David's Prayer (2)

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1 Chronicles 17:16–21 NASB95
Then David the king went in and sat before the Lord and said, “Who am I, O Lord God, and what is my house that You have brought me this far? “This was a small thing in Your eyes, O God; but You have spoken of Your servant’s house for a great while to come, and have regarded me according to the standard of a man of high degree, O Lord God. “What more can David still say to You concerning the honor bestowed on Your servant? For You know Your servant. “O Lord, for Your servant’s sake, and according to Your own heart, You have wrought all this greatness, to make known all these great things. “O Lord, there is none like You, nor is there any God besides You, according to all that we have heard with our ears. “And what one nation in the earth is like Your people Israel, whom God went to redeem for Himself as a people, to make You a name by great and terrible things, in driving out nations from before Your people, whom You redeemed out of Egypt?
1 CHRO 17:16-
1 chr 17:
1 Chronicles 17:22–27 NASB95
“For Your people Israel You made Your own people forever, and You, O Lord, became their God. “Now, O Lord, let the word that You have spoken concerning Your servant and concerning his house be established forever, and do as You have spoken. “Let Your name be established and magnified forever, saying, ‘The Lord of hosts is the God of Israel, even a God to Israel; and the house of David Your servant is established before You.’ “For You, O my God, have revealed to Your servant that You will build for him a house; therefore Your servant has found courage to pray before You. “Now, O Lord, You are God, and have promised this good thing to Your servant. “And now it has pleased You to bless the house of Your servant, that it may continue forever before You; for You, O Lord, have blessed, and it is blessed forever.”

So God’s revealed words correct and actually harness the impulses of the heart, and the wise believer will bring emotion and revelation together as he comes before God: ‘Thou, my God, hast revealed to thy servant that thou wilt build a house for him; therefore thy servant has found courage to pray before thee’ (17:25).

The New American Commentary: 1, 2 Chronicles (2) David’s Prayer in Response to the Oracle (17:16–27)

17:16 David referred to the insignificance of his own family in contrast to the high position he now held. More than that, there was an exciting future hope.

The New American Commentary: 1, 2 Chronicles (2) David’s Prayer in Response to the Oracle (17:16–27)

17:17–24 Verse 17b has textual problems, and translators give different renderings. The general drift of the passage seems to be that God has marked out a significant future for David, but there is uncertainty about the exact translation. In the parallel in 2 Sam 7:19, David proclaims that God’s decree is “instruction for the people” (NRSV), a phrase that may have profound messianic implications. The text here, however, is unclear.

The New American Commentary: 1, 2 Chronicles (2) David’s Prayer in Response to the Oracle (17:16–27)

In any case David expressed thanks that God had honored him (v. 19). David’s prayer is that the Lord’s promise should be established forever. The frequent use of “forever” and similar phrases points forward to a future beyond David’s time. So David prayed that God’s “name” (fame) should be sure and great forever so that “the LORD Almighty, the God over Israel, is Israel’s God.” Thus will the house of David be established forever before God.

The New American Commentary: 1, 2 Chronicles (2) David’s Prayer in Response to the Oracle (17:16–27)

17:25–27 The prayer closes with the invocation: “O LORD, you are God! You have promised these good things to your servant.” Assurance of the Lord’s continuing blessing comes in the final words, “Now you have been pleased to bless the house of your servant, that it may continue forever in your sight; for you, O LORD, have blessed it, and it will be blessed forever.”

The New American Commentary: 1, 2 Chronicles (2) David’s Prayer in Response to the Oracle (17:16–27)

The continuity of David’s throne also is acknowledged (vv. 23–24).

The New American Commentary: 1, 2 Chronicles (2) David’s Prayer in Response to the Oracle (17:16–27)

The reference to the exodus in vv. 21–22 is important.

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary iii. David’s Prayer (17:16–27)

First, God’s unconditional promises are not to be received casually, as though their advantages were automatic, but with submissive faith and thanksgiving.

