
2 Samuel 7:11c-17 describes the LORD’s final and ultimate promises of the Davidic Covenant, an eternal dynasty.
There is a parallel scripture of 2 Samuel 7:11-17 in 1 Chronicles 17:10-15.
The LORD continues the second part of His message to David through the prophet Nathan. In the first part of His message to David, the LORD indicated that He did not want David to be the one to build His house (a temple for the Ark of the Covenant) (2 Samuel 7:4-7).
The second part of the LORD’s message began with a reminder to David of how God exalted him from shepherd to king of Israel and how the LORD protected him from all his enemies (2 Samuel 4:8-9a).
Then the second part continued as the LORD of hosts began to tell David the covenant which God would fulfill for His servant David. The Davidic Covenant began with three promises which God would accomplish for David and His people:
As incredible as these promises were, they were not all that God had in store for David.
The LORD also declares to you that the LORD will make a house for you (v 11c).
The LORD is speaking this message to King David through Nathan the prophet (2 Samuel 7:4). The phrase The LORD also declares to you… is Nathan assuring the king that what he is about to say is not from himself-but from the LORD. The words that follow are what the LORD declares to David.
This expression also indicates the third part of the LORD’s message to David and one that will have special significance for David.
The fourth promise the LORD made to His servant David is that God would personally (the LORD will) establish the kingly lineage of David. In the context of verse 11, the expression make a house means “royal lineage.”
David wished to make a house for the ark of God by building a temple to the LORD (2 Samuel 7:2-3) but instead, the LORD declared that He will make a house for David in establishing his royal line.
The Hebrew word translated house, where David referred to a temple for the Lord in 2 Samuel 7:2-3, is the same word God used when He told David He would make a house for him.
This could be viewed somewhat humorously, as David the warrior king says to God “I would like to make you a house” and God says in return “I am an even greater warrior king (Lord of Hosts) and I think it is a better idea for Me to build you a house.” In this case, though, the house God has in mind is quite earth-shaking; God will take on human flesh and occupy the throne of David Himself.
In some respects, the LORD’s promise to make David a house was like the LORD’s promise to Abraham to make a great nation of him (Genesis 12:2, 17:4-5). The promises of both covenants are about legacy and descendants.
The LORD’s declaration that He would make a house for David by establishing his royal line was extremely significant because it introduced the first divine guarantee of a lasting dynasty in Israel.
Until this point, Israel had only known two kings:
Saul’s house failed and was cut off because of his disobedience (1 Samuel 15:26-28). Saul’s house had no lasting legacy. But with David, the LORD initiated something entirely new-a covenant-promise to establish his house forever.
This divine commitment marked a turning point in the history of Israel and the house of David. It transformed the kingship from a temporary, conditional role into a covenantal institution.
But the LORD’s promise would not only secure David’s house and legacy and shape the course of Israel’s national identity-it would also lay the foundation for the hope of a future, eternal King who would descend from David’s house.
In fulfillment to this promise, David had a descendant on the throne of Judah: King Solomon (v 12).
Jesus also came from the house of David (Matthew 1:1, 1:6, 1:17, Luke 1:27, 2:4, 3:31, Revelation 22:16).
This prophetic hope is further explained in a flurry of promises the LORD made to David in the Davidic Covenant which come in rapid succession.
When your days are complete and you lie down with your fathers, I will raise up your descendant after you, who will come forth from you (v 12a).
The beginning of verse 12 states the fifth promise of the Davidic Covenant and it initiates a flurry of promises the LORD made to David.
The Davidic Covenant’s fifth promise was that when David had died, the LORD would raise up a descendant of David after him.
The thought when your days are complete and you lie down with your fathers means the LORD will fulfill this flurry of promises sometime in the future after David had died and had been buried.
A descendant is a person who comes from a particular ancestor, such as a child, grandchild, or later generation. A descendant is someone who comes forth from that ancestor. Chronologically, descendants come after their ancestors. A descendant carries on the lineage or house of those who came before them.
The LORD is promising David that He will personally raise up a descendant that will come forth from him to carry on his house, legacy, and throne after he is dead and buried with his fathers.
The expression raise up can mean “cause to be born,” “exalt,” or “resurrect.” As we dig into the prophetic meanings of this promise later in this commentary, we will see that all three meanings of raise up are inferred.
This covenant promise was fulfilled in multiple ways through two different people-King Solomon and Jesus.
The covenant promise fulfilled through King Solomon
The first descendant who was a fulfillment of God’s promise to David was David’s own son-Solomon.
The LORD loved Solomon from his birth and even gave him a second name-Jedidiah-which means ‘beloved of the LORD’ (2 Sameul12:24-25). The LORD raised Solomon up, elevating him to the throne, as He promised to do (1 Chronicles 28:5-6). And God did not just raise Solomon up to the throne, the LORD “bestowed on [Solomon] royal majesty which had not been bestowed on any king before him in Israel” (1 Chronicles 29:25).
The book of 2 Chronicles opens with a description of Solomon’s exaltation,
“…the LORD his God was with him and exalted him greatly.”
(2 Chronicles 1:1)
King Solomon’s reign was the continuation and expansion of his father King David’s house.
The covenant promise fulfilled through Jesus
The second descendant who was a fulfillment of God’s promise to David was Jesus who descended from David (Matthew 1:1, 1:6 1:17).
Jesus claimed to be this descendant when He told John: “I, Jesus… am the root and the descendant of David, the bright morning star” (Revelation 22:16).
