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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Expositor's Bible: The First Book of
+Samuel, by W. G. Blaikie
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Expositor's Bible: The First Book of Samuel
+
+Author: W. G. Blaikie
+
+Editor: W. Robertson Nicoll
+
+Release Date: April 7, 2012 [EBook #39394]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXPOSITOR'S BIBLE: FIRST SAMUEL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Marcia Brooks, Colin Bell, Nigel Blower and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian
+Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+ [Transcriber's Note:
+
+ _Italic_ words have been enclosed in underscores.
+
+ As the oe ligature cannot be included in this format, it has been
+ replaced with the separate letters in "coelo" and "Syrophoenician".
+
+ A few minor typographical errors have been silently corrected.
+
+ The Table of Contents refers to original page numbers.]
+
+
+
+
+ THE EXPOSITOR'S BIBLE.
+
+ EDITED BY THE REV.
+ W. ROBERTSON NICOLL, M.A.,
+ _Editor of "The Expositor."_
+
+ THE FIRST BOOK OF SAMUEL.
+
+ BY
+ W. G. BLAIKIE, D.D., LL.D.
+
+ TORONTO:
+ WILLARD TRACT DEPOSITORY AND BIBLE DEPOT,
+ CORNER OF YONGE AND TEMPERANCE STREETS.
+ 1888.
+
+
+
+
+ THE FIRST BOOK
+ OF
+ SAMUEL.
+
+ BY THE REV. PROFESSOR
+ W. G. BLAIKIE, D.D., LL.D.,
+ NEW COLLEGE, EDINBURGH.
+
+ TORONTO:
+ WILLARD TRACT DEPOSITORY AND BIBLE DEPOT,
+ CORNER OF YONGE AND TEMPERANCE STREETS.
+ 1888.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+ PAGE
+ CHAPTER I.
+ HANNAH'S TRIAL AND TRUST 1
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+ HANNAH'S FAITH REWARDED 14
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+ HANNAH'S SONG OF THANKSGIVING 25
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ ELI'S HOUSE 37
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+ SAMUEL'S VISION 49
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ THE ARK OF GOD TAKEN BY THE PHILISTINES 61
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ THE ARK AMONG THE PHILISTINES 73
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ REPENTANCE AND REVIVAL 85
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ NATIONAL DELIVERANCE--THE PHILISTINES SUBDUED 97
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+ THE PEOPLE DEMAND A KING 109
+
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ SAUL BROUGHT TO SAMUEL 121
+
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ FIRST MEETING OF SAMUEL AND SAUL 133
+
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ SAUL ANOINTED BY SAMUEL 145
+
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ SAUL CHOSEN KING 157
+
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ THE RELIEF OF JABESH-GILEAD 169
+
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ SAMUEL'S VINDICATION OF HIMSELF 181
+
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ SAMUEL'S DEALINGS WITH THE PEOPLE 193
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ SAUL AND SAMUEL AT GILGAL 205
+
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ JONATHAN'S EXPLOIT AT MICHMASH 217
+
+ CHAPTER XX.
+ SAUL'S WILFULNESS 229
+
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+ THE FINAL REJECTION OF SAUL 241
+
+ CHAPTER XXII.
+ DAVID ANOINTED BY SAMUEL 253
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII.
+ DAVID'S EARLY LIFE 265
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV.
+ DAVID'S CONFLICT WITH GOLIATH 278
+
+ CHAPTER XXV.
+ SAUL'S JEALOUSY--DAVID'S MARRIAGE 292
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI.
+ SAUL'S FURTHER EFFORTS AGAINST DAVID 305
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII.
+ DAVID AND JONATHAN 317
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII.
+ DAVID AT NOB AND AT GATH 329
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX.
+ DAVID AT ADULLAM, MIZPEH, AND HARETH 341
+
+ CHAPTER XXX.
+ DAVID AT KEILAH, ZIPH, AND MAON 354
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI.
+ DAVID TWICE SPARES THE LIFE OF SAUL 366
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII.
+ DAVID AND NABAL 378
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII.
+ DAVID'S SECOND FLIGHT TO GATH 391
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV.
+ SAUL AT ENDOR 404
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV.
+ DAVID AT ZIKLAG 416
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI.
+ THE DEATH OF SAUL 429
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+_HANNAH'S TRIAL AND TRUST._
+
+1 SAMUEL i 1-18.
+
+
+The prophet Samuel, like the book which bears his name, comes in as a
+connecting link between the Judges and the Kings of Israel. He belonged
+to a transition period. It was appointed to him to pilot the nation
+between two stages of its history: from a republic to a monarchy; from a
+condition of somewhat casual and indefinite arrangements to one of more
+systematic and orderly government. The great object of his life was to
+secure that this change should be made in the way most beneficial for
+the nation, and especially most beneficial for its spiritual interests.
+Care must be taken that while becoming like the nations in having a
+king, Israel shall not become like them in religion, but shall continue
+to stand out in hearty and unswerving allegiance to the law and covenant
+of their fathers' God.
+
+Samuel was the last of the judges, and in a sense the first of the
+prophets. The last of the judges, but not a military judge; not ruling
+like Samson by physical strength, but by high spiritual qualities and
+prayer; not so much wrestling against flesh and blood, as against
+principalities and powers, and the rulers of the darkness of this world,
+and spiritual wickedness in high places. In this respect his function
+as judge blended with his work as prophet. Before him, the prophetic
+office was but a casual illumination; under him it becomes a more steady
+and systematic light. He was the first of a succession of prophets whom
+God placed side by side with the kings and priests of Israel to supply
+that fresh moral and spiritual force which the prevailing worldliness of
+the one and formalism of the other rendered so necessary for the great
+ends for which Israel was chosen. With some fine exceptions, the kings
+and priests would have allowed the seed of Abraham to drift away from
+the noble purpose for which God had called them; conformity to the world
+in spirit if not in form was the prevailing tendency; the prophets were
+raised up to hold the nation firmly to the covenant, to vindicate the
+claims of its heavenly King, to thunder judgments against idolatry and
+all rebellion, and pour words of comfort into the hearts of all who were
+faithful to their God, and who looked for redemption in Israel. Of this
+order of God's servants Samuel was the first. And called as he was to
+this office at a transition period, the importance of it was all the
+greater. It was a work for which no ordinary man was needed, and for
+which no ordinary man was found.
+
+Very often the finger of God is seen very clearly in connection with the
+birth and early training of those who are to become His greatest agents.
+The instances of Moses, Samson, and John the Baptist, to say nothing of
+our blessed Lord, are familiar to us all. Very often the family from
+which the great man is raised up is among the obscurest and least
+distinguished of the country. The "certain man" who lived in some quiet
+cottage at Ramathaim-Zophim would never probably have emerged from his
+native obscurity but for God's purpose to make a chosen vessel of his
+son. In the case of this family, and in the circumstances of Samuel's
+birth, we see a remarkable overruling of human infirmity to the purposes
+of the Divine will. If Peninnah had been kind to Hannah, Samuel might
+never have been born. It was the unbearable harshness of Peninnah that
+drove Hannah to the throne of grace, and brought to her wrestling faith
+the blessing she so eagerly pled for. What must have seemed to Hannah at
+the time a most painful dispensation became the occasion of a glorious
+rejoicing. The very element that aggravated her trial was that which led
+to her triumph. Like many another, Hannah found the beginning of her
+life intensely painful, and as a godly woman she no doubt wondered why
+God seemed to care for her so little. But at evening time there was
+light; like Job, she saw "the end of the Lord;" the mystery cleared
+away, and to her as to the patriarch it appeared very clearly that "the
+Lord is very pitiful and of tender mercy."
+
+The home in which Samuel is born has some points of quiet interest about
+it; but these are marred by serious defects. It is a religious
+household, at least in the sense that the outward duties of religion are
+carefully attended to; but the moral tone is defective. First, there is
+that radical blemish--want of unity. No doubt it was tacitly permitted
+to a man in those days to have two wives. But where there were two wives
+there were two centres of interest and feeling, and discord must ensue.
+
+Elkanah does not seem to have felt that in having two wives he could do
+justice to neither. And he had but little sympathy for the particular
+disappointment of Hannah. He calculated that a woman's heart-hunger in
+one direction ought to be satisfied by copious gifts in another. And as
+to Peninnah, so little idea had she of the connection of true religion
+and high moral tone, that the occasion of the most solemn religious
+service of the nation was her time for pouring out her bitterest
+passion. Hannah is the only one of the three of whom nothing but what is
+favourable is recorded.
+
+With regard to the origin of the family, it seems to have been of the
+tribe of Levi. If so, Elkanah would occasionally have to serve the
+sanctuary; but no mention is made of such service. For anything that
+appears, Elkanah may have spent his life in the same occupations as the
+great bulk of the people. The place of his residence was not many miles
+from Shiloh, which was at that time the national sanctuary. But the
+moral influence from that quarter was by no means beneficial; a decrepit
+high priest, unable to restrain the profligacy of his sons, whose vile
+character brought religion into contempt, and led men to associate gross
+wickedness with Divine service,--of such a state of things the influence
+seemed fitted rather to aggravate than to lessen the defects of
+Elkanah's household.
+
+Inside Elkanah's house we see two strange arrangements of Providence, of
+a kind that often moves our astonishment elsewhere. First, we see a
+woman eminently fitted to bring up children, but having none to bring
+up. On the other hand, we see another woman, whose temper and ways are
+fitted to ruin children, entrusted with the rearing of a family. In the
+one case a God-fearing woman does not receive the gifts of Providence;
+in the other case a woman of a selfish and cruel nature seems loaded
+with His benefits. In looking round us, we often see a similar
+arrangement of other gifts; we see riches, for example, in the very
+worst of hands; while those who from their principles and character are
+fitted to make the best use of them have often difficulty in securing
+the bare necessaries of life. How is this? Does God really govern, or do
+time and chance regulate all? If it were God's purpose to distribute His
+gifts exactly as men are able to estimate and use them aright, we should
+doubtless see a very different distribution; but God's aim in this world
+is much more to try and to train than to reward and fulfil. All these
+anomalies of Providence point to a future state. What God does we know
+not now, but we shall know hereafter. The misuse of God's gifts brings
+its punishment both here and in the life to come. To whom much is given,
+of them much shall be required. For those who have shown the capacity to
+use God's gifts aright, there will be splendid opportunities in another
+life. To those who have received much, but abused much, there comes a
+fearful reckoning, and a dismal experience of the "the unprofitable
+servant's doom."
+
+The trial which Hannah had to bear was peculiarly heavy, as is well
+known, to a Hebrew woman. To have no child was not only a
+disappointment, but seemed to mark one out as dishonoured by God,--as
+unworthy of any part or lot in the means that were to bring about the
+fulfilment of the promise, "In thee and in thy seed shall all the
+families of the earth be blessed." In the case of Hannah, the trial was
+aggravated by the very presence of Peninnah and her children in the same
+household. Had she been alone, her mind might not have brooded over her
+want, and she and her husband might have so ordered their life as almost
+to forget the blank. But with Peninnah and her children constantly
+before her eyes, such a course was impossible. She could never forget
+the contrast between the two wives. Like an aching tooth or an aching
+head, it bred a perpetual pain.
+
+In many cases home affords a refuge from our trials, but in this case
+home was the very scene of the trial. There is another refuge from
+trial, which is very grateful to devout hearts--the house of God and the
+exercises of public worship. A member of Hannah's race, who was
+afterwards to pass through many a trial, was able even when far away, to
+find great comfort in the very thought of the house of God, with its
+songs of joy and praise, and its multitude of happy worshippers, and to
+rally his desponding feelings into cheerfulness and hope. "Why art thou
+cast down, O my soul, and why art thou disquieted within me? Hope in
+God, for I shall yet praise Him for the health of His countenance." But
+from Hannah this resource likewise was cut off. The days of high
+festival were her days of bitter prostration.
+
+It was the custom in religious households for the head of the house to
+give presents at the public festivals. Elkanah, a kind-hearted but not
+very discriminating man, kept up the custom, and as we suppose, to
+compensate Hannah for the want of children, he gave her at these times a
+worthy or double portion. But his kindness was inconsiderate. It only
+raised the jealousy of Peninnah. For her and her children to get less
+than the childless Hannah was intolerable. No sense of courtesy
+restrained her from uttering her feeling. No sisterly compassion urged
+her to spare the feelings of her rival. No regard for God or His worship
+kept back the storm of bitterness. With the reckless impetuosity of a
+bitter heart she took these opportunities to reproach Hannah with her
+childless condition. She knew the tender spot of her heart, and, instead
+of sparing it, she selected it as the very spot on which to plant her
+blows. Her very object was to give Hannah pain, to give her the greatest
+pain she could. And so the very place that should have been a rebuke to
+every bitter feeling, the very time which was sacred to joyous
+festivity, and the very sorrow that should have been kept furthest from
+Hannah's thoughts, were selected by her bitter rival to poison all her
+happiness, and overwhelm her with lamentation and woe.
+
+After all, was Hannah or Peninnah the more wretched of the two? To
+suffer in the tenderest part of one's nature is no doubt a heavy
+affliction. But to have a heart eager to inflict such suffering on
+another is far more awful. Young people that sting a comrade when out of
+temper, that call him names, that reproach him with his infirmities, are
+far more wretched and pitiable creatures than those whom they try to
+irritate. It has always been regarded as a natural proof of the holiness
+of God that He has made man so that there is a pleasure in the exercise
+of his amiable feelings, while his evil passions, in the very play of
+them, produce pain and misery. Lady Macbeth is miserable over the
+murdered king, even while exulting in the triumph of her ambition. Torn
+by her heartless and reckless passions, her bosom is like a hell. The
+tumult in her raging soul is like the writhing of an evil spirit. Yes,
+my friends, if you accept the offices of sin, if you make passion the
+instrument of your purposes, if you make it your business to sting and
+to stab those who in some way cross your path, you may succeed for the
+moment, and you may experience whatever of satisfaction can be found in
+gloated revenge. But know this, that you have been cherishing a viper
+in your bosom that will not content itself with fulfilling your desire.
+It will make itself a habitual resident in your heart, and distil its
+poison over it. It will make it impossible for you to know anything of
+the sweetness of love, the serenity of a well-ordered heart, the joy of
+trust, the peace of heaven. You will be like the troubled sea, whose
+waters cast up mire and dirt. You will find the truth of that solemn
+word, "There is no peace, saith my God, to the wicked."
+
+If the heart of Peninnah was actuated by this infernal desire to make
+her neighbour fret, it need not surprise us that she chose the most
+solemn season of religious worship to gratify her desire. What could
+religion be to such a one but a form? What communion could she have, or
+care to have, with God? How could she realize what she did in disturbing
+the communion of another heart? If we could suppose her realizing the
+presence of God, and holding soul-to-soul communion with Him, she would
+have received such a withering rebuke to her bitter feelings as would
+have filled her with shame and contrition. But when religious services
+are a mere form, there is absolutely nothing in them to prevent, at such
+times, the outbreak of the heart's worst passions. There are men and
+women whose visits to the house of God are often the occasions of
+rousing their worst, or at least very unworthy, passions. Pride, scorn,
+malice, vanity--how often are they moved by the very sight of others in
+the house of God! What strange and unworthy conceptions of Divine
+service such persons must have! What a dishonouring idea of God, if they
+imagine that the service of their bodies or of their lips is anything to
+Him. Surely in the house of God, and in the presence of God, men ought
+to feel that among the things most offensive in His eyes are a foul
+heart, a fierce temper, and the spirit that hateth a brother. While, on
+the other hand, if we would serve Him acceptably, we must lay aside all
+malice and all guile and hypocrisies, envies and all evil speakings.
+Instead of trying to make others fret, we should try, young and old
+alike, to make the crooked places of men's hearts straight, and the
+rough places of their lives plain; try to give the soft answer that
+turneth away wrath; try to extinguish the flame of passion, to lessen
+the sum-total of sin, and stimulate all that is lovely and of good
+report in the world around us.
+
+But to return to Hannah and her trial. Year by year it went on, and her
+sensitive spirit, instead of feeling it less, seemed to feel it more. It
+would appear that, on one occasion, her distress reached a climax. She
+was so overcome that even the sacred feast remained by her untasted. Her
+husband's attention was now thoroughly roused. "Hannah, why weepest
+thou? and why eatest thou not? and why is thy heart grieved? am not I
+better to thee than ten sons?" There was not much comfort in these
+questions. He did not understand the poor woman's feeling. Possibly his
+attempts to show her how little cause she had to complain only
+aggravated her distress. Perhaps she thought, "When my very husband does
+not understand me, it is time for me to cease from man." With the double
+feeling--my distress is beyond endurance, and there is no sympathy for
+me in any fellow-creature--the thought may have come into her mind, "I
+will arise and go to my Father." However it came about, her trials had
+the happy effect of sending her to God. Blessed fruit of affliction! Is
+not this the reason why afflictions are often so severe? If they were of
+ordinary intensity, then, in the world's phrase, we might "grin and bear
+them." It is when they become intolerable that men think of God. As
+Archbishop Leighton has said, God closes up the way to every broken
+cistern, one after another, that He may induce you, baffled everywhere
+else, to take the way to the fountain of living waters. "I looked on my
+right hand and beheld, but there was no man that would know me; refuge
+failed me, no man cared for my soul. I cried unto thee, O Lord; I said,
+Thou art my refuge and my portion in the land of the living."
+
+Behold Hannah, then, overwhelmed with distress, in "the temple of the
+Lord" (as His house at Shiloh was called), transacting solemnly with
+God. "She vowed a vow." She entered into a transaction with God, as
+really and as directly as one man transacts with another. It is this
+directness and distinctness of dealing with God that is so striking a
+feature in the piety of those early times. She asked God for a man
+child. But she did not ask this gift merely to gratify her personal
+wish. In the very act of dealing with God she felt that it was His glory
+and not her personal feelings that she was called chiefly to respect. No
+doubt she wished the child, and she asked the child in fulfilment of her
+own vehement desire. But beyond and above that desire there arose in her
+soul the sense of God's claim and God's glory, and to these high
+considerations she desired to subordinate every feeling of her own. If
+God should give her the man child, he would not be hers, but God's. He
+would be specially dedicated as a Nazarite to God's service. No razor
+should come on his head; no drop of strong drink should pass his lips.
+And this would not be a mere temporary dedication, it would last all
+the days of his life. Eagerly though Hannah desired a son, she did not
+wish him merely for personal gratification. She was not to make herself
+the end of her child's existence, but would sacrifice even her
+reasonable and natural claims upon him in order that he might be more
+thoroughly the servant of God.
+
+Hannah, as she continued praying, must have felt something of that peace
+of soul which ever comes from conscious communion with a prayer-hearing
+God. But probably her faith needed the element of strengthening which a
+kindly and favourable word from one high in God's service would have
+imparted. It must have been terrible for her to find, when the high
+priest spoke to her, that it was to insult her, and accuse her of an
+offence against decency itself from which her very soul would have
+recoiled. Well meaning, but weak and blundering, Eli never made a more
+outrageous mistake. With firmness and dignity, and yet in perfect
+courtesy, Hannah repudiated the charge. Others might try to drown their
+sorrows with strong drink, but she had poured out her soul before God.
+The high priest must have felt ashamed of his rude and unworthy charge,
+as well as rebuked by the dignity and self-possession of this much-tried
+but upright, godly woman. He sent her away with a hearty benediction,
+which seemed to convey to her an assurance that her prayer would be
+fulfilled. As yet it is all a matter of faith; but her "faith is the
+substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." Her
+burden is completely removed; her soul has returned to its quiet rest.
+This chapter of the history has a happy ending--"The woman went her way
+and did eat, and her countenance was no more sad."
+
+Is not this whole history just like one of the Psalms, expressed not in
+words but in deeds? First the wail of distress; then the wrestling of
+the troubled heart with God; then the repose and triumph of faith. What
+a blessing, amid the multitude of this world's sorrows; that such a
+process should be practicable! What a blessed thing is faith, faith in
+God's word, and faith in God's heart, that faith which becomes a bridge
+to the distressed from the region of desolation and misery to the region
+of peace and joy? Is there any fact more abundantly verified than this
+experience is--this passage out of the depths, this way of shaking one's
+self from the dust, and putting on the garments of praise? Are any of
+you tired, worried, wearied in the battle of life, and yet ignorant of
+this blessed process? Do any receive your fresh troubles with nothing
+better than a growl of irritation--I will not say an angry curse? Alas
+for your thorny experience! an experience which knows no way of blunting
+the point of the thorns. Know, my friends, that in Gilead there is a
+balm for soothing these bitter irritations. There is a peace of God that
+passeth all understanding, and that keeps the hearts and minds of His
+people through Christ Jesus. "Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose
+mind is stayed on Thee, because he trusteth in Thee."
