David

Davide Rondoni and Giuseppe Frangi

In the Old Testament the figure of the King embodies the People and forms one thing with it. The example of the second King of Israel. His mission for the greatness of the People, his great humanity at grips with human history and misery. Jesus called himself "Son of David," because David had been the greatest King and the one most loved by God

I came across the figure of King David in the course of my work on a new poetic version of the psalms that the publisher Marietti commissioned from me last year (Poesia dell'uomo e di Dio). I already knew that many psalms are ascribed to David as their author and that, notwithstanding the lively philological discussion on this, his twofold image as King and poet is central to the history of the Hebrew people. Beyond this, and what every Christian knows from hearing the readings at Sunday Mass and the odd bits of information picked up here and there, I knew very little.
I knew that Dante places David in Paradise at the center of the eagle-eye of the blessed that looks at God's light (according to legend the eagle is the only creature that can look directly at the sun), and I remembered that the author of the Divine Comedy, according to authoritative exegetes, saw himself as the new poet David. Furthermore, in Dante's texts there is no lack of references to the figure of David: while he dances "più e men che re" ("more than a king and less") (Purg. II), "king and humble psalmist".
I later discovered that Boccaccio made Petrarch a gift of the psalms with a commentary by St. Augustine and that the poet of the Canzoniere (and of some Penitential Psalms) wanted that book "by day always in my hands and by night and in the hour of death beneath my head." Nietzsche said that nothing in the whole of literary history was comparable to that Hebrew poetry. On the work of David and on the man himself an infinite band of poets, artists, writers, and musicians have worked and continue to work.

Love and sin
But poetry, even such powerful poetry as that of Dante, only sketches and introduces reality.
David, king and poet, appears on the human and historical horizon of the Bible as a giant of a man. It is not by chance that in order to comment on what sin is St. Ambrose, the author of a splendid Apology for the Prophet David, takes up the question speaking of St. Peter. Then the moment when Jesus asks him if he loves him he switches to the contrition of David, who was guilty of murder and adultery. "A great love," writes Ambrose, "remits sin." Ambrose elsewhere "uses" David and his ups and downs (even his faults) as symbols to interpret the mystery of the Incarnation, in opposing the Arian heresies of his time. The words of David's Psalm 50, Miserere mei, found a place not only in Dante's Purgatory, but in the sense of sorrow that every Christian is educated to discover in the Church's liturgy. The number 50, according to the exegetes, is given to this psalm because it is the number of forgiveness: it is the number that appears in the parable of the two debtors, and is the number of years between one Jubilee Year of mercy and the next.
About David, as about all great personalities, legends and various and fantastic interpretations have flourished: that he was a reincarnation of Orpheus, a demi-god of antiquity; that he was not one single person, but the grouping together of a series of kings (David would be a word like "Tsar"); that he had three hundred children. Paolo Flores d'Arcais, participating in a recent convention on the figure of David, did not begrudge him an anodyne laicist homage.

Chosen by God
The Bible tells us of this fair-haired young man, the last born of his father, who is pointed out by Samuel. David is 14 years old and in the sun-drenched fields of Bethlehem is secretly anointed king by the prophet. We are about twenty years before the year 1000 BC. This choice remains a mystery. For sure, as an acute biographer of David has noted, in those long days and nights spent in the empty countryside with his flock, the young shepherd-poet must have matured in his powerful relationship with the God whose hands had created the heavens and fixed the stars, with the God-"shepherd."
He is invited to the king's court so that he can cheer up king Saul, so sullen in his infidelity to God and tormented by an evil spirit. For news of the talent of this poet, who invented his own instruments, had reached the ears of the king's son, Jonathan.
While at court he became a warrior. He gave proof of his courage and of having God on his side. The celebrated episode of the defeat of Goliath represents his entrance into the inner circle of the people and the court. For ten years David is in the king's service as a soldier. Saul's daughter, Michal, falls in love with David and the king agrees to their marriage. Meanwhile the people begin to have a preference for David and rumors begin to circulate in which David is praised for killing tens of thousands of Philistines, while Saul has "only" killed thousands. This and other facts arouse profound envy in Saul, who is already anguished by the thought of his own imminent death, prophesied by Samuel. After the wedding, according to Saul's secret plan, David must die, but the plan is foiled by Michal. David however is forced to go into exile and is separated from his beloved Jonathan.

