way of hope, which has its origin in David's disastrous detour into sin and back by the grace of God?

How Does This Apply To Us?

God awakens our consciences in different ways. God wants us to leave restlessness, misery, and death and walk in the path of righteousness and peace. Prov. 12:28 says, ‘In the path of righteousness is life, but the way of error leads to death.’ David knew he was out of bounds. It kept his heart in turmoil until God sent Nathan to David with the story of the rich man who took a precious ewe lamb from a poor man (2 Sam. 12:11-13). Nathan spoke the courageous words, ‘You are that man.’

Sometimes our consciences are awakened, and we must own up to our broken promises, our shattered vows, and our tarnished ideals. We might hear in our thoughts the words of Nathan’s accusation, but God loves us, and His Spirit will bring to the repentant a new beginning like the return of Spring or the coming of dawn. You are the person that God loves.

Pray With Me

Dear Lord, it is wonderful to discover this truth, to keep on rediscovering it, and to keep on realizing it at deeper levels of understanding and appreciation, ‘The Lord has put away your sin.’ Today, I pray for your grace that you will put away my sin. Help me to see how it destroys communion with you.

With David, I would say, I have sinned against the Lord. Wherever I stray, however careless I grow, Your patient love, Lord, reaches me. Your love in Christ ignites the heart's fire, long dead. Thank you for this assurance, this reassurance, ‘the Lord also has put away your sin.’

When you, Lord, shall make, who shall undo? When you discover who can hide? When you put it away, who will bring it back? In the vast seas of your forgetfulness, Lord, my sin is put away. Help me to be wise and leave it there. Help me to walk without the weight of needless guilt. Help me to move on, set free from the encumbrances of an accusing conscience.

In the name of Him who, in response to simple faith and by His death on Calvary, has put away all sins for all time, for all who believe, for all who trust in Him. Amen.

Moving On In The Life of Prayer

Prayer is being honest with God. Prayer is leaving the burden of our failure, the weight of the past, at the foot of the Cross. Prayer is saying Jesus can take care of all that. Prayer is turning from all that, and thinking only about all that God has prepared for us: good work, wholesome life, good friends, the peace of forgiveness, joy the world cannot give or take away, eternal life, and a place in the Father's house forever.

Read More