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Published on:

9th Nov 2025

David: The Making Of

Welcome back to the truth podcast! We're in week two of our Davis series, and this week we look at how God led David from boyhood toward his most famous moment: his battle with Goliath, and how that shaped his future.

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The PursueGOD Truth podcast is the “easy button” for making disciples – whether you’re looking for resources to lead a family devotional, a small group at church, or a one-on-one mentoring relationship. Join us for new episodes every Tuesday and Friday.

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Big Idea: God’s promises always come with a process. The making of a man or woman of God happens long before the moment of recognition — in hidden places, through faithful obedience, and in God’s perfect timing.

The Development Process

After Saul’s rejection as king in 1 Samuel 15:23, God sent Samuel to anoint David. But even though David was chosen, it would take over 20 years before he would sit on the throne. That gap between promise and fulfillment was the development process — the “darkroom” where God forms character away from the spotlight.

David’s story reminds us that God develops His people like a photograph. There’s an image already imprinted — His image — but if exposed too soon, it’s ruined. God’s kingdom grows through faithfulness in little things, not instant promotion. “Well done, my good and faithful servant.” (Matthew 25:21)

David’s great moment began with a simple errand: “Take this basket of grain and these ten loaves of bread” (1 Samuel 17:17-20). Before Goliath, before the crown, there was cheese delivery. God often tests us in ordinary moments to see if we’ll serve before we shine.


If you’re too big to serve, you’re too small to lead.

Faithfulness in obscurity prepares us for influence in the open. Private obedience shapes public impact.

Private Victories Protect Public Callings

David’s courage before Goliath wasn’t random; it was rehearsed in the field. When he fought lions and bears to protect his sheep (1 Samuel 17:34–37), he learned that God rescues and sustains His people even when no one is watching. His confidence wasn’t arrogance — it was built through history with God.

Every believer faces “lions and bears”: private temptations, hidden sins, and heart battles that no one else sees. Conquering them is how faith matures. Private compromise, on the other hand, always leads to public downfall. (James 1:15; Proverbs 28:13)


Life doesn’t change that much — the stakes just get higher.

So deal with sin in secret before it grows. Confess it to a trusted believer (James 5:16; 1 John 1:7). Every hidden victory builds strength for your future battles.

Learn to Walk in Your Own Armor

When Saul offered David his armor (1 Samuel 17:38–40), it didn’t fit. David had to fight with what God had already given him — his shepherd’s tools. Likewise, we must resist the urge to imitate others. The gifts, skills, and experiences God has given you are exactly what He intends to use.


If you don’t walk in it, you can’t war in it.

David’s sling was more powerful in faith than Saul’s sword in flesh. And his five smooth stones? Perhaps they weren’t about doubt, but readiness — years later, David’s men would slay four more giants (2 Samuel 21:22).


We don’t do amazing — we just do available. God does amazing.

Identify what God has put in your hand today and walk faithfully in it (1 Timothy 4:14–16).

God Prepares the Worker and the Work

When David killed Goliath, he did it with Goliath’s own sword (1 Samuel 17:50–51). Ironically, Goliath had sharpened the very weapon that would end him. That’s how God works — He’s always one step ahead.

This victory mirrored what God did earlier to Dagon, the Philistine idol, whose head and hands broke off before the Ark of the LORD (1 Samuel 5:1–4). God was writing a story of triumph long before David arrived on the battlefield.


God isn’t winging your life. He’s writing it.

Every moment — from Abraham’s late-life faith to Moses’ wilderness years, Nehemiah’s captivity, and the disciples’ disappointment — proves that God prepares both the person and the path. (Ephesians 2:10)

The Making Of

David didn’t become great overnight. He became great through years of unseen obedience and faithfulness. God’s process takes time, but He’s already given us everything we need for godliness. (2 Peter 1:3)


Spiritual growth isn’t about getting more of God, but giving more of yourself to Him.

Like a child growing into their DNA, God’s design for your life is already imprinted on your soul. The image is forming — trust His timing.

God’s promises always come with a process. Let Him bring your purpose into focus.

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About the Podcast

The PursueGOD Truth Podcast
If you seek him, you'll find him.
The official faith and life podcast for the discipleship resources at pursueGOD.org. Great for families, small groups, and one-on-one mentoring. New sermonlink topics every Friday.

About your host

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Bryan Dwyer