The LORD raised up Jesus in four ways:
Interestingly, the Hebrew word that is translated descendant here in the Davidic covenant is the same Hebrew word that is translated as “seed” in God’s judgment of the serpent, and it is also the same Hebrew word that is translated interchangeably as “offspring,” “descendant,” and/or “seed” when referring to the LORD’s promised descendants of Abraham in the book of Genesis (Genesis 12:7, 13:15-16, 15:3, 15:5, 15:13, 15:18, 16:10, 17:7-12, 17:19, 22:18).
“And I will put enmity
Between you and the woman,
And between your seed and her seed;
He shall bruise you on the head,
And you shall bruise him on the heel.”
(Genesis 3:15)
“In your seed all the nations of the earth shall be blessed, because you have obeyed My voice.”
(Genesis 22:18)
The Hebrew word that is translated as “seed” in Genesis 3:15 and Genesis 22:18, and again as descendant in 2 Samuel 7:12, is זֶרַע (H2232-pronounced “zeh-rah”). The use of zeh-rah throughout these prophecies and covenants link them as Messianic prophecies.
Jesus is the promised zeh-rah/seed in Genesis 3:15 who will crush the serpent’s head.
Jesus is the promised zeh-rah/seed of Abraham in Genesis 22:18 through whom the world will be blessed.
And Jesus is the promised zeh-rah/descendant of David who will:
And I will establish his kingdom (v. 12b).
The sixth promise of the Davidic Covenant is that the LORD will personally (I will) establish the kingdom of David’s descendant.
David’s descendant will have a kingdom. This kingdom will be established by the LORD.
The Hebrew word that is translated as establish means to “make solid,” “securely fixed,” “make firm,” and/or to “stabilize.”
The covenant promise of a kingdom fulfilled through King Solomon
The LORD fulfilled this covenant promise through David’s son, Solomon, and again through David’s descendant-Jesus.
The first fulfillment of this promise occurred when David’s days were complete and he was buried with his fathers. Solomon became king after him (1 Chronicles 29:28). This was the LORD’s plan.
“Of all my sons (for the LORD has given me many sons), He has chosen my son Solomon to sit on the throne of the kingdom of the LORD over Israel.”
(1 Chronicles 28:5)
And the LORD established Solomon’s kingdom so that it prospered greatly.
“And Solomon sat on the throne of his father David, and his kingdom was firmly established."
(1 Kings 2:12)
During Solomon’s reign, the kingdom of Israel reached an unprecedented level of peace, wealth, and influence, fulfilling the LORD’s covenant promise to David.
The Bible says that “Solomon sat on the throne of the LORD as king instead of his father David; and he prospered, and all Israel obeyed him” (1 Chronicles 29:23). The LORD granted Solomon great wisdom, “God gave Solomon wisdom and very great discernment... so that Solomon’s wisdom surpassed the wisdom of all the people of the east and all the wisdom of Egypt” (1 Kings 4:29-30).
Under Solomon’s leadership, Israel enjoyed peace on all sides: “So Judah and Israel lived in safety, everyone under his vine and his fig tree, from Dan even to Beersheba, all the days of Solomon” (1 Kings 4:25). His rule was marked by national unity, military strength, and economic prosperity. The LORD established his kingdom.
Solomon’s wealth and accomplishments were legendary even in his own time.
The Bible says that “King Solomon became greater than all the kings of the earth in wealth and in wisdom” (1 Kings 10:23). “Silver was not considered valuable in the days of Solomon” due to the abundance of gold (2 Chronicles 9:20). His trading ventures, tribute from surrounding nations, and extensive building projects-including the construction of the temple in Jerusalem-displayed the height of Israel’s glory (1 Kings 10, 2 Chronicles 9).
The Queen of Sheba herself testified: “I did not believe the reports... but behold, the half of the greatness of your wisdom was not told me. You surpass the report that I heard” (2 Chronicles 9:6).
The LORD indeed raised up Solomon and established his kingdom. Solomon’s prosperous rule was a testimony to God’s faithfulness to His covenant promises to David.
King Solomon’s reign was the first fulfillment of the LORD’s promise to establish the kingdom of David’s descendant. King Jesus is the second fulfillment of this same promise.
The covenant promise of a kingdom as fulfilled through Jesus
The kingdom of Jesus is a far greater fulfillment of what Solomon’s kingdom only foreshadowed.
1. The dominion of Jesus’s kingdom is larger than Solomon’s kingdom.
2. The duration of Jesus’s kingdom outlasts the duration of Solomon’s kingdom.
3. The Shalom (peace) of Jesus’s kingdom is superior to the peace of Solomon’s kingdom.
4. King Jesus’s divine Wisdom is greater than King Solomon’s.
The LORD has established and will establish the kingdom of Jesus, David’s descendant, to a far greater extent than He first established the kingdom of Solomon, David’s son.
He shall build a house for My name (v 13a).
In Hebrew, the temple is called the "Beit Hamikdash" which means "the holy house." It was intended to be God’s earthly dwelling place. The temple-Beit Hamikdash-is the house for the LORD’s name. It is His house.
The seventh promise of the covenant the LORD made to David was that David’s descendant shall be the one who will build a house for My name.
This promise confirms that David will NOT be the one who shall build a house for God’s name. The first part of the LORD’s message to David through Nathan the prophet implied that David would not be the one to build the LORD’s house but it did not explicitly state that fact (2 Samuel 7:4-8). 1 Chronicles 17:4, however, did explicitly state that David would not build the LORD’s house.
