Posted on 10/17/2018 10:39:44 PM PDT by Sontagged
Who incited David to take the census in 2 Samuel 24, God or Satan? Why was God so angry at David for taking the census? Why did God punish the Israelite people when it was David who ordered the census?"
Answer: Second Samuel 24:1 says, Again the anger of the Lord burned against Israel, and he incited David against them, saying, Go and take a census of Israel and Judah.
The parallel account of the incident surrounding the census, however, reveals it was Satan who incited David to take the census: Satan rose up against Israel and incited David to take a census of Israel (1 Chronicles 21:1).
This discrepancy is often explained by the understanding that, in order to achieve His purposes, sometimes God sovereignly permits Satan to act. God can use Satan in various ways, with the result being the refining, disciplining, and purification of disobedient believers (Luke 22:3132; 1 Corinthians 5:15; 2 Corinthians 12:710).
Such might have been the case with David. God allowed Satan to tempt him, and David sinned, revealing his pride, and God then dealt with David accordingly.
There other considerations concerning the passages relating Davids sinful census. Here is 2 Samuel 24:1 in four translations:
Again the anger of the Lord burned against Israel, and he incited David against them . . . (NIV).
Again the anger of the LORD was kindled against Israel, and he incited David against them . . . (ESV).
And again the anger of the LORD was kindled against Israel, and he moved David against them . . . (KJV).
Now again the anger of the LORD burned against Israel, and it incited David against them . . . (NASB).
Note that the New American Standard Bible says it (the anger of the Lord) is what caused David to take the census. The other translations say he (the Lord) did the inciting.
The reason for the differences in translation is that, in the original language, there is no subject for the verb incited. The fact is we arent told who exactly moved David to take the census.
To translate the verse literally, we would say, There was who moved David against them or For one moved David against them. The translations above have taken this to mean it was either God or His anger that caused David to take the census. But there are other options:
The unstated thing that moved David to conduct the census could have been Davids own evil imagination.
The one who moved David could be Satan, as 1 Chronicles 21:1 says.
The adversary (the meaning of the word Satan) mentioned in 1 Chronicles could be someone other than the devil; it could have been an unnamed counsellor to David who prompted him into a foolish (or sinful) action.
As to why God was angry at David, in those times, a man only had the right to count or number what belonged to him. Israel did not belong to David; Israel belonged to God.
In Exodus 30:12 God told Moses, When you take a census of the Israelites to count them, each one must pay the LORD a ransom for his life at the time he is counted. Then no plague will come on them when you number them. It was up to God to command a census, and if David counted he should only do it at Gods command, receiving a ransom to atone for the counting.
This is why God was angry again with Israel and is also why David was conscience-stricken after he counted Israel. David knew it was wrong and begged God to take away the guilt of his sin (2 Samuel 24:10).
God gave David a choice of three punishments for his sinthree years of famine, three months of fleeing before his enemies, or three days of plague. David chose the third, and the Lord then punished Israel with a plague that killed 70,000 men from Dan in the north to Beersheba in the south.
As for why God punished the whole nation for the sin of the king, that is exactly the question David asks in 2 Samuel 24:17. Why, when he was the one who had sinned, did the people have to suffer? He even requested that Gods hand be against him and his family only, and that God would spare the people.
But, as with the account of Job, God chose not to give a reason for His actions. Perhaps it was because of Israels multiplied sins and rebellion against God throughout the centuries.
Perhaps it was a lesson to the people (and to us as well) that the people suffer when their leaders go astray. The reality is that God didnt justify His actions with a reason, nor does He have to.
Of the three choices presented to David, the first two would have involved some level of dependency upon the mercy of man: the warfare, of course, would be as severe as the enemy wanted it to be; the famine would require Israel to seek food from other nations, relying on the pity of their neighbors. Instead of relying on the mercy of any human, David chose to rely on the mercy of Godthe pestilence was, after all, the most direct form of punishment from God, and in the plague they could only look to God for relief.
The psalmist tells us, As for God, His way is perfect (Psalm 18:30). If Gods ways are perfect, then we can trust that whatever He doesand whatever He allowsis also perfect. Our responsibility to God is to obey Him, to trust Him, and to submit to His will, whether we understand it or not.
As we see in 2 Samuel 24:16, God was grieved because of the things that were happening to His people, and He called off the punishment. Even in His rebuke God still shows His love and mercy.
I can’t see how civilization can go on much longer like this. Everything is being turned on it’s head - gender, morals. How much longer can this be sustained? I can’t see it at all.
Exactly.
There are times God Himself orders that the census be taken (i.e. Numbers 1 and elsewhere in Numbers, hence the reason for the book name). But I think it’s safe to say that David knew what he did was a sin (2nd Samuel 24:10). That alone, the belief that what he was doing was sin, might constitute it being sin.
It may be an end of “nominal business as usual” for a lot of Christendom. But this is a periodic problem that Christendom gets in, and we should be watchful for it.
When the power of darkness comes in like a flood, the Lord will raise up a standard (a rallying point).
Sounds like Obamacare. /s
Seriously, I have not had time this week to consider your question fully; and will bookmark it.
S I N = Systematic Inversion of Norms.
LOL... and thanks. Lord bless your day.
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