Fechar Favor digitar seu Nome de Usuário e Senha
Redefinir Senha
Caso tenha esquecido sua senha, digite seu nome de usuário ou endereço de e-mail abaixo. Um e-mail será enviado com um link onde você poderá criar uma nova senha.
Cancelar
Link para redefinir a senha enviado
Link para redefinir a senha enviado para
Confira o seu email e digite o código de confirmação:
Não vê o email?
  • Reenviar link de confirmação
  • Começar novamente
Fechar
Se você tem alguma pergunta, por favor entre em contato com o Serviço ao Cliente
Synopsis Home 2 Samuel Chapter 9
2 Samuel
introduction
Chapters 1 and 2
Chapters 3 and 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapters 11 to 13
Chapters 14 to 20
Chapter 21
Chapters 22 and 23
Chapter 24

The kindness of God" showed to Mephibosheth

He acts in grace also towards the humble remnant of Saul's house; and if Mephibosheth is not associated with the glory of his kingdom, he enjoys the privilege of the king's table, who shews him kindness; although Mephibosheth belongs to the family of his enemy and persecutor, but at the same time to that little remnant which favoured the king whom God had chosen (being itself, on that account, hated by those in power). He enjoys also the whole of his family's inheritance.

This touching and beautiful testimony to David's kindness and faithfulness through grace, appears to me to give us a picture of Christ's relations to the remnant of Israel, or at least that of the spirit of these relations. It was "the kindness of God" which sought out the family of Saul, the enemy of David's crown -- and which rests upon the representative of Jonathan, whose history we have read, and who typifies those that will attach themselves to Christ in prospect of the kingdom, to which their thoughts are limited. The remnant enjoys the effect of the establishment of the kingdom, but does not rank among those that surround the throne after having shared the sufferings of the despised and rejected king.

Resumo por John Darby