What is the meaning of 2 Samuel 14:28? Now Absalom lived • After three years of exile in Geshur, “Absalom fled and went to Geshur, where he stayed for three years” (2 Samuel 13:38). Joab’s intervention (14:1–23) secured his return, fulfilling David’s longing yet leaving issues unresolved. • Absalom’s continued life points to God’s mercy in sparing him despite his murder of Amnon (13:28–33). Compare Cain living east of Eden after slaying Abel (Genesis 4:15-16). • The verse opens with calm wording—he “lived”—yet beneath the surface smolders unrepentant sin, setting the stage for eventual rebellion (15:1-6). in Jerusalem • Jerusalem was “the city David had captured” (2 Samuel 5:6-7), the political and spiritual center God chose “to put His Name” (Deuteronomy 12:5). • Absalom residing there kept him near the throne, highlighting proximity without intimacy—physically close, relationally distant. • This tension mirrors Saul’s presence in Israel after rejection (1 Samuel 15:26-28), illustrating how location alone does not equal favor. two years • Two years earlier Absalom had plotted Amnon’s death (13:23); now another two-year span passes, showing a pattern of simmering grievance. • Delay tests hearts. David waited years under Saul (1 Samuel 24:1-7), yet trusted God; Absalom’s wait fuels ambition. • “Do not let the sun set upon your anger” (Ephesians 4:26) underscores the danger of prolonged estrangement. without seeing the face of the king • David had commanded, “He must not see my face” (14:24). Separation was discipline, but Absalom interpreted it as rejection. • Absence of the king’s face meant absence of favor; compare Esther’s fear of not being summoned by Xerxes (Esther 4:11). • The father-son breach anticipates the gospel pattern: sinners barred from God’s presence until reconciliation through a mediator (Romans 5:10-11). • Joab will again mediate (14:29-33), yet true repentance remains absent, leading to Absalom’s eventual coup (15:10-14). summary Absalom’s two-year stay in Jerusalem without an audience with David spotlights unresolved sin, strained relationships, and the peril of mere proximity to divine blessing. The verse warns that withheld fellowship, when met with unrepentant pride rather than humble confession, hardens the heart and prepares the ground for deeper rebellion. |