March 1, 2026

Strengthened in the Lord His God

Pastor: Tyrell Haag Passage: 1 Samuel 30:1–15

Sermon Title: Strengthened in the Lord His God
Scripture Text: 1 Samuel 30:1-15 (ESV)

1. Key Scriptures

  • 1 Samuel 30:1–15: David at Ziklag: loss, bitterness, strengthening himself in the Lord, seeking God’s word, mercy to the weak, and guidance through the forgotten.

  • Romans 8:28: God working all things together for good for those who love him (implied in discussion of discipline vs. destruction).

  • 1 Corinthians 1:27: God choosing the foolish and weak to shame the strong (echoed explicitly in Section V).

  • 2 Corinthians 12:9-10: Strength made perfect in weakness (theological backdrop to “strength where strength should not exist”).

  • Psalm 46:1-3: God as refuge and strength when the earth gives way (thematic resonance).

  • Proverbs 27:1: The fragility of assumed security (implicit in the collapse of Ziklag).

2. Sermon Flow & Takeaways

Introduction & Central Tension

Summary:
We start by naming the core question of the text: what do we do when every visible support collapses and God feels silent?

Takeaways:

  • Crisis exposes not only loss, but what we were trusting for stability.

  • Ziklag moments force faith out of theory and into lived dependence.

I. The Ruins of False Security (vv. 1-6)

Summary:
David returns to Ziklag expecting rest and finds devastation. The burning of the city reveals both the cost of compromise and the fragility of human security.

Takeaways:

  • God may dismantle false refuges to correct, not destroy, his people.

  • Modern idols of control, planning, and competence cannot withstand the fire.

  • Bitterness often arises when grief loses its theological bearings.

II. Strength Where Strength Should Not Exist (v. 6b)

Summary:
At the lowest point, David “strengthens himself in the Lord his God,” anchoring his soul in covenant faith rather than circumstances.

Takeaways:

  • Biblical strength is not self-generated resolve but clinging to God against appearances.

  • Faith often looks weakest precisely where it is most real.

  • This verse describes where weakness must go, not a command to feel strong.

III. A King Who Seeks the Word of the Lord (vv. 7-8)

Summary:
Before acting, David seeks God’s will through the ephod, sharply contrasting Saul’s silence and desperation.

Takeaways:

  • True faith asks, “What is my duty now?” not “Why did this happen?”

  • Obedience begins with hearing before pursuing.

  • Prayer is submission, not a request for divine endorsement of our plans.

IV. The Mercy of the True King (vv. 9-10)

Summary:
In obedience, David pursues the Amalekites but refuses to crush the exhausted, allowing the faint to remain behind.

Takeaways:

  • God’s promises free leaders to show mercy rather than panic.

  • Weakness in others is not an obstacle to God’s purposes.

  • Urgency does not justify severity in the kingdom of God.

V. Salvation Comes Through the Weak and Forgotten (vv. 11-15)

Summary:
A discarded Egyptian slave becomes the means of deliverance, exposing the cruelty of false masters and the mercy of God’s chosen king.

Takeaways:

  • God often brings salvation through those the world discards.

  • Mercy precedes usefulness in God’s economy.

  • The question “To whom do you belong?” reveals the true nature of power and lordship.

VI. Christ in This Text

Summary:
David points beyond himself to Christ, the true King who was abandoned so his people would never be.

Takeaways:

  • Union with Christ, not imitation of David, is the engine of obedience.

  • Christ embodies perfect strength, obedience, mercy, and restoration.

  • Because Christ reigns, Ziklag does not have the final word.

Conclusion: From Ziklag to the Kingdom

Summary:
The sermon ends by lifting eyes from ashes to the coming kingdom of the Son of David.

Takeaways:

  • God’s redemptive purposes often move forward through loss and weakness.

  • Christ reigns now, restores the broken, and will return in glory.

  • Hope is anchored not in circumstances, but in the King who belongs to his people.

3. Primary Sources (Cited and Used)

  • Matthew HenryCommentary on the Whole Bible - Pastoral and theological insights on correction vs. destruction and God’s care for the weak.

  • H. D. M. Spence-Jones (ed.)The Pulpit Commentary: 1 Samuel - Linguistic, historical, and narrative observations (bitterness of soul, stragglers, Egyptian servant).

  • John CalvinCommentaries on the Books of Samuel - God stripping false confidence and forming true dependence.

  • Martin Luther, various writings on faith clinging to God’s Word against appearances.

  • Charles H. Spurgeonsermons and devotional reflections (notably on “To whom belongest thou?”).

4. Additional Resources (For Deeper Study)

  • Dale Ralph DavisLooking on the Heart: Expositions of the Historical Books - Accessible exposition of 1 Samuel.

  • Walter BrueggemannFirst and Second Samuel - Literary and theological analysis (read very critically).

  • Timothy Kellersermons on suffering, false refuges, and gospel-centered endurance.

  • Psalm 46 Devotional Studies - For reflection on God as refuge amid collapse.

  • 1 Corinthians 1-2 - Extended meditation on God’s use of weakness in redemption.