April 21-25
[M] 1 Samuel 9-10; Acts 8
[T] 1 Sam 11-13; Psalm 38; Acts 9
[W] 1 Sam 14; Psalm 124; Acts 10
[T] 1 Sam 15-16; 1 Chr 1; Ps 39; Acts 11
[F] 1 Sam 17; 1 Chr 2; Acts 12
Dwell Plan Day 81-85 | CSB | Digital PDF | Printable PDF
Notes from Jon & Chris
Monday
1 Samuel 9:2, 18 | Hebrew storytelling is thoughtful and careful. It likes to show you details and let you put it together. Remember Hannah’s song from chapter 2; it’s the golden key to interpret and understand these texts, to read between the lines.
Let’s take a look at some “suggestive” details. None of these are disqualifications; they just raise some questions, don’t they? First, Saul is good looking and tall. That’s not a problem in itself, but anyone who knows God’s wisdom knows that outward appearances can be deceiving. Not always, but you’ve got to pay attention. Saul looks like a quarterback, he’s head and shoulders taller and he’s rich. Any warning bells ringing yet?
Notice that it’s Saul’s servant who comes up with the idea to find the prophet. It’s Saul’s servant who knows where the prophet Samuel lives, it’s Saul’s servant who knows what to do. It’s Saul’s servant who has a gift for the prophet. What’s the problem here? The servant is wiser, better prepared, and more spiritually aware than his master. Verse 18 says it all in a very funny moment. Saul walks right up to Samuel to ask him where he can find Samuel! It’s pure comedy! But it’s also a chilling moment. Samuel is the great religious leader of his day. Samuel the great pastor of God’s people and is leading them as their judge. What’s the point of Saul not recognizing Samuel? Saul is spiritually disconnected and ignorant. He goes to worship God so infrequently, he doesn’t even know who Samuel is. Now the warning signs are blaring at us. See if you can find other details that point out Saul’s inherent flaws and inability to lead! (Hint: in 1 Sam 10:22 he’s hiding in the baggage when they make him king.)
Acts 8:4 | Now those who were scattered went about preaching the word. | Saul and the religious leaders thought they could shut down the Jesus movement by cracking down hard—violence, threats, arrests. But God wasn’t caught off guard. In fact, He used it. As believers were forced to flee Jerusalem, they didn’t go silent, they took the gospel with them. Everywhere they went, they shared the good news. What looked like a setback turned into a gospel wildfire. It’s such a good reminder that even when things feel out of control, God is still in control and He can turn even opposition into opportunity.
Acts 8:17 | Pentecost actually happens three times in Acts. First in Acts 2 in Jerusalem. Acts 8 is the Samaritan Pentecost. The Gentile Pentecost is coming up in Acts 10. Why does God repeat this dramatic outpouring of the Spirit? It’s to make something crystal clear: the gospel isn’t just for one group. The Samaritans and Gentiles aren’t second-class citizens in the kingdom. They’re fully welcomed, fully filled, and fully part of God’s family, just like the first believers in Jerusalem.
Tuesday
1 Samuel 12:5 | The leaders in God’s kingdom have always been held to a higher standard of character, and this is revealed clearly in God’s descriptions of the Godly elders and leaders He wants for His churches. This consistency runs through the course of all Scripture. God’s kingdom is the same kingdom. Same rules, same holiness, same grace. Praise Him!
1 Samuel 13:8 | This is a leadership test straight from God. Wait seven days for my prophet is the instruction, but Samuel seems to be running late. Saul is now king and he’s nervous about it. What will the people think? They’re outgunned and outclassed by the Philistines. The Philistines have better tech for sharpening swords. Folks are starting to desert him and get scared. Waiting for the prophet isn’t working. It’s all falling apart and he’s barely begun to be king. He has to do something! Anything! Waiting for God to do something is just lazy isn’t it? Maybe Samuel marked the date wrong on his calendar. Where is he? This crisis grinds Saul down and he caves in. He doesn’t wait.
God tests many of us this way at some point. Will we be faithful when it’s difficult and it looks like the losing strategy? It’s a hard, hard test for us. Our self reliance and bias for action are tools for our pride and fear to take control with, and that ends disastrously for us time and time again.
