πBELIEVE HIS PROPHETS | 13.01.2026 | π2 Samuel 5 β David: King Over All Israel
π 13 January 2026
π BELIEVE HIS PROPHETS
π Daily Bible Reading
π 2 Samuel 5 β David: King Over All Israel
β¨ From Hebron to Jerusalem: How God wants to unite His people and lead them through His servant
π Read online here
π Introduction
After years of waiting, fighting, and suffering, Godβs promise is fulfilled: David is anointed king over all Israel. The move from Hebron to Jerusalem is not only a political victoryβit is a spiritual signal. In this chapter we see how God advances His plan through an obedient manβdespite resistance, ridicule, and war. It is the story of a growing kingdomβand a growing trust.
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π§΅ Commentary
The day has come. All the tribes of Israel gather in Hebron. They come not as strangers, but as brothers: βWe are your bone and your flesh,β they say. David, once the shepherd son of Jesse in Bethlehem, is now confirmed by Israelβs elders as shepherd of the whole people. Not by violence, but by agreementβnot by intrigue, but by calling. A covenant is made before the Lord, and the anointing as king over Israel is completed.
David is thirty years oldβyoung, yet rich in experience, tested through many fires. His reign begins in Hebron, a place of waiting, faithfulness, and patience. But Godβs plan does not remain in the wilderness. Jerusalem, the stronghold of the Jebusites, lies before himβunconquered, fortified, and mocking. The inhabitants sneer: βThe blind and the lame will drive you away!β But Davidβs faith sees more than walls and ridicule. He sees Godβs assignment. And so the fortress of Zion falls and becomes the βCity of David.β Something new begins hereβsomething that will endure.
With Godβs help, Davidβs influence grows. Hiram of Tyre sends building materials and craftsmenβa sign of recognition from other nations. David builds himself a house. Yet he knows: it is not his fame, but Godβs people that are the reason for his exaltation. Humility in the middle of rising successβthat is Davidβs strength.
And then: war. The Philistines hear of the new royal anointingβand attack immediately. David does not run to tactics or pride. He runs to the Lord. Twice he asks, βShall I go?β And twice he receives a clear answer. The victory is not merely strategicβit is spiritual. At Baal-perazim, God breaks through the enemies βlike water breaking out.β The second time, the victory comes with the sound in the mulberry treesβa sign that God Himself is going ahead.
David obeys, waits, strikesβand God confirms his leadership. The king of Israel is not only courageous, but listening.
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π§Ί Summary
David is finally anointed king over all Israel. He conquers Jerusalem, makes it the capital, and experiences victories over the Philistines. Yet everything happens in trust in God, with humility and obedience. David asks, God answersβand leads His people to victory.
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π¦ Message for Us Today
Sometimes it takes a long time for Godβs promises to be fulfilled. But faithfulness in small things, obedience in everyday life, and patience in testing prepare us. When God opens doors, He also leads us through resistance. And like David, we too should learn: Before you fight, ask. Before you build, pray. Before you lead, listen.
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π Reflection
What βJerusalemβ lies before youβunconquered, mocked, difficult? And where is God calling you to ask instead of fight, to trust instead of rush?
β‘οΈ Today: Ask God. Wait for His βsound in the mulberry trees.β
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π 11β13 January 2026
π BELIEVE HIS PROPHETS
π Weekly Reading from the Spirit of Prophecy
π Ellen G. White | Patriarchs and Prophets
π₯ Chapter 56: Eli and His Sons
β¨ When indulgence becomes a catastrophe β spiritual responsibility in the home and in the sanctuary
π Read online here
π Blog 3
The Day of Judgment β When God no longer remains silent
How Godβs patience ends and His judgment begins
π Introduction
God is patientβbut not indifferent. When responsibility is continually refused, God will act. This blog is about the final warningβand the unavoidable judgment that followed.
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π§΅ Commentary
It was a day like many others when the βman of Godβ came to Eli. Not a prophet with a trumpet voice, not thunder from heavenβjust a messenger with serious words. But his message was clear: God had seen enough.
βYou honor your sons more than Me.β It was the sharpest accusation. Eli had not sinned activelyβbut he had allowed sin, covered it, excused it. And God could no longer tolerate it. The sacrifices meant for His honor were being abused. The peopleβs faith was being undermined. Holiness was being profaned. Grace was being squandered.
The Lord did not speak only about guilt. He spoke about replacement: βI will raise up for Myself a faithful priest.β A new chapter would beginβwithout Eli, without his sons. Aaronβs line had forfeited its right.
And when Samuel, the boy, slept in the sanctuary, God spokeβto a child, not to the high priest. It was the beginning of a shift: God is not looking for a title, but for character.
Grace gave way to judgment. Eli, broken in heart, remained silent. Perhaps he realized too late that his leniency was the beginning of the end.
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π§Ί Summary
God sent a final warning. When Eli still did not act, God announced judgment. He withdrew the calling and prepared a new wayβthrough a faithful servant.
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π¦ Message for Us Today
Godβs patience is longβbut not unlimited. Those who continually avoid responsibility can lose it. God does not act impulsively, but justly. And when people fail, He looks for others.
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π Reflection
πΉ Where is God calling me to actβand I am still hesitating?
πΉ What can I learn from Eliβs story about spiritual leadership and neglect?
