One of
the first things David does after becoming king is to finally go and conquer
Jerusalem, in which the Jebusites had been quietly holding out ever since the
Israelites first invaded Canaan hundreds of years prior. As most of you are no
doubt aware, Jerusalem was to become quite an important religious center. David
also took a bunch of wives and concubines from among the women of Jerusalem
(and don’t kid yourselves that all of them were happy at the prospect of
marrying the man who’d just invaded their home and killed their menfolk).
There’s
a bit more about David’s ongoing wars with the Philistines, but the next
important religious bit is when David decides to have the ark of the Covenant
brought to Jerusalem. So he sets out with a bunch of people to retrieve it from
this guy Abinadab. They set it on this nice new cart, and Abinadab sends his
sons Uzzah and Ahio along to drive the cart and make sure the ark gets to
Jerusalem safely. David and all his men are making a big happy holiday out of
the trip when…
“2 Sam 6:6 And when they came to the threshing floor of Nacon, Uzzah
put out his hand to the ark of God and took hold of it, for the oxen stumbled. 7 And the anger of Yahweh was kindled
against Uzzah, and God struck him down there because of his error, and he died
there beside the ark of God.”
So the oxen
stumble, and Uzzah touches the ark to steady it so it won’t fall and get
smashed to pieces. And God just killed the fuck out of him for touching his
shit. That’s the kind of behavior you’d expect to see from a psycho villain in
some over-the-top action movie.
Of
course, that takes the celebratory mood right out of everyone, and David
decides that maybe he doesn’t want the ark in Jerusalem after all. So he takes
it to the house of some guy named Obed-edom and leaves it there. That is, until
three months later when he hears how prosperous Obed-edom has been ever since
the ark took up residence. Then David decides he still wants it after all, and
has it brought to Jerusalem.
There’s
a little aside about how his wife Michal get annoyed with David for flaunting
himself half-naked in front of all the female servants while he was dancing
around celebrating the arrival of the ark. David has kind of a douchebag
response, pretty much saying that his wife and her opinions can go fuck
themselves, because the female servants all get off on seeing him dance about
and that’s all good with him. Classy.
Moving
on, God sends the prophet Nathan to tell David that God has a promise to make
to him. And that promise is that God is going to make sure that David and his
offspring are kings forever. There’s an interesting bit contained in the end of
the promise.
“2 Sam 7:12 When your days are fulfilled and you lie down with your
fathers, I will raise up your offspring after you, who shall come from your
body, and I will establish his kingdom. 13
He shall build a house for my name, and I will establish the throne of his
kingdom forever. 14 I will be to him
a father, and he shall be to me a son. When he commits iniquity, I will
discipline him with the rod of men, with the stripes of the sons of men, 15 but my steadfast love will not
depart from him, as I took it from Saul, whom I put away before you. 16 and your house and your kingdom
shall be made sure forever before me. Your throne shall be established
forever.”
Oh, the
things that can be said about this! Firstly, it takes some balls to describe
your love as “steadfast,” in the same sentence you talk about how you took that
love away from someone. Well, it takes balls, or a complete failure to
understand what the word “steadfast” means.
Also, I
like the bit about how when David’s descendants are naughty, God will use other
people to “discipline” them. This strikes me as a pretty clever little
apologetic. It kind of covers the fact that God seems by this point in the
Bible to not be performing miracles anymore (“Oh, ummm… yeah, God’s not doing
miraculous punishments anymore, but, ummm… that’s because he promised David to
work through people from now on. It’s totally not because he doesn’t exist and
all that stuff from earlier stories was made up by your ignorant and illiterate
ancestors”), plus it gives the priest class carte blanche to claim that
anything bad that happens is because the king isn’t running the country the way
they (umm… I mean, God… yeah, God) want them to. Of course, it also kind of
makes a hash of free will. But again free will is not a concept that has been
introduced thus far in the Bible, so I’m pretty sure the authors didn’t
consider that a weakness of the text at all.
And
finally, this passage is commonly held to have two meanings. The clear literal
meaning is that God is talking about David’s kingdom (Israel) and the rulership
of his descendants over it. But of course, everyone knows that the kingdom of
Israel under David’s line didn’t last forever, the nation of Israel even ceased
to exist for a couple thousand years, and then once it was reinstated it was
governed by elected officials rather than monarchs claiming descent from David.