+
+But let those who profess to be Christ's see that they are consistent
+here. A fretful, complaining Christian is a contradiction in terms. How
+unlike to Christ! How forgetful such a one is of the grand argument, "He
+that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall
+He not with Him also freely give us all things?" "Be patient, brethren,
+for the coming of the Lord draweth near." Amid the agitations of life
+often steal away to the green pastures and the still waters, and they
+will calm your soul. And while "the trial of your faith is much more
+precious than of gold that perisheth, although it be tried with fire,"
+it shall be "found unto praise and honour and glory at the appearing of
+Jesus Christ."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+_HANNAH'S FAITH REWARDED._
+
+1 SAMUEL i. 19-28.
+
+
+In all the transactions recorded in these verses, we see in Hannah the
+directing and regulating power of the family; while Elkanah appears
+acquiescing cordially in all that she proposes, and devoutly seconding
+her great act of consecration,--the surrender of Samuel to the perpetual
+service of God. For a moment it might be thought that Hannah assumed a
+place that hardly belonged to her; that she became the leader and
+director in the house, while her proper position was that of a helpmeet
+to her husband. We are constrained, however, to dismiss this thought,
+for it does not fit in to the character of Hannah, and it is not in
+keeping with the general tone of the passage. There are two reasons that
+account sufficiently for the part she took. In the first place, it was
+she that had dealt with God in the matter, and it was with her too that
+God had dealt. She had been God-directed in the earlier part of the
+transaction, and therefore was specially able to see what was right and
+proper to be done in following up God's remarkable acknowledgment and
+answer of her prayer. The course to be taken came to her as an
+intuition,--an intuition not to be reasoned about, not to be exposed to
+the criticism of another, to be simply accepted and obeyed. As she gave
+no heed to those impulses of her own heart that might have desired a
+different destination for her child, so she was disposed to give none to
+the impulses of any other. The name, and the training, and the life-work
+of a child given so remarkably were all clear as sunbeams to her godly
+heart; and in such a matter it would have been nothing but weakness to
+confer with flesh and blood.
+
+And in the second place, Elkanah could be in no humour to resist his
+wife, even if he had had any reason to do so. For he was in a manner
+reproved of God for not being more concerned about her sadness of
+spirit. God had treated her sorrow more seriously than he had. God had
+not said to her that her husband was better to her than ten sons. God
+had recognised the hunger of her heart for a son as a legitimate
+craving, and when she brought her wish to Him, and meekly and humbly
+asked Him to fulfil it, He had heard her prayer, and granted her
+request. In a sense Hannah, in the depth of her sorrow, had appealed
+from her husband to a higher court, and the appeal had been decided in
+her favour. Elkanah could not but feel that in faith, in lofty
+principle, in nearness of fellowship with God, he had been surpassed by
+his wife. It was no wonder he surrendered to her the future direction of
+a life given thus in answer to her prayers. Yet in thus surrendering his
+right he showed no sullenness of temper, but acted in harmony with her,
+not only in naming and dedicating the child, but in taking a vow on
+himself, and at the proper moment fulfilling that vow. The three
+bullocks, with the ephah of flour and the bottle of wine brought to
+Shiloh when the child was presented to the Lord, were probably the
+fulfilment of Elkanah's vow.
+
+But to come more particularly to what is recorded in the text.
+
+1. We notice, first, the fact of the answer to prayer. The answer was
+prompt, clear, explicit. It is an important question, Why are some
+prayers answered and not others? Many a good man and woman feel it to be
+the greatest trial that their prayers for definite objects are not
+answered. Many a mother will say, Why did God not answer me when I
+prayed Him to spare my infant's life? I am sure I prayed with my whole
+heart and soul, but it seemed to make no difference, the child sank and
+died just as if no one had been praying for him. Many a wife will say,
+Why does God not convert my husband? I have agonized, I have wept and
+made supplication on his behalf, and in particular, with reference to
+his besetting infirmity, I have implored God to break his chain and set
+him free; but there he is, the same as ever. Many a young person under
+serious impressions will say, Why does God not hear my prayer? I have
+prayed with heart and soul for faith and love, for peace in believing,
+for consciousness of my interest in Christ; but my prayers seem directed
+against a wall of brass, they seem never to reach the ears of the Lord
+of hosts. In spite of all such objections and difficulties, we maintain
+that God is the hearer of prayer. Every sincere prayer offered in the
+name of Christ is heard, and dealt with by God in such way as seems good
+to Him. There are good reasons why some prayers are not answered at all,
+and there are also good reasons why the visible answer to some prayers
+is delayed. Some prayers are not answered because the spirit of them is
+bad. "Ye ask but receive not because ye ask amiss, that ye may consume
+it upon your lusts." What is asked merely to gratify a selfish feeling
+is asked amiss. It is not holy prayer; it does not fit in with the
+sacred purposes of life; it is not asked to make us better, or enable us
+to serve God better, or make our life more useful to our fellows; but
+simply to increase our pleasure, to make our surroundings more
+agreeable. Some prayers are not answered because what is asked would be
+hurtful; the prayer is answered in spirit though denied in form. A
+Christian lady, over the sick bed of an only son, once prayed with
+intense fervour that he might be restored, and positively refused to
+say, "Thy will be done." Falling asleep, she seemed to see a panorama of
+her son's life had he survived; it was a succession of sorrows, rising
+into terrible agonies,--so pitiful a sight that she could no longer
+desire his life to be prolonged, and gave up the battle against the will
+of God. Some prayers are not answered at the time, because a discipline
+of patience is needed for those who offer them; they have to be taught
+the grace of waiting patiently for the Lord; they have to learn more
+fully than hitherto to walk by faith, not by sight; they have to learn
+to take the promise of God against all appearances, and to remember that
+heaven and earth shall pass away, but God's word shall not pass away.
+
+But whatever be the reasons for the apparent silence of God, we may rest
+assured that hearing prayer is the law of His kingdom. Old Testament and
+New alike bear witness to this. Every verse of the Psalms proclaims it.
+Alike by precept and example our Lord constantly enforced it. Every
+Apostle takes up the theme, and urges the duty and the privilege. We may
+say of prayer as St. Paul said of the resurrection--if prayer be not
+heard our preaching is vain, and your faith is vain. And what true
+Christian is there who cannot add testimonies from his own history to
+the same effect? If the answer to some of your prayers be delayed, has
+it not come to many of them? Come, too, very conspicuously, so that you
+were amazed, and almost awed? And if there be prayers that have not yet
+been answered, or in reference to which you have no knowledge of an
+answer, can you not afford to wait till God gives the explanation? And
+when the explanation comes, have you not much cause to believe that it
+will redound to the praise of God, and that many things, in reference to
+which you could at the time see nothing but what was dark and terrible,
+may turn out when fully explained to furnish new and overwhelming
+testimony that "God is love?"
+
+2. The next point is the name given by Hannah to her son. The name
+Samuel, in its literal import, does not mean "asked of the Lord," but
+"heard of the Lord." The reason assigned by Hannah for giving this name
+to her son is not an explanation of the word, but a reference to the
+circumstances. In point of fact, "heard of the Lord" is more expressive
+than even "asked of the Lord," because it was God's hearing (in a
+favourable sense), more than Hannah's asking, that was the decisive
+point in the transaction. Still, as far as Hannah was concerned, he was
+asked of the Lord. The name was designed to be a perpetual memorial of
+the circumstances of his birth. For the good of the child himself, and
+for the instruction of all that might come in contact with him, it was
+designed to perpetuate the fact that before his birth a solemn
+transaction in prayer took place between his mother and the Almighty.
+The very existence of this child was a perpetual witness, first of all
+of the truth that God exists, and then of the truth that He is a
+prayer-hearing God. The very name of this child is a rebuke to those
+parents who never think of God in connection with their children, who
+never thank God for giving them, nor think of what He would like in
+their education and training. Even where no such special transaction by
+prayer has taken place as in the case of Samuel's mother, children are
+to be regarded as sacred gifts of God. "Lo, children are the heritage of
+the Lord, and the fruit of the womb is His reward." Many a child has had
+the name Samuel given him since these distant days in Judaea under the
+influence of this feeling. Many a parent has felt what a solemn thing it
+is to receive from God's hands an immortal creature, that may become
+either an angel or a devil, and to be entrusted with the first stage of
+a life that may spread desolation and misery on the one hand, or joy and
+blessing wherever its influence reaches. Do not treat lightly, O
+parents, the connection between God and your children! Cherish the
+thought that they are God's gifts, God's heritage to you, committed by
+Him to you to bring up, but not apart from Him, not in separation from
+those holy influences which He alone can impart, and which He is willing
+to impart. What a cruel thing it is to cut this early connection between
+them and God, and send them drifting through the world like a ship with
+a forsaken rudder, that flaps hither and thither with every current of
+the sea! What a blessed thing when, above all things, the grace and
+blessing of God are sought by parents for their children, when all the
+earnest lessons of childhood are directed to this end, and before
+childhood has passed into youth the grace of God rules the young heart,
+and the holy purpose is formed to live in His fear through Jesus Christ,
+and to honour Him for evermore!
+
+3. Hannah's arrangements for the child. From the very first she had
+decided that at the earliest possible period he should be placed under
+the high priest at Shiloh. Hannah's fulfilment of her vow was to be an
+ample, prompt, honourable fulfilment. Many a one who makes vows or
+resolutions under the pressure and pinch of distress immediately begins
+to pare them down when the pinch is removed, like the merchant in the
+storm who vowed a hecatomb to Jupiter, then reduced the hecatomb to a
+single bullock, the bullock to a sheep, the sheep to a few dates; but
+even these he ate on the way to the altar, laying on it only the stones.
+Not one jot would Hannah abate of the full sweep and compass of her vow.
+She would keep the child by her only till he was weaned, and then he
+should be presented at Shiloh. It is said that Jewish mothers sometimes
+suckled their children to the age of three years, and this was probably
+little Samuel's age when he was taken to Shiloh. Meanwhile, she resolved
+that till that time was reached she would not go up to the feast. Had
+she gone before her son was weaned she must have taken him with her, and
+brought him away with her, and that would have broken the solemnity of
+the transaction when at last she should take him for good and all. No.
+The very first visit that she and her son should pay to Shiloh would be
+the decisive visit. The very first time that she should present herself
+at that holy place where God had heard her prayer and her vow would be
+the time when she should fulfil her vow. The first time that she should
+remind the high priest of their old interview would be when she came to
+offer to God's perpetual service the answer to her prayer and the fruit
+of her vow. To miss the feast would be a privation, it might even be a
+spiritual loss, but she had in her son that which itself was a means of
+grace to her, and a blessed link to God and heaven; while she remained
+with him God would still remain with her; and in prayer for him, and the
+people whom he might one day influence, her heart might be as much
+enlarged and warmed as if she were mingling with the thousands of
+Israel, amid the holy excitement of the great national feast.
+
+4. Elkanah's offering at Shiloh. When Elkanah heard his wife's plan with
+reference to Samuel, he simply acquiesced, bade her remain at Shiloh,
+"only the Lord establish His word." What word? Literally, the Lord had
+spoken no word about Samuel, unless the word of Eli to Hannah "The God
+of Israel grant thee thy petition that thou hast asked of Him" could be
+regarded as a word from God. That word, however, had already been
+fulfilled; and Elkanah's prayer meant, The Lord bring to pass those
+further blessings of which the birth of Samuel was the promise and the
+prelude; the Lord accept, in due time, the offering of this child to His
+service, and grant that out of that offering there may come to Israel
+all the good that it is capable of yielding.
+
+The cordiality with which Elkanah accepted his wife's view of the case
+is seen further in the ample offering which he took to Shiloh--three
+bullocks, an ephah of flour, and a bottle of wine. One bullock would
+have sufficed as a burnt-offering for the child now given for the
+service of God, and in ver. 25 special mention is made of one being
+slain. The other two were added to mark the speciality of the occasion,
+to make the offering, so to speak, round and complete, to testify the
+ungrudging cordiality with which the whole transaction was entered into.
+One might perhaps have thought that in connection with such a service
+there was hardly any need of a bloody sacrifice, A little child of two
+or three years old--the very type and picture of innocence--surely
+needed little in the way of expiation. Not so, however, the view of the
+law of Moses. Even a newborn infant could not be presented to the Lord
+without some symbol of expiation. There is such a virus of corruption in
+every human soul that not even infants can be brought to God for
+acceptance and blessing without a token of atonement. Sin has so
+separated the whole race from God, that not one member of it can be
+brought near, can be brought into the region of benediction, without
+shedding of blood. And if no member of it can be even accepted without
+atonement, much less can any be taken to be God's servant, taken to
+stand before Him, to represent Him, to be His organ to others, to speak
+in His name. What a solemn truth for all who desire to be employed in
+the public service of Jesus Christ! Remember how unworthy you are to
+stand before him. Remember how stained your garments are with sin and
+worldliness, how distracted your heart is with other thoughts and
+feelings, how poor the service is you are capable of rendering. Remember
+how gloriously Jesus is served by the angels that excel in strength,
+that do His commandments, hearkening to the voice of His word. And when
+you give yourselves to Him, or ask to be allowed to take your place
+among His servants, seek as you do so to be sprinkled with the blood of
+cleansing, own your personal unworthiness, and pray to be accepted
+through the merit of His sacrifice!
+
+5. And now, the bullock being slain, they bring the child to Eli. Hannah
+is the speaker, and her words are few and well chosen. She reminds Eli
+of what she had done the last time she was there. Generous and
+courteous, she makes no allusion to anything unpleasant that had passed
+between them. Small matters of that sort are absorbed in the solemnity
+and importance of the transaction. In her words to Eli she touches
+briefly on the past, the present, and the future. What occurred in the
+past was, that she stood there a few years ago praying unto the Lord.
+What was true of the present was, that the Lord had granted her
+petition, and given her this child for whom she had prayed. And what was
+going to happen in the future was (as the Revised Version has it), "I
+have granted him to the Lord; as long as he liveth he is granted to the
+Lord."
+
+It is interesting to remark that no word of Eli's is introduced. This
+Nazarite child is accepted for the perpetual service of God at once and
+without remark. No remonstrance is made on the score of his tender
+years. No doubt is insinuated as to how he may turn out. If Samuel's
+family was a Levitical one, he would have been entitled to take part in
+the service of God, but only occasionally, and at the Levitical age. But
+his mother brings him to the Lord long before the Levitical age, and
+leaves him at Shiloh, bound over to a lifelong service. How was she able
+to do it? For three years that child had been her constant companion,
+had lain in her bosom, had warmed her heart with his smiles, had amused
+her with his prattle, had charmed her with all his engaging little ways.
+How was she able to part with him? Would he not miss her too as much as
+she would miss him? Shiloh was not a very attractive place, Eli was old
+and feeble, Hophni and Phinehas were beasts, the atmosphere was
+offensive and pernicious. Nevertheless, it was God's house, and if a
+little child should be brought to it, capable of rendering to God real
+service, God would take care of the child. Already he was God's child.
+Asked of God, and heard of God, he bore already the mark of his Master.
+God would be with him, as He had been with Joseph, as He had been with
+Moses--"He shall call on Me, and I will answer him; I will be with him
+in trouble, I will be with him and honour him."
+
+Noble in her spirit of endurance in the time of trial, Hannah is still
+more noble in the spirit of self-denial in the time of prosperity. It
+was no common grace that could so completely sacrifice all her personal
+feelings, and so thoroughly honour God. What a rebuke to those parents
+that keep back their children from God's service, that will not part
+with their sons to be missionaries, that look on the ministry of the
+Gospel as but a poor occupation! What a rebuke, too, to many Christian
+men and women who are so unwilling to commit themselves openly to any
+form of Christian service,--unwilling to be identified with religious
+work! Yet, on the other hand, let us rejoice that in this our age, more
+perhaps than in any other, so many are willing, nay eager, for Christian
+service. Let us rejoice that both among young men and young women
+recruits for the mission-field are offering themselves in such numbers.
+After all, it is true wisdom, and true policy, although not done as a
+matter of policy. It will yield far the greatest satisfaction in the
+end. God is not unrighteous to forget the work and labour of love of His
+children. And "every one that hath forsaken houses, or brethren, or
+sisters, or father, or mother, or wife, or children, or lands for My
+name's sake, shall receive an hundredfold, and shall inherit everlasting
+life."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+_HANNAH'S SONG OF THANKSGIVING._
+
+1 SAMUEL ii. 1-10.
+
+
+The emotion that filled Hannah's breast after she had granted Samuel to
+the Lord, and left him settled at Shiloh, was one of triumphant joy. In
+her song we see no trace of depression, like that of a bereaved and
+desolate mother. Some may be disposed to think less of Hannah on this
+account; they may think she would have been more of a true mother if
+something of human regret had been apparent in her song. But surely we
+ought not to blame her if the Divine emotion that so completely filled
+her soul excluded for the time every ordinary feeling. In the very first
+words of her song we see how closely God was connected with the emotions
+that swelled in her breast. "My heart rejoiceth _in the Lord_, mine horn
+is exalted _in the Lord_." The feeling that was so rapturous was the
+sense of God's gracious owning of her; His taking her into partnership,
+so to speak, with Himself; His accepting of her son as an instrument for
+carrying out His gracious purposes to Israel and the world. Only those
+who have experienced it can understand the overwhelming blessedness of
+this feeling. That the infinite God should draw near to His sinful
+creature, and not only accept him, but identify Himself with him, as it
+were, taking him and those dearest to him into His confidence, and using
+them to carry out His plans, is something almost too wonderful for the
+human spirit to bear. This was Hannah's feeling, as it afterwards was
+that of Elizabeth, and still more of the Virgin Mary, and it is no
+wonder that their songs, which bear a close resemblance to each other,
+should have been used by the Christian Church to express the very
+highest degree of thankfulness.
+
+The emotion of Hannah was intensified by another consideration. What had
+taken place in her experience was not the only thing of this kind that
+had ever happened or that ever was to happen. On the contrary, it was
+the outcome of a great law of God's kingdom, which law regulated the
+ordinary procedure of His providence. Hannah's heart was enlarged as she
+thought how many others had shared or would share what had befallen her;
+as she thought how such pride and arrogance as that which had tormented
+her was doomed to be rebuked and brought low under God's government; how
+many lowly souls that brought their burden to Him were to be relieved;
+and how many empty and hungry hearts, pining for food and rest, were to
+find how He "satisfieth the longing soul, and filleth the hungry soul
+with goodness."
+
+But it would seem that her thoughts took a still wider sweep. Looking on
+herself as representing the nation of Israel, she seems to have felt
+that what had happened to her on a small scale was to happen to the
+nation on a large; for God would draw nigh to Israel as He had to her,
+make him His friend and confidential servant, humble the proud and
+malignant nations around him, and exalt him, if only he endeavoured
+humbly and thankfully to comply with the Divine will. Is it possible
+that her thoughts took a more definite form? May not the Holy Spirit
+have given her a glimpse of the great truth--"Unto us a child is born,
+unto us a son is given"? May she not have surmised that it was to be
+through one born in the same land that the great redemption was to be
+achieved? May she not have seen in her little Samuel the type and symbol
+of another Child, to be more wonderfully born than hers, to be dedicated
+to God's service in a higher sense, to fulfil all righteousness far
+beyond anything in Samuel's power? And may not this high theme, carrying
+her far into future times, carrying her on to the end of the world's
+history, bearing her up even to eternity and infinity, have been the
+cause of that utter absence of human regret, that apparent want of
+motherly heart-sinking, which we mark in the song?
+
+When we examine the substance of the song more carefully, we find that
+Hannah derives her joy from four things about God:--1. His nature (vv.
+2-3); 2. His providential government (vv. 4-8); 3. His most gracious
+treatment of His saints (v. 9); 4. The glorious destiny of the kingdom
+of His anointed.
+
+1. In the second and third verses we find comfort derived from (1) God's
+holiness, (2) His unity, (3) His strength, (4) His knowledge, and (5)
+His justice.
