Hera And David Direct

The old stories survive because they don't give easy answers. Hera never forgives Zeus. David never gets his perfect family back. But they both keep going—one in eternal, majestic rage, the other in ragged, repentant hope.

When you first put Hera and David side by side, it feels like a mismatch. hera and david

Justice without loyalty is tyranny, but loyalty without justice is a cage. The Sorrow of the Anointed King Now look at David. The Bible presents him as “a man after God’s own heart.” He kills Goliath. He writes the Psalms. He unites a kingdom. The old stories survive because they don't give easy answers

Anointing doesn’t mean innocence. Greatness and grievous failure often sleep in the same bed. The Crossroads: Where They Meet So where do a Greek goddess and an Israelite king intersect? But they both keep going—one in eternal, majestic

One is myth. One is scripture. One is married to the king of the gods. One is the king.