Summary: There was no question that David was the underdog. But there was also no question about God’s help. How do we face our giants? There were odds, there was opposition and there was Divine help.

DAVID VOLUNTEERED

Text: 1 Samuel 17:38 - 50

When I was a kid, I was a crack shot with a sling shot. My grandfather, Cecil had a patent on a couple of sling shots he designed. He designed sling shots that you could literally hunt deer with using an arrow. It was one of his sling shots that I practiced with until I became good aim.

I got so good with my sling shot that I could almost bull’s eye any target I aimed at. I once targeted a bully who came to my neighborhood. He was a redheaded kid from school named Link who was bigger than me. To taunt him, I would call him Lincoln because he hated it. That day when he was in my neighborhood, I got where he could not see men and taunted him as I yelled, “Lincoln” while aiming at his knee with a piece of meow-mix cat food. Bap! Right on target! You could hear Link scream “ouch” as he grabbed his knee. I know it was wrong. I just thought I would get Link where he would not bother me any more at school. It worked. I was only seven or eight at the time.

David faced a bully much bigger than that, named Goliath. He was Nine foot nine inches tall and match the description of being nearly unstoppable. It sounds like this might be the place where the expression ten feet tall and bullet proof came from. He was a Philistine who had been a problem for Saul and his army for as a “twice a day threat for forty days” (I Samuel 17:16). Going against Goliath was a dangerous mission, but David volunteered for it.

There was no question that David was the underdog. But there was also no question about God’s help. How do we face our giants? There were odds, there was opposition and there was Divine help.

ODDS

How do you look at odds? Do you look at track records and statistics? If Saul’s army had been unsuccessful, how do you think people are going to view the odds for this little shepherd boy David. He’s young, he’s quick, he’s agile, he’s good with a sling shot, he has successfully defended the flock against a lion, a bear (1 Samuel 17:36). But are those successes enough?

How does Goliath’s odds look? He’s almost ten feet tall and bullet proof with an unstoppable record day and night of forty days! Goliath says no one will ever be able to stop him! What do they say about saying “never?” When it comes to odds, there is always the favored opponent who is almost always the top pick between opponents in a contest.

“In the heat of World War II, the Germans worked fervently behind closed doors constructing what they thought would be the greatest military weapon ever conceived. In mid 1941, they launched the battleship Bismarck, with an armored shell eighteen inches thick, and a gun that could hurl a shell the size of a Volkswagen over twenty miles. They were convinced that it could destroy the entire British navy and that its supreme power would quickly afford a German victory. Almost immediately, the floating fortress sank one of the highly feared British battleships called the Hood, striking fear in the hearts of her equals. The Bismarck seemed impenetrable.

But not long after its impressive debut, the ultimate German weapon was spotted by a pair of enemy sea planes on patrol. Made partially of canvas, the planes carried only one torpedo each, since they were not designed to be aggressive attack planes. But as the planes flew over the battleship, they both fired their torpedoes. The first one hit the side of the Bismarck and exploded but did no damage. Similarly, the second hit the tail of the ship and bounced off, exploding into the water but doing no visible damage. The planes fled quickly, not wishing to exchange fire. But little did they know that the second torpedo had, in fact, knocked the rudder off its hinges, and without a rudder, the mighty fortress was left with no way to steer. Although the damage seemed totally insignificant, the most powerful, indestructible, military force ever created was actually helpless in the water. Within hours, it floated directly into the middle of a British fleet, which shelled it again and again until the great ship went down”. (Terry Tekyl. Pray The Price. Muncie: Prayer Point Press, 1997, pp. 17-18). The odds seemed too great for something like that to happen. Remember that God used a shepherd boy to whip a giant.

OPPOSITION

Odds are one thing but what opposition within families? Odds are statistics and records are one thing but opposition comes from actual people.

1) Sibling rivalry: Cain opposed Abe (Genesis 4) Jacob and Esau (Gen. 27), Joseph and his brothers (Gen. 37), the prodigal son and his elder brother (Luke 15:28-30).