The exile
The period of exile is one of battles, betrayals, necromancies, the fathering of many children, and of secret ambushes laid in order to convince Saul that David bears him no hatred (on two occasions, in fact, he spares Saul his life).
The two Old Testament books of Samuel tell of this gripping adventure. Saul meanwhile goes through a bitter decline, abandoned one after another by "his" prophet, by God, and by the people. After a number of years in exile and after lamenting the death of king Saul (who kills himself after losing a battle) as well as that of Jonathan, David is able to become king himself. He has with him the Ark of the Covenant, which he finally brings to Jerusalem, the city he establishes as his capital. It is then that one of the most significant episodes takes place. David went before the Ark "dancing with all his strength," undressed and merry. His first wife, Michal, is shocked and reproves him for having made a fool of himself, but David replies that he danced for God and cares not for the opinion of high-minded people like her, but that of his People who loves the Lord. This image of the poet-king who dances before the Lord will live forever in iconography.
David's gratitude to God is expressed in the great words of the Psalms and in those pronounced after entering Jerusalem, "Who am I, my Lord, and what is my house that you have raised me up so high? Yet all this seemed good in your eyes, Lord God, you have wished to extend your promises to the house of your servant into the distant future…. What more can David say to you? You yourself Lord, have chosen your servant. To keep faith to your word and the wishes of your heart you have done such a great thing and revealed it to your servant. For you are great, Lord God… There is none like you. And what people on earth is like your people Israel? Was there ever a people whose god set out to redeem them and make them his own people, making their name great, working great and terrible things for them…? For you have constituted them as your people, Israel, for ever."
He who pronounces these words is the same man who composed the magnificent Psalm 8.
After re-entering Jerusalem as King, David calls for the last descendent of Saul, Meribbaal ("the man with crippled feet"), Jonathan's only surviving son, who had fallen on hard times. He welcomed him and had him eat always at his table. Despite all the battles and hatred, David preserves his sense of belonging to a people and to its concrete history.
From then on, though growing in power and popularity, David will see his life and his reign disrupted by what he holds most dear, his children and his loves.

A human story
David, a man of great love, for a sinful love will understand the bitterness of being far from God. This is the well-known story of the murder with which he stains his hands in order to possess the beautiful Bathsheba. The son born to her will die. God will send a plague. On that occasion God has proposed three possible punishments on the kingdom, three years of famine, flight before his enemies or three days of plague. David decides that it is better to fall into God's hands than into man's, since He is great in mercy.
His first born son Amnon will do violence to his sister. He will be proud. His other favorite son, Absalom, will go to war against him. It is a history of clever counselors, of untamed passion, of about-face intrigues for the sake of power. A human history of mud and blood. One of the dramatic climaxes of David's life is the killing of Absalom by his army commander. Although Absalom was at war with him, David had asked for him to be spared. When he receives the news he weeps, overcome with terrible grief. His servants do not understand and reprove him. Once more the king is all too human.
At the end of his life, David begins to feel the chill of time and of his grief. He can no longer get warm, so his servants search the whole kingdom for a virgin who can sleep beside him and warm his old body. They bring him Abishag. The old king had no intercourse with her. This image of the old king who needs to be kept warm has passed into history, not only as a theological sign, but also as an emblem of power that is not sufficient to make a man feel the warmth of life.
David lived long enough to see the rebellion of another of his sons, the handsome Adonijah-whom he never wanted to put to death, though he evidently aspired to a kingdom that was not his right-and to witness more bloodshed. He had been told that his would not be a kingdom of peace. Finally he acquiesced to the request of Bathsheba to nominate his son by her, Solomon, as the new king. With Solomon came a period of great peace in Israel. According to tradition in 970 BC David slept with his fathers after reigning over Israel for forty years.
An evangelical scholar, Samuel Amsler, wrote of him, "David arose in one of the key moments in the Old Testament where the mission of Israel and God's work of salvation converge and complete each other. Here is where David arises again today as the Old Testament's witness to point out to the Church the unique and decisive role of a certain Jesus."

His life
1029 David is born in Bethlehem of Ephrata, descended from the tribe of Judah. His name, David, in its Hebrew root means "favorite," "beloved". He is the eighth of Jesse's sons. The book of Samuel describes him as "blond, with fine eyes and a pleasing appearance".
He was honoured as a "harpist," and is brought to the court of Saul because he was a "capable singer with the harp". He was secretly anointed king by the prophet Samuel, without Saul's knowledge, when the latter had fallen from God's favor.
Saul out of jealousy refused him the hand of his daughter Merab, and gives him Michal instead only after exposing him to mortal danger in battle against the Philistines.

