Late one
afternoon, after his midday rest, David got out of bed and was walking on the
roof of the palace. As he looked out over the city, he noticed a woman of
unusual beauty taking a bath. 2 Samuel 11:2 NLT
Baths may clean you up, but sometimes they get
you into trouble.
Resting outside the bathtub in our spare bathroom
is a plastic container with numerous bath toys: a rubber duck, a sailing boat,
several balls, a bar of Ivory soap. The normal toys kids play with when they
bathe. And our grandboys love to play with them when they take a bath. They love
the bubbles MeMe puts in the tub. They hide the toys under the bubbles, and
then hold them in the air and watch as the water squirts out, while laughing
and hollering. Occasionally they splash the water on the floor, which brings a
sharp rebuke from MeMe.
King David knew a little about bathing and
getting into trouble. He wasn’t the one bathing—Bathsheba was, but he was the
one who looked when he shouldn’t have. The play on words is interesting:
Bathsheba bathing. Some suggest she bathed here on purpose because she knew the
king’s practice of walking on his roof. Whether or not she intentionally
provided the temptation, David fell into the traps of lust, adultery, murder,
and lying. One year—and a number of consequences, passed before he finally
confessed.
My world is filled with play toys—not that I
bathe with but that I encounter daily. Technological gadgets, possessions of
all sorts, hobbies—and the things I need to enjoy them, sporting activities—and
the money I can spend watching them, movies, video games. The list of play toys
available to those who live in developed countries is endless.
Some of the play toys are sinful—and others have
the potential to be. Bathsheba’s bathing wasn’t a sin, but if she did it hoping
the king would do what he did, then it became sinful. David’s accidental glance
wasn’t a sin, but when he lusted and acted it became one. Satan is a master at
wrapping innocent things in sinful paper.
Only God can give me the wisdom to play with the
right toys and to keep them in the proper perspective. I can’t trust my own judgment.
It’s skewed by my sinful nature and my propensity to gratify my selfish
desires.
God may not ask you to throw your toys away; He
may simply want you to see them with different eyes or use them in a more
productive way.
Prayer: Father, guide us in the use of our toys
so they won’t grab our attention from You and more important things.
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