+
+(1) The _holiness_, the spotlessness of God is a source of
+comfort,--"There is none holy as the Lord." To the wicked this attribute
+is no comfort, but only a terror. Left to themselves, men take away this
+attribute, and, like the Greeks and Romans and other pagans, ascribe to
+their gods the lusts and passions of poor human creatures. Yet to those
+who _can_ appreciate it, how blessed a thing is the holiness of God! No
+darkness in Him, no corruption, no infirmity; absolutely pure, He
+governs all on the principles of absolute purity; He keeps all up, even
+in a sinful, crumbling world, to that high standard; and when His
+schemes are completed, the blessed outcome will be "the new heavens and
+the new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness."
+
+(2) His _unity_ gives comfort,--"There is none besides Thee." None to
+thwart His righteous and gracious plans, or make those to tremble whose
+trust is placed in Him. He doeth according to His will in the army of
+heaven and among the inhabitants of the earth; and none can stay His
+hand, or say unto Him, "What doest Thou?"
+
+(3) His _strength_ gives comfort,--"Neither is there any rock like our
+God." "If God be for us, who can be against us?" "Hast thou not known,
+hast thou not heard, that the everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of
+the ends of the earth, fainteth not, nor is weary? There is no searching
+of His understanding? He giveth power to the faint, and to them that
+have no might He increaseth strength. Even the youths shall faint and be
+weary, and the young men shall utterly fall; but they that wait on the
+Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as
+eagles; they shall run and not be weary, and they shall walk and not
+faint."
+
+(4) His _knowledge_ gives comfort,--"The Lord is a God of knowledge." He
+sees all secret wickedness, and knows how to deal with it. His eye is on
+every plot hatched in the darkness. He knows His faithful servants, what
+they aim at, what they suffer, what a strain is often put on their
+fidelity. And He never can forget them, and never can desert them, for
+"the angel of the Lord encampeth about them that fear Him, and
+delivereth them."
+
+(5) His _justice_ gives comfort. "By Him actions are weighed." Their
+true quality is ascertained; what is done for mean, selfish ends stands
+out before Him in all its native ugliness, and draws down the
+retribution that is meet. Men may perform the outward services of
+religion with great regularity and apparent zeal, while their hearts are
+full of all uncleanness and wickedness. The hypocrite may rise to
+honour, the thief may become rich, men that prey upon the infirmities or
+the simplicity of their fellows may prosper; but there is a God in
+heaven by Whom all evil devices are weighed, and Who in His own time
+will effectually checkmate all that either deny His existence or fancy
+they can elude His righteous judgment.
+
+2. These views of God's holy government are more fully enlarged on in
+the second part of the song (vv. 3-8). The main feature of God's
+providence dwelt on here is the changes that occur in the lot of certain
+classes. The class against whom God's providence bears chiefly is the
+haughty, the self-sufficient, the men of physical might who are ready to
+use that might to the injury of others. Those again who lie in the path
+of God's mercies are the weak, the hungry, the childless, the beggar.
+Hannah uses a variety of figures. Now it is from the profession of
+soldiers--"the bows of the mighty are broken"; and on the other hand
+they that for very weakness were stumbling and staggering are girded
+with strength. Now it is from the appetite for food--they that were full
+have had to hire out themselves for bread, and they that were hungry are
+hungry no more. Now it is from family life, and from a feature of family
+life that came home to Hannah--"the barren hath borne seven, and she
+that had many children is waxed feeble." And these changes are the doing
+of God, "The Lord killeth and maketh alive; He bringeth down to the
+grave and bringeth up. The Lord maketh poor and maketh rich, He bringeth
+low and lifteth up. He raiseth up the poor out of the dust, and lifteth
+up the beggar from the dunghill, to set them among princes, and to make
+them inherit the throne of glory; for the pillars of the earth are the
+Lord's, and He hath set the world upon them." If nothing were taught
+here but that there are great vicissitudes of fortune among men, then a
+lesson would come from it alike to high and low--let the high beware
+lest they glory in their fortune, let the low not sink into dejection
+and despair. If it be further borne in mind that these changes of
+fortune are all in the hands of God, a further lesson arises, to beware
+how we offend God, and to live in the earnest desire to enjoy His
+favour. But there is a further lesson. The class of qualities that are
+here marked as offensive to God are pride, self-seeking,
+self-sufficiency both in ordinary matters and in their spiritual
+development. Your tyrannical and haughty Pharaohs, your high-vaunting
+Sennacheribs, your pride-intoxicated Nebuchadnezzars, are objects of
+special dislike to God. So is your proud Pharisee, who goes up to the
+temple thanking God that he is not as other men, no, nor like that poor
+publican, who is smiting on his breast, as well such a sinner may. It is
+the lowly in heart that God takes pleasure in. "Thus saith the high and
+lofty One, that inhabiteth eternity, and whose name is Holy: I dwell in
+the high and in the holy place, but with him also that is of a humble
+and contrite heart; to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive
+the heart of the contrite one."
+
+When we turn to the song of the Virgin we find the same strain--"He hath
+showed strength with His arm, He hath scattered the proud in the
+imagination of their hearts. He hath put down the mighty from their
+seats, and exalted them of low degree. He hath filled the hungry with
+good things, and the rich He hath sent empty away." Undoubtedly these
+words have primary reference to the social conditions of men. Thanks are
+given that the highest privilege that God could bestow on a creature had
+been conferred not on any one rolling in luxury, but on a maiden of the
+lowest class. This meaning does not exhaust the scope of the
+thanksgiving, which doubtless embraces that law of the spiritual kingdom
+to which Christ gave expression in the opening words of the Sermon on
+the Mount, "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of
+heaven." Yet it is plain that both the song of Hannah and the song of
+Mary dwell with complacency on that feature of providence by which men
+of low degree are sometimes exalted, by which the beggar is sometimes
+lifted from the dunghill, and set among princes to inherit the throne of
+glory. Why is this? Can God have any sympathy with the spirit which
+often prevails in the bosom of the poor towards the rich, which rejoices
+in their downfall just because they are rich, and in the elevation of
+others simply because they belong to the same class with themselves? The
+thought is not to be entertained for a moment. In God's government there
+is nothing partial or capricious. But the principle is this. Riches,
+fulness, luxury are apt to breed pride and contempt of the poor; and it
+pleases God at times, when such evil fruits appear, to bring down these
+worthless rich men to the dust, in order to give a conspicuous rebuke to
+the vanity, the ambition, the remorseless selfishness which were so
+conspicuous in their character. What but this was the lesson from the
+sudden fall of Cardinal Wolsey? Men, and even the best of men, thanked
+God for that fall. Not that it gave them pleasure to see a poor wretch
+who had been clothed in purple and fine linen, and fared sumptuously
+every day, reduced to so pitiful a plight; but because they felt it a
+righteous thing and a wholesome thing that so proud and so wicked a
+career should be terminated by a conspicuous manifestation of the
+displeasure of God. The best instincts of men's nature longed for a
+check to the monstrous pride and wicked avarice of that man; and when
+that check was given, and given with such tremendous emphasis, there was
+not an honest man or woman in all England who did not utter a hearty
+"Praise God!" when they heard the terrible news.
+
+So also it pleases God to give conspicuous proofs from time to time that
+qualities that in poor men are often associated with a hard-working,
+humble career are well-pleasing in His sight. For what qualities on the
+part of the poor are so valuable, in a social point of view, as
+industry, self-denying diligence, systematic, unwearying devotion even
+to work which brings them such scanty remuneration? By far the greater
+part of such men and women are called to work on, unnoticed and
+unrewarded, and when their day is over to sink into an undistinguished
+grave. But from time to time some such persons rise to distinction. The
+class to which they belong is ennobled by their achievements. When God
+wished in the sixteenth century to achieve the great object of punishing
+the Church which had fallen into such miserable inefficiency and
+immorality, and wrenching half of Europe from its grasp, he found his
+principal agent in a poor miner's cottage in Saxony. When he desired to
+summon a sleeping Church to the great work of evangelising India, the
+man he called to the front was Carey, a poor cobbler of Northampton.
+When it was his purpose to present His Church with an unrivalled picture
+of the Christian pilgrimage, its dangers and trials, its joys, its
+sorrows, and its triumphs, the artist appointed to the task was John
+Bunyan, the tinker of Elstow. When the object was to provide a man that
+would open the great continent of Africa to civilisation and
+Christianity, and who needed, in order to do this, to face dangers and
+trials before which all ordinary men had shrunk, he found his agent in a
+poor spinner-boy, who was working twelve hours a day in a cotton mill on
+the banks of the Clyde. In all such matters, in humbling the rich and
+exalting the poor, God's object is not to punish the one because they
+are rich, or to exalt the other because they are poor. In the one case
+it is to punish vices bred from an improper use of wealth, and in the
+other to reward virtues that have sprung from the soil of poverty. "Poor
+_and_ pious parents," wrote David Livingstone on the tombstone of his
+parents at Hamilton, when he wished to record the grounds of his
+thankfulness for the position in life which they held. "I would not
+exchange my peasant father for any king," said Thomas Carlyle, when he
+thought of the gems of Christian worth that had shone out all the
+brighter amid the hard conditions of his father's life. Riches are no
+reproach, and poverty is no merit; but the pride so apt to be bred of
+riches, the idleness, the injustice, the selfishness so often associated
+with them, is what God likes to reprove; and the graces that may be
+found in the poor man's home, the unwearied devotion to duty, the
+neighbourliness and brotherly love, and above all the faith, the hope,
+and the charity are what He delights to honour.
+
+In the spiritual sense there is no more important ingredient of
+character in God's sight than the sense of emptiness, and the conviction
+that all goodness, all strength, all blessing must come from God. The
+heart, thus emptied, is prepared to welcome the grace that is offered to
+supply its needs. Air rushes into an exhausted receiver. Where the idea
+prevails either that we are possessed of considerable native goodness,
+or that we have only to take pains with ourselves to get it, there is no
+welcome for the truth that "by grace are ye saved." Whoever says, "I am
+rich and increased in goods, and have need of nothing," knows not that
+"he is wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked."
+Miserable they who live and die in this delusion! Happy they who have
+been taught, "In me dwelleth no good thing." "All my springs are in
+Thee." Jesus Christ "is made to us of God wisdom and righteousness and
+sanctification and redemption." "Out of His fulness have we all
+received, and grace for grace."
+
+3. The third topic in Hannah's song is God's very gracious treatment of
+His saints. "He will keep the feet of His saints." The term "feet" shows
+the reference to be to their earthly life, their steps, their course
+through the world. It is a promise which others would care for but
+little, but which is very precious to all believers. To know the way in
+which God would have one to go is of prime importance to every godly
+heart. To be kept from wandering into unblest ways, kept from trifling
+with temptation, and dallying with sin is an infinite blessing. "Oh that
+my ways were directed to keep Thy statutes! Then shall I not be ashamed
+when I have respect unto all Thy commandments." "He will keep the feet
+of His saints."
+
+4. And lastly, Hannah rejoices in that dispensation of mercy that was
+coming in connection with God's "king, His anointed" (v. 10). Guided by
+the Spirit, she sees that a king is coming, that a kingdom is to be set
+up, and ruled over by the Lord's anointed. She sees that God's blessing
+is to come down on the king, the anointed, and that under him the
+kingdom is to prosper and to spread. Did she catch a glimpse of what was
+to happen under such kings as David, Jehoshaphat, Hezekiah, and Josiah?
+Did she see in prophetic vision the loving care of such kings for the
+welfare of the people, their holy zeal for God, their activity and
+earnestness in doing good? And did the glimpse of these coming benefits
+suggest to her the thought of what was to be achieved by Him who was to
+be the anointed one, the Messiah in a higher sense? We can hardly avoid
+giving this scope to her song. It was but a small measure of these
+blessings that her son personally could bring about. Her son seems to
+give place to a higher Son, through whom the land would be blessed as no
+one else could have blessed it, and all hungry and thirsty souls would
+be guided to that living bread and living water of which whosoever ate
+and drank should never hunger or thirst again.
+
+What is the great lesson of this song? That for the answer to prayer,
+for deliverance from trial, for the fulfilment of hopes, for the
+glorious things yet spoken of the city of our God, our most cordial
+thanksgivings are due to God. Every Christian life presents numberless
+occasions that very specially call for such thanksgiving. But there is
+one thanksgiving that must take precedence of all--"Thanks be unto God
+for His unspeakable gift." "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord
+Jesus Christ, who according to His abundant mercy hath begotten us
+again unto a living hope, to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled,
+and that fadeth not away, reserved in heaven for you, who are kept by
+the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in
+the last day."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+_ELI'S HOUSE._
+
+1 SAMUEL ii. 11-36.
+
+
+The notices of little Samuel, that alternate in this passage with the
+sad accounts of Eli and his house, are like the green spots that vary
+the dull stretches of sand in a desert; or like the little bits of blue
+sky that charm your eye when the firmament is darkened by a storm. First
+we are told how, after Elkanah and Hannah departed, the child Samuel
+ministered unto the Lord before Eli the priest (v. 11); then comes an
+ugly picture of the wickedness practised at Shiloh by Eli's sons (vv.
+12-17); another episode brings Samuel again before us, with some details
+of his own history and that of his family (vv. 18-21); this is followed
+by an account of Eli's feeble endeavours to restrain the wickedness of
+his sons (vv. 22-25). Once more we have a bright glimpse of Samuel, and
+of his progress in life and character, very similar in terms to St.
+Luke's account of the growth of the child Jesus (v. 26); and finally the
+series closes with a painful narrative--the visit of a man of God to
+Eli, reproving his guilty laxity in connection with his sons, and
+announcing the downfall of his house (vv. 27-36). In the wickedness of
+Eli's sons we see the enemy coming in like a flood; in the progress of
+little Samuel we see the Spirit of the Lord lifting up a standard
+against him. We see evil powerful and most destructive; we see the
+instrument of healing very feeble--a mere infant. Yet the power of God
+is with the infant, and in due time the force which he represents will
+prevail. It is just a picture of the grand conflict of sin and grace in
+the world. It was verified emphatically when Jesus was a child. How
+slender the force seemed that was to scatter the world's darkness, roll
+back its wickedness, and take away its guilt! How striking the lesson
+for us not to be afraid though the apparent force of truth and goodness
+in the world be infinitesimally small. The worm Jacob shall yet thresh
+the mountains; the little flock shall yet possess the kingdom; "there
+shall be a handful of corn on the top of the mountains, the fruit
+thereof shall shake like Lebanon, and they of the city shall flourish
+like grass of the earth."
+
+It is mainly the picture of Eli's house and the behaviour of his family
+that fills our eye in this chapter. It is to be noticed that Eli was a
+descendant, not of Eleazar, the elder son of Aaron, but of Ithamar, the
+younger. Why the high priesthood was transferred from the one family to
+the other, in the person of Eli, we do not know. Evidently Eli's claim
+to the priesthood was a valid one, for in the reproof addressed to him
+it is fully assumed that he was the proper occupant of the office. One
+is led to think that either from youth or natural feebleness the proper
+heir in Eleazar's line had been unfit for the office, and that Eli had
+been appointed to it as possessing the personal qualifications which the
+other wanted. Probably therefore he was a man of vigour in his earlier
+days, one capable of being at the head of affairs; and if so his loose
+government of his family was all the more worthy of blame. It could not
+have been that the male line in Eleazar's family had failed; for in the
+time of David Zadok of the family of Eleazar was priest, along with
+Abiathar, of the family of Ithamar and Eli. From Eli's administration
+great things would seem to have been expected; all the more lamentable
+and shameful was the state of things that ensued.
+
+1. First our attention is turned to the gross wickedness and scandalous
+behaviour of Eli's sons. There are many dark pictures in the history of
+Israel in the time of the Judges,--pictures of idolatry, pictures of
+lust, pictures of treachery, pictures of bloodshed; but there is none
+more awful than the picture of the high priest's family at Shiloh. In
+the other cases members of the nation had become grossly wicked; but in
+this case it is the salt that has lost its savour--it is those who
+should have led the people in the ways of God that have become the
+ringleaders of the devil's army. Hophni and Phinehas take their places
+in that unhonoured band where the names of Alexander Borgia, and many a
+high ecclesiastic of the Middle Ages send forth their stinking savour.
+They are marked by the two prevailing vices of the lowest natures--greed
+and lechery. Their greed preys upon the worthy men who brought their
+offerings to God's sanctuary in obedience to His law; their lechery
+seduces the very women who, employed in the service of the place (see
+Revised Version), might have reasonably thought of it as the gate to
+heaven rather than the avenue of hell. So shameless were they in both
+kinds of vice that they were at no pains to conceal either the one or
+the other. It mattered nothing what regulations God had made as to the
+parts of the offering the priest was to have; down went their fork into
+the sacrificial caldron, and whatever it drew up became theirs. It
+mattered not that the fat of certain sacrifices was due to God, and that
+it ought to have been given off before any other use was made of the
+flesh; the priests claimed the flesh in its integrity, and if the
+offerer would not willingly surrender it their servant fell upon him and
+wrenched it away. It is difficult to say whether the greater hurt was
+inflicted by such conduct on the cause of religion or on the cause of
+ordinary morality. As for the cause of religion, it suffered that
+terrible blow which it always suffers whenever it is dissociated from
+morality. The very heart and soul is torn out of religion when men are
+led to believe that their duty consists in merely believing certain
+dogmas, attending to outward observances, paying dues, and "performing"
+worship. What kind of conception of God can men have who are encouraged
+to believe that justice, mercy, and truth have nothing to do with His
+service? How can they ever think of Him as a Spirit, who requires of
+them that worship Him that they worship Him in spirit and in truth? How
+can such religion give men a real veneration for God, or inspire them
+with that spirit of obedience, trust, and delight of which he ought ever
+to be the object? Under such religion all belief in God's existence
+tends to vanish. Though His existence may continue to be acknowledged,
+it is not a power, it has no influence; it neither stimulates to good
+nor restrains from evil. Religion becomes a miserable form, without
+life, without vigour, without beauty--a mere carcase deserving only to
+be buried out of sight.
+
+And if such a condition of things is fatal to religion, it is fatal to
+morality too. Men are but too ready by nature to play loose with
+conscience. But when the religious heads of the nation are seen at once
+robbing man and robbing God, and when this is done apparently with
+impunity, it seems foolish to ordinary men to mind moral restraints.
+"Why should we mind the barriers of conscience" (the young men of Israel
+might argue) "when these young priests disregard them? If we do as the
+priest does we shall do very well." Men of corrupt lives at the head of
+religion, who are shameless in their profligacy, have a lowering effect
+on the moral life of the whole community. Down and down goes the
+standard of living. Class after class gets infected. The mischief
+spreads like dry rot in a building; ere long the whole fabric of society
+is infected with the poison.
+
+2. And how did the high priest deal with this state of things? In the
+worst possible way. He spoke against it but he did not act against it.
+He showed that he knew of it, he owned it to be very wicked; but he
+contented himself with words of remonstrance, which in the case of such
+hardened transgression were of no more avail than a child's breath
+against a brazen wall. At the end of the day, it is true that Eli was a
+decrepit old man, from whom much vigour of action could not have been
+expected. But the evil began before he was so old and decrepit, and his
+fault was that he did not restrain his sons at the time when he ought
+and might have restrained them. Yes, but even if Eli was old and
+decrepit when the actual state of things first burst on his view, there
+was enough of the awful in the conduct of his sons to have roused him to
+unwonted activity. David was old and decrepit, lying feebly at the edge
+of death, when word was brought to him that Adonijah had been proclaimed
+king in place of Solomon, for whom he had destined the throne. But
+there was enough of the startling in this intelligence to bring back a
+portion of its youthful fire to David's heart, and set him to devise the
+most vigorous measures to prevent the mischief that was so ready to be
+perpetrated. Fancy King David sending a meek message to Adonijah--"Nay,
+my son, it is not on your head but on Solomon's that my crown is to
+rest; go home, my son, and do nothing more in a course hurtful to
+yourself and hurtful to your people." But; it was this foolish and most
+inefficient course that Eli took with his sons. Had he acted as he
+should have acted at the beginning, matters would never have come to
+such a flagrant pass. But when the state of things became so terrible,
+there was but one course that should have been thought of. When the
+wickedness of the acting priests was so outrageous that men abhorred the
+offering of the Lord, the father ought to have been sunk in the high
+priest; the men who had so dishonoured their office should have been
+driven from the place, and the very remembrance of the crime they had
+committed should have been obliterated by the holy lives and holy
+service of better men. It was inexcusable in Eli to allow them to
+remain. If he had had a right sense of his office he would never for one
+moment have allowed the interest of his family to outweigh the claims of
+God. What! Had God in the wilderness, by a solemn and deadly judgment,
+removed from office and from life the two elder sons of Aaron simply
+because they had offered strange fire in their censers? And what was the
+crime of offering strange fire compared to the crime of robbing God, of
+violating the Decalogue, of openly practising gross and daring
+wickedness, under the very shadow of the tabernacle? If Eli did not take
+steps for stopping these atrocious proceedings, he might rely on it
+that steps would be taken in another quarter--God Himself would mark His
+sense of the sin.
