Scripture References Primary Passages:2 Samuel 9 (entire chapter: David's kindness to Mephibosheth)Supporting Passages:2 Samuel 4:4: Mephibosheth becomes lame while fleeing in fear2 Timothy 1:7: "For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind"Matthew 6: Warning against anxious worryMatthew 14: Peter begins to sink when fear takes his eyes off Jesus1 Samuel 15: Saul's fear of the people leads to disobedienceMatthew 26 (Gethsemane): Jesus faces real fear but submits to the Father's willRomans 5:8, 10: God shows love while we were still sinners and enemiesEphesians 2: Kindness and grace for Jesus' sake (salvation not by works)Key Points of the Sermon Fear's Destructive PowerMephibosheth became lame in both feet because his nanny fled with him out of fear when Saul and Jonathan died (2 Samuel 4:4).Operating from fear (instead of faith) leads to hurt, sin, paralysis, missed blessings, and can cripple future generations. Examples include Saul (1 Samuel 15), Peter sinking (Matthew 14), and anxious worry (Matthew 6). God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power, love, and self-control (2 Timothy 1:7).Lo-debar– The Spiritual WildernessMephibosheth hid in Lo-debar ("no pasture" / barren place of no provision, abundance, or word). This represents our fallen state: spiritual barrenness, isolation, shame, silence from God due to sin, and hiding.Lent is our intentional 40-day spiritual wilderness—mirroring Jesus' desert time—to confront these "dry places" through prayer, fasting, repentance, and self-examination.God's Unmerited Grace & InitiativeDavid actively sought Mephibosheth (not the other way around), restored his land, and seated him permanently at the king's table "for Jonathan's sake."This foreshadows the Gospel: God seeks us while we are still sinners and enemies (Romans 5:8, 10), showing kindness for Jesus' sake (Ephesians 2). We don't earn a place at God's table—we receive it through Christ's covenant faithfulness.Shame Swept Away & TransformationMephibosheth's name means "dispeller of shame" or "shame is swept away." Lent calls us to confront shame, guilt, and unworthiness.Jesus bore our shame on the cross. God carries us from Lo-debar (desolation) to the palace (restoration and belonging), inviting us to feast as adopted sons and daughters.At the King's TableEven though Mephibosheth remained lame, when seated at the table, his feet (weakness/defect) were hidden. His focus shifted to the King. During Lent, we die to fear-driven living so we can rise with Christ in Easter joy. Fix your eyes on Jesus (the One who went to the cross for you), not your issues.Call to ActionCome out of fear and the desert. Repent, confess, fast, and refocus on Christ. If still in the "lameness of sin" and far from God, come to the King today. You have a permanent place at the table of the King! Come to salvation!Comment here