8 Then Saul was very angry, and the saying displeased him; and he said,
“They have ascribed to David ten thousands, and to me they have ascribed only
thousands. Now what more can he have but the kingdom?” 9 So Saul eyed David
from that day forward.
1 Samuel 18.8-9
Insecurity
is a terrible thing. It makes us feel like we are less than perfect. It holds
us hostage to unhealthy emotions and an unfair standard. Insecurity lies to us
and tells us that we aren’t – when God is telling us that we are. Insecurity
can ruin your leadership. It will slowly wrap around your faith and squeeze all
the life out of you. There is no place in the life of a leader for insecurity.
In the
above passage we find Saul, the reigning king of Israel, succumbing to the lure
of insecurity. He is stung by the words of the crowd and for the rest of his
life lives in suspicion and jealousy of David. The ironic thing is that David
would have been Saul’s greatest ally if only Saul had been able to overcome his
insecurity.
I
wonder how many of us are chasing “David” away because of insecurity.
Seriously. “David” is that new leader who has a ton of ideas. “David” is that
church member that finally caught a fire for Jesus (the very passion that you have
been praying she would get) and now suggests that you start new ministries. “David”
is that person who you keep at arms distance because they have to “prove their
faithfulness” before you let them serve in a greater capacity.
If we
are honest with ourselves we would say that “David” threatens everything that
has “Saul’s” blood running through it. What I mean by that is we get
comfortable with our status and position and when someone upsets the apple cart
by offering fresh perspective and new ideas we can get territorial. All of a sudden
we catch ourselves thinking negative thoughts about people on the team or in
the church. “Why can’t he just listen to what I’m saying?” “I’m the one who has
been here serving when no one else was here. She needs to chill out and just do
what I said.” “He hasn’t even been a Christian for 2 months and now he wants to
lead a group?!” The list goes on and on.
Beware
of places where insecurity has crept into your heart. Saul eventually threw
spears at David trying to kill him. Actually, his overwhelming need to get rid
of David was what ultimately led to his death. Like I said earlier, insecurity
is a terrible thing.
Here
are a few observations about insecurity in Saul’s life that we might identify
with:
1. He was more
concerned with public opinion than with his God-given position.
It was
the singing of the town’s women that sent Saul into his insecure tizzy. They exaggerated
the works of both men yet Saul was angry because the new kid on the block was
given more credit than he was. I cannot tell you how many times I have been
victim to this trick. In ministry it is so easy to draw our identity from the
crowd. That’s why for many pastors the greatest day of the week and the worst
day of the week is Sunday. On that day if the house is packed and people
respond well to the sermon the soft whisper of insecurity reminds us of how
great we are. However when we have lower numbers than usual or preach what we consider
a “bad” sermon that same voice that once reassured us now confirms how terrible
we are. “Well you bombed that one!” “I’ll be surprised if anyone comes back
next week!”
Ministry
success in not defined by numbers. Period. Numbers don’t prove that you are a
good leader. That day Saul placed too much emphasis on the movement of the
crowd and not enough emphasis on his God-given position. Regardless of what
those silly women sang as they shook their ancient tambourines that day there
was still one simple truth…Saul was still the king. There song didn’t change
his position. He lost track of that because he was more concerned with public
opinion than with his God-given position. Don’t draw your significance from the
song of the crowd. You’re better than that. If God has put you in your position
celebrate His choosing of you and don’t let the jingling of the tambourines
change your mind.
2. He jumped to
unhealthy conclusions.
Check
this out: Saul actually took the words from a song that women were singing
because they were glad the battle with the Philistines was over and in essence
said, “Wow they have said David is amazing. I guess the next thing they’re
going to do is kill me so that he can be the king!” Saul was displaying the
classic tell-tale signs of a spiritual hypochondriac. He thought that matters
were worse than they actually were.
My wife
picks on me because I tend to act like a hypochondriac at times. You know my
type: a soon as I get a sore throat I go to WebMD and look at the symptoms only
to realize that I have low spinal fluid, polio, and throat cancer! Stop
laughing. You know how we can get! That’s what’s happening here with Saul. He
hears a silly song (not from Larry) and freaks out because he thinks the sky is
falling! It’s kind of like how us pastors can get when someone disagrees with a
decision we make and we start looking at www.churchjobs.com for a new job. Calm
down. Take a few deep breaths. Drink some cold water. It’s just a silly song.
Don’t jump to conclusions. Let the younger leaders have their celebration. Heck,
even celebrate with them! Don’t be so scared that the “kingdom” is on the line
that you don’t enjoy the journey.
I want
to point out here that Saul was scared over a silly song that was sang in the
heat of the moment. I don’t want to call the character of those young Israelite
women into account here, but I want to point out that they were just making
stuff up off the cuff. They didn’t put together a task force to research all of
David and Saul’s military exploits. They didn’t bring in Randy Johnson from
American Idol and have him coach them on the song writing process. They just
opened their mouths and started singing. They were glad the war was over and
that’s all. Yet the insecurity within Saul’s heart caused him to forfeit his
joy over a few silly songs. Don’t let a silly song rob you of your joy.
3. He held a grudge.
Verse 9
says, “So Saul eyed David from that day forward.” As a matter of fact on
several occasions Saul tried to kill David. From that day forward all the
affairs of King Saul’s administration were focused on eliminating David as a
threat to the crown. Saul eventually ruined relationships with his daughter
Michal and his son Jonathan because of his grudge with David. He even lost his
throne over it. The one thing that he was trying to protect he ended up losing
because the intoxication of his grudge clouded his judgment and hampered his
effectiveness as a leader.
That’s
why we must labor to accept the Davids in our lives. Let them win every now and
then. Pray for them. Ask God to surround you with Davids. Ask God to help you
not be an insecure leader. If you are holding onto a grudge stop right now and
let it go. Listen to me when I say you need David to help you be successful. David
is not there to hurt you – he’s there to help you. Stop letting insecurity rob
you of the blessing of teamwork. In ministry it really is true that we’re better
together. Saul lost sight of that and it cost him dearly. Don’t make the same
mistake.
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