+
+For what were the interests of his sons compared with the credit of the
+national worship? What mattered it that the sudden stroke would fall on
+them with startling violence? If it did not lead to their repentance and
+salvation it would at least save the national religion from degradation,
+and it would thus bring benefit to tens of thousands in the land. All
+this Eli did not regard. He could not bring himself to be harsh to his
+own sons. He could not bear that they should be disgraced and degraded.
+He would satisfy himself with a mild remonstrance, notwithstanding that
+every day new disgrace was heaped on the sanctuary, and new
+encouragement given to others to practise wickedness, by the very men
+who should have been foremost in honouring God, and sensitive to every
+breath that would tarnish His name.
+
+How differently God's servants acted in other days! How differently
+Moses acted when he came down from the mount and found the people
+worshipping the golden calf! "It came to pass, as soon as he came nigh
+unto the camp, that he saw the calf and the dancing: and Moses' anger
+waxed hot, and he cast the tables out of his hands and brake them
+beneath the mount. And he took the calf which they had made, and burnt
+it in the fire, and ground it to powder, and strawed it upon the water,
+and made the children of Israel drink of it.... And Moses stood in the
+gate of the camp and said, Who is on the Lord's side? let him come unto
+me. And all the sons of Levi gathered themselves together unto him. And
+he said unto them, Thus saith the Lord God of Israel, Put every man his
+sword by his side, and go in and out from gate to gate through the camp,
+and slay every man his brother, and every man his companion, and every
+man his neighbour." Do we think this too sharp and severe a retribution?
+At all events it marked in a suitable way the enormity of the offence of
+Aaron and the people, and the awful provocation of Divine judgments
+which the affair of the golden calf implied. It denoted that in presence
+of such a sin the claims of kindred were never for a moment to be
+thought of; and in the blessing of Moses it was a special commendation
+of the zeal of Levi, that "he said unto his father, and to his mother, I
+have not seen him; neither did he acknowledge his brethren, nor knew his
+own children." It was the outrageous character of the offence in the
+matter of the golden calf that justified the severe and abrupt
+procedure; but it was Eli's condemnation that though the sin of his sons
+was equally outrageous, he was moved to no indignation, and took no step
+to rid the tabernacle of men so utterly unworthy.
+
+It is often very difficult to explain how it comes to pass that godly
+men have had ungodly children. There is little difficulty in accounting
+for this on the present occasion. There was a fatal defect in the method
+of Eli. His remonstrance with his sons is not made at the proper time.
+It is not made in the fitting tone. When disregarded, it is not followed
+up by the proper consequences. We can easily think of Eli letting the
+boys have their own will and their own way when they were young;
+threatening them for disobedience, but not executing the threat; angry
+at them when they did wrong, but not punishing the offence; vacillating
+perhaps between occasional severity and habitual indulgence, till
+by-and-bye all fear of sinning had left them, and they coolly calculated
+that the grossest wickedness would meet with nothing worse than a
+reproof. How sad the career of the young men themselves! We must not
+forget that, however inexcusable their father was, the great guilt of
+the proceeding was theirs. How must they have hardened their hearts
+against the example of Eli, against the solemn claims of God, against
+the holy traditions of the service, against the interests and claims of
+those whom they ruined, against the welfare of God's chosen people! How
+terribly did their familiarity with sacred things react on their
+character, making them treat even the holy priesthood as a mere trade, a
+trade in which the most sacred interests that could be conceived were
+only as counters, to be turned by them into gain and sensual pleasure!
+Could anything come nearer to the sin against the Holy Ghost? No wonder
+though their doom was that of persons judicially blinded and hardened.
+They were given up to a reprobate mind, to do those things that were not
+convenient. "They hearkened not to the voice of their father, because
+the Lord would slay them." They experienced the fate of men who
+deliberately sin against the light, who love their lusts so well that
+nothing will induce them to fight against them; they were so hardened
+that repentance became impossible, and it was necessary for them to
+undergo the full retribution of their wickedness.
+
+3. But it is time we should look at the message brought to Eli by the
+man of God. In that message Eli was first reminded of the gracious
+kindness shown to the house of Aaron in their being entrusted with the
+priesthood, and in their having an honourable provision secured for
+them. Next he is asked why he trampled on God's sacrifice and offering
+(marg. Revised Version), and considered the interests of his sons above
+the honour of God? Then he is told that any previous promise of the
+perpetuity of his house is now qualified by the necessity God is under
+to have regard to the character of his priests, and honour or degrade
+them accordingly. In accordance with this rule the house of Eli would
+suffer a terrible degradation. He (this includes his successors in
+office) would be stript of "his arm," that is, his strength. No member
+of his house would reach a good old age. The establishment at Shiloh
+would fall more and more into decay, as if there was an enemy in God's
+habitation. Any who might remain of the family would be a grief and
+distress to those whom Eli represented. The young men themselves, Hophni
+and Phinehas, would die the same day. Those who shared their spirit
+would come crouching to the high priest of the day and implore him to
+put them into one of the priest's offices, not to give them the
+opportunity of serving God, but that they might eat a piece of bread.
+Terrible catalogue of curses and calamities! Oh, sin, what a brood of
+sorrows dost thou bring forth! Oh, young man, who walkest in the ways of
+thine heart, and in the sight of thine eyes, what a myriad of distresses
+dost thou prepare for those whom thou art most bound to care for and to
+bless! Oh, minister of the gospel, who allowest thyself to tamper with
+the cravings of the flesh till thou hast brought ruin on thyself,
+disgrace on thy family, and confusion on thy Church, what infatuation
+was it to admit thy worst foe to the sanctuary of thy bosom, and allow
+him to establish himself in the citadel till thou couldst not get quit
+of him, so that thou art now helpless in his hands, with nothing but
+sadness for thy present inheritance, and for the future a fearful
+looking for of judgment and fiery indignation!
+
+One word, in conclusion, respecting that great principle of the kingdom
+of God announced by the prophet as that on which Jehovah would act in
+reference to His priests--"Them that honour Me I will honour, but they
+that despise Me shall be lightly esteemed." It is one of the grandest
+sayings in Scripture. It is the eternal rule of the kingdom of God, not
+limited to the days of Hophni and Phinehas, but, like the laws of the
+Medes and Persians, eternal as the ordinances of heaven. It is a law
+confirmed by all history; every man's life confirms it, for though this
+life is but the beginning of our career, and the final clearing up of
+Divine providence is to be left to the judgment-day, yet when we look
+back on the world's history we find that those that have honoured God,
+God has honoured them, while they that have despised Him have indeed
+been lightly esteemed. However men may try to get their destiny into
+their own hands; however they may secure themselves from this trouble
+and from that; however, like the first Napoleon, they may seem to become
+omnipotent, and to wield an irresistible power, yet the day of
+retribution comes at last; having sown to the flesh, of the flesh also
+they reap corruption. While the men that have honoured God, the men that
+have made their own interests of no account, but have set themselves
+resolutely to obey God's will and do God's work; the men that have
+believed in God as the holy Ruler and Judge of the world, and have
+laboured in private life and in public service to carry out the great
+rules of His kingdom,--justice, mercy, the love of God and the love of
+man,--these are the men that God has honoured; these are the men whose
+work abides; these are the men whose names shine with undying honour,
+and from whose example and achievements young hearts in every following
+age draw their inspiration and encouragement. What a grand rule of life
+it is, for old and young! Do you wish a maxim that shall be of high
+service to you in the voyage of life, that shall enable you to steer
+your barque safely both amid the open assaults of evil, and its secret
+currents, so that, however tossed you may be, you may have the assurance
+that the ship's head is in the right direction, and that you are moving
+steadily towards the desired haven; where can you find anything more
+clear, more fitting, more sure and certain than just these words of the
+Almighty, "Them that honour Me I will honour; but they that despise Me
+shall be lightly esteemed"?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+_SAMUEL'S VISION._
+
+1 SAMUEL iii.
+
+
+It is evident that Samuel must have taken very kindly to the duties of
+the sanctuary. He was manifestly one of those who are sanctified from
+infancy, and whose hearts go from the first with sacred duties. There
+were no wayward impulses to subdue, no hankerings after worldly freedom
+and worldly enjoyment; there was no necessity for coercive measures,
+either to restrain him from outbursts of frivolity or to compel him to
+diligence and regularity in his calling. From the first he looked with
+solemn awe and holy interest on all that related to the worship of God;
+that, to him, was the duty above all other duties, the privilege above
+all other privileges. God to him was not a mere idea, an abstraction,
+representing merely the dogmas and services of religion. God was a
+reality, a personality, a Being who dealt very closely with men, and
+with whom they were called to deal very closely too. We can easily
+conceive how desirous little Samuel would be to know something of the
+meaning of the services at Shiloh; how scrupulous to perform every duty,
+how regular and real in his prayers, and how full of reverence and
+affection for God. He would go about all his duties with a grave,
+sweet, earnest face, conscious of their importance and solemnity; always
+thinking more of them than of anything else,--thinking perhaps of the
+service of the angels in heaven, and trying to serve God as they served
+Him, to do God's will on earth as it was done in heaven.
+
+At the opening of this chapter he seems to be the confidential servant
+of the high priest, sleeping near to him, and in the habit of receiving
+directions from him. He must be more than a child now, otherwise he
+would not be entrusted, as he was, with the opening of the doors of the
+house of the Lord.
+
+The evil example of Hophni and Phinehas, so far from corrupting him,
+seems to have made him more resolute the other way. It was horrid and
+disgusting; and as gross drunkenness on the part of a father sometimes
+sets the children the more against it, so the profligacy of the young
+priests would make Samuel more vigilant in every matter of duty. That
+Eli bore as he did with the conduct of his sons must have been a great
+perplexity to him, and a great sorrow; but it did not become one at his
+time of life to argue the question with the aged high priest. This
+conduct of Eli's did not in any respect diminish the respectful bearing
+of Samuel towards him, or his readiness to comply with his every wish.
+For Eli was God's high priest; and in engaging to be God's servant in
+the tabernacle Samuel knew well that he took the high priest as his
+earthly master.
+
+1. The first thing that engages our special attention in this chapter is
+the singular way in which Samuel was called to receive God's message in
+the temple.
+
+The word of God was rare in those days; there was no open vision, or
+rather no vision that came abroad, that was promulgated to the nation
+as the expression of God's will. From the tone in which this is referred
+to, it was evidently looked on as a want, as placing the nation in a
+less desirable position than in days when God was constantly
+communicating His will. Now, however, God is to come into closer contact
+with the people, and for this purpose He is to employ a new instrument
+as the medium of His messages. For God is never at a loss for suitable
+instruments--they are always ready when peculiar work has to be done. In
+the selection of the boy Samuel as his prophet there is something
+painful, but likewise something very interesting. It is painful to find
+the old high priest passed over; his venerable years and venerable
+office would naturally have pointed to him; but in spite of many good
+qualities, in one point he is grossly unfaithful, and the very purpose
+of the vision now to be made is to declare the outcome of his
+faithlessness. But it is interesting to find that already the child of
+Hannah is marked out for this distinguished service. Even in his case
+there is opportunity for verifying the rule, "Them that honour Me I will
+honour." His entire devotion to God's service, so beautiful in one of
+such tender years, is the sign of a character well adapted to become the
+medium of God's habitual communications with His people. Young though he
+is, his very youth in one sense will prove an advantage. It will show
+that what he speaks is not the mere fruit of his own thinking, but is
+the message of God. It will show that the spiritual power that goes
+forth with his words is not his own native force, but the force of the
+Holy Spirit dwelling in him. It will thus be made apparent to all that
+God has not forsaken His people, corrupt and lamentably wicked though
+the young priests are.
+
+Both Eli and Samuel sleep within the precincts of the tabernacle. Not,
+however, in the sanctuary itself, but in one of those buildings that
+opened into its courts, which were erected for the accommodation of the
+priests and Levites. Eli's sight was failing him, and perhaps the care
+of the lamp as well as the door was entrusted to Samuel. The lamp was to
+burn always (Exod. xxvii. 20), that is, it was to be trimmed and lighted
+every morning and evening (Exod. xxx. 7, 8); and to attend to this was
+primarily the high priest's duty. The lamp had doubtless been duly
+trimmed, and it would probably continue burning through a good part of
+the night. It was not yet out when a voice fell on the ears of Samuel,
+loud enough to rouse him from the profound slumber into which he had
+probably fallen. Thinking it was Eli's, he ran to his side; but Eli had
+not called him. Again the voice sounded, again Samuel springs to his
+feet and hastens to the high priest; again he is sent back with the same
+assurance. A third time the voice calls; a third time the willing and
+dutiful Samuel flies to Eli's side, but this time he is sent back with a
+different answer. Hitherto Samuel had not known the Lord--that is, he
+had not been cognisant of His way of communicating with men in a
+supernatural form--and it had never occurred to him that such a thing
+could happen in his case. But Eli knew that such communications were
+made at times by God, and, remembering the visit of the man of God to
+himself, he may have surmised that this was another such occasion. The
+voice evidently was no natural voice; so Samuel is told to lie down once
+more, to take the attitude of simple receptiveness, and humbly invite
+God to utter His message.
+
+There are some lesser traits of Samuel's character in this part of the
+transaction which ought not to be passed over without remark. The
+readiness with which he springs from his bed time after time, and the
+meekness and patience with which he asks Eli for his orders, without a
+word of complaint on his apparently unreasonable conduct, make it very
+clear that Samuel had learned to subdue two things--to subdue his body
+and to subdue his temper. It is not an easy thing for a young person in
+the midst of a deep sleep to spring to his feet time after time. In such
+circumstances the body is very apt to overcome the mind. But Samuel's
+mind overcame the body. The body was the servant, not the master. What
+an admirable lesson Samuel had already learned! Few parts of early
+education are so important as to learn to keep the body in subjection.
+To resist bodily cravings, whether greater or smaller, which unfit one
+for duty; temptations to drink, or smoke, or dawdle, or lie in bed, or
+waste time when one ought to be up and doing; to be always ready for
+one's work, punctual, methodical, purpose-like, save only when sickness
+intervenes,--denotes a very admirable discipline for a young person, and
+is a sure token of success in life. Not less admirable is that control
+over the temper which Samuel had evidently acquired. To be treated by
+Eli as he supposed that he had been, was highly provoking. Why drag him
+out of bed at that time of night at all? Why drag him over the cold
+stones in the chill darkness, and why tantalise him first by denying
+that he called him and then by calling him again? As far as appears,
+Samuel's temper was in no degree ruffled by the treatment he appeared to
+be receiving from Eli; he felt that he was a servant, and Eli was his
+master, and it was his part to obey his master, however unreasonable
+his treatment might be.
+
+2. We proceed now to the message itself, and Samuel's reception of it.
+It is substantially a repetition of what God had already communicated to
+Eli by the man of God a few years before; only it is more peremptory,
+and the bearing of it is more fixed and rigid. When God denounced His
+judgment on Eli's house by the prophet, he seems to have intended to
+give them an opportunity to repent. If Eli had bestirred himself then,
+and banished the young men from Shiloh, and if his sons in their
+affliction and humiliation had repented of their wickedness, the
+threatened doom might have been averted. So at least we are led to
+believe by this second message having been superadded to the first. Now
+the opportunity of repentance has passed away. God's words are very
+explicit--"I have sworn unto the house of Eli that the iniquity of Eli's
+house shall not be purged with sacrifice nor offering for ever." After
+the previous warning, Eli seems to have gone on lamenting but not
+chastising. Hophni and Phinehas seem to have gone on sinning as before,
+and heedless of the scandal they were causing. In announcing to Samuel
+the coming catastrophe, God shows Himself thoroughly alive to the
+magnitude of the punishment He is to inflict, and the calamity that is
+to happen. It is such that the ears of every one that heareth it shall
+tingle. God shows also that, painful though it is, it has been
+deliberately determined, and no relenting will occur when once the
+terrible retribution begins. "In that day will I perform against Eli all
+that I have spoken concerning his house; when I begin I will also make
+an end." But terrible though the punishment will be, there is only too
+good cause for it. "For I have told him that I will judge his house for
+ever, for the iniquity which he knoweth; because his sons made
+themselves vile, and he restrained them not." There are some good
+parents whose sons have made themselves vile, and they would fain have
+restrained them but their efforts to restrain have been in vain. The
+fault of Eli was, that he might have restrained them and he did not
+restrain them. In those times fathers had more authority over their
+families than is given them now. The head of the house was counted
+responsible for the house, because it was only by his neglecting the
+power he had that his family could become openly wicked. It was only by
+Eli neglecting the power he had that his sons could have become so vile.
+Where his sons were heirs to such sacred functions there was a double
+call to restrain them, and that call he neglected. He neglected it at
+the time when he might have done it, and that time could never be
+recalled.
+
+So, there is an age when children may be restrained, and if that age is
+allowed to pass the power of restraining them goes along with it. There
+are faults in this matter on the part of many parents, on the right hand
+and on the left. Many err by not restraining at all. Mothers begin while
+their children are yet infants to humour their every whim, and cannot
+bear to hold back from them anything they may wish. It is this habit
+that is liable to have such a terrible reaction. There are other parents
+that while they restrain do not restrain wisely. They punish, but they
+do not punish in love. They are angry because their children have broken
+their rules; they punish in anger, and the punishment falls merely as
+the blow of a stronger person on a weaker. It does not humble, it does
+not soften. What awful consequences it often brings! What skeletons it
+lodges in many a house! God has designed the family to be the nurse of
+what is best and purest in human life, and when this design is crossed
+then the family institution, which was designed to bring the purest joy,
+breeds the darkest misery. And this is one of the forms of retribution
+on wickedness which we see carried out in their fulness in the present
+life! How strange, that men should be in any doubt as to God carrying
+out the retribution of wickedness to the bitter end! How singular they
+should disbelieve in a hell! The end of many a career is written in
+these words:--"Thine own wickedness shall correct thee, and thy
+backslidings shall reprove thee; know therefore, and see that it is an
+evil thing and bitter that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God, and that
+My fear is not in thee, saith the Lord God of hosts."
+
+3. And now we go on to the meeting of Eli and Samuel. Samuel is in no
+haste to communicate to Eli the painful message he has received. He has
+not been required to do it, and he lies till the morning, awake we may
+believe, but staggered and dismayed. As usual he goes to open the doors
+of God's house. And then it is that Eli calls him. "What is the thing
+that He hath said unto thee?" he asks. He adjures Samuel to tell him
+all. And Samuel does tell him all. And Eli listens in silence, and when
+it is over he says, with meek resignation, "It is the Lord; let Him do
+what seemeth Him good."
+
+We are touched by this behaviour of Eli. First we are touched by his
+bearing toward Samuel. He knows that God has conferred an honour on
+Samuel which He has not bestowed on him, but young though Samuel is he
+feels no jealousy, he betrays no sign of wounded pride. It is not easy
+for God's servants to bear being passed over in favour of others, in
+favour of younger men. A feeling of mortification is apt to steal on
+them, accompanied with some bitterness toward the object of God's
+preference. This venerable old man shows nothing of that feeling. He is
+not too proud to ask Samuel for a full account of God's message. He will
+not have him leave anything out, out of regard to his feelings. He must
+know the whole, however painful it may be. He has learned to reverence
+God's truth, and he cannot bear the idea of not knowing all. And Samuel,
+who did not wish to tell him anything, is now constrained to tell him
+the whole. "He told him every whit, and hid nothing from him." He did
+not shun to declare to him the whole counsel of God. Admirable example
+for all God's servants! How averse some men are to hear the truth! And
+how prone are we to try to soften what is disagreeable in our message to
+sinners--to take off the sharp edge, and sheathe it in generalities and
+possibilities. It is no real kindness. The kindest thing we can do is to
+declare God's doom on sin, and to assure men that any hopes they may
+cherish of His relenting to do as He has said are vain hopes--"When I
+begin," says God, "I will also make an end."
