“Let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace, that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need.”
Hebrews 4:16 (RSV)
The story of David and Goliath started when the Philistine army challenged the Israelite army, saying “Send your champion to fight our champion”. The Philistine champion was a nine foot nine inch tall giant, named Goliath, and no one stepped forward to take the challenge.
David was a youth, sent to the battle line by his father, to bring food to his older brothers and other soldiers in the camp. He was sent on a routine errand, but in learning of the threats of Goliath, he asked King Saul for permission to fight the giant. In this scene from the House of David, movie series, King Saul warned David that Goliath is a monster made for war, reminding David that he had no military training. David’s reply was, “but, I was made for this.”
His persistence to take on the giant was an indication of the confidence he had in the Lord. Instead of being motivated by ego or self confidence, David had God confidence.
Having God confidence meant that he knew himself, and his abilities, but his confidence was in knowing who God is and what He can do. The Israelite soldiers were stronger, better trained and more experienced in the skills of war, than David, yet he had something that the rest of the army didn’t have-God confidence.
We all face giants of some kind during our lifetime. I think of my maternal grandmother, who grew up on a vegetable farm in what is now the Chicago suburb of Niles, Illinois. She was riding on a vegetable cart one day after helping to gather the family’s produce on the farm. The hired man driving the cart might have been drunk because he drove across the train tracks just when a train was coming and their cart was struck by that train.
The driver died instantly and my teenage grandmother was thrown hundreds of feet, yet found alive and unconscious. She had a severe head injury and was in a coma for a period of time. She eventually awoke without any mental or physical deficits, and was blessed with a full recovery. She later married, had three healthy children, and lived to the age of 79.
I heard her story since I was a child, but have a greater appreciation for it today, since she overcame a traumatic brain injury, which is now a reality in my own son’s life. Getting hit by a train and overcoming her head injury, was only the first giant that my grandmother faced and overcame.
She gave birth to her first child, but at nine months old, she noticed a sore on the baby’s leg, that never healed. Her baby girl was diagnosed with Osteomyelitis, a bone infection that can quickly spread through the bloodstream, and become fatal. The standard medical treatment at the time was amputation, but my grandmother refused to have her baby’s leg amputated. She found a way to face another giant, approach God’s throne of grace and overcome once again.
A physician told her about clinical research trials being done for osteomyelitis at Evanston hospital, so she took her baby there, and they performed an experimental procedure of scraping the infection from the bone while administering certain medications. In time, the treatment was successful and the baby was healed. That baby girl grew up to become my mother.
Today, I have a greater empathy for my grandmother and how she faced the giants in her life. It took courage but more than that, it required God confidence, to approach the throne of grace, through faith and prayer in seeking God’s help.
It’s another reminder that we will all face a giant at some time in our lives, and we too, can follow David’s example of having “God confidence.”Whatever type of giant we face, the Lord invites us to place all of our confidence in the throne of grace. Through Jesus, we receive grace, mercy and victory over any giant in our time of need.
Lord, remind us to look to your throne of grace instead of at the giants we currently face. Help us to have faith like David had, which leads to God confidence as we trust you to bring the victory. Amen