Instead of David building the LORD’s house as was David’s initial intent (1 Chronicles 28:2-3), the LORD confirmed that it shall be his descendant who would do this. King David made preparations by gathering materials, but he himself did not construct the temple in Jerusalem (1 Chronicles 28:2b).
There were two people who fulfilled this prophecy.
The covenant promise to build God’s house as fulfilled through King Solomon
The LORD told David that his son, Solomon, would be the descendant who would build His house,
“Your son Solomon is the one who shall build My house and My courts.”
(1 Chronicles 28:6).
And after his father King David had died and was buried with his fathers, King Solomon built the temple of God in Jerusalem.
When Solomon came to the throne, he acknowledged his divine appointment and set his heart on fulfilling God’s promise. He said to King Hiram of Tyre:
“Behold, I intend to build a house for the name of the LORD my God, as the LORD spoke to my father David, saying, ‘Your son, whom I will put on your throne in your place, he will build the house for My name.’”
(1 Kings 5:5)
Solomon gathered skilled workers, precious materials, and followed the instructions given through David according to the LORD’s design. The temple that Solomon built was magnificent in beauty and purpose, as David had envisioned. King Solomon instructed the builders:
“The house which is to be built for the LORD shall be exceedingly magnificent, famous and glorious throughout all lands”
(1 Chronicles 22:5).
After completing the temple, Solomon publicly recognized that what had been accomplished was the fulfillment of the LORD’s covenant promise to his father David:
“Now the LORD has fulfilled His word which He spoke; for I have risen in place of my father David and sit on the throne of Israel, as the LORD promised, and have built the house for the name of the LORD, the God of Israel.”
(1 Kings 8:20)
The completion of the temple under Solomon’s reign not only fulfilled God’s covenant promise to David but also marked a new chapter in Israel’s spiritual life-a central place where the LORD’s name would dwell and where sacrifices and prayers would be offered. As Solomon proclaimed, “I have surely built You a lofty house, A place for Your dwelling forever” (1 Kings 8:13).
Through King Solomon, God’s word to David was fulfilled precisely, establishing both the throne of Israel and the house of God as enduring symbols of the LORD’s faithfulness.
To learn more about the temple King Solomon built, see The Bible Says article: “The Temple.”
The covenant promise to build God’s house as fulfilled through Jesus
David’s descendant, Jesus Christ, is the ultimate fulfillment of the LORD’s covenant promise that David would have a descendant who shall build a house for My name. While Solomon constructed a physical temple in Jerusalem, Jesus came to establish a greater, spiritual house of God that would endure forever.
Jesus fulfilled the LORD’s covenant promise to David that your descendant shall build a house for My name through His resurrection and the establishment of His church.
When Jesus was asked on whose authority He cleared the temple grounds of the money changers (John 2:18), Jesus said:
“Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up”
(John 2:19).
John then clarifies that Jesus “was speaking about the temple of His body” (John 2:21). Later Jesus was crucified, His body died and was buried, and it rose again to the glory of God as He predicted. Through the rising of this temple, Jesus’s body became the living temple where God’s presence eternally dwells and the house in which His name is glorified forever.
Jesus’s resurrection from the dead began His fulfillment of the LORD’s covenant promise to David by raising up the temple of His body and becoming the cornerstone and foundation for the church.
Jesus is “the stone which the builders [leaders of Israel] rejected [and] Has become the chief cornerstone” (Psalm 118:22) for the church. Isaiah further develops this prophetic thought, that the Messiah will establish God’s temple of believers:
“Therefore this is what the Lord GOD says:
‘Behold, I am laying a stone in Zion, a tested stone,
A precious cornerstone for the foundation, firmly placed.
The one who believes in it will not be disturbed.’”
(Isaiah 28:16)
Paul and Peter both identify David’s descendant, Jesus, as this cornerstone (Acts 4:11, Ephesians 2:20, 1 Peter 2:6-7).
The church is the true and everlasting temple of God. The church is the body of believers who have been redeemed from sin and its consequence of death through their faith in Jesus as the Son of God and Messiah. (See: The Gift of Eternal Life). Two outcomes of this redemption are that believers:
Jesus is the only foundation (1 Corinthians 3:11) and is the cornerstone (Psalm 118:22, 1 Peter 2:6-7) of our salvation.
Through His death, resurrection, and exaltation, Jesus laid the foundation for a new kind of temple-not made with hands, but composed of His people. And through Jesus, believers are joined into a living, spiritual house: “You also, as living stones, are being built up as a spiritual house for a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices” (1 Peter 2:5). Paul tells the believers of Ephesus that they “are of God’s household” (Ephesians 2:19b).
The church, made up of redeemed people from every nation, becomes the house that Jesus, the Son of David and Son of God, builds for the LORD’s name.
But Jesus is not only the Foundation and the Cornerstone of the church, He is also the Architect who builds the house for God’s name. He is the Author and Finisher of our faith (Hebrew 12:1). He is “the beginning and the end” (Revelation 22:13). The Greek term that is translated as “beginning” in Revelation 22:13 is “arché.” This word is the root of the English word “architect.”
The House Jesus built and His fulfillment of this covenant promise is superior to the House King Solomon built.