2) King candidates: Here in the text today is David and his opponents in his siblings. There was Eliab, Abinadab, Shammah and Jesse’ other sons, and lastly, he sent David whom God chose because He could see David’s heart. At that time, David was just a lowly shepherd boy.

3) Envy of the favored: It was one thing for David to be favored as the next king, but the next hero too? Eliab is probably enviously thinking, “He’s gets to be a king and a hero too! Are you kidding me?”

What about the opposition of the opposing enemy---the giant that David would face?

1) Three kinds of warriors: a) The cavalry which is your armed men on horseback or in chariots [which today would be your tanks---the armored calvary]. b) The infantry---[your “boots on the ground] foot soldiers. c ) Your projectile warriors, archers and slingers. (Malcolm Gladwell. David and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits and the Art of Battling Giants. New York, New York, Hatchette Book Group, 2013, p.p. 7 - 8).

2) Combat style: “Single combat was a common practice in the ancient world. Rather than wipe out an army and lose all potential servants, the Philistines preferred to settle fights economically. Each side sent one to fight, and those two men would fight to the death. The winner’s nation was declared victorious”. (David Jeremiah. Overcomer. Nashville: Word Publishing, 2018, p. 6). This combat style explains why Goliath made the challenge to fight the way he did. This means that Goliath was literally a one-man army.

“Goliath stood and shouted a taunt across to the Israelites. “Why are you all coming out to fight?” he called. “I am the Philistine champion, but you are only the servants of Saul. Choose one man to come down here and fight me! 9 If he kills me, then we will be your slaves. But if I kill him, you will be our slaves! 10 I defy the armies of Israel today! Send me a man who will fight me!” (1 Samuel 17:8 NLT).

Who are the giants that we face?

Don’t we have giants within and without?

The issues our denomination are facing right now, is that not a giant? The giants of fear, the giants of complacency, the giants of sin, the giants of obstacles.

Whatever giants we are facing, we need to ask this question, “How are we going to defeat these giants that stand between us and who God is calling us to be?

How did David do it?

DIVINE HELP

How bad was David the underdog in this fight?

The odds were against him.

> Compare David’s size--- he was like a Chihuahua taking on a Great Dane

> Weapon wise, David’s weaponry is obsolete against Goliath’s weapons

1.Goliath’s bronze armor was 125 pounds

2.Goliath’s iron spear was 15 pounds

3.Goliath’s coat of armor was 91 pounds

4.Goliath’s helmet was 11 pounds

5.Goliath’s sword was 15 pounds and sixteen to eighteen feet long

6.Goliath’s sword was 2.5 to 4.5 pounds

7.Goliath’s height was 9 feet 6 inches

https://studybuff.com/how-heavy-was-goliaths-armor-and-weapons/#How_tall_was_David_from_the_Bible

8.Goliath’s weight had to be at least 600 pounds or more.

https://medicalsciences.stackexchange.com/questions/16469/how-much-would-a-man-96-3m-tall-likely-weigh

What about David’s stats?

1. David was a teenager, probably about fifteen years old when he was anointed to be king. https://www.biblestudy.org/question/why-did-king-david-wait-to-rule-israel.html

2. He was a shepherd boy who was very experienced with his sling having killed a lion and a bear that were far bigger than he was.

3. Saul gave David battle armor to wear, a coat of armor, a helmet, a sword and a tunic but he could not use them because he was not used to them. He took his staff and his sling and five smooth stones (1 King17:38 – 40).

How did David defeat Goliath?

Goliath his opponent, David and got offended that he had come at him like a dog him with his staff. As Goliath came toward David approached the battle line and discharged his sling hitting Goliath in forehead and killed him with one blow.

How did David defeat Goliath?

David was the underdog in this fight so how did he win the fight with that one blow? He won because he did not look at the size of the giant that he was facing. He looked for God’s help. David did not walk by sight! No! David walked by faith!