2 Samuel Explained: David, Failure, and God’s Grace
2 Samuel explained: explore David's triumphs, catastrophic failures, and the breathtaking grace of God that refused to let a broken king — or a broken you — stay down for good. If you want a hero without flaws, 2 Samuel is the wrong book. Its central figure — King David, the man after God's own heart — commits adultery, engineers a murder, fails as a father, and watches his own household tear itself apart in violence and betrayal. The biography is shocking in its honesty. Ancient literature almost never treats its heroes this way. Kings were gods in Egypt, demigods in Mesopotamia. In Israel, the greatest king who ever reigned is shown weeping, hiding, sinning, and breaking. And yet 2 Samuel is one of the most hope-filled books in the entire Bible. Because it is not ultimately a book about David's greatness. It is a book about God's covenant faithfulness — a faithfulness so deep and so stubborn that it holds even when the man it is extended to falls spectacularly short o...