Clearly the literal reading is a broken promise and/or bullshit. Which is why
Christians go to such trouble to create a metaphorical second meaning in which
Jesus is descended from David, and Jesus’ heavenly kingdom lasts forever, and that’s the kingdom God is talking about
in this passage. Of course, in order to believe that you have to believe a
whole lot of stuff for which there is no evidence, so there’s no demonstrable
truth to that interpretation. And even if heaven exists, remember that God’s
promise to David is “your throne
shall be established forever.” But David doesn’t rule in heaven (even though
he’s presumably there), so even that is a problematic interpretation.
For the
next couple chapters, the bible goes on about more military victories over the
Philistines, Syrians, Edomites, et al, complete with wildly exaggerated numbers
of participants in the battles. This is broken up with a little aside about how
David tracks down the last of Saul’s surviving grandsons and invites him to
share the royal table for the rest of his life. Then we get to another classic
tale about David and Bathsheba.
See, one
year David had his armies out beating the snot out of the Ammonites, but David
himself remained in Jerusalem. He was standing around on the roof of his house
taking in the view, when he noticed this beautiful woman bathing herself. So
David asked around about who she was, and found out that she was Bathsheba, the
wife of one of his soldiers named Uriah. Uriah was away fighting in the
battles, and David was feeling his kingly oats, so he sent some of his men to
kidnap her for his sexual amusement.
So, are
we all clear that David was a rapist? I mean, it’s sort of implied with his
taking wives from defeated enemies in the past, but here it’s pretty explicit.
We’re all on the same page here, right?
Later,
David comes to learn that Bathsheba had gotten pregnant. His solution: he sent
a message to Joab (who was commanding his armies) instructing him to make sure
that Bathsheba’s husband Uriah got placed in the midst of the thickest
fighting. He was then to abandon him there to ensure Uriah got killed in
battle. Once Uriah was out of the picture, David forced Bathsheba to marry him.
Now,
this actually pissed God off. Which probably shouldn’t come as a surprise; as
discussed back in Leviticus, nailing another man’s wife is a death penalty offense
under God’s law, as is murder. And David had just done both. So you know he’s
in for it. Let’s check out God’s wrath:
“2 Sam 12: 10 ‘Now therefore the sword shall never depart from your
house, because you have despised me and have taken the wife of Uriah the
Hittite to be your wife.’ 11 Thus
says Yahweh, ‘Behold, I will raise up evil against you out of your own house.
And I will take your wives before your eyes and shall give them to your
neighbor, and he shall lie with your wives in the sight of this sun. 12 For you did it secretly, but I will
do this thing before all Israel and before the sun.’”
What…
the… fuck?! David commits a crime, and God declares that his punishment will be
that his wives will be publicly raped?!
HIS WIVES?! What the fuck did his wives
have to do with David’s fucking
crime? There is no conceivable way in which this is justifiable!
And
that’s not even looking at the hypocrisy of it. Even under God’s own barbaric
laws – the ones that were dictated to Moses with the instruction that they were
never to be altered – David should have been sentenced to death twice over. But
I guess being king, or even just someone that God likes, means David is above
the law, just like the rich and powerful have acted like they’re above the law
since, well, pretty much the invention of law.
I love,
too, the phrase “because you have despised me,” as if David’s crime was
something he’d done to God and not to Bathsheba and Uriah. God suffered no
harm, but Bathsheba was raped and her husband murdered. Then Bathsheba was
forced to marry her rapist and her husband’s killer. But, y’know, she’s a
woman, which in the Bible isn’t really the same as being a person anyway.
And just
a tad bit of icing on the cake, the other part of the punishment being “I will
raise up evil against you out of your own house,” as though God will be
compelling members of David’s household to act against him in ways they would
not have without God’s intervention. Once again, taking a dump on the concept of
free will.
By the
way, none of these punishments happen right away. They just kind of start
cropping up later in the story (we’ll get to the details in future posts). This
kind of suggests to me that, if any of this stuff is even historical at all,
the writers kind of noticed that David totally got away with committing some
capital crimes. So they inserted this shit declaration from God as a way of “explaining”
how the bad stuff that David goes through later means he didn’t really get away with it. It’s a
whitewash job, and it even totally fails at being that.
Anyway,
I think winding down this rant will bring us to the end of today’s post. But
there’s still more to Second Samuel to come, so don’t be a stranger. Until
then, do take care!
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