Jesus’s Temple is Eternal and Incorruptible
Jesus’s Temple is Spiritually Alive
Jesus’s Temple is Not Confined to a Single Location
The house for God’s name which Jesus built fulfilled not only the letter but the fullness of the LORD’s covenant promise to David, that your descendant shall build a house for My name.
And I will establish the throne of his kingdom forever (v 13).
The eighth promise of the covenant the LORD made to David was the LORD would personally (I will) establish the throne of David’s descendant’s kingdom forever.
In verse 12, the LORD promised to personally establish the throne of David’s descendant.
In verse 13, the LORD elaborates on that promise and guarantees David that the throne of his kingdom will last forever.
This promise is one of the most important promises of the Davidic Covenant. It is perhaps this promise-that the throne and kingdom of David’s descendant will endure forever-which is the most often repeated and echoed in subsequent prophecies from the Davidic Covenant (1 Kings 2:4, 1 Kings 9:5, Psalm 89:2-4, Psalm 132:11-12, Isaiah 9:6-7, Jeremiah 33:17, Ezekiel 37:24-25, Luke 1:32-33).
The LORD’s promise to establish the throne and kingdom of David’s descendant forever is fulfilled through David’s son, King Solomon, and ultimately through David’s descendant-Jesus.
The covenant promise of an eternal throne as fulfilled through King Solomon
King Solomon inherited and reigned on David’s throne over a united Israel. Solomon not only built the temple in Jerusalem, but during his reign, Israel experienced peace, prosperity, and international renown.
Solomon’s reign represented the immediate, visible, and temporal fulfillment of God’s covenant promise to David. But Solomon, like David, died. This meant that the forever aspect of this covenant promise would be fulfilled through their kingly line of descendants.
And it was through the descendancy and line of Solomon that the forever aspect of the LORD’s promise was and is and will be fulfilled.
Just as the LORD extended the Abrahamic covenant to Abraham’s son Isaac (Genesis 26:2-5) and later to Abraham’s grandson, Jacob (Genesis 28:13-15), so too did God extend this promise of the Davidic covenant to David’s son, King Solomon.
The LORD came to Solomon and said to him:
“If you walk before Me... I will establish the throne of your kingdom over Israel forever.”
(1 Kings 9:4-5)
According to Matthew, Jesus was a descendant of Solomon (Matthew 1:6). Thus, Jesus fulfilled the forever aspect of the LORD’s covenant promise to both King Solomon (v 13, 1 Kings 1:9:5) and King David v 13, v16). Unfortunately, Solomon did not follow God’s ways, so his descendants did not receive the immediate, physical part of the promised reward, as Israel split into two kingdoms and began to decline immediately after Solomon’s death.
The covenant promise of an eternal throne as fulfilled through Jesus
We have already discussed how Jesus was given a kingdom when we examined the LORD’s covenant promise to personally establish a kingdom for David’s descendant. (See commentary for v 12b.)
But here, the LORD elaborates on that promise and guarantees David that this descendant’s throne will be established forever.
Jesus’s throne is eternal and will endure forever.
Jesus’s eternal throne was prophesied by the angel Gabriel at His annunciation to Mary.
“The Lord God will give Him the throne of His father David, and He will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and His kingdom will have no end."
(Luke 1:32-33)
Jesus’s eternal throne will become inescapably apparent upon His second coming.
“The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of His Christ, and He will reign forever and ever.”
(Revelation 11:15)
I will be a father to him and he will be a son to Me (v 14a).
The ninth promise of the covenant the LORD made to David was that the LORD would personally (I will) be a father to David’s descendant.
In Jewish and Old Testament terms, for the LORD to be like a Father to someone and for someone to be considered a son to the LORD signifies a covenantal relationship characterized by intimacy, authority, guidance, and inheritance.
The LORD’s statement I will be a father to him and he will be a son to Me is a key phrase within a Suzerain-Vassal treaty, or at least something like it.
A Suzerain-Vassal treaty was a formal covenant used in the ancient Near East between a greater king (the suzerain) and a lesser ruler (the vassal). The suzerain offered protection, provision, and legitimacy. In return, the vassal pledged loyalty, obedience, and tribute.
These treaties typically included a historical prologue, stipulations or expectations, blessings for obedience, and curses for disobedience. The book of Deuteronomy can be viewed as a Suzerain-Vassal treaty between God and the people of Israel, with Chapters 27-28 setting forth the blessings and cursings provision of the covenant. It can also be viewed that God made such a covenant with Abraham in Genesis 15 when He caused a torch and oven to pass through split animal carcasses and promised Abraham his descendants would possess the Promised Land (see commentary on Genesis 15:7-9).
When the vassal displayed faithful service, their reward would be an adoption and the reception of a territory over which to reign. In the case of Deuteronomy and Genesis 15, the territory in question was the Promised Land of Israel. The imagery of adoption as a “son” signifies a close relationship between David’s descendant and the LORD and all the responsibilities and potential blessings that come with adoption.
The relationship was hierarchical, but it was also personal and often paternal, with the suzerain referring to the vassal as “son.” The title son signifies royal privilege and responsibility. The responsibility for the vassal would include reigning over the assigned territory and remaining in submission to the suzerain.
In this covenant with David, The LORD (the Suzerain) establishes a binding and benevolent relationship with David and his descendant (the vassal), granting them royal authority under His ultimate sovereignty.
The Davidic Covenant mirrors the Suzerain-Vassal format.
