Saturday, May 30, 2009

Up against the wall ...

Today’s time extends yesterday’s little thought experiment.

Today’s text is the continuing description of a tragic decision: wrong thinking becoming wrong action compounded with cover-up. Instead of having the text interpreted for you, imagine that you are a person within this story. Identify with a character, named or not. You don’t know what is coming; you only know what is past and what is happening. Remember that the king was absolute monarch, controlling life and death. Remember that there were people serving him who would steal miles through enemy territory just to get the king a drink of water out of a particular well.

How would you feel?

What would you say?

Is there something that you can do?

What does it say about a community where you can have a cover-up this big?

How secret really is the cover-up?

In the morning David wrote a letter to Joab, and sent it by the hand of Uriah. In the letter he wrote, "Set Uriah in the forefront of the hardest fighting, and then draw back from him, so that he may be struck down and die."

As Joab was besieging the city, he assigned Uriah to the place where he knew there were valiant warriors. The men of the city came out and fought with Joab; and some of the servants of David among the people fell. Uriah the Hittite was killed as well.

Then Joab sent and told David all the news about the fighting; and he instructed the messenger, "When you have finished telling the king all the news about the fighting, then, if the king's anger rises, and if he says to you, 'Why did you go so near the city to fight? Did you not know that they would shoot from the wall? Who killed Abimelech son of Jerubbaal? Did not a woman throw an upper millstone on him from the wall, so that he died at Thebez? Why did you go so near the wall?' then you shall say, 'Your servant Uriah the Hittite is dead too.'"

So the messenger went, and came and told David all that Joab had sent him to tell. The messenger said to David, "The men gained an advantage over us, and came out against us in the field; but we drove them back to the entrance of the gate. Then the archers shot at your servants from the wall; some of the king's servants are dead; and your servant Uriah the Hittite is dead also."

David said to the messenger, "Thus you shall say to Joab, 'Do not let this matter trouble you, for the sword devours now one and now another; press your attack on the city, and overthrow it.' And encourage him."

When the wife of Uriah heard that her husband was dead, she made lamentation for him. When the mourning was over, David sent and brought her to his house, and she became his wife, and bore him a son.

2 Samuel 11:14-27 – NRSV

Blessings,

Ron