Learning from the Father of Meditation
Posted: Wednesday, October 29, 2008
by Mogama
http://www.mogama.info
The Book of Psalm is the Bible's hymnbook, a book of praises and prayers. And the person who wrote half of the 150 Psalms was the man named David. Known to many from the "David and Goliath" Bible story, David became Israel's greatest and most beloved king.
The 19th Psalm, whose theme is meditation, was written by David. David's life experiences show us how or why he became the master of meditation. Though many of the prophets, apostles and saints of the Bible were students and practitioners of meditation, I think it is to David that we should award the title "Father of Biblical Meditation".
(a) David was the last of 8 sons born to Jesse, a man from Bethlehem in the tribal land of Judah. David was not seen by his dad as leadership material. That could be why Jesse never brought David to the family gathering when the Prophet Samuel came to town to anoint one of Jesse's sons to be the next king.
- David might have used mediation to comfort himself as the black sheep of the family.
- Through the discipline of meditation, David was able to overcome the fears associated with his job.
- David used his music as a means for meditation. It was wise of him to meditate through music. Musical meditation is mystical medication for the soul.
- During those years of wandering and running for his life, David encouraged his heart and soothed his soul through the art of meditation.
- As a warrior with battle plans to lay out, and as a monarch with administrative duties, David found much wisdom in meditation.
Furthermore, David witnessed incest among his children. One of his sons raped one of David's daughters. That sister's brother (Absalom) murdered the brother who raped his sister. Eventually, Absalom, David's most handsome and beloved son, plotted a revolt that gain steam. King David was forced to flee the city and hide out in the country. In the process of this coup attempt, the rebellious prince engaged in broad-day sex with his father's women (concubines or half-wives).
- In and through all of those difficult national and personal situations, the discipline of meditation was probably one of David's most used secret weapons. It was how he got through each day, whether as a boy in his family, as a shepherd in the desert, as a fugitive on the run from King Saul, as the warrior-king of Israel, and as a struggling husband and father.
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Top-level comments on this article: (2 total)Great article, as usual, Mogama. I have no doubts that meditation was a main-stay for King David. What a stressful life he had lived! Thanks for putting it into an understandable story for us.Sandra
Good observations about David, but keep one thing in mind. He didn't just meditate; he meditated on God. The New Age Movement would say to empty your mind and meditate, but David didn't empty his mind, he filled it with thoughts of God.
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