Historical Prologue
The LORD reminds David of His past faithfulness
(2 Samuel 7:8-9a)
Covenant Blessings
The LORD outlines the benefits of the covenant blessings.
Covenant Stipulations
The LORD establishes expectations for future kings descended from David
(He shall build a house for My name v 13)
Covenant Relationship
The LORD promises to provide oversight and care for the vassal
(I will be a father to him and he will be a son to Me… v 14)
Covenant Consequences
The LORD warns of discipline for disobedience without revoking the covenant These are conditional punishments, not total curses.
(When he does wrong, I will discipline him with the rod of men… v 14b)
Perpetual Covenant
The LORD promises to uphold the covenant with His mercy
(My lovingkindness shall not depart from him… v 15)
All of these demonstrate that the Davidic Covenant follows the pattern of a Suzerain-Vassal treaty and conveys a deeply relational and hierarchical bond between the LORD and the house of David.
To learn more about Suzerain-Vassal Treaties, see The Bible Says article: “Suzerain-Vassal Treaties.”
The expression I will be a father to him and he will be a son to Me follows the suzerain-vassal treaty structure and anticipates a reward for faithful service. This is meant to reflect a bond of chosen favor and responsibility. David’s descendant will bear the burden and blessing of fulfilling God’s purposes as a son would fulfill the will of his father. Jesus was the fulfillment of this promise.
To be a son also signified being under the LORD’s special care, discipline, and blessing (Deuteronomy 8:5). Calling God Father acknowledged His authoritative role as a Protector and Provider (Exodus 4:22).
This father-son language was not merely relational, but spiritual and royal, often used to describe kingship, with the king acting as God's representative and servant on earth, ruling under divine authority and enjoying divine favor.
The covenant promise of a father/son relationship as fulfilled through King Solomon
The LORD explicitly named Solomon as the descendant whom He would share a father-son-like relationship when He told David:
“Your son Solomon is the one… I have chosen him to be a son to Me, and I will be a father to him.”
(1 Chronicles 28:6b)
When Solomon inherited his father David’s throne, he also inherited the covenant responsibilities and blessings that came with it. As king, Solomon was adopted into a royal sonship relationship with God, demonstrating God's continued favor and authority. In this role, Solomon functioned as a royal son, representing the people before God and ruling under His divine guidance.
This father-son dynamic was revealed when the LORD personally appeared to Solomon and gave him wisdom to govern Israel (1 Kings 3:5-14). The LORD appeared to Solomon in a dream and responded to his request for wisdom, saying:
“Behold, I have given you a wise and discerning heart... and if you walk in My ways, keeping My statutes and commandments, as your father David walked, then I will prolong your days.”
(1 Kings 3:12,14)
Later, after the temple was completed, the LORD appeared again and reaffirmed this fatherly relationship. God told Solomon:
“If you will walk before Me... then I will establish the throne of your kingdom over Israel forever... But if you or your sons indeed turn away... then I will cut off Israel.” (1 Kings 9:4-7)
Again, this conditional language of the LORD’s terms to Solomon in 1 Kings 3:12-14, 9:4-7 contain the stipulation language of Suzerain-Vassal treaties, where the suzerain (superior ruler) promises blessings and protection in exchange for the vassal’s (subordinate ruler’s) loyalty and obedience, while warning of curses or consequences if the vassal fails to uphold the covenant’s obligations.
King Solomon enjoyed the blessings and bore the accountability for being God’s son. Solomon was to rule in obedience, reflect the LORD’s character, and faithfully lead his people. While Solomon began well, his eventual disobedience showed the limits of the human fulfillment of this covenant, pointing ahead to a greater Son who would fulfill it perfectly.
The covenant promise of a father/son relationship as fulfilled through Jesus
The LORD’s covenant promise I will be a father to him and he will be a son to Me finds its ultimate fulfillment in Jesus Christ, who is not only a son by covenant but by His eternal and divine nature. Jesus is literally the Son of the living God (Matthew 16:16, 27:54).
The Book of Hebrews begins with an assertion that Jesus is the son of David who was promised to be the Son of God in the Davidic Covenant first described in 2 Samuel,
“For to which of the angels did He ever say, ‘You are My Son, today I have fathered You’?... I will be a Father to Him, and He will be a Son to Me.”
(Hebrews 1:5)
Hebrews claims that Jesus’s unique status as God’s Son and the LORD as His Father is the fulfillment of this covenant promise that God will be a father to David’s descendant and that he will be a son to Me. Jesus, as God, was the Son from eternity past. But Jesus, as a human, was rewarded the title of “Son” for His faithful service (Philippians 2:8-10). His reward was to be given the scepter of the earth (Matthew 28:18, Hebrews 1:8, 13).
Jesus is both the Son of David because He is human, and the Son of God because He is divine.
Unlike Solomon, whose father/son relationship to the LORD was established through royal adoption and obedience, Jesus is the eternal Son of God, proceeding from the Father and sharing His divine nature (John 1:1, 1:14). Jesus’s divine Sonship therefore is not symbolic or temporary-it is the essence of His identity and authority.
Jesus said: “I and the Father are one” (John 10:30).
At Jesus’s baptism and again at His transfiguration, God the Father affirmed Jesus’s identity as His Son when a voice from heaven declared:
“This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.”
(Matthew 3:17)
“This is My beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased; listen to Him!”