+
+And we are touched further by Eli's resignation to God's will. The words
+of Samuel must have raised a deep agony in his spirit when he thought of
+the doom of his sons. Feeble though he was, there might have arisen in
+his heart a gust of fierce rebellion against that doom. But nothing of
+the kind took place. Eli was memorable for the passive virtues. He could
+bear much, though he could dare little. He could submit, but he could
+not fight. We find him here meekly recognizing the Divine will. God has
+a right to do what He will with His own; and who am I that I should cry
+out against Him? He is the Supreme Disposer of all events; why should a
+worm like me stand in His way? He submits implicitly to God. "The thing
+formed must not say to Him that formed him, Why hast Thou formed me
+thus"? What God ordains must be right. It is a terrible blow to Eli, but
+he may understand the bearings of it better in another state. He bows to
+that Supreme Will which he has learned to trust and to honour above
+every force in the universe.
+
+Yes, we are touched by Eli's meekness and submission. And yet, though
+Eli had in him the stuff that martyrs are often made of, his character
+was essentially feeble, and his influence was not wholesome. He wanted
+that resolute purpose which men like Daniel possessed. His will was too
+feeble to control his life. He was too apprehensive of immediate
+trouble, of present inconvenience and unpleasantness, to carry out firm
+principles of action against wickedness, even in his own family. He was
+a memorable instance of the soundness of the principle afterwards laid
+down by St. Paul: "If a man know not how to rule his own house, how
+shall he take care of the Church of God?" He greatly needed the
+exhortation which God gave to Joshua--"Be strong and of a good courage."
+It is true his infirmity was one of natural temperament. Men might say
+he could not help it. Neither can one overcome temperament altogether.
+But men of feeble temperament, especially when set over others, have
+great need to watch it, and ask God to strengthen them where they are
+weak. Divine grace has a wonderful power to make up the defects of
+nature. Timid, irresolute Peter was a different man after his fall.
+Divine grace turned him into a rock after all. The coward who had shrunk
+from before a maiden got courage to defy a whole Sanhedrim. In the
+ministers of God's house the timid, crouching spirit is specially
+unseemly. They, at least, would need to rest on firm convictions, and to
+be governed by a resolute will. "Finally, brethren, be strong in the
+Lord and in the power of His might. Put on the whole armour of God, that
+ye may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to
+stand."
+
+4. Samuel is now openly known to be the prophet of the Lord. "Samuel
+grew, and the Lord was with him, and did let none of his words fall to
+the ground." Little didst thou think, Hannah, some twenty years ago,
+that the child thou didst then ask of the Lord would ere long supersede
+the high priest who showed so little tact and judgment in interpreting
+the agitation of thy spirit! No, thou hast no feeling against the
+venerable old man; but thou canst not but wonder at the ups and downs of
+Providence; thou canst not but recall the words of thine own song, "He
+bringeth low, and lifteth up." And Samuel has not to fight his way to
+public recognition, or wait long till it come. "All Israel, from Dan
+even to Beersheba, knew that Samuel was established to be a prophet of
+the Lord."
+
+And by-and-bye other oracles came to him, by which all men might have
+known that he was the recognized channel of communication between God
+and the people. We shall see in our next chapter into what trouble the
+nation was brought by disregarding his prophetic office, and recklessly
+determining to drag the ark of God into the battlefield. Meanwhile we
+cannot but remark what a dangerous position, in a mere human point of
+view, Samuel now occupied. The danger was that which a young man
+encounters when suddenly or early raised to the possession of high
+spiritual power. Samuel, though little more than a boy, was now
+virtually the chief man in Israel. Set so high, his natural danger was
+great. But God, who placed him there, sustained in him the spirit of
+humble dependence. After all he was but God's servant. Humble obedience
+was still his duty. And in this higher sphere his career was but a
+continuation of what had been described when it was said, "The child
+Samuel ministered to the Lord in Shiloh."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+_THE ARK OF GOD TAKEN BY THE PHILISTINES._
+
+1 SAMUEL iv.
+
+
+We are liable to form an erroneous impression of the connection of
+Samuel with the transactions of this chapter, in consequence of a clause
+which ought to belong to the last chapter, being placed, in the
+Authorized Version, at the beginning of this. The clause "And the word
+of Samuel came to all Israel" belongs really to the preceding chapter.
+It denotes that Samuel was now over all Israel the recognized channel of
+communication between the people and God. But it does not denote that
+the war with the Philistines, of which mention is immediately made, was
+undertaken at Samuel's instance. In fact, the whole chapter is
+remarkable for the absence of Samuel's name. What is thus denoted seems
+to be that Samuel was not consulted either about the war or about the
+taking of the ark into the battle. Whatever he may have thought of the
+war, he would undoubtedly have been horrified at the proposal about the
+ark. That whole transaction must have seemed to him a piece of
+infatuation. Probably it was carried into effect in a kind of tumultuous
+frenzy. But there can be no reasonable doubt that whatever Samuel could
+have done to oppose it would have been done with the greatest
+eagerness.
+
+The history is silent about the Philistines from the days of Samson. The
+last we have heard of them was the fearful tragedy at the death of that
+great Judge of Israel, when the house fell upon the lords and the
+people, and such a prodigious slaughter of their great men took place.
+From that calamity they seem now to have revived. They would naturally
+be desirous to revenge that unexampled catastrophe, and as Ebenezer and
+Aphek are situated in the land of Israel, it would seem that the
+Philistines were the aggressors. They had come up from the Philistine
+plain to the mountainous country of Israel, and no doubt had already
+sent many of the people to flight through whose farms they came. As the
+Israelites had no standing army, the troops that opposed the Philistines
+could be little better than an untrained horde. When they joined battle,
+Israel was smitten before the Philistines, and they slew of the army
+about four thousand men. In a moral point of view the defeat was
+strange; the Philistines had made the attack, and the Israelites were
+fighting for their homes and hearths; yet victory was given to the
+invaders, and in four thousand homes of Israel there was lamentation and
+woe.
+
+But this was not really strange. Israel needed chastening, and the
+Philistines were God's instruments for that purpose. In particular,
+judgment was due to the sons of Eli; and the defeat inflicted by the
+Philistines, and the mistaken and superstitious notion which seized on
+the people that they would do well to take God's ark into the battle,
+were the means by which their punishment came. How often Providence
+seems to follow a retrograde course! And yet it is a forward course all
+the time, although from our point of view it seems backward; just as
+those planets which are nearer the sun than the earth sometimes seem to
+us to reverse the direction of their movement; although if we were
+placed in the centre of the system we should see very plainly that they
+are moving steadily forward all the time.
+
+Three things call for special notice in the main narrative of this
+chapter--1. The preparation for the battle; 2. The battle itself; and 3.
+The result when the news was carried to Shiloh.
+
+1. The preparation for the battle was the sending for the ark of the
+Lord to Shiloh, so that Israel might fight under the immediate presence
+and protection of their God.
+
+It seemed a brilliant idea. Whichever of the elders first suggested it,
+it caught at once, and was promptly acted on. There were two great
+objections to it, but if they were so much as entertained they certainly
+had no effect given them. The first was, that the elders had no
+legitimate control over the ark. The custody of it belonged to the
+priests and the Levites, and Eli was the high priest. If the rulers of
+the nation at any time desired to remove the ark (as David afterwards
+did when he placed it on Mount Zion), that could only be done after
+clear indications that the step was in accordance with the will of God,
+and with the full consent of the priests. There is no reason to suppose
+that any means were taken to find out whether its removal to the camp
+was in accordance with the will of God; and as to the mind of the
+priests, Eli was probably passed over as too old and too blind to be
+consulted, and Hophni and Phinehas would be restrained by no scruples
+from an act which every one seemed to approve. The second great
+objection to the step was that it was a superstitious and irreverent use
+of the symbol of God's presence. Evidently the people ascribed to the
+symbol the glorious properties that belonged only to the reality. They
+expected that the symbol of God's presence would do for them all that
+might be done by His presence itself. And doubtless there had been
+occasions when the symbol and the reality went together. In the
+wilderness, in the days of Moses, "It came to pass, when the ark set
+forward, that Moses said, Rise up, Lord, and let Thine enemies be
+scattered, and let them that hate Thee flee before Thee" (Num. x. 35).
+But these were occasions determined by the cloud rising and going before
+the host, an unmistakable indication of the will of God (Num. ix.
+15-22). God's real presence accompanied the ark on these occasions, and
+all that was expressed in the symbol was actually enjoyed by the people.
+There was no essential or inherent connection between the two; the
+actual connection was determined merely by the good pleasure of God. It
+pleased Him to connect them, and connected they were. But the ignorant
+and superstitious elders forgot that the connection between the symbol
+and the reality was of this nature; they believed it to be inherent and
+essential. In their unthinking and unreasoning minds the symbol might be
+relied on to produce all the effect of the reality. If only the ark of
+God were carried into the battle, the same effect would take place as
+when Moses said in the wilderness, "Rise up, Lord, and let Thine enemies
+be scattered."
+
+Could anything show more clearly the unspiritual tendencies of the human
+mind in its conceptions of God, and of the kind of worship He should
+receive? The idea of God as the living God is strangely foreign to the
+human heart. To think of God as one who has a will and purpose of His
+own, and who will never give His countenance to any undertaking that
+does not agree with that will and purpose, is very hard for the
+unspiritual man. To make the will of God the first consideration in any
+enterprise, so that it is not to be thought of if He do not approve, and
+is never to be despaired of if He be favourable, is a bondage and a
+trouble beyond his ability. Yet even superstitious men believe in a
+supernatural power. And they believe in the possibility of enlisting
+that power on their side. And the method they take is to ascribe the
+virtue of a charm to certain external objects with which that power is
+associated. The elders of Israel ascribed this virtue to the ark. They
+never inquired whether the enterprise was agreeable to the mind and will
+of God. They never asked whether in this case there was any ground for
+believing that the symbol and the reality would go together. They simply
+ascribed to the symbol the power of a talisman, and felt secure of
+victory under its shadow.
+
+Would that we could think of this spirit as extinct even in Christian
+communities! What is the Romish and the very High Church doctrine of the
+sacraments but an ascription to them, when rightly used, of the power of
+a charm? The sacraments, as Scripture teaches, are symbols of very
+glorious realities, and wherever the symbols are used in accordance with
+God's will the realities are sure to be enjoyed. But it has long been
+the doctrine of the Church of Rome, and it is the doctrine of Churches,
+with similar views, that the sacraments are reservoirs of grace, and
+that to those who place no fatal obstacle in their way, grace comes from
+them _ex opere operato_, from the very act of receiving them. It is the
+Protestant and scriptural doctrine that by stimulating faith, by
+encouraging us to look to the living Saviour, and draw from Him in whom
+all fulness dwells, the sacraments bring to us copious supplies of
+grace, but that without the presence of that living Saviour they would
+be merely as empty wells. The High Church view regards them as charms,
+that have a magic virtue to bless the soul. The superstitious mother
+thinks if only her child is baptised it will be saved, the act of
+baptism will do it, and she never thinks of the living Saviour and His
+glorious grace. The dying sinner thinks, if only he had the last
+sacraments, he would be borne peacefully and well through the dark
+scenes of death and judgment, and forgets that the commandment of
+Scripture is not, Look unto the last sacraments, but, "Look _unto Me_
+and be ye saved." Alas! what will men not substitute for personal
+dealings with the living God? The first book and the last book of the
+Bible present sad proof of his recoil from such contact. In Genesis, as
+man hears God's voice, he runs to hide himself among the trees of the
+garden. In Revelation, when the Judge appears, men call on the mountains
+to fall on them and hide them from Him that sitteth on the throne. Only
+when we see God's face, beautiful and loving, in Christ, can this
+aversion be overcome.
+
+If the presence of the ark in the field of battle did much to excite the
+hopes of the Israelites, it did not less to raise the fears of their
+opponents. The shout with which its arrival was hailed by the one struck
+something of consternation into the breasts of the other. But now, an
+effect took place on which the Israelites had not reckoned. The
+Philistines were too wise a people to yield to panic. If the Hebrew God,
+that did such wonders in the wilderness, was present with their
+opponents, there was all the more need for their bestirring themselves
+and quitting them like men. The elders of Israel had not reckoned on
+this wise plan. It teaches us, even from a heathen point of view, never
+to yield to panic. Even when everything looks desperate, there may be
+some untried resource to fall back on. And if this be a lesson to be
+learnt from pagans, much more surely may it be thought of by believers,
+who know that man's extremity is often God's opportunity, and that no
+peril is too imminent for God not to be able to deliver.
+
+2. And now the battle rages. The hope of misguided Israel turns out an
+illusion. They find, to their consternation, that the symbol does not
+carry the reality. It pleases God to allow the ark with which His name
+is so intimately associated to be seized by the enemy. The Philistines
+carry everything before them. The ark is taken, Hophni and Phinehas are
+slain, and there fall of Israel thirty thousand footmen.
+
+Can we fancy the feelings of the two priests who attended the ark as the
+defeat of the army of Israel became inevitable? The ark would probably
+be carried near the van of the army, preceded by some of the most
+valiant troops of Israel. No doubt it had been reckoned on that as soon
+as its sacred form was recognized by the Philistines, fear would seize
+on them, and they would fly before it. It must have made the two priests
+look grave when nothing of the kind took place, but the host of the
+Philistines advanced in firm and intrepid phalanx to the fight. But
+surely the first onset of the advanced guard will show with whose army
+the victory is to lie. The advanced guards are at close quarters, and
+the men of Israel give way. Was there conscience enough left in these
+two men to flash into their minds that God, whose Holy Spirit they had
+vexed, was turned to be their enemy, and was now fighting against them?
+Did they, in that supreme moment, get one of those momentary glimpses,
+in which the whole iniquities of a lifetime seem marshalled before the
+soul, and the enormity of its guilt overwhelms it? Did they feel the
+anguish of men caught in their own iniquities, every hope perished,
+death inevitable, and after death the judgment? There is not one word,
+either in this chapter or in what precedes it, from which the slightest
+inference in their favour can be drawn. They died apparently as they had
+lived, in the very act of dishonouring God. With the weapons of
+rebellion in their hands, and the stains of guilt on their hearts, they
+were hurried into the presence of the Judge. Now comes the right
+estimate of their reckless, guilty life. All the arts of sophistry, all
+the refuges of lies, all their daring contempt of the very idea of a
+retribution on sin, are swept away in a moment. They are confronted with
+the awful reality of their doom. They see more vividly than even Eli or
+Samuel the truth of one part, certainly, of the Divine rule--"Them that
+honour Me I will honour; but they that despise Me shall be lightly
+esteemed."
+
+The time of guilty pleasure has passed for ever away; the time of
+endless retribution has begun. Oh, how short, how miserable, how
+abominable appears to them now the revelry of their evil life! what
+infatuation it was to forswear all the principles in which they had been
+reared, to laugh at the puritanic strictness of their father, to sit in
+the seat of the scorner, and pour contempt on the law of God's house!
+How they must have cursed the folly that led them into such awful ways
+of sin, how sighed in vain that they had not in their youth chosen the
+better part, how wished they had never been born!
+
+3. But we must leave the field of battle and hasten back to Shiloh.
+Since the ark was carried off Eli must have had a miserable time of it,
+reproaching himself for his weakness if he gave even a reluctant assent
+to the plan, and feeling that uncertainty of conscience which keeps one
+even from prayer, because it makes one doubtful if God will listen. Poor
+old man of ninety-eight years, he could but tremble for the ark! His
+official seat had been placed somewhere on the wayside, where he would
+be near to get tidings from the field of any one who might come with
+them, and quite probably a retinue of attendants was around him. At last
+a great shout of horror is heard, for a man of Benjamin has come in
+sight with his clothes rent and earth upon his head. It is but too
+certain a sign of calamity. But who could have thought of the extent of
+the calamity which with such awful precision he crowded into his answer?
+Israel is fled before the Philistines--calamity the first; there hath
+been a great slaughter among the people--calamity the second; thy two
+sons, Hophni and Phinehas, are slain--calamity the third; and last, and
+most terrible of all, the ark of God is taken! The ark of God is taken!
+The Divine symbol, with its overshadowing cherubim and its sacred light,
+into which year by year Eli had gone alone to sprinkle the blood of
+atonement on the mercy-seat, and where he had solemnly transacted with
+God on behalf of the people, was in an enemy's hands! The ark, that no
+Canaanite or Amalekite had ever touched, on which no Midianite or
+Ammonite had ever laid his polluted finger, which had remained safe and
+sure in Israel's custody through all the perils of their journeys and
+all the storms of battle, was now torn from their grasp! And there
+perishes with it all the hope of Israel, and all the sacred service
+which was associated with it; and Israel is a widowed, desolate, godless
+people, without hope and without God in the world; and all this has come
+because they dragged it away from its place, and these two sons of mine,
+now gone to their account, encouraged the profanation!
+
+"And it came to pass, when he made mention of the ark of God, that he
+fell from off the seat backward by the side of the gate, and his neck
+brake, and he died; for he was an old man and heavy. And he had judged
+Israel forty years."
+
+This was calamity the fifth; but even yet the list was not exhausted.
+"His daughter-in-law, Phinehas' wife, was with child, near to be
+delivered; and when she heard the tidings that the ark of God was taken,
+and that her father-in-law and her husband were dead, she bowed herself
+and travailed, for her pains came upon her. And about the time of her
+death the women that stood by her said unto her, Fear not, for thou hast
+born a son. But she answered not, neither did she regard it. And she
+named the child Ichabod, saying, The glory is departed from Israel;
+because the ark of God was taken, and because of her father-in-law and
+her husband. And she said, The glory is departed from Israel; for the
+ark of God is taken."
+
+Poor, good woman! with such a husband she had no doubt had a troubled
+life. The spring of her spirit had probably been broken long ago; and
+what little of elasticity yet remained was all too little to bear up
+under such an overwhelming load. But it may have been her comfort to
+live so near to the house of God as she did, and to be thus reminded of
+Him who had commanded the sons of Aaron to bless the people saying, "The
+Lord bless thee and keep thee; the Lord make His face shine upon thee
+and be gracious to thee; the Lord lift up His countenance upon thee and
+give thee peace." But now the ark of God is taken, its services are at
+an end, and the blessing is gone. The tribes may come up to the feasts
+as before, but not with the bright eye or the merry shouts of former
+days; the bullock may smoke on the altar, but where is the sanctuary in
+which Jehovah dwelt, and where the mercy-seat for the priest to sprinkle
+the blood, and where the door by which he can come out to bless the
+people? Oh, my hapless child, what shall I call thee, who hast been
+ushered on this day of midnight gloom into a God-forsaken and
+dishonoured place? I will call thee Ichabod, for the glory is departed.
+The glory is departed from Israel, for the ark of God is taken.
+
+What an awful impression these scenes convey to us of the overpowering
+desolation that comes to believing souls with the feeling that God has
+taken His departure. Tell us that the sun is no longer to shine; tell us
+that neither dew nor rain shall ever fall again to refresh the earth;
+tell us that a cruel and savage nation is to reign unchecked and
+unchallenged over all the families of a people once free and happy; you
+convey no such image of desolation as when you tell to pious hearts that
+God has departed from their community. Let us learn the obvious lesson,
+to do nothing to provoke such a calamity. It is only when resisted and
+dishonoured that the Spirit of God departs--only when He is driven away.
+Oh, beware of everything that grieves Him--everything that interferes
+with His gracious action on your souls. Beware of all that would lead
+God to say, "I will go and return to My place, till they acknowledge
+their offence and seek My face." Let our prayer be the cry of
+David:--"Cast me not away from Thy presence, and take not Thy Holy
+Spirit from me. Restore unto me the joy of Thy salvation, and uphold me
+with Thy free Spirit."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+_THE ARK AMONG THE PHILISTINES._
+
+1 SAMUEL v., vi.
+
+
+Although the history in Samuel is silent as to the doings of the
+Philistines immediately after their great victory over Israel, yet we
+learn from other parts of the Bible (Psalm lxxviii. 60-64; Jeremiah vii.
+12, xxvi. 9) that they proceeded to Shiloh, massacred the priests,
+wrecked the city, and left it a monument of desolation, as it continued
+to be ever after. Probably this was considered an appropriate sequel to
+the capture of the ark--a fitting mode of completing and commemorating
+their victory over the national God of the Hebrews. For we may well
+believe that it was this unprecedented feature of their success that was
+uppermost in the Philistines' mind. The prevalent idea among the
+surrounding nations regarding the God of the Hebrews was that He was a
+God of exceeding power. The wonders done by Him in Egypt still filled
+the popular imagination (ch. vi. 6); the strong hand and the
+outstretched arm with which He had driven out the seven nations of
+Canaan and prepared the way for His people were not forgotten. Neither
+in more recent conflicts had any of the surrounding nations obtained the
+slightest advantage over Him. It was in His name that Barak and Deborah
+had defeated the Canaanites; it was the sword of the Lord and of Gideon
+that had thrown such consternation into the hearts of the Midianites.