Saul is meant to be a mirror for us, a mirror for our flesh and our broken unbelief. Saul has it all—God’s call, the power of the Spirit, a prophet behind him, success at everything he’s done so far, detailed descriptions of the future so he’d know it was God’s miraculous power. None of that matters. Saul is a cautionary tale for us, a picture of someone who has every opportunity to know God, and even appears to know God, but it’s all false. What a warning to us today.
1 Samuel 13:10–12 | What’s the difference between David and Saul? Both are leaders who think that their power and status puts them above the law. Both fall into grievous sin. When David is confronted by Nathan (we’ll get there soon), he repents and writes Psalm 51. When Saul is confronted by Samuel, he passes the blame off and makes excuses for his sin. That lack of repentance and hatred of sin shows us what’s going on in his heart, and it’s not devotion to YHWH.
Psalm 38 | Feeling beat up? Feel like God is taking you to the woodshed and disciplining you? This is your poem. Are you suffering and in horrible pain? This is your poem. Do folks avoid you because you’re so miserable? This is your poem. Have you been so wicked in your thoughts that it dismays you and discourages you? This is your poem. Feel like you’re about to completely give up? This is your poem. Need to ask God to hurry, to be closer to you, to not abandon you? This is your poem. This is your song and your anthem for all of those low down times, when you see how you messed everything up, when you can’t see a way out, when your internal world is complete chaos. And this is our God giving us a poem we can pray and express ourselves through, to give voice to our deep frustration with our sins and failures and all the disappointments we bring into the world. What a sweet God we have, that He gives us words like this, because sometimes these are the only words that make sense to us. What a message of grace this poem/prayer is for us to enact and pray for ourselves. Praise Him.
Acts 9:4 | This is how deeply Jesus is united to his people. Saul was persecuting the followers of Jesus, but when Jesus confronted him, He asked, “Why are you persecuting ME?” Think about what that means for how much He loves you.
Acts 9:26–27 | Think about this: when Saul tried to meet with the apostles after his conversion, they were terrified of him, and honestly, who could blame them? This was the guy who had been hunting down Christians. But then Barnabas stepped in. His name literally means “son of encouragement,” and he really lived up to it. He listened to Saul’s story, believed in what God had done, and personally brought him to the apostles, saying, “You turkeys need to hear this guy’s story.” Barnabas’s response is such a beautiful picture of the gospel in action. He believed that even someone with Saul’s past wasn’t beyond the reach of grace.
Wednesday
1 Samuel 14:44 | Rash leaders and their proud decisions are on display here. Saul’s folly seems to increase as he goes on his career as king. He makes commitments that are absurd. Telling the soldiers to not eat on pain of death, while you’ve got eight solid hours of combat ahead, that’s just plain stupid. And then, on top of stupid, to add stubbornness and saving face in front of everyone. Saul is ready to kill his own son just to not look dumb for a stupid decision he made. Saul can’t admit that. It reveals a heart more passionately concerned for his own reputation than he is for the life of his own boy. Makes you wonder how Jonathan felt. Watch leaders for this sort of foolishness. Saul is a warning about the destruction that an insecure and unspiritual leader creates in their wake. He’s also a warning to us in our own pride and anger. Don’t get blinded in your arrogance, and because of it limit the success and growth of God’s kingdom. It’s as much a problem today as it was thousands of years ago.
Thursday
1 Samuel 15:22 | Saul has been showing his true colors now. We’re seeing him for who he is. We’re seeing what a judgment he is on God’s people as well. This final test of Saul is what destroys him. It’s the Jericho test, the “things devoted to destruction” test. Remember that from Joshua? It’s rare, but several times God commands this kind of utter annihilation of a people group or city. It’s meant to be God’s people carrying out God’s justice. It’s severe and scary. It’s also very hard to do, because—as we saw with Achan at Jericho—there’s a lot of incentives to take some stuff for yourself. There’s incentives to let kings live too. After all, it’s just détente. In other words, if you don’t kill kings and you show some respect, then when you’re defeated in battle, the same respect will be shown to you. Kings do fight other kings for their stuff, but they also look out for each other. It’s just good foreign policy. God isn’t interested in Saul’s policy decisions. Saul fails the “devoting things to destruction” test. It’s a catastrophic failure. For him and for us. Father, help us pass this test of our hearts by the power of your Spirit. Amen.