(Matthew 17:5)
These proclamations of “Son” took place prior to Jesus’s completion of His obedience. Jesus was a Son from eternity past. Then, throughout His earthly ministry, Jesus consistently lived in perfect obedience to the Father, embodying the ideal that Solomon only partially fulfilled. As a result, He was granted the title of Son as a human as well, and granted to reign over the earth (Matthew 28:18).
Jesus said, “I always do the things that are pleasing to Him” (John 8:29). Christ’s Sonship was marked not only by position but by relational intimacy (John 10:30) and complete submission (John 8:29)-even to death on a cross (Philippians 2:8).
In the beginning of Romans, the Apostle Paul points out that Jesus was the promised son of David and argued that His resurrection further confirmed the permanence and supremacy of His divine Sonship.
“concerning His Son, who was born of a descendant of David according to the flesh, who was declared the Son of God with power by the resurrection from the dead.”
(Romans 1:3-4a)
And after His resurrection, Jesus proclaimed, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Me” (Matthew 28:18), a fulfillment not only of the Davidic throne but also of the Father-Son covenantal relationship.
The Father entrusted full authority to the Son. Jesus’s divine Sonship and obedience were the basis for this granting of power. Because Jesus was the faithful Son who perfectly fulfilled His Father’s will, Jesus received the promised rule and inheritance, completing the covenantal pattern of a son reigning on behalf of the Father.
Jesus now reigns from heaven, “seated at the right hand of the Majesty on high” (Hebrews 1:3). He rules forever as the divine Son through whom all the promises of God are fulfilled (2 Corinthians 1:20). In the future He will reign on the earth, at which time all biblical promises will be fulfilled (Revelation 19:11-16, 20:4). This includes this covenant promise to David, as Jesus will reign on earth “for a thousand years” (Revelation 20:4) then be the tabernacle and light of a new earth (Revelation 21:3, 23)
From the descent of His birth in the line of David (Luke 1:32), through the obedience to His Father during His earthly ministry (Matthew 3:17, 17:5, John 5:30), culminating in His death on the cross (Luke 22:42, Philippians 2:8), through the power of His resurrection (Romans 1:3-4a), to His receiving absolute and total authority and His exaltation to heaven’s throne (Matthew 28:18, Hebrews 1:3), Jesus is the ultimate fulfilment of the LORD’s promise to David, that I will be a father to your descendant and he will be a son to Me.
Jesus’s fulfillment of I Will Be a Father to Him, and He Will Be a Son to Me” surpassed Solomon’s
Eternal Sonship
Perfect Obedience
Next the LORD described the father/son relationship He would have with David’s descendant.
When he commits iniquity, I will correct him with the rod of men and the strokes of the sons of men, but My lovingkindness shall not depart from him, as I took it away from Saul, whom I removed from before you (vv 14b-15).
The tenth promise of the covenant the LORD made to David was the LORD would personally (I will) correct David’s descendant whenever he went astray, but even when he sinned against God, the LORD would never remove His mercies and blessing as the LORD did to King Saul when he obstinately disobeyed God’s commands.
This tenth promise expresses the LORD’s fatherly commitment to His son (David’s descendant) through love and discipline.
The expression: When he commits iniquity, I will correct Him means that the LORD will personally discipline David’s descendant when he sins.
To commit iniquity is to sin or disobey God’s will or instruction.
A good father loves his son. And a good father disciplines his son whenever his son disobeys his will or instruction for his son’s benefit and good.
The LORD is a good Father (Deuteronomy 1:31, Matthew 5:48, 7:11, James 1:17-18). And the LORD disciplines His children to help them mature into the likeness of Jesus (Hebrews 12:10).
It was likely with this tenth covenant promise in mind that Solomon counseled his son:
“My son, do not reject the discipline of the Lord
Or loathe His reproof,
For whom the Lord loves He reproves,
Even as a father corrects the son in whom he delights.”
(Proverbs 3:11-12)
The LORD’s discipline of David’s descendant will be with the rod of men and the strokes of the sons of men.
The rod is a symbol of fatherly correction, not destruction. It draws from the imagery of a father disciplining a son for wrongdoing. A father uses a rod to train and restore his son, because he loves him (Proverbs 13:24, 29:15). A father does not use a rod to reject or abuse him.
The rod of men and the strokes of the sons of men suggests that God will provide correction through human agency or means-such as political opposition, enemy attacks, or natural consequences-not supernatural punishment. It is measured correction, not a covenantal rejection.
It is worth mentioning how this is in keeping with how God uses all the trials we encounter for our own good (Romans 8:28-29, James 1:2-4).
David’s descendant will not be free from fatherly correction when he sins. And this divine discipline, though unpleasant, will preserve the covenant bond even in times of human failure. It is a model of divine justice and love that includes accountability with grace.
The LORD affirms His love for David’s descendant and the eternal sense of belonging he will enjoy as God’s son:
but My favor shall not depart from him, as I took it away from Saul, whom I removed from you (v 15).
Again, the LORD’s discipline will never escalate into rejection. Unlike King Saul, whose disobedience led to the removal of his kingship (1 Samuel 15:26-28), David’s descendant will enjoy a permanent, enduring relationship with God. Their relationship will be grounded in and maintained by the LORD’s love and faithfulness rather than human performance. The covenant will remain secure even when the son falters. God’s love and commitment are not revoked by failure.
The LORD’s promise to discipline and correct in love while never rejecting David’s descendant as His son foreshadows the Gospel and the eternal belonging we enjoy as believers when we are adopted into God’s family through faith in Jesus.