+But now the tide was completely turned; not only had the Hebrew God
+failed to protect His people, but ruin had come on both Him and them,
+and His very sanctuary was in Philistine hands. No wonder the
+Philistines were marvellously elated. Let us sweep from the face of the
+earth every trace and memorial of His worship, was their cry. Let us
+inflict such humiliation on the spot sacred to His name that never again
+shall His worshippers be able to regain their courage and lift up their
+heads, and neither we nor our children shall tremble any more at the
+mention of His terrible deeds.
+
+We have not one word about Samuel in connection with all this. The news
+from the battlefield, followed by the death of Eli and of the wife of
+Phinehas, must have been a terrible blow to him. But besides being calm
+of nature (as his bearing showed after he got the message about Eli's
+house), he was habitually in fellowship with God, and in this habit
+enjoyed a great help towards self-possession and promptitude of action
+in sudden emergencies and perplexities. That the ill-advised scheme for
+carrying the ark into battle implied any real humiliation of the God of
+Israel, or would have any evil effect on the covenant sworn to Abraham,
+Isaac, and Jacob, he could not for a moment suppose. But the confusion
+and trouble that would arise, especially if the Philistines advanced
+upon Shiloh, was a very serious consideration. There was much left at
+Shiloh which needed to be cared for. There were sacred vessels, and
+possibly national records, which must not be allowed to fall into the
+hands of the enemy. By what means Samuel was able to secure the safety
+of these; by what means he secured his own personal safety when "the
+priests fell by the sword" (Psalm lxxviii. 64), we cannot say. But the
+Lord was with Samuel, and even in this hour of national horror He
+directed his proceedings, and established upon him the work of his
+hands.
+
+The fact to which we have drawn attention, that it was over the God of
+Israel that the Philistines had triumphed, is the key to the
+transactions recorded so minutely in the fifth and sixth chapters. The
+great object of these chapters is to show how God undeceived the
+Philistines on this all-important point. He undeceived them in a very
+quiet, undemonstrative manner. On certain occasions God impresses men by
+His great agencies,--by fire and earthquake and tempest, by "stormy wind
+fulfilling His word." But these are not needed on this occasion.
+Agencies much less striking will do the work. God will recover His name
+and fame among the nations by much humbler forces. By the most trifling
+exertion of His power, these Philistines will be brought to their wit's
+end, and all the wisdom of their wisest men and all the craft of their
+most cunning priests will be needed to devise some propitiation for One
+who is infinitely too strong for them, and to prevent their country from
+being brought to ruin by the silent working of His resistless power.
+
+1. First of all, the ark is carried to Ashdod, where stood the great
+temple of their God, Dagon. It is placed within the precincts of the
+temple, in some place of subordination, doubtless, to the place of the
+idol. Perhaps the expectation of the Philistines was that in the
+exercise of his supernatural might their god would bring about the
+mutilation or destruction of the Hebrew symbol. The morning showed
+another sight. It was Dagon that was humiliated before the ark--fallen
+to the ground upon his face. Next day a worse humiliation had befallen
+him. Besides having fallen, his head and hands were severed from the
+image, and only the stump remained. And besides this, the people were
+suffering extensively from a painful disease, emerods or hemorrhoids,
+and this too was ascribed to the influence of the God of the Hebrews.
+The people of Ashdod had no desire to prolong the contest. They gathered
+the lords of the Philistines and asked what was to be done. The lords
+probably concluded that it was a case of mere local ill-luck. But what
+had happened at Ashdod would not happen elsewhere. Let the ark be
+carried to Gath.
+
+2. To Gath, accordingly, the ark is brought. But no sooner is it there
+than the disease that had broken out at Ashdod falls upon the Gittites,
+and the mortality is terrible. The people of Gath are in too great haste
+to call again on the lords of the Philistines to say what is to be done.
+They simply carry the ark to Ekron.
+
+3. And little welcome it gets from the Ekronites. It is now recognised
+as the symbol of an angry God, whose power to punish and to destroy is
+unlimited. The Ekronites are indignant at the people of Gath. "They have
+brought about the ark of the God of Israel to us, to slay us and our
+people." The destruction at Ekron seems to have been more awful than at
+the other places--"The cry of the city went up to heaven." The lords of
+the Philistines are again convened, to deliberate over the failure of
+their last advice. There is no use trying any other place in the
+country. The idea of local ill-luck is preposterous. Let it go again to
+its own place! is the cry. Alas that we have destroyed Shiloh, for where
+can we send it now? We can risk no further mistakes. Let us convene the
+priests and the diviners to determine how it is to be got quit of, and
+with what gifts or offerings it is to be accompanied. Would only we had
+never touched it!
+
+The priests and the diviners give a full answer on all the points
+submitted to them. First, the ark when sent away must contain an
+offering, in order to propitiate the Hebrew God for the insults heaped
+on Him. The offering was to be in the form of golden emerods and golden
+mice. It would appear that in addition to the disease that had broken
+out on the bodies of the people they had had in their fields the plague
+of mice. These field-mice bred with amazing rapidity, and sometimes
+consumed the whole produce of the field. There is a slight difficulty
+about numbers here. There are to be five golden emerods and five golden
+mice, according to the number of the lords of the Philistines (vi. 3);
+but it is said after (ver. 18) that the number of the golden mice was
+according to the number of all the cities of the Philistines belonging
+to the five lords, both of fenced cities and country villages. It is
+surmised, however, that (as in the Septuagint) the number _five_ should
+not be repeated in the middle of the first passage (vi. 4, 5), but that
+it should run, "five golden emerods, according to the number of the
+lords of the Philistines, and golden mice, images of the mice that
+destroy the land." The idea of presenting offerings to the gods
+corresponding with the object in connection with which they were
+presented was often given effect to by heathen nations. "Those saved
+from shipwreck offered pictures of the shipwreck, or of the clothes
+which they had on at the time, in the Temple of Isis; slaves and
+captives, in gratitude for the recovery of their liberty, offered chains
+to the Lares; retired gladiators, their arms to Hercules; and in the
+fifth century a custom prevailed among Christians of offering in their
+churches gold or silver hands, feet, eyes, etc., in return for cures
+effected in those members respectively in answer to prayer. This was
+probably a heathen custom transferred into the Christian Church; for a
+similar usage is still found among the heathen in India" (_Speaker's
+Commentary_).
+
+4. Next, as to the manner in which the ark was to be sent away. A new
+cart was to be made, and two milch cows which had never been in harness
+before were to be fastened to the cart. This was to be out of respect to
+the God of Israel; new things were counted more honourable, as our Lord
+rode on a colt "whereon never man had yet sat," and His body was laid in
+a new sepulchre. The cows were to be left without guidance to determine
+their path; if they took the road to Judea, the road up the valley to
+Bethshemesh, that would be a token that all their trouble had come from
+the God of the Hebrews; but if they took any other road, the road to any
+place in the Philistine country, that would prove that there had only
+been a coincidence, and no relation of cause and effect between the
+capture of the ark and the evils that had befallen them. It was the
+principle of the lot applied to determine a grave moral question. It was
+a method which, in the absence of better light, men were ready enough to
+resort to in those times, and which on one memorable occasion was
+resorted to in the early Christian Church (Acts i.). The much fuller
+light which God has given men on moral and religious questions greatly
+restricts, if it does not indeed abolish, the lawful occasions of
+resorting to such a method. If it be ever lawful, it can only be so in
+the exercise of a devout and solemn spirit, for the apostles did not
+make use of it by itself, but only after earnest prayer that God would
+make the lot the instrument of making known His will.
+
+At last the ark leaves the land of the Philistines. For seven terrible
+months it had spread among them anxiety, terror, and death. Nothing but
+utter ruin seemed likely to spring from a longer residence of the ark in
+their territories. Glad were they to get rid of it, golden emerods,
+golden mice, new cart, milch kine, and all. We are reminded of a scene
+in Gospel history, that took place at Gadara after the devils drove the
+herd of swine over the cliff into the lake. The people of the place
+besought Jesus to depart out of their coasts. It is a solemn truth that
+there are aspects of God's character, aspects of the Saviour's
+character, in which He is only a terror and a trouble. These are the
+aspects in which God is seen opposed to what men love and prize, tearing
+their treasures away from them, or tearing them away from their
+treasures. It is an awful thing to know God in these aspects alone. Yet
+it is the aspect in which God usually appears to the sinner. It is the
+aspect in which our consciences present Him when we are conscious of
+having incurred His displeasure. And while man remains a sinner and in
+love with his sin, he may try to disguise the solemn fact to his own
+mind, but it is nevertheless true that his secret desire is to get rid
+of God. As the apostle puts it, he does not like to retain God in his
+knowledge (Rom. i. 28). He says to God, "Depart from us, for we desire
+not the knowledge of Thy ways" (Job xxi. 14). Nay, he goes a step
+further--"The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God" (Ps. xiv.
+1). Where he still makes some acknowledgment of Him, he may try to
+propitiate Him by offerings, and to make up for the transgressions he
+commits in some things by acts of will-worship, or voluntary humiliation
+in other things. But alas! of how large a portion even of men in
+Christian lands is it true that they do not love God. Their hearts have
+no yearning for Him. The thought of Him is a disturbing, uncomfortable
+element. Heart communion with Him is a difficulty not to be overcome.
+Forms of worship that leave the heart unexercised are a great relief.
+Worship _performed_ by choirs and instruments and aesthetic rules comes
+welcome as a substitute for the intercourse and homage of the soul.
+Could anything demonstrate more clearly the need of a great spiritual
+change? What but the vision of God in Christ reconciling the world to
+Himself can effect it? And even the glorious truths of redemption are
+not in themselves efficacious. The seed needs to fall on good soil. He
+that commanded the light to shine out of darkness must shine in our
+minds to give the light of the glory of God in the face of His Anointed.
+But surely it is a great step towards this change to feel the need of
+it. The heart that is honest with God, and that says, "O God Almighty, I
+do not love Thee, I am not happy in Thy presence, I like life better
+without Thee; but I am convinced that this is a most wretched condition,
+and most sinful. Wilt Thou, in infinite mercy, have compassion on me?
+Wilt Thou so change me that I may come to love Thee, to love Thy
+company, to welcome the thought of Thee, and to worship Thee in spirit
+and in truth?"--such a heart, expressing itself thus, will surely not be
+forsaken. How long it may be ere its quest is granted we cannot tell;
+but surely the day wall come when the new song shall be put in its
+mouth--"Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits. Who
+forgiveth all thine iniquities, who healeth all thy diseases; who
+redeemeth thy life from destruction, who crowneth thee with
+loving-kindness and tender mercies; who satisfieth thy mouth with good
+things, so that thy youth is renewed like the eagle's."
+
+5. And now the ark has reached Bethshemesh, in the tribe of Judah. The
+lords of the Philistines have followed it, watching it, as Miriam
+watched her infant brother on the Nile, to see what would become of it.
+Nor do they turn back till they have seen the men of Bethshemesh welcome
+it, till they have seen the Levites take it down from the cart, till
+they have seen the cart cleft, and the cows offered as a trespass
+offering, and till they have seen their own golden jewels, along with
+the burnt-offerings and sacrifices of the people of Bethshemesh,
+presented in due form to the Lord.
+
+Thus far all goes well at Bethshemesh. The ark is on Hebrew soil. The
+people there have no fear either of the emerods or of the mice that so
+terribly distressed their Philistine neighbours. After a time of great
+depression the sun is beginning to smile on Israel again. The men of
+Bethshemesh are reaping their barley-harvest--that is one mercy from
+God. And here most unexpectedly appears the sight that of all possible
+sights was the most welcome to their eyes; here, unhurt and unrifled, is
+the ark of the covenant that had been given up for lost, despaired of
+probably, even by its most ardent friends. How could Israel hope to gain
+possession of that apparently insignificant box except by an invasion of
+the Philistines in overwhelming force--in such force as a nation that
+had but lately lost thirty thousand men was not able to command? And
+even if such an overwhelming expedition were to be arranged, how easy
+would it not be for the Philistines to burn the ark, and thus annihilate
+the very thing to recover which the war was undertaken? Yet here is the
+ark back without the intervention of a single soldier. No ransom has
+been given for it, no blow struck, nothing promised, nothing threatened.
+Here it comes, as if unseen angels had fetched it, with its precious
+treasures and still more precious memories just as before! It was like a
+foreshadow of the return from the captivity--an experience that might
+have found expression in the words, "When the Lord turned again the
+captivity of Zion, we were like them that dream."
+
+Happy men of Bethshemesh, for whom God prepared so delightful a
+surprise. Truly He is able to do in us exceeding abundantly above all
+that we ask or think. How unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways
+past finding out! Never let us despair of God, or of any cause with
+which He is identified. "Rest in the Lord and wait patiently for Him;"
+"The Lord bringeth the counsel of the heathen to nought; He maketh the
+devices of the people of none effect. The counsel of the Lord standeth
+for ever, and the thoughts of His heart to all generations."
+
+But alas! the men of Bethshemesh did not act according to the benefit
+received. Their curiosity prevailed above their reverence: they looked
+into the ark of the Lord. As if the sacred vessel had not had enough of
+indignity in the din of battle, in the temples of the uncircumcised
+Philistines, and in the cart drawn by the kine, they must expose it to a
+yet further profanation! Alas for them! their curiosity prevailed over
+their reverence. And for this they had to pay a terrible penalty. "The
+Lord smote of the men of Bethshemesh fifty thousand and three score and
+ten men." It is the general opinion, however, that an error has slipped
+into the text that makes the deaths amount to fifty thousand threescore
+and ten. Bethshemesh was never more than a village or little town, and
+could not have had anything like so great a population. Probably the
+threescore and ten, without the fifty thousand, is all that was
+originally in the text. Even that would be "a great slaughter" in the
+population of a little town. It was a very sad thing that an event so
+joyous should be clouded by such a judgment. But how often are times and
+scenes which God has made very bright marred by the folly and
+recklessness of men!
+
+The prying men of Bethshemesh have had their counterparts many a time in
+more recent days. Many men, with strong theological proclivities, have
+evinced a strong desire to pry into the "secret things which belong to
+the Lord our God." Foreknowledge, election, free will, sin's
+punishment--men have often forgot that there is much in such subjects
+that exceeds the capacity of the human mind, and that as God has shown
+reserve in what He has revealed about them, so men ought to show a holy
+modesty in their manner of treating them. And even in the handling of
+sacred things generally, in the way of theological discussion, a want of
+reverence has very often been shown. It becomes us all most carefully to
+beware of abusing the gracious condescension which God has shown in His
+revelation, and in the use which He designs us to make of it. It was an
+excellent rule a foreign theologian laid down for himself, to keep up
+the spirit of reverence--never to speak of God without speaking to God.
+
+God has drawn very near to us in Christ, and given to all that accept of
+Him the place and privileges of children. He allows us to come very
+near to Him in prayer. "In everything," He says, "by prayer and
+supplication with thanksgiving make your requests known unto God." But
+while we gratefully accept these privileges, and while in the enjoyment
+of them we become very intimate with God, never let us forget the
+infinite distance between us, and the infinite condescension manifested
+in His allowing us to enter into the holiest of all. Never let us forget
+that in His sight we are "as dust and ashes," unworthy to lift up our
+eyes to the place where His honour dwelleth. To combine reverence and
+intimacy in our dealings with God,--the profoundest reverence with the
+closest intimacy, is to realise the highest ideal of worship. God
+Himself would have us remember, in our approaches to Him, that He is in
+heaven and we on the earth. "Thus saith the High and Lofty One that
+inhabiteth Eternity and whose name is holy, I dwell in the high and holy
+place, but with him also who is of a contrite and humble spirit, to
+revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the hearts of the
+contrite ones."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+_REPENTANCE AND REVIVAL._
+
+1 SAMUEL vii. 1-9.
+
+
+With the men of Bethshemesh the presence of the ark had become the same
+terror as it had been successively at Ashdod, Gath, and Ekron. Instead
+of the savour of life to life, it had proved a savour of death to death.
+Instead of a chief cornerstone, elect, precious, it had become a stone
+of stumbling and a rock of offence. They sent therefore to their
+neighbours at Kirjath-jearim, and begged them to come down and remove
+the ark. This they readily did. More timid men might have said, The ark
+has brought nothing but disaster in its train; we will have nothing to
+do with it. There was faith and loyalty to God shown in their readiness
+to give accommodation to it within their bounds. Deeming a high place to
+be the kind of situation where it should rest, they selected the house
+of Abinadab in the hill, he being probably a Levite. To keep the ark
+they set apart his son Eleazar, whose name seems to indicate that he was
+of the house of Aaron. They seem to have done all they could, and with
+due regard to the requirements of the law, for the custody of the sacred
+symbol. But Kirjath-jearim was not turned into the seat of the national
+worship. There is no word of sacrificial or other services being
+performed there. There is nothing to indicate that the annual feasts
+were held at this place. The ark had a resting-place there--nothing
+more.
+
+And this lasted for twenty years. It was a long and dreary time. A rude
+shock had been given to the sacred customs of the people, and the comely
+order of the Divine service among them. The ark and the other sacred
+vessels were separated from each other. If, as seems likely (1 Sam.
+xxi.), the daily offerings and other sacred services ordained by Moses
+were offered at this time at Nob, a sense of imperfection could not but
+belong to them, for the ark of the covenant was not there.
+Incompleteness would attach to any public rites that might now be
+celebrated. The service of Baal and Ashtaroth would have a less powerful
+rival than when the service of Jehovah was conducted in all due form and
+regularity at Shiloh. During these years the nation seems to have been
+somewhat listless on the subject, and to have made no effort to remove
+the ark to a more suitable place. Kirjath-jearim was not in the centre,
+but on the very edge of the country, looking down into the territory of
+the Philistines, not far from the very cities where the ark had been in
+captivity, a constant reminder to the Israelites of its degradation.
+That Samuel was profoundly concerned about all this we cannot doubt. But
+he seems to have made no effort to remedy it, most probably because he
+knew it to be God's order first to make the people sensible of their
+wickedness, and only thereafter to restore to them free access to
+Himself.
+
+What then was Samuel doing during the twenty years that the ark was at
+Kirjath-jearim? We can answer that question only conjecturally, only
+from what we know of his general character. It cannot be doubted that
+in some way or other he was trying to make the nation sensible of their
+sins against God; to show them that it was to these sins that their
+subjection to the Philistines was due; and to urge them to abandon their
+idolatrous practices if they desired a return to independence and peace.
+Perhaps he began at this period to move about from place to place,
+urging those views, as he moved about afterwards when he held the office
+of Judge (vii. 16). And perhaps he was laying the foundations of those
+schools of the prophets that afterwards were associated with his name.
+Whenever he found young men disposed to his views he would doubtless
+cultivate their acquaintance, and urge them to steadfastness and
+progress in the way of the Lord. There is nothing said to indicate that
+Samuel was connected with the priestly establishment at Nob.
+
+There are two great services for God and for Israel in which we find
+Samuel engaged in the first nine verses of this chapter: 1. In exhorting
+and directing them with a view to bring them into a right state before
+God. 2. This being accomplished, in praying for them in their time of
+trouble, and obtaining Divine help when the Philistines drew near in
+battle.
+
+1. In the course of time the people appear to have come to feel how sad
+and desolate their national life was without any tokens of God's
+presence and grace. "All the house of Israel lamented after the Lord."
+The expression is a peculiar one, and some critics, not understanding
+its spiritual import, have proposed to give it a different meaning. But
+for this there is no cause. It seems to denote that the people, missing
+God, under the severe oppression of the Philistines, had begun to grieve
+over the sins that had driven Him away, and to long after Him, to long
+for His return. These symptoms of repentance, however, had not shown
+themselves in a very definite or practical form. Samuel was not
+satisfied with the amount of earnestness evinced as yet. He must have
+more decided evidence of sincerity and repentance. He insisted on it
+that they must "put away the strange gods and Ashtaroth from among them,
+and prepare their hearts unto the Lord and serve Him only."
+
+Now the putting away of the strange gods and Ashtaroth was a harder
+condition than we at first should suppose. Some are inclined to fancy
+that it was a mere senseless and ridiculous obstinacy that drew the
+Israelites so much to the worship of the idolatrous gods of their
+neighbours. In reality the temptation was of a much more subtle kind.
