Episode
April 15 (2 Samuel 11:2–12:25; Psalm 51:1–19)
- Published
- Apr 15, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 848
- Processing state
processed- Canonical source
- https://www.esv.org/2Samuel11:2–12:25;Psalm51:1–19/
Actions
POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/chronological-esv-bible-plan-with-robert-smith-6726997/episodes/april-15-2-samuel-11-2-12-25-psalm-51-1-19/transcription-requests
Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode.GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/chronological-esv-bible-plan-with-robert-smith-6726997/april-15-2-samuel-11-2-12-25-psalm-51-1-19.md
Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource.
Summary
An examination of King David's moral collapse, the calculated murder of Uriah the Hittite, and the subsequent prophetic confrontation by Nathan. The narrative follows the heavy consequences of sin and the profound expression of repentance found in Psalm 51.
Topics
- King David
- Nathan the Prophet
- Uriah the Hittite
- Bathsheba
- Repentance
- Psalm 51
- 2 Samuel
- Biblical Justice
Highlights
- Main idea: The progression from David's adultery to the orchestrated assassination of Uriah
- Failure mode: The use of deception and political maneuvering to cover personal moral transgressions
- Practical takeaway: The inevitability of divine confrontation through the prophet Nathan
- Main idea: The heavy personal and familial consequences that follow even when sin is forgiven
- Practical takeaway: The biblical definition of true worship as a broken and contrite spirit
Chapters
1:00The Deception of Uriah: David attempts to cover his adultery with Bathsheba by bringing Uriah home from the war, but Uriah's integrity prevents him from enjoying his comforts.3:00The Death of Uriah: David orchestrates a military maneuver to place Uriah in the line of fire, leading to the death of the Hittite soldier.5:30Nathan's Parable: The prophet Nathan uses the story of a rich man stealing a poor man's beloved lamb to expose David's guilt.7:50Judgment and Consequences: Nathan pronounces God's judgment on David's house, resulting in the death of the child born to Bathsheba.9:30David's Grief and Acceptance: Following the child's death, David moves from fasting and mourning to a state of somber acceptance and worship.11:10Psalm 51: A Prayer for Mercy: A profound liturgical plea for cleansing, forgiveness, and the restoration of a joyful spirit before God.