When we receive Jesus through faith, we are graciously adopted as children of God and into His eternal family. And we are eligible to inherit all that a son is entitled to inherit (John 1:12-13). Once we are part of God’s family-nothing can take us out of our Father’s loving hands (John 10:29), and/or separate us from His omnipotent love (Romans 8:35-39). And as His children, God has promised that He will correct and discipline us when we stray (Hebrews 12:5-7).
The covenant promise of discipline and belonging as fulfilled through King Solomon
King Solomon’s life represents a partial but real fulfillment of the LORD’s covenant promise: I will be a father to him and he will be a son to Me; when he does wrong, I will discipline him with the rod of men and the strokes of the sons of men, but My lovingkindness shall not depart from him, as I took it away from Saul.
This promise was made to King David regarding his descendant and emphasized both the relational closeness (as between father and son) and the stability of divine favor, even in times of failure. King Solomon, as David’s son and successor, upon being made king, was an immediate fulfillment of this covenantal promise (1 Chronicles 28:5-6).
The LORD granted Solomon wisdom, peace, and unparalleled prosperity, which confirmed the presence of divine favor (1 Kings 4:20-30).
But later in his reign, King Solomon committed iniquity and turned away from the LORD (his father). He became influenced by his many foreign wives, and his heart was not wholly devoted to the LORD (1 Kings 11:4). Solomon built high places for idols and permitted idolatry in Israel (1 Kings 11:5-8). The LORD became angry with His son, Solomon (1 Kings 11:9).
The LORD kept His covenant promises to correct His son, Solomon, for his iniquity,
“So the Lord said to Solomon, ‘Because you have done this, and you have not kept My covenant and My statutes, which I have commanded you, I will surely tear the kingdom from you, and will give it to your servant.’”
(1 Kings 11:11)
And the LORD kept His covenant promise to not reject Solomon for his iniquity,
“Nevertheless I will not do it in your days for the sake of your father David, but I will tear it out of the hand of your son. However, I will not tear away all the kingdom, but I will give one tribe to your son for the sake of My servant David and for the sake of Jerusalem which I have chosen.’”
(1 Kings 11:12-13)
As a result, God raised up adversaries against King Solomon:
These opponents served as human instruments of divine correction. They are the fulfillment of the rod of men and the strokes of the sons of men.
Yet, despite this chastisement, the LORD did not reject Solomon entirely, just as He promised: but My lovingkindness shall not depart from him, as I took it away from Saul, whom I removed from before you.
The LORD’s discipline of His son, King Solomon did not include the loss of his kingdom during his lifetime. This preserved the covenantal line and confirmed God’s commitment: He would correct David’s descendant for his iniquity as a father would discipline his disobedient son, but the LORD did not remove Solomon from the throne. This contrasted with how the LORD rejected Saul as king and took away his kingdom (1 Samuel 15:26-28).
Solomon’s remaining on the throne was a demonstration of God’s faithfulness and that the LORD remained Solomon’s father, and Solomon remained His son.
King Solomon experienced discipline within the bounds of sonship, not covenantal rejection.
Once again, Solomon's life serves as both a fulfillment and a foreshadowing of the LORD’s promises in the Davidic Covenant and point to the need for a greater Son who would obey perfectly and reign forever.
The covenant promise of discipline and belonging as fulfilled through Jesus
Jesus Christ perfectly fulfills the LORD’s covenant promise: when he does wrong, I will discipline him with the rod of men and the strokes of the sons of men but My lovingkindness shall not depart from him.
The LORD’s covenant promise, I will be a father to him and he will be a son to Me, established a unique and intimate relationship between God and the royal descendant of David. Jesus embodied this promise fully and eternally as the only begotten Son who shares the very nature of the Father (John 1:14, Hebrews 1:3).
Yet the covenant continues beyond this relationship by addressing what will happen when the son sins: when he does wrong, I will discipline him with the rod of men and the strokes of the sons of mankind.
But Jesus was a perfect Son, without any iniquity or sin (Hebrews 4:15, 1 Peter 2:22, 1 John 3:5).
How then could Jesus have been the fulfillment of the LORD’s promise-when he does wrong… when Jesus did no wrong and was without any iniquity or sin?
Although Jesus committed no sin (Hebrews 4:15), He willingly took the place of sinners and bore the consequences of iniquity on their behalf. In this way, Jesus fulfilled this portion of the covenant vicariously-He was disciplined with the rod of men, not for His own wrongdoing, but for ours (Isaiah 53:6b):
“But He was pierced through for our transgressions,
He was crushed for our iniquities.”
(Isaiah 53:5a)
Jesus never did any wrong. But He became our wrong for us. Jesus obeyed His Father and willingly became sin on our behalf.
“He made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.”
(2 Corinthians 5:21)
Jesus was mocked, beaten, and crucified by human hands-the very strokes described in the covenant-and yet He endured it without complaint, willingly submitting to the Father’s will in order to redeem the many (Matthew 26:39, 27:26-31).
Jesus was disciplined with the rod of men when He was beaten with a rod by the Roman guards, when He was mocked as king (Matthew 27:28-30). This was in fulfillment of not only the Davidic Covenant but also the prophecy of Isaiah’s final Servant Song,
“Surely our griefs He Himself bore,
And our sorrows He carried;
Yet we ourselves esteemed Him stricken,
Smitten of God, and afflicted.”