1 Samuel 16:7 | This is the biblical principle that Christ puts into action again and again, seeing past the outward show that folks put on, and seeing into the heart. That’s how God sees stuff. That’s how God looks at our motives and desires and goals, weighing our actions against our hearts. Everything flows from the heart. This wisdom is all over the Scriptures. This crashes past our fakery, our pretensions to spiritual maturity, our desire to look good to others.
1 Chronicles 1 | You’re going to be tempted to skip this part. That’s okay. Try skimming through to catch the little details. One family names their kid after an earthquake (Peleg) and another has kids through a slave and another has a different issue. So why are these lists of folks and their little penny-ante problems in our Bibles? No little people! That’s God’s kingdom for you! There are no nobodies in God’s kingdom. You may find these names hard to pronounce and meaningless. That’s okay. They may be pointless and meaningless to you. But they aren’t to God, and that’s the point. Do you think that Peleg ever even knew his name would be written down in a book that would last thousands of years? Of course not. But there it is, he’s honored by God by being mentioned in a list of other folks we don’t know anything about. And there’s the joy for us. God is just as interested in your life as he was in Peleg’s. There are no people who are unimportant and don’t matter. That’s how the world works, not our God and not His kingdom. This is how we are to act as well. We’re to adopt the same sort of attitude that is on these pages. It’s only God that makes you matter, and when you matter to Him, you matter to eternal purposes. You’re a part of His grand design, however insignificant and unimportant you feel. You’re more than a conqueror. You. Wow, what a God and what a savior.
Acts 11 | The early church in its first days goes through some real changes. After Jesus ascended, the disciples are now trying to work out God’s kingdom. They don’t see it all yet. They’re still culturally Jews, and that comes with a lot of baggage. There’s dietary rules and rules for associating with sinners and rules for just about everything in life. That’s the heritage of the Old Testament law. And the rabbis had added many more rules “just to be on the safe side.” They weren’t supposed to do that. God said don’t add to My law. But they did it anyway. So these early church leaders had a lot to sort through. And God helped them. Here we see these Godly leaders processing all the stuff that’s happening. They’re looking for the evidences of God’s true work, and they can’t deny what Peter has seen and experienced. God’s kingdom is expanding and driving outwards, just like Jesus said it would. The church is trying to play catch up with God’s works! That’s comforting, because it seems we still have the same sorts of issues, and this is showing us we still have the same God to solve them. This encourages us to constantly process what God is doing and how He is moving and how we can align ourselves with that.
Friday
1 Samuel 17:26 | The living God! This is one of my favorite names for our Father. This leaps off the page for me.
What does it mean for him to be living? First, He’s active in the world. This isn’t a God removed from life, but a God engaged with life in Himself as much as with us.
Second, this reveals how His eternity is actually personal. What is living is personal, not impersonal and distant. Gravity is a force. It’s impersonal and has no life. What it does, pulling us all towards the ground, it does unthinkingly. It merely is. But not our God! He’s alive and engaged. He can be known.
Third, if He is the living God, where did His life come from? It comes from Himself. It can’t come from anywhere else, or there would be something or someone greater than Him. It’s absurd and ridiculous to think anything is greater than God, because then He would no longer be God. Why? A part of what defines God as God is that He is greater than any being that you can even think of in your head. So His life, His living, is from Himself. Remember, from Him and through Him and to Him are all things. And the One who has life in Himself doesn’t need anyone else to give Him life.
This leads to the fourth implication: we live because He lives. Our personhood, our living self, is ours because our God is the living God, and he made us to be like Him—living creatures. He did this first in the work of creating the world, and then He did it again in His second great work of saving the world. In His first work, He breathed life into us, giving us living souls. (That’s what died when Adam sinned.) In His second redeeming work through Jesus, Jesus died and was resurrected. Why? It’s obvious: He’s the living God, He can’t be dead! And now this new living life is in us. The living God has gone further than before. At first we were a copy of Him. Living like He is living. Through Jesus we’re more than a copy or an image bearer. Now the eternal part of the living God’s life in Himself is being shared with us. Now if you trust in Jesus, you are a new creation. A new living person filled and transformed and united to the Living God. Praise Him! Praise the Living God!