+Their religious worship as prescribed by Moses had little to attract the
+natural feelings of the human heart. It was simple, it was severe, it
+was self-denying. The worship of the pagan nations was more lively and
+attractive. Fashionable entertainments and free-and-easy revelries were
+superadded to please the carnal mind. Between Hebrew and heathen
+worship, there was something of the contrast that you find between the
+severe simplicity of a Puritan meeting and the gorgeous and fashionable
+splendour of a great Romish ceremonial. To put away Baalim and Ashtaroth
+was to abjure what was fashionable and agreeable, and fall back on what
+was unattractive and sombre. Was it not, too, an illiberal demand? Was
+it not a sign of narrowness to be so exclusively devoted to their own
+religion that they could view that of their neighbours with no sort of
+pleasure? Why not acknowledge that in other religions there was an
+element of good, that the services in them were the expression of a
+profound religious sentiment, and were therefore entitled to a measure
+of praise and approval? It is very certain that with this favourite view
+of modern liberalism neither Samuel nor any of the prophets had the
+slightest sympathy. No. If the people were in earnest now, they must
+show it by putting away every image and every object and ornament that
+was connected with the worship of other gods. Jehovah would have their
+homage on no other terms. If they chose to divide it between Him and
+other gods, they might call on them for help and blessing; for it was
+most certain that the God of Israel would receive no worship that was
+not rendered to Him alone.
+
+But the people were in earnest; and this first demand of Samuel was
+complied with. We are to remember that the people of Israel, in their
+typical significance, stand for those who are by grace in covenant with
+God, and that their times of degeneracy represent, in the case of
+Christians, seasons of spiritual backsliding, when the things of this
+world are too keenly sought, when the fellowship of the world is
+habitually resorted to, when the soul loses its spiritual appetite, and
+religious services become formal and cold. Does there begin to dawn on
+such a soul a sense of spiritual poverty and loneliness? Does the spirit
+of the hymn begin to breathe from it--
+
+ "Return, O holy Dove, return,
+ Sweet Messenger of rest!
+ I hate the sins that made Thee mourn
+ And drove Thee from my breast."
+
+Then the first steps towards revival and communion must be the forsaking
+of these sins, and of ways of life that prepare the way for them. The
+sorrow for sin that is working in the conscience is the work of the Holy
+Ghost; and if the Holy Ghost be resisted in this His first operation--if
+the sins, or ways toward sin, against which He has given His warning be
+persisted in, the Spirit is grieved and His work is stopped. The Spirit
+calls us to set our hearts against these sins, and "prepare them unto
+the Lord."
+
+Let us mark carefully this last expression. It is not enough that in
+church, or at some meeting, or in our closet, we experience a painful
+conviction how much we have offended God, and a desire not to offend Him
+in like manner any more. We must "prepare our hearts" for this end. We
+must remember that in the world with which we mingle we are exposed to
+many influences that remove God from our thoughts, that stimulate our
+infirmities, that give force to temptation, that lessen our power of
+resistance, that tend to draw us back into our old sins. One who has a
+tendency to intemperance may have a sincere conviction that his acts of
+drunkenness have displeased God, and a sincere wish never to be drunk
+again. But besides this he must "prepare his heart" against his sin. He
+must resolve to turn away from everything that leads to drinking, that
+gives strength to the temptation, that weakens his power of resistance,
+that draws him, as it were, within the vortex. He must fortify himself,
+by joining a society or otherwise, against the insidious approaches of
+the vice. And in regard to all that displeases God he must order his
+life so that it shall be abandoned, it shall be parted with for ever.
+You may say this is asking him to do more than he can do. No doubt it
+is. But is not the Holy Spirit working in him? Is it not the Holy Spirit
+that is urging him to do these things? Whoever is urged by the Holy
+Spirit may surely rely on the power of the Spirit when he endeavours to
+comply with His suggestions. When God works in us to will and to do of
+His good pleasure, we may surely work out our own salvation with fear
+and trembling.
+
+Having found the people so far obedient to his requirements, Samuel's
+next step was to call an assembly of all Israel to Mizpeh. He desired to
+unite all who were like-minded in a purpose of repentance and
+reformation, and to rouse them to a higher pitch of intensity by contact
+with a great multitude animated by the same spirit. When the assembly
+met, it was in a most proper spirit. They began the proceedings by
+drawing water and pouring it out before the Lord, and by fasting. These
+two acts being joined in the narrative, it is probable they were acts of
+the same character. Now as fasting was evidently an expression of
+contrition, so the pouring out of the water must have been so too. It is
+necessary to remark this, because an expression not unlike to our text,
+in Isa. xii., denotes an act of a joyful character, "With joy shall ye
+draw water out of the wells of salvation." But what was done on this
+occasion was to draw water and _pour it out before the Lord_. And this
+seems to have been done as a symbol of pouring out before God
+confessions of sin drawn from the depths of the heart. What they said in
+connection with these acts was, "We have sinned against the Lord." They
+were no longer in the mood in which the Psalmist was when he kept
+silence, and his bones waxed old through his roaring all the day. They
+were in the mood into which he came when he said, "I will confess my
+transgressions to the Lord." They humbled themselves before God in deep
+convictions of their unworthiness, and being thus emptied of self they
+were in a better state to receive the gracious visitation of love and
+mercy.
+
+It is important to mark the stress which is laid here on the _public
+assembly_ of the people. Some might say would it not have answered the
+same end if the people had humbled themselves apart--the family of the
+house of Levi apart, and their wives apart, every family apart, and
+their wives apart, as in the great mourning of Zechariah (Zech. xii.
+12-14)? We answer, the one way did not exclude the other; we do not need
+to ask which is best, for both are best. But when Samuel convened the
+people to a public assembly, he evidently did it on the principle on
+which in the New Testament we are required not to forsake the assembling
+of ourselves together. It is in order that the presence of people
+like-minded, and with the same earnest feelings and purposes, may have a
+rousing and warming influence upon us. No doubt there are other purposes
+connected with public worship. We need constant instruction and constant
+reminding of the will of God. But the public assembly and the social
+prayer-meeting are intended to have another effect. They are intended to
+increase our spiritual earnestness by the sight and presence of so many
+persons in earnest. Alas! what a difference there often is between the
+ideal and the real. Those cold and passionless meetings that our
+churches and halls often present--how little are they fitted, by the
+earnestness and warmth of their tone, to give those who attend them a
+great impulse heavenward! Never let us be satisfied with our public
+religious services until they are manifestly adapted to this great end.
+
+Thus did Samuel seek to promote repentance and revival among his people,
+and to prepare the way for a return of God's favour. And it is in this
+very way that if we would have a revival of earnest religion, we must
+set about obtaining it.
+
+2. The next scene in the panorama of the text is--the Philistines
+invading Israel. Here Samuel's service is that of an intercessor,
+praying for his people, and obtaining God's blessing. It is to be
+observed that the alleged occasion for this event is said to have been
+the meeting held at Mizpeh. "When the Philistines heard that the
+children of Israel were gathered together to Mizpeh, the lords of the
+Philistines went up against Israel." Was not this most strange and
+distressing? The blessed assembly which Samuel had convened only gives
+occasion for a new Philistine invasion! Trying to do his people good,
+Samuel would appear only to have done them harm. With the assembly at
+Mizpeh, called as it was for spiritual ends, the Philistines could have
+no real cause for complaint. Either they mistook its purpose and thought
+it a meeting to devise measures to throw off their yoke, or they had an
+instinctive apprehension that the spirit which the people of Israel were
+now showing would be accompanied by some remarkable interposition on
+their behalf. It is not rare for steps taken with the best of intentions
+to become for a time the occasion of a great increase of evil,--just as
+the remonstrances of Moses with Pharaoh led at first to the increase of
+the people's burdens; or just as the coming of Christ into the world
+caused the massacre of the babes of Bethlehem. So here, the first public
+step taken by Samuel for the people's welfare was the occasion of an
+alarming invasion by their cruel enemies. But God's word on such
+occasions is, "Be still and know that I am God." Such events are
+suffered only to stimulate faith and patience. They are not so very
+overwhelming events to those who know that God is with them, and that
+"none of them that trust in Him shall be desolate." Though the
+Israelites at this time were not far advanced in spiritual life, they
+betrayed no consternation when they heard of the invasion of the
+Philistines. They knew where their help was to be found, and recognizing
+Samuel as their mediator, they said to him, "Cease not to cry unto the
+Lord our God for us, that He will save us out of the hand of the
+Philistines."
+
+With this request Samuel most readily complies. But first he offers a
+sucking lamb as a whole burnt-offering to the Lord, and only after this
+are we told that "Samuel cried unto the Lord, and the Lord heard him."
+
+The lesson is supremely important. When sinners approach God to entreat
+His favour, it must be by the new and living way, sprinkled with atoning
+blood. All other ways of access will fail. How often has this been
+exemplified in the history of the Church! How many anxious sinners have
+sought unto God by other ways, but have been driven back, sometimes
+farther from Him than before. Luther humbles himself in the dust and
+implores God's favour, and struggles with might and main to reform his
+heart; but Luther cannot find peace until he sees how it is in the
+righteousness of another he is to draw nigh and find the blessing,--in
+the righteousness of the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin of the
+world. Dr. Chalmers, profoundly impressed with the sinfulness of his
+past life, strives, with the energy of a giant, to attain conformity to
+the will of God; but he too is only tossed about in weary
+disappointment until he finds rest in the atoning mercy of God in
+Christ. We may be well assured that no sense of peace can come into the
+guilty soul till it accepts Jesus Christ as its Saviour in all the
+fulness of His saving power.
+
+Another lesson comes to us from Samuel's intercession. It is well to try
+to get God's servants to pray for us. But little real progress can be
+made till we can pray for ourselves. Whoever really desires to enjoy
+God's favour, be it for the first time after he has come to the sense of
+his sins; or be it at other times, after God's face has been hid from
+him for a time through his backsliding, can never come as he ought to
+come without earnest prayer. For prayer is the great medium that God has
+appointed to us for communion with Himself. "Ask and ye shall receive,
+seek and ye shall find, knock and it shall be opened to you." If there
+be any lesson written with a sunbeam alike in the Old Testament and in
+the New, it is that God is the Hearer of prayer. Only let us take heed
+to the quality and tone of our prayer. Before God can listen to it, it
+must be from the heart. To gabble over a form of prayer is not to pray.
+Saul of Tarsus had said many a prayer before his conversion; but after
+that for the first time it was said of him, "Behold, he prayeth." To
+pray is to ask an interview with God, and when we are alone with Him, to
+unburden our souls to Him. Those only who have learned to pray thus in
+secret can pray to any purpose in the public assembly. It is in this
+spirit, surely, that the highest gifts of Divine grace are to be sought.
+Emphatically it is in this way that we are to pray for our nation or for
+our Church. Let us come with large and glowing hearts when we come to
+pray for a whole community. Let us plead with God for Church and for
+nation in the very spirit of the prophet: "For Zion's sake I will not
+hold my peace, and for Jerusalem's sake I will not rest, until the
+righteousness thereof go forth as brightness, and the salvation thereof
+as a lamp that burneth."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+_NATIONAL DELIVERANCE--THE PHILISTINES SUBDUED._
+
+1 SAMUEL vii. 10-17.
+
+
+It must have been with feelings very different from those of their last
+encounter, when the ark of God was carried into the battle, that the
+host of Israel now faced the Philistine army near Mizpeh. Then they had
+only the symbol of God's gracious presence, now they had the reality.
+Then their spiritual guides were the wicked Hophni and Phinehas; now
+their guide was holy Samuel. Then they had rushed into the fight in
+thoughtless unconcern about their sins; now they had confessed them, and
+through the blood of sprinkling they had obtained a sense of
+forgiveness. Then they were puffed up by a vain presumption; now they
+were animated by a calm but confident hope. Then their advance was
+hallowed by no prayer; now the cry of needy children had gone up from
+God's faithful servant. In fact, the battle with the Philistines had
+already been fought by Samuel on his knees. There can be no more sure
+token of success than this. Are we engaged in conflict with our own
+besetting sins? Or are we contending against scandalous transgression in
+the world around us? Let us first fight the battle on our knees. If we
+are victorious there we need have little fear of victory in the other
+battle.
+
+It was as Samuel was offering up the burnt-offering that the Philistines
+drew near to battle against Israel. There was an unseen ladder that day
+between earth and heaven, on which the angels of God ascended and
+descended as in Jacob's vision at Bethel. The smoke of the
+burnt-offering carried up to God the confession and contrition of the
+people, their reliance on God's method of atonement, and their prayer
+for His pardon and His blessing. The great thunder with which God
+thundered on the Philistines carried down from God the answer and the
+needed help. There is no need for supposing that the thunder was
+supernatural. It was an instance of what is so common, a natural force
+adapted to the purpose of an answer to prayer. What seems to have
+occurred is this: a vehement thunderstorm had gathered a little to the
+east, and now broke, probably with violent wind, in the faces of the
+Philistines, who were advancing up the heights against Mizpeh. Unable to
+face such a terrific war of the elements, the Philistines would turn
+round, placing their backs to the storm. The men of Israel, but little
+embarrassed by it, since it came from behind them, and gave the greater
+momentum to their force, rushed on the embarrassed enemy, and drove them
+before them like smoke before the wind. It was just as in former
+days--God arose, and His enemies were scattered, and they also that
+hated Him fled before Him. The storm before which the Philistines
+cowered was like the pillar of fire which had guided Israel through the
+desert. Jehovah was still the God of Israel; the God of Jacob was once
+more his refuge.
+
+We have said that this thunderstorm may have been quite a natural
+phenomenon. Natural, but not casual. Though natural, it was God's answer
+to Samuel's prayer. But how could this have been? If it was a natural
+storm, if it was the result of natural law, of atmospheric conditions
+the operation of which was fixed and certain, it must have taken place
+whether Samuel prayed or not. Undoubtedly. But the very fact that the
+laws of nature are fixed and certain, that their operation is definite
+and regular, enables the great Lord of Providence to make use of them in
+the natural course of things, for the purpose of answering prayer. For
+this fact, the uniformity of natural law, enables the Almighty, who sees
+and plans the end from the beginning, to frame a comprehensive scheme of
+Providence, that shall not only work out the final result in His time
+and way, but that shall also work out every intermediate result
+precisely as He designs and desires. "Known unto God are all His works
+from the beginning of the world." Now if God has so adjusted the scheme
+of Providence that the final result of the whole shall wonderfully
+accomplish His grand design, may He not, must He not, have so adjusted
+it that every intermediate part shall work out some intermediate design?
+It is only those who have an unworthy conception of omniscience and
+omnipotence that can doubt this. Surely if there is a general
+Providence, there must be a special Providence. If God guides the whole,
+He must also guide the parts. Every part of the scheme must fall out
+according to His plan, and may thus be the means of fulfilling some of
+His promises.
+
+Let us apply this view to the matter of prayer. All true prayer is the
+fruit of the Holy Spirit working in the human soul. All the prayer that
+God answers is prayer that God has inspired. The prayer of Samuel was
+prayer which God had inspired. What more reasonable than that in the
+great plan of providence there should have been included a provision for
+the fulfilment of Samuel's prayer at the appropriate moment? The
+thunderstorm, we may be sure, was a natural phenomenon. But its
+occurrence at the time was part of that great scheme of Providence which
+God planned at the beginning, and it was planned to fall out then in
+order that it might serve as an answer to Samuel's prayer. It was thus
+an answer to prayer brought about by natural causes. The only thing
+miraculous about it was its forming a part of that most marvellous
+scheme--the scheme of Divine providence--a part of the scheme that was
+to be carried into effect after Samuel had prayed. If the term
+supernatural may be fitly applied to that scheme which is the sum and
+substance of all the laws of nature, of all the providence of God, and
+of all the works and thoughts of man, then it was a miracle; but if not,
+it was a natural effect.
+
+It is important to bear these truths in mind, because many have the
+impression that prayer for outward results cannot be answered without a
+miracle, and that it is unreasonable to suppose that such a multitude of
+miracles as prayer involves would be wrought every day. If a sick man
+prays for health, is the answer necessarily a miracle? No; for the
+answer may come about by purely natural causes. He has been directed to
+a skilful physician; he has used the right medicine; he has been treated
+in the way to give full scope to the recuperative power of nature. God,
+who led him to pray, foresaw the prayer, and in the original scheme of
+Providence planned that by natural causes the answer should come. We do
+not deny that prayer may be answered in a supernatural way. We would
+not affirm that such a thing as supernatural healing is unknown. But it
+is most useful that the idea should be entertained that such prayer is
+usually answered by natural means. By not attending to this men often
+fail to perceive that prayer has been answered. You pray, before you set
+out on a journey, for protection and safe arrival at the end. You get
+what you asked--you perform the journey in safety. But perhaps you say,
+"It would have been all the same whether I had prayed for it or not. I
+have gone on journeys that I forgot to pray about, and no evil befell
+me. Some of my fellow-passengers, I am sure, did not pray for safety,
+yet they were taken care of as much as I was." But these are sophistical
+arguments. You should feel that your safety in the journey about which
+you prayed was as much due to God, though only through the operation of
+natural causes, as if you had had a hairbreadth escape. You should be
+thankful that in cases where you did not pray for safety God had regard
+to the habitual set of your mind, your habitual trust in Him, though you
+did not specially exercise it at these times. Let the means be as
+natural as they may--to those who have eyes to see the finger of God is
+in them all the same.
+
+But to return to the Israelites and the Philistines. The defeat of the
+Philistines was a very thorough one. Not only did they make no attempt
+to rally after the storm had passed and Israel had fallen on them, but
+they came no more into the coast of Israel, and the hand of the Lord was
+against them all the days of Samuel. And besides this, all the cities
+and tracts of land belonging to Israel which the Philistines had taken
+were now restored. Another mercy that came to Israel was that "there was
+peace between Israel and the Amorites"--the Amorites being put here,
+most likely, for the remains of all the original inhabitants living
+among or around Israel. Those promises were now fulfilled in which God
+had said to Moses, "This day will I begin to put the dread of thee and
+the fear of thee upon the nations that are under the whole heaven, who
+shall hear report of thee, and shall tremble and be in anguish because
+of thee" (Deut. ii. 25). "There shall no man be able to stand before
+you; for the Lord your God shall lay the fear of you and the dread of
+you upon all the land ye shall tread upon, as He hath said to thee." It
+was so apparent that God was among them, and that the power of God was
+irresistible and overwhelming, that their enemies were frightened to
+assail them.
+
+The impression thus made on the enemies of Israel corresponds in some
+degree to the moral influence which God-fearing men sometimes have on an
+otherwise godless community. The picture in the Song of Solomon--"Who is
+she that looketh forth as the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the
+sun, and _terrible as an army with banners_?"--ascribes even to the fair
+young bride a terrifying power, a power not appropriate to such a
+picture in the literal sense, but quite suitable in the figurative.
+Wherever the life and character of a godly man is such as to recall God,
+wherever God's image is plainly visible, wherever the results of God's
+presence are plainly seen, there the idea of a supernatural Power is
+conveyed, and a certain overawing influence is felt. In the great
+awakening at Northampton in Jonathan Edwards' days, there was a complete
+arrest laid on open forms of vice. And whensoever in a community God's
+presence has been powerfully realized, the taverns have been emptied,
+the gambling-table deserted, under the sense of His august majesty.
+Would only that the character and life of all God's servants were so
+truly godlike that their very presence in a community would have a
+subduing and restraining influence on the wicked!
+
+Two points yet remain to be noticed: the step taken by Samuel to
+commemorate this wonderful Divine interposition; and the account given
+of the prophet and his occupations in his capacity of Judge of Israel.
+
+"Samuel took a stone, and set it between Mizpeh and Shen, and called the
+name of it Ebenezer, saying, Hitherto hath the Lord helped us."
+
+The position of Shen is not known. But it must have been very near the
+scene of the defeat of the Philistines--perhaps it was the very spot
+where that defeat occurred. In that case, Samuel's stone would stand
+midway between the two scenes of battle: the battle gained by him on his
+knees at Mizpeh, and the battle gained by the Israelites when they fell
+on the Philistines demoralised by the thunderstorm.