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary iii. David’s Prayer (17:16–27)

Secondly, for the Chronicler, faith is often expressed through prayer, notably in the examples of David (also 29:10–19), Solomon (2 Chr. 1:8–10; 6:14–42), Jehoshaphat (2 Chr. 20:6–12), and Hezekiah (2 Chr. 30:18–20; 32:20, 24).

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary iii. David’s Prayer (17:16–27)

Prayers are often strategic in Chronicles, especially those which introduce and conclude the temple-building narratives in the reigns of David and Solomon. Chronicles makes a closer connection between prayer and the building of the temple than Samuel or Kings (1 Chr. 29:10–19 has no parallel),

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary a. Praise for God’s Uniqueness (17:16–22)

a. Praise for God’s uniqueness (17:16–22).

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary a. Praise for God’s Uniqueness (17:16–22)

Three rhetorical questions, Who am I? (v. 16), ‘What is my house?’ (v. 16, NRSV, RSV, etc.), and Who is like your people Israel? (v. 21),

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary a. Praise for God’s Uniqueness (17:16–22)

God as not only unique but without any rival (v. 20).

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary a. Praise for God’s Uniqueness (17:16–22)

and a statement of faith, There is no-one like you, O LORD, and there is no God but you (v. 20),

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary a. Praise for God’s Uniqueness (17:16–22)

There is no-one like you, O LORD in the prayers of Asa (2 Chr. 14:11, EVV; v. 10, MT), Jehoshaphat (2 Chr. 20:6) and Jeremiah (Jer. 10:6–7); there is no God but you in both prayer (Ps. 18:32; Isa. 64:4) and divine speech (Isa. 45:5, 21; Hos. 13:4).

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary a. Praise for God’s Uniqueness (17:16–22)

and a statement of faith, There is no-one like you, O LORD, and there is no God but you (v. 20),

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary a. Praise for God’s Uniqueness (17:16–22)

the Davidic covenant is to be placed on a par with God’s mighty acts of salvation in the exodus (Hos. 13:4) and the return from exile (Isa. 45:5, 21) as major evidence for Yahweh’s incomparability (cf. v. 24).

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary a. Praise for God’s Uniqueness (17:16–22)

The prayer confirms that the new covenant promises are also a continuation of God’s eternal promises for his people in the Mosaic covenant (vv. 21–22; cf. vv. 7–8). By echoing the covenant formula, You made your people Israel your very own for ever, and you, O LORD, have become their God (v. 22),

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary a. Praise for God’s Uniqueness (17:16–22)

the past is resumed (Exod. 6:7; Lev. 26:12), the judgment of exile forgiven (Hos. 1:8–9; Jer. 31:33), and the future in Christ anticipated (Rom. 9:25–26; Rev. 21:3).

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary b. Request for God to Confirm His Promises (17:23–27)

b. Request for God to confirm his promises (17:23–27).

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary b. Request for God to Confirm His Promises (17:23–27)

Two requests emerge in the latter part of the prayer. The first is that God’s ‘word’ (NRSV, RSV) promise (NIV, GNB) should be established for ever (v. 23).

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary b. Request for God to Confirm His Promises (17:23–27)

The Davidic covenant is usually described in this chapter as the word/promise (vv. 3, 23; cf. v. 6), but it is also called this great thing (v. 19), ‘this good thing’ (v. 26, NRSV, RSV), and what God has revealed (v. 25; cf. v. 15). Verse 23 contains a good example of prayer not always changing the circumstances but the attitude of the person who prays—‘Do what you said’

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary b. Request for God to Confirm His Promises (17:23–27)

The second request is that God’s name (‘fame’, GNB, REB, NEB) will be magnified for ever (v. 24, NRSV, RSV).

1 Chronicles: An Introduction and Commentary b. Request for God to Confirm His Promises (17:23–27)

God’s covenant promise is twice seen as evidence of God’s blessing, and this is the real ground of hope that the blessing will not be lost in the future (You have been pleased to bless …, you … have blessed, v. 27

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