Weekly Bulletin
Edition 020 | 7-14 June 2026
Devotion
2 Samuel 7:1–17
“But My steadfast love will not depart from him” (2 Samuel 7:15a)
In 2 Samuel 7, David was already living in safety. He lived in a beautiful palace, while the ark of God was still inside a tent. Then David thought, “I want to build a house for the LORD.”
At first glance, David’s intention was very good. He wanted to do something great for God. But God responded in a surprising way. God said that it would not be David who would build a house for Him; rather, God Himself would build a “house” for David. That is, God would establish David’s family, descendants, kingdom, and future. Here we see the LORD’s steadfast love.
The LORD’s steadfast love is not merely a feeling of affection. In Hebrew, the word used is khesed—faithful love, love that holds firmly to a promise, love that is not easily withdrawn. Khesed is relational faithfulness within a covenant bond, not simply an ordinary emotion.
God reminded David that everything he had came from God. It was God who took David from the pasture, from tending sheep. It was God who was with David. It was God who defeated his enemies. It was God who made David’s name great.
In other words, before David did anything for God, God had already done many things for David.
This also applies to us. Sometimes we think our lives are secure because of our own efforts. We feel our families stand because of our hard work. We feel our ministry succeeds because of our abilities. But God’s Word reminds us: everything good in our lives is because of the LORD’s steadfast love.
A particularly beautiful part is found in 2 Samuel 7:14–15. God says that if David’s descendants do wrong, God will discipline them. But God also says, “My steadfast love will not be taken away from him.”
This means the LORD’s steadfast love does not make sin seem trivial. God still rebukes. God still disciplines. But God does not simply cast His people away.
God is like a Father who loves His child. A good father does not let a child continue in wrongdoing. He rebukes, teaches, and shapes. But that rebuke is not a sign of rejection—it is a sign of love.
So it is in our lives. When God shapes us through rebuke, hardship, or a difficult process, it does not mean God has abandoned us. It may be that, at that moment, God is training us in His steadfast love.
The LORD’s steadfast love is also important in family life. A strong family is not a family that never has problems. Husbands and wives can disagree. Children can make mistakes. Parents are not perfect either. But a family built on the LORD’s steadfast love will learn to correct without destroying, to forgive without pretending nothing is wrong, and to keep loving even when there are weaknesses.
This is the steadfast love God showed to David. And for us as believers, that steadfast love reaches its pinnacle in Jesus Christ, the Son of David. In Christ, God shows His greatest love: He comes to seek sinners, to forgive those who fail, and to restore the broken.
Therefore, today we are invited to trust again in the LORD’s steadfast love. Our lives may not be perfect. Our families may not be perfect. Our ministries may not be perfect. But God remains faithful. Amen!
THE LORD’S STEADFAST LOVE IS NOT EASILY WITHDRAWN. HE REBUKES, SHAPES, FORGIVES, AND RESTORES US SO THAT OUR LIVES MAY STAND FIRM IN HIS PROMISE
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