SUMMARY
By having DavidSecond king of Israel, David united the northern and southern kingdoms. More bring the ark of God from Kiriath-jearim to Jerusalem, the Chronicler turns to an abiding concern of the narrative: the establishment of proper worship.
ANALYSIS
It is significant that David’s first act following his anointing as king is his transfer of the ark to the recently captured city of Jerusalem. This is at odds with the parallel in 2 SamuelThe judge who anointed the first two kings of Israel. More 6, where David first needed to rebuild Jebus into Jerusalem and defeat the Philistines (2 Samuel 5) before he could transfer the ark to the Holy City. By placing the building of the palace and the defeat of the Philistines (14:1-17) after the transfer of the ark, the Chronicler casts David in a new light. Unlike SaulThe first king of Israel. More, whose unfaithfulness had resulted in his neglect of religious duties, David’s very first act as king demonstrates his pious concern for the chosen location of God’s earthly presence. In fact, the account opens with an explicit statement of guilt in this regard (13:1-5). While in 2 Samuel David’s building activities and military success paved the way for the transfer of the ark, the Chronicler claims, in effect, that David’s success in these matters indicates God’s favorable response to his concern for the ark. Lest readers suppose the Samuel account is any less theologically ordered than the one in Chronicles, it should be noted that, historically, the defeat of the Philistines would have necessarily preceded both the taking of Jerusalem and the transfer of the ark.
In addition to the Chronicler’s juxtaposition of David and Saul, the account is greatly expanded from that in Samuel. A primary purpose of these expansions is to establish David’s concern for proper worship. In response to Uzzah’s death for an unintentional violation of a cultic regulation that resulted in a failed first attempt to move the ark (1 Chronicles 13:9-14), David orders that only the divinely appointed Levites carry the ark, in accordance with Mosaic legislation (15:1-15; compare Deuteronomy 10:8). David then organizes Israel’s worship attendants with priests, Levites, singers, and musicians who will accompany the ark in its joyous liturgical procession into Jerusalem. In so doing, the Chronicler seeks to validate the liturgical practices of the postexilic period by ascribing their origins to David.
Embedded in this presentation of David’s care of the ark and establishment of the cult is a beautiful hymn of thanksgiving and petition. In chapter 16, the Chronicler constructs this prayer from PsalmA psalm is a song of praise. In the Old Testament 150 psalms comprise the psalter, although some of the psalms are laments and thanksgivings. In the New Testament early Christians gathered to sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs. More 105:1-15 (1 Chronicles 16:8-22); Psalm 96 (1 Chronicles 16:23-33); and Psalm 106:1, 47-48 (1 Chronicles 16:34-36). Each of these psalms brings a much-needed message to the Chronicler’s postexilic people living under the foreign domination of Persian rule. While the rehearsal of God’s prior saving work for Israel (vv. 8-22) reminds them of God’s covenantal loyalty and culminates in God’s “anointed ones” (that is, David and his line, v. 22), verses 23-33 encourage Israel to praise God as the true king and future judge of all the earth (v. 33). But not yet. The brief conclusion (vv. 34-36) lifts up the community’s need to be saved, gathered, and rescued “from among the nations.” Thus, the prayer, as reframed by the Chronicler, pleads for a new act of deliverance in the present generation of God’s people as a testimony to the cosmic reign of God.