There are moments when the distance between faithfulness and failure feels almost impossibly small.
A glance lingers. A private desire is entertained. A warning is dismissed. One compromise makes the next compromise easier, and before long, a person who once walked closely with God finds himself standing in the wreckage of choices he never imagined he would make.
That is part of the tragedy of David’s story.
Yet this week’s Come Follow Me 2026 Old Testament study does not leave us standing on the rooftop with David, trapped in the moment when temptation first entered his heart. It carries us into Nathan’s courageous confrontation, through David’s anguish and the painful consequences of sin, and onward into Solomon’s prayer for wisdom and his dedication of the house of the Lord.
At the center of these chapters is a plea filled with covenant hope:
“If they shall bethink themselves in the land whither they were carried captives, and repent, and make supplication unto thee … saying, We have sinned, and have done perversely, we have committed wickedness; And so return unto thee with all their heart, and with all their soul … then hear thou their prayer and their supplication in heaven thy dwelling place, and maintain their cause.” —1 Kings 8:47–49, KJV
This is not a lesson about flawless kings or effortless discipleship. David fell. Solomon began with wisdom and ended with a divided heart. Both stories warn us that yesterday’s spiritual strength cannot substitute for today’s surrender.
But these chapters also testify that God has provided a covenant path of return. He hears the prayer of the humble. He grants wisdom to those who sincerely seek it. He establishes His name in His holy house. Through Jesus Christ, He invites wounded, wandering, and repentant people to come home.
The question is not merely whether David or Solomon remained faithful. The question is whether our hearts are fully turned toward the Lord today.
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