Refuge in Him
While David was called a man after God’s own heart, he was neither a perfect man nor a perfect king. So how can we account for David rejoicing that he was righteous and clean before a holy God? Examining 2 Samuel 22, Alistair Begg explains that David was not claiming sinlessness. Rather, David was expressing his trust in God’s promise to blot out his transgressions. The righteousness David experienced was an imputed righteousness that all who put their faith in Jesus enjoy.
TOPICS: Assurance of Salvation, Biblical Figures, Imputed Righteousness, Jesus Christ, Preaching Christ from the Old Testament, Security in Christ
Speakers
Recent Sermons
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12/14/25
A Song of a Servant
God’s good news often arrives in surprising ways—overturning our assumptions about who God uses and how he works. In Luke ...
Danny Schillero
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12/07/25
A Birth for the Barren
The story of Zechariah shows how the gospel meets us in real-life brokenness, not polished perfection. After 400 years of ...
Danny Schillero
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12/07/25
Sent on Mission
The church exists to be a people shaped and directed by God’s mission. In Matthew 28, Jesus gives a clear ...
Danny Schillero