Imperfection

May 1, 2026

The Greatest of Men Still Let the People Down

The monarchy promised stability, but it exposed something deeper. Even at its best, human leadership could not carry the weight of what God’s people needed. Saul failed in obvious ways. David succeeded in many ways. Yet neither could provide what the people were ultimately looking for.

King David

David is often held up as the model king, a man after God’s own heart (1 Samuel 13:14). And in many ways, he was. He trusted God when others would not. He stood before Goliath and declared that the battle belonged to the Lord (1 Samuel 17:46). He led with courage, wrote psalms that still shape worship, and pointed the nation toward God.

But David was not perfect.

For every victory in the valley, there was a compromise on the rooftop (2 Samuel 11:2–4). While he should have been leading his troops into battle, he remained at home and fell into sin. His failure with Bathsheba was not a momentary lapse. It was a cascade of decisions that led to adultery, deception, and murder (2 Samuel 11:14–17). The man who trusted God in public battlefields failed to trust God in private moments.

David’s life reveals a tension. He shows what faith can look like, but he also shows how quickly that faith can falter. For every psalm that declares God’s greatness, there are moments where David seeks to establish his own, such as when he orders a census to measure his strength rather than trust God’s provision (2 Samuel 24:1–10).

This is the complexity of human leadership. We can admire parts of David’s life, but we cannot model it all. He is a picture of devotion and a warning of compromise at the same time.

David desired to build a house for the Lord, a place where God’s people could experience His presence in a permanent way. It was a noble desire, an attempt to restore something lost since Eden. But God tells David that he will not be the one to build it. “You have shed much blood,” and therefore the task will belong to a son who comes after him (1 Chronicles 22:8).

Yet in that moment, God makes a greater promise. David wants to build a house for God, but God tells David that He will build a house for him. A descendant from David’s line will sit on the throne forever (2 Samuel 7:12–13). This is not merely about Solomon. This is about a future King whose reign will never end.

King Solomon

Solomon, David’s son, begins with a promise. He is known for wisdom, discernment, and blessing. He builds the temple, a place where God’s presence would dwell among His people (1 Kings 6:1). It appears that the kingdom has reached its peak.

But Solomon’s story does not end the way it begins.

The wisest man who ever lived eventually stops living according to his own wisdom. His heart is drawn away by foreign alliances and multiple marriages. What begins as a political strategy turns into a spiritual compromise. Solomon accumulates wealth, power, and relationships, but in doing so, he loses sight of the very truths he once taught (1 Kings 11:1–4).

He wrote about the beauty of marriage, yet he had more wives than reason would allow. He instructed others to train their children, yet failed to establish a legacy of faithfulness in his own household. The man who began with clarity ended with confusion.

The warning is clear. Knowing truth is not the same as living truth. Teaching truth does not guarantee faithfulness to it.

Solomon builds a temple where people can come and meet with God, but even that structure cannot secure lasting obedience. The temple stands as a symbol of God’s presence, yet it cannot transform the human heart.

Following Kings

After Solomon, the kingdom fractures. The nation divides. What had once been unified under one king now splits into two. The decline is not sudden. It is the result of accumulated compromise.

The pattern becomes undeniable. Even the greatest leaders fail. Even the wisest kings fall. Even the strongest kingdoms fracture. Human leadership cannot sustain what only God can secure.

The story is not just recounting failure. It is building expectation. If David cannot fulfill the promise, and Solomon cannot sustain it, then someone greater must be coming.

A King who will not compromise. A King who will not fail. A King whose reign will not end.

The greatest of men still let the people down.

And that is exactly why the people needed more than a man.


Story

The Bible is often read in pieces, but it was written as one story. Tracing the singular story of Scripture from creation to commission reveals how every page points to Jesus Christ.

Unity

When we read the Bible in fragments, we gain familiar verses but lose the coherence of God’s unfolding work. This article shows how a piecemeal approach to Scripture weakens understanding, thins meaning, and keeps us from seeing how every part fits into the one story God is telling.

Hero

The Bible was never meant to place us at the center of the story. Reading Scripture rightly means recognizing God as the true hero and seeing every page point to what He has done, not what we hope to do.

Orientation

Reading the Bible as one unified story brings clarity where there was confusion and purpose where there was frustration. When God’s redemptive plan comes into focus, Scripture stops feeling scattered and starts shaping how we read, believe, and live.

Design

The Bible opens with a declaration, not a debate: God exists, and He created everything. Creation is presented as intentional and ordered, revealing a sovereign God whose design establishes the foundation for the entire story of Scripture.

Purpose

Creation was made by Christ and for Christ, meant to display God’s glory rather than our importance. The vastness of the universe points beyond us, reminding us that the world exists to declare who God is and to call us into humble participation in His purposes.

Travis Agnew

Travis Agnew serves as the Lead Pastor of Rocky Creek Church in Greenville, SC.