У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно Covenant Kindness | 2 Samuel 9; или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
God’s kindness finds its fullest expression in the surprising rescue of the helpless. In a retelling of 2 Samuel 9 & 19, the story of Mephibosheth becomes a theological mirror: a crippled, disgraced descendant of Saul is carried into the king’s house and seated at the royal table not because of merit but because of covenantal love. This kindness is neither sentimental niceness nor transactional exchange; it is a steadfast, risk-taking commitment that gives land, security, and family space to one who deserves exile. The king’s actions invert expectations in a warrior culture—where revenge and self-preservation would be natural—so that mercy and grace stand out as decisive marks of true rule. That radical kindness points forward to the greater David: the Messiah who takes those dead in sin, carries them to the banquet, and gives them life they could never earn. Theologically, the text insists that humans are more like Mephibosheth than David—broken, ashamed, unable to approach the table apart from being carried. Mercy withholds deserved wrath; grace bestows an undeserved welcome. Together they reveal a God whose signature is adoption into the family rather than mere moral approval. Practically, this vision reshapes communal and missional priorities. When understood as recipients of covenant kindness, people are moved away from consumer expectations and toward sacrificial generosity—investing goods, time, and presence into others who cannot repay. The story becomes a summons to “go find” the Mephibosheths: the vulnerable children, the isolated, the culturally sidelined who cannot make it to the table without someone crossing into their nothingness. Adoption, foster care, mission sending, and persistent relational commitment are not just social programs but incarnations of the same royal kindness that rescued Mephibosheth. Ultimately the narrative demands a posture change: identity reclaimed by grace begets a life characterized by covenantal giving. The bowl of abundance at the king’s table reframes every other desire and orients a community toward long-term investment in the lost and helpless. The question posed is both private and corporate—will the kindness that met one’s own helplessness be the spring from which others are found, carried, and welcomed into the family? Key Takeaways 1. God's kindness meets helplessness God’s action is to enter the scene where human resources and dignity have run out and to respond not with condemnation but with sovereign, restorative love. This meeting is decisive: it reframes identity, rescues from deserved ruin, and establishes belonging by covenant rather than performance. The divine rescue is both merciful (withholding wrath) and gracious (bestowing welcome). [15:58] 2. Kindness as covenant, not consumer True kindness in Scripture is rooted in covenant commitment, not in transactional exchange or conditional favor. It costs the giver and secures the recipient without expectation of repayment, inviting a posture of sacrificial investment rather than ‘‘what’s in it for me.’’ This reorients relationships from utility to fidelity. [21:20] 3. Believers are Mephibosheths, not Davids The biblical imagination places fallen humans as those who cannot approach God by merit—crippled, ashamed, and dependent—so that grace and adoption are unmistakable gifts. Recognizing this shifts humility from mere sentiment to a gospel-shaped identity that reshapes mission and mercy. Only those who feel their helplessness can properly embody royal kindness for others. [27:35] 4. Respond by finding the helpless The rightful response to being welcomed is to seek out those who cannot access the table themselves and bring them in through concrete acts of care. Whether through foster care, adoption, sending, or persistent relational presence, the church’s call is to cross barriers, bear cost, and provide belonging. This is how God’s covenantal kindness is incarnated in community. [42:38] Sermon Chapters [00:00] - Welcome [11:23] - 2030 Vision: One Thousand Kids [12:33] - Introducing Mephibosheth [15:27] - What Helplessness Means [21:20] - Covenant Kindness vs Consumerism [25:01] - David’s Gift: Land and Table [28:41] - The Greater David: Gospel Parallel [33:45] - Identity Shift: Mephibosheth, Not David [42:38] - Go Find the Mephibosheths [46:18] - Closing Prayer ----------------- Welcome to the Mercy Hill Church YouTube channel. Here you will find our latest messages and content. Subscribe to the latest messages: http://bit.ly/2yV95Cv Follow us on Facebook: facebook.com/mercyhillnc Follow us on Instagram: instagram.com/mercyhillnc