(Isaiah 53:4)
Jesus suffered the strokes of the sons of mankind when He was scourged and flogged by Roman guards (Matthew 27:26). This too was in fulfillment of not only the Davidic Covenant but also the prophecy of Isaiah’s final Servant Song,
“The chastening for our well-being fell upon Him,
And by His scourging we are healed.”
(Isaiah 53:5b)
As He became sin for us, Jesus-the Son of God-experienced the wrath and correction of His Father when He was on the cross during the three hours of darkness (Matthew 27:45). The severity of the LORD’s correction can be heard in Jesus’s cry at the end of that darkness,
“Jesus cried out with a loud voice… ‘My God, My God, Why have you forsaken Me?’”
(Matthew 27:46)
And at His death, the Father’s lovingkindness did not depart from His Son, who completely entrusted His spirit into His Father’s hands. With His final breath, Jesus cried out:
“Father, into Your hands I commit My spirit.”
(Luke 23:46)
Thus, Jesus’s fourth and seventh statements on the cross demonstrate the fulfillment of the LORD’s covenant promise to David that He will correct His descendant when He commits iniquity with the rod of men (the fourth statement-Matthew 27:46) and that His lovingkindness shall not depart from him (the seventh statement-Luke 23:46).
Though Jesus suffered and died, the Father’s lovingkindness never departed from His Son. This was dramatically confirmed in His resurrection. Again, we quote Paul’s opening to the book of Romans:
“[Jesus] was declared the Son of God with power by the resurrection from the dead, according to the Spirit of holiness, Jesus Christ our Lord.”
(Romans 1:4)
Jesus’s experiencing His Father’s correction through the strokes of the sons of men and the shame and agony and death on the cross in our place did not disqualify Him from kingship. Rather, it was the very path through which “God highly exalted Him, and bestowed on Him the name which is above every name” because He learned obedience, even to death on a cross (Philippians 2:9).
The eternal proof of God the Father’s love for Jesus His Son is that Jesus now sits at the right hand of God (Hebrews 1:3), reigning as the eternal King, and His throne is forever secure (Luke 1:32-33).
Therefore, Jesus fulfills not only the relationship established in the LORD’s covenant promise: I will be a father to him and he will be a son to Me, but also the disciplinary and enduring favor aspects of the covenant promise. He bore the rod meant for sinners and yet remained the object of the Father’s delight. Unlike Solomon or any other king before or after Him, Jesus emerges from His suffering with the eternal approval of the Father and now reigns over a kingdom that will never end.
The fulfillment of this covenant promise through Jesus shows us both the severity of sin and the steadfastness of divine love. Jesus is the eternal Son who became the Servant King.
Your house and your kingdom shall endure before Me forever; your throne shall be established forever (v 16).
The eleventh covenant promise the LORD made to His servant David reaffirms the essence of the covenant’s first ten promises.
Your house shall endure forever reaffirms the covenant promise that the LORD will make a house for David (v 11b) and that David’s line will continue forever.
What began as a desire in David’s heart to build a house for the ark of God (2 Samuel 7:2) now concludes with the LORD building an eternal house for His servant, David.
David’s line-his house-will endure before the LORD forever through David’s descendant, Jesus.
The middle expression-and your kingdom shall endure before Me forever-reaffirms the covenant promise that the LORD will establish his descendant’s kingdom and throne forever (v 12b, 13b).
Likewise, the final expression, your throne shall be established forever, reaffirms the covenant promise that the LORD will establish the throne of his kingdom forever (v 13).
In the initial declaration of these promises, it was spoken in reference to David’s descendant-that it would be his kingdom.
Here at the end of the Davidic Covenant, it is stated that it will be your (David’s) kingdom.
Jesus, the descendant of David who fulfills these promises will usher in the Messianic kingdom. This kingdom will belong to Jesus. It will be His, but it will also be a Davidic kingdom, because Jesus is the line and house of David and Jesus will sit on David’s throne forever:
“He [Jesus] will be called the Son of the Most High; and the Lord God will give Him the throne of His father David; and He will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and His kingdom will have no end.”
(Luke 1:32-33)
The prophet Jeremiah seems to echo these core promises of the Davidic covenant when he proclaimed:
“For thus says the LORD, ‘David shall never lack a man to sit on the throne of the house of Israel.’”
(Jeremiah 33:17)
In accordance with all these words and all this vision, so Nathan spoke to David (v 17).
The LORD had communicated all these wonderful words and all this incredible vision of this covenant to the prophet, Nathan (2 Samuel 7:4).
And the LORD instructed Nathan to “go and say [all these words and all this vision] to My servant David” (2 Samuel 7:5).
After the LORD had delivered the terms of this covenant to the prophet, Nathan faithfully spoke all these words and all this vision to King David.
This means David received and heard all the words and all the vision of the covenant the LORD made with him.
This story continues in 2 Samuel 7:18-29 and reveals King David’s response to hearing all these incredible things.
Used with permission from TheBibleSays.com.
You can access the original article here.
The Blue Letter Bible ministry and the BLB Institute hold to the historical, conservative Christian faith, which includes a firm belief in the inerrancy of Scripture. Since the text and audio content provided by BLB represent a range of evangelical traditions, all of the ideas and principles conveyed in the resource materials are not necessarily affirmed, in total, by this ministry.
Loading
Loading
| Interlinear |
| Bibles |
| Cross-Refs |
| Commentaries |
| Dictionaries |
| Miscellaneous |