1004 Saul dies in the war against the Philistines. A revolt explodes against the politics of the king and his household. The intertribal tensions are reawakened, especially between Judah and Ephraim. David is anointed king by the men of the tribe of Judah, but he doesn't exploit this fact by imposing the extension of his reign over the other ten tribes. Under David the kingdom of Israel and Judah reaches its greatest expansion.

998 Abner, the commander of Saul's army, who had remained loyal to the latter's son, moves to David's side and at Hebron David is recognized as king by the other 10 tribes.
King David defeats the Philistines and subjugates them definitively, he captures the fortress of the Jubusites and this city, giving it the name of Jerusalem, which becomes the capital of the kingdom. Here David has the ark brought and begins the building of the temple, which will, however, be completed only by Solomon, his son and successor.
The king's house sees the beginning of disruption. He commits adultery with Bathsheba, the wife of one of his valiant officers, Uriah. In order to cover up his sin and marry Bathsheba, David arranges for Uriah to be killed in battle. Then his eldest son, Amnon, commits incest with his sister, Tamar, and is killed by his brother Absalom. Absalom himself leads a rebellion against his father and is killed in the course of the revolt.

965 David dies in Jerusalem at the age of 71. In total he had fathered six children at Hebron, nine at Jerusalem, and many more with his concubines. He was buried, according to the most reliable tradition on Mount Sion. At the time of the Acts of the Apostles his tomb was still being venerated, but was later destroyed by Hadrian in 133 AD. The Catholic Church considers him a saint (feast day December 29th because he is at the center of revelation: the Messiah is in strict relation to his person, being his direct descendent, destined to sit "on the throne of David for ever."

The temple of God
"O Lord remember David and all the hardships he endured, the oath he swore to the Lord, his vow to the strong one of Jacob, 'I will not enter the house where I live, nor go to the bed where I rest, I will give no sleep to my eyes, to my eyelids I will give no slumber, until I find a place for the Lord, a dwelling for the strong one of Jacob.'"
It was David's intention to build a temple for the Lord: "I will not rest until I have built the house of the Lord," I cannot live in a house of timber, when the temple of God is built with branches. This, described in Psalm 131, is poverty of spirit. Wherever we read about poverty of spirit, we feel a stirring, a breath of gladness inside. Such a psalm can be recited only in a state of gladness.
(Luigi Giussani, Si può vivere così?, Rizzoli 1994, pp. 222-223)

David and sin
I am determined to write an apology for David not because he needs this favor, but because many ask why such a great prophet was unable to avoid the sin of adultery and murder….
We can even deduce that sin has a certain usefulness…. The Apostle Paul himself warns us that God, our Lord, sees to it that even the saints in their human hearts do not become proud because of the sublimity of the truths revealed to them and for the constant success of their work…. God allows that guilt should enter into them, so that in this way they, too, will understand that they stand in need of divine help in order to be saved. Paul confesses that human weakness was an advantage for him. When the Apostle asked for the thorn in the flesh to be taken away, God answered him, "My grace is enough for you: my strength finds its full scope in your weakness." Justly then, one glories in his own weakness: for He knew that through excessive self-confidence many had perished, even saints.
(St. Ambrose, Apology for David, 2,8)

David and forgiveness
If Peter obtained forgiveness for weeping only once, how much more did David obtain it, who every night drenched his pillow with tears. If therefore Jesus had mercy on him who repented and wept, how much more did He remain ed under the eyes of the Lord who wept for so long! Peter denied Jesus but he didn't weep, because the Lord had not looked at him, he denied Him a second time and didn't weep, because the Lord had not looked at him, he denied Him a third time, Jesus looked at him, and immediately he wept, and wept bitterly. So David who never stopped weeping, said, "My eyes are always on the Lord." He, who was always under Christ's eyes, said, "My eyes are cast down with torrents of tears."
(St. Ambrose, Apology for David, 6,25)

David and the moralists
We find written in the Book of Kings that David, while walking in his house, saw the wife of Uriah as she was bathing, and immediately fell in love with her and commanded that she be brought to him. Then he gave orders that the woman's husband, who was blameless (so the scripture presents him), be placed where the fighting was fiercest so that he be overcome by the enemy forces. These are the facts, no one disputes them. But how can they be justified?
In this regard the reading of the Gospel warns us that, even when the sin is evident, the sentence of the judge must be marked by a spirit of understanding and above all everyone must remember his own condition and what he himself would deserve. For, in judging, often the fault committed in passing judgment is graver than that of the one being judged. Whoever presumes to judge another must always judge himself first and not condemn lesser sins in the other when he himself has committed graver ones! Who then are you to judge David, the just man?
(St. Ambrose, Second Apology for David, 2,5)