+
+"Hitherto hath the Lord helped us." The characteristic feature of the
+inscription lies in the word "hitherto." It was no doubt a testimony to
+special help obtained in that time of trouble; it was a grateful
+recognition of that help; and it was an enduring monument to perpetuate
+the memory of it. But it was more, much more. The word "hitherto"
+denotes a series, a chain of similar mercies, an unbroken succession of
+Divine interpositions and Divine deliverances. The special purpose of
+this inscription was to link on the present deliverance to all the past,
+and to form a testimony to the enduring faithfulness and mercy of a
+covenant-keeping God. But was there not something strange in this
+inscription, considering the circumstances? Could Samuel have forgot
+that tragic day at Shiloh--the bewildered, terrified look of the
+messenger that came from the army to bring the news, the consternation
+caused by his message, the ghastly horror of Eli and his tragic death,
+the touching death of the wife of Phinehas, and the sad name which she
+had with such seeming propriety given to her babe? Was _that_ like God
+remembering them? or had Samuel forgot how the victorious Philistines
+soon after dashed upon Shiloh like beasts of prey, plundering,
+destroying, massacreing, till nothing more remained to be done to
+justify the name of "Ichabod"? How can Samuel blot that chapter out of
+the history? or how can he say, with that chapter fresh in his
+recollection, "_Hitherto_ hath the Lord helped us"?
+
+All that Samuel has considered well. Even amid the desolations of Shiloh
+the Lord was helping them. He was helping them to know themselves,
+helping them to know their sins, and helping them to know the bitter
+fruit and woful punishment of sin. He was helping them to achieve the
+great end for which he had called them--to keep alive the knowledge of
+the true God and the practice of His worship, onward to the time when
+the great promise should be realised,--when HE should come in whom all
+the families of the earth were to be blessed. Samuel's idea of what
+constituted the nation's glory was large and spiritual. The true glory
+of the nation was to fulfil the function for which God had taken it into
+covenant with Himself. Whatever helped them to do this was a blessing,
+was a token of the Lord's remembrance of them. The links of the long
+chain denoted by Samuel's "hitherto" were not all of one kind. Some were
+in the form of mercies, many were in the form of chastenings. For the
+higher the function for which Israel was called, the more need was
+there of chastening. The higher the destination of a silver vessel, the
+greater is the need that the silver be pure, and therefore that it be
+frequently passed through the furnace. The destination of Israel was the
+highest that could have been. So Samuel does not merely give thanks for
+seasons of prosperity, but for checks and chastenings too.
+
+Happy they who, full of faith in the faithfulness and love of God, can
+take a similar view of His dealings! Happy they who, when special
+mercies come, deem the occasion worthy to be commemorated by some
+special memorial, but who can embrace their whole life in the grateful
+commemoration, and bracket joys and sorrows alike under their
+"hitherto"! It is not that sorrows are less sorrows to them than to
+others; it is not that losses of substance entail less inconvenience, or
+bereavements penetrate less deeply; but that all are seen to be embraced
+in that gracious plan of which the final consummation is, as the apostle
+puts it, "to present her to Himself a glorious Church, not having spot
+or wrinkle or any such thing." And well is it for us, both in individual
+life and in Church and national life, to think of that plan of God in
+which mercies and chastenings are united, but all with a gracious
+purpose! It is remarkable how often in Scripture tears are wiped away
+with this thought. Zion saying, "The Lord hath forsaken me, and my God
+hath forgotten me," is assured, "Behold, I have graven thee upon the
+palms of My hands, thy walls are continually before Me." Rachel weeping
+for her children, and refusing to be comforted, is thus addressed,
+"Refrain thy voice from weeping and thine eyes from tears; for thy work
+shall be rewarded, saith the Lord, and thy children shall come again
+from the land of the enemy." "Weep not," said our Lord to the woman of
+Nain; and His first words after His resurrection were, "Woman, why
+weepest thou?" Vale of tears though this world is, there comes from
+above a gracious influence to wipe them away; and the march Zionward has
+in it something of the tread and air of a triumphant procession, for
+"the ransomed of the Lord shall return and come to Zion with songs and
+everlasting joy on their heads; they shall obtain joy and gladness, and
+sorrow and sighing shall flee away."
+
+We have yet to notice the concluding verses of the chapter (15-17),
+which give a little picture of the public life of Samuel. He judged
+Israel all the days of his life. The office of judge had a twofold
+sphere, external and internal. Externally, it bore on the oppression of
+the people by foreign enemies, and the judge became the deliverer of the
+people. But in this sense there was now nothing for Samuel to do,
+especially after the accession of Saul to the kingdom. The judge seems
+to have likewise had to do with the administration of justice, and the
+preservation of the peace and general welfare of the nation. It is very
+natural to suppose that Samuel would be profoundly concerned to imbue
+the people with just views of the purpose for which God had called them,
+and of the law and covenant which He had given them. The three places
+among which he is said to have made his circuit, Bethel, Gilgal and
+Mizpeh, were not far from each other, all being situated in the tribes
+of Benjamin and Judah,--in that part of the land which afterwards
+constituted the kingdom of the two tribes. To these three places falls
+to be added Ramah, also in the same neighbourhood, where was his house.
+In this place he built an altar to the Lord. Whether this was in
+connection with the tabernacle or not, we cannot say. We know that in
+the time of David's wanderings "the house of God" was at Nob (Compare 1
+Sam. xxi. 1 and Matt. xii. 4), but we have nothing to show us when it
+was carried thither. All we can say is, that Samuel's altar must have
+been a visible memorial of the worship of God, and a solemn protest
+against any idolatrous rites to which any of the people might at any
+time be attracted.
+
+In this way Samuel spent his life like Him whose type he was, "always
+about his Father's business." An unselfish man, having no interests of
+his own, full of zeal for the service of God and the public welfare;
+possibly too little at home, taking too little charge of his children,
+and thus at last in the painful position of one, "whose sons walked not
+in his ways, but turned aside after lucre, and took bribes, and
+perverted judgment" (ch. viii. 1). That Samuel attained the highest
+reputation for sanctity, intercourse with God and holy influence, is
+plain from various passages of Scripture. In Psalm xcix. 6, he is
+coupled with Moses and Aaron, as having influence with God,--"they
+called upon the Lord and He answered them." In Jeremiah xv. 1, his name
+is coupled with that of Moses alone as a powerful intercessor, "Though
+Moses and Samuel stood before Me, yet My mind could not be toward this
+people." His mother's act of consecration was wonderfully fulfilled.
+Samuel stands out as one of the best and purest of the Hebrew worthies.
+His name became a perpetual symbol of all that was upright, pure and
+Godlike. The silent influence of his character was a great power in
+Israel, inspiring many a young heart with holy awe, and silencing the
+flippant arrogance of the scoffer. Mothers, did not Hannah do well, do
+nobly, in dedicating her son to the Lord? Sons and daughters, was it not
+a noble and honourable life? Then go ye and do likewise. And God be
+pleased to incline many a heart to the service; a service, which with
+all its drawbacks, is the highest and the noblest; and which bequeaths
+so blessed a welcome into the next stage of existence: "Well done, good
+and faithful servant; enter thou into the joy of thy Lord."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+_THE PEOPLE DEMAND A KING._
+
+1 SAMUEL viii.
+
+
+Whatever impression the "Ebenezer" of Samuel may have produced at the
+time, it passed away with the lapse of years. The feeling that, in
+sympathy with Samuel, had recognized so cordially at that time the
+unbroken help of Jehovah from the very beginning, waxed old and vanished
+away. The help of Jehovah was no longer regarded as the palladium of the
+nation. A new generation had risen up that had only heard from their
+fathers of the deliverance from the Philistines, and what men only hear
+from their fathers does not make the same impression as what they see
+with their own eyes. The privilege of having God for their king ceased
+to be felt, when the occasions passed away that made His interposition
+so pressing and so precious. Other things began to press upon them,
+other cravings began to be felt, that the theocracy did not meet. This
+double process went on--the evils from which God did deliver becoming
+more faint, and the benefits which God did not bestow becoming more
+conspicuous by their absence--till a climax was reached. Samuel was
+getting old, and his sons were not like himself; therefore they afforded
+no materials for continuing the system of judges. None of them could
+ever fill their father's place. The people forgot that God's policy had
+been to raise up judges from time to time as they were needed. But would
+it not be better to discontinue this hand-to-mouth system of government
+and have a regular succession of kings? Why should Israel contrast
+disadvantageously in this respect with the surrounding nations? This
+seems to have been the unanimous feeling of the nation. "All the elders
+of Israel gathered themselves together, and said to Samuel, Make us a
+king to judge us like all the nations."
+
+It seems to us very strange that they should have done such a thing. Why
+were they not satisfied with having God for their king? Was not the roll
+of past achievements under His guidance very glorious? What could have
+been more wonderful than the deliverance from Egypt, and the triumph
+over the greatest empire in the world? Had ever such victories been
+heard of as those over Sihon and Og? Was there ever a more triumphant
+campaign than that of Joshua, or a more comfortable settlement than that
+of the tribes? And if Canaanites, and Midianites, and Ammonites, and
+Philistines had vexed them, were not Barak and Deborah, Gideon and
+Jephthah, Samson and Samuel, more than a match for the strongest of them
+all? Then there was the moral glory of the theocracy. What nation had
+ever received direct from God, such ordinances, such a covenant, such
+promises? Where else were men to be found that had held such close
+fellowship with heaven as Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, Moses and Aaron, and
+Joshua? What other people had had such revelations of the fatherly
+character of God, so that it could be said of them, "As an eagle
+stirreth up her nest, fluttereth over her young, spreadeth abroad her
+wings, taketh them, beareth them on her wings: so the Lord did lead him,
+and there was no strange god with him." Instead of wishing to change the
+theocracy, we might have expected that every Israelite, capable of
+appreciating solid benefits, would have clung to it as his greatest
+privilege and his greatest honour.
+
+But it was otherwise. Comparatively blind to its glories, they wished to
+be like other nations. It is too much a characteristic of our human
+nature that it is indifferent to God, and to the advantages which are
+conferred by His approval and His blessing. How utterly do some leave
+God out of their calculations! How absolutely unconcerned they are as to
+whether they can reckon on His approval of their mode of life, how
+little it seems to count! You that by false pretences sell your wares
+and prey upon the simple and unwary; you that heed not what
+disappointment or what pain and misery you inflict on those who believe
+you, provided you get their money; you that grow rich on the toil of
+underpaid women and children, whose life is turned to slavery to fulfil
+your hard demands, do you never think of God? Do you never take into
+your reckoning that He is against you, and that He will one day come to
+reckon with you? You that frequent the haunts of secret wickedness, you
+that help to send others to the devil, you that say, "Am I my brother's
+keeper?" when you are doing your utmost to confirm others in debauchery
+and pollution, is it nothing to you that you have to reckon one day with
+an angry God? Be assured that God is not mocked, for whatsoever a man
+soweth, that shall he also reap; for he that soweth to the flesh shall
+of the flesh reap corruption, while he that soweth to the Spirit shall
+of the Spirit reap life everlasting.
+
+But the lesson of the text is rather for those who have the favour and
+blessing of God, but are not content, and still crave worldly things.
+You are in covenant with God. He has redeemed you, not with corruptible
+things such as silver and gold, but with the precious blood of Christ.
+You are now sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what you shall be.
+There is laid up for you an inheritance incorruptible, undefiled, and
+that fadeth not away. Yet your heart hankers after the things of the
+world. Your acquaintances and friends are better off. Your bare house,
+your homely furnishings, your poor dress, your simple fare distress you,
+and you would fain be in a higher worldly sphere, enjoying more
+consideration, and participating more freely in worldly enjoyments. Be
+assured, my friends, you are not in a wholesome frame of mind. To be
+depreciating the surpassing gifts which God has given you, and to be
+exaggerating those which He has withheld, is far from being a wholesome
+condition. You wish to be like the nations. You forget that your very
+glory is not to be like them. Your glory is that ye are a chosen
+generation, an holy nation, a royal priesthood, a peculiar people, your
+bodies temples of the Holy Ghost, your souls united to the Lord Jesus
+Christ.
+
+Yet again, there are congregations, which though in humble
+circumstances, have enjoyed much spiritual blessing. Their songs have
+gone up, bearing the incense of much love and gratitude; their prayers
+have been humble and hearty, most real and true; and the Gospel has come
+to them not in word only, but in power, and in the Holy Ghost, and in
+much assurance. Yet a generation has grown up that thinks little of
+these inestimable blessings, and misses fine architecture, and
+elaborate music, and highly cultured services. They want to have a king
+like the nations. However they may endanger the spiritual blessing, it
+is all-important to have these surroundings. It is a perilous position,
+all the more perhaps that many do not see the peril--that many have
+little or no regard for the high interests that are in such danger of
+being sacrificed.
+
+This then, was the request of all the elders of Israel to Samuel--"Give
+us a king to judge us like all the nations." We have next to consider
+how it was received by the prophet.
+
+"The thing displeased Samuel." On the very face of it, it was an affront
+to himself. It intimated dissatisfaction with the arrangement which had
+made him judge of the people under God. Evidently they were tired of
+him. He had given them the best energies of his youth and of his
+manhood. He had undoubtedly conferred on them many real benefits. For
+all this, his reward is to be turned off in his old age. They wish to
+get rid of him, and of his manner of instructing them in the ways of the
+Lord. And the kind of functionary they wish to get in his room is not of
+a very flattering order. The kings of the nations for the most part were
+a poor set of men. Despotic, cruel, vindictive, proud--they were not
+much to be admired. Yet Israel's eyes are turned enviously to them!
+Possibly Samuel was failing more than he was aware of, for old men are
+slow to recognise the progress of decay, and highly sensitive when it is
+bluntly intimated to them. Besides this, there was another sore point
+which the elders touched roughly. "Thy sons walk not in thy ways."
+However this may have come about, it was a sad thought to their father.
+But fathers often have the feeling that while they may reprove their
+sons, they do not like to hear this done by others. Thus it was that
+the message of the elders came home to Samuel, first of all, in its
+personal bearings, and greatly hurt him. It was a personal affront, it
+was hard to bear. The whole business of his life seemed frustrated;
+everything he had tried to do had failed; his whole life had missed its
+aim. No wonder if Samuel was greatly troubled.
+
+But in the exercise of that admirable habit which he had learned so
+thoroughly, Samuel took the matter straight to the Lord. And even if no
+articulate response had been made to his prayer, the effect of this
+could not but have been great and important. The very act of going into
+God's presence was fitted to change, in some measure, Samuel's estimate
+of the situation. It placed him at a new point of view--at God's point
+of view. When he reached that, the aspect of things must have undergone
+a change. The bearing of the transaction on God must have come out more
+prominently than its bearing on Samuel. And this was fully expressed in
+God's words. "They have not rejected thee, but they have rejected Me."
+Samuel was but the servant, God was the lord and king. The servant was
+not greater than his lord, nor the disciple greater than his Master. The
+great sin of the people was their sin against God. He it was to whom the
+affront had been given; He, if any, it was that had cause to remonstrate
+and complain.
+
+So prone are even the best of God's servants to put themselves before
+their Master. So prone are ministers of the Gospel, when any of their
+flock has acted badly, to think of the annoyance to themselves, rather
+than the sin committed in the holy eyes of God. So prone are we all, in
+our families, and in our Churches, and in society, to think of other
+aspects of sin, than its essential demerit in God's sight. Yet surely
+this should be the first consideration. That God should be dishonoured
+is surely a far more serious thing than that man should be offended. The
+sin against God is infinitely more heinous than the sin against man. He
+that has sinned against God has incurred a fearful penalty--what if this
+should lie on his conscience for ever, unconfessed, unforgiven? It is a
+fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.
+
+Yet, notwithstanding this very serious aspect of the people's offence,
+God instructs Samuel to "hearken to their voice, yet protest solemnly to
+them, and show them the manner of the kingdom." There were good reasons
+why God should take this course. The people had shown themselves
+unworthy of the high privilege of having God for their king. When men
+show themselves incapable of appreciating a high privilege, it is meet
+they should suffer the loss of it, or at least a diminution of it. They
+had shown a perpetual tendency to those idolatrous ways by which God was
+most grievously dishonoured. A theocracy, to work successfully, would
+need a very loyal people. Had Israel only been loyal, had it even been a
+point of conscience and a point of honour with them to obey God's voice,
+had they even had a holy recoil from every act offensive to Him, the
+theocracy would have worked most beautifully. But there had been such a
+habitual absence of this spirit, that God now suffered them to institute
+a form of government that interposed a human official between Him and
+them, and that subjected them likewise to many an inconvenience. Yet
+even in allowing this arrangement God did not utterly withdraw His
+loving-kindness from them. The theocracy did not wholly cease. Though
+they would find that their kings would make many an exaction of them,
+there would be among them some that would reign in righteousness, and
+princes that would rule in judgment. The king would so far be approved
+of God as to bear the name of "the Lord's anointed:" and would thus, in
+a sense, be a type of the great Anointed One, the true Messiah, whose
+kingdom, righteous, beneficent, holy, would be an everlasting kingdom,
+and his dominion from generation to generation.
+
+The next scene in the chapter before us finds Samuel again met with the
+heads of the people. He is now showing them "the manner of the
+king"--the relation in which he and they will stand to one another. He
+is not to be a king that gives, but a king that takes. His exactions
+will be very multifarious. First of all, the most sacred treasures of
+their homes, their sons and their daughters, would be taken to do hard
+work in his army, and on his farms, and in his house. Then, their landed
+property would be taken on some pretext--the vineyards and olive-yards
+inherited from their fathers--and given to his favourites. The tenth
+part of the produce, too, of what remained would be claimed by him for
+his officers and his servants, and the tenth of their flocks. Any
+servant, or young man, or animal, that was particularly handsome and
+valuable would be sure to take his fancy, and to be attached for his
+service. This would be ordinarily the manner of their king. And the
+oppression and vexation connected with this system of arbitrary
+spoliation would be so great that they would cry out against him, as
+indeed they did in the days of Rehoboam, yet the Lord would not hear
+them. Such was Samuel's picture of what they desired so much, but it
+made no impression; the people were still determined to have their
+king.
+
+What a contrast there was between this exacting king, and the true King,
+the King that in the fulness of the time was to come to His people, meek
+and having salvation, riding upon the foal of an ass! If there be
+anything more than another that makes this King glorious, it is His
+giving nature. "The Son of God," says the Apostle, "loved me, and gave
+Himself for me." Gave Himself! How comprehensive the word! All that He
+was as God, all that He became as man. As prophet He gave Himself to
+teach, as priest to atone and intercede, as king to rule and to defend.
+"The Good Shepherd _giveth_ His life for the sheep." "This is My body
+which is _given_ for you." "If thou knewest the gift of God, and Who it
+is that saith unto thee, Give Me to drink, thou wouldest have asked of
+Him, and He would have _given_ thee living water." With what kingly
+generosity, while He was on earth, He scattered the gifts of health and
+happiness among the stricken and the helpless! "Jesus went about all
+Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the
+kingdom, and healing all manner of sickness, and all manner of disease
+among the people." See Him, even as He hung helpless on the cross,
+exercising His royal prerogative by giving to the thief at His side a
+right to the Kingdom of God--"Verily I say unto thee, this day shalt
+thou be with Me in Paradise." See Him likewise, exalted on His throne
+"at God's right hand, to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give
+repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins." How different the
+attributes of this King from him whom Samuel delineated! The one
+exacting all that is ours; the other giving all that is His!
+
+The last scene in the chapter shows us the people deliberately
+disregarding the protest of Samuel, and reiterating their wilful
+resolution--"Nay, but we will have a king over us; that we also may be
+like all the nations, and that our king may judge us, and go out before
+us, and fight our battles." Once more, Samuel brings the matter to the
+Lord--repeats all that he has heard; and once more the Lord says to
+Samuel, "Hearken unto their choice and make them a king." The matter is
+now decided on, and it only remains to find the person who is to wear
+the crown.
+
+On the very surface of the narrative we see how much the people were
+influenced by the desire to be "like all the nations." This does not
+indicate a very exalted tone of feeling. To be like all the nations was
+surely in itself a poor and childish thing, unless the nations were in
+this respect in a better condition than Israel. Yet how common and
+almost irresistible is this feeling!
+
+Singularity is certainly not to be affected for singularity's sake; but
+neither are we to conform to fashion simply because it is fashion. How
+cruel and horrible often are its behests! The Chinese girl has to submit
+to her feet being bandaged and confined till walking becomes a living
+torture, and even the hours of what should be rest and sleep, are often
+broken by bitter pain. The women of Lake Nyassa insert a piece of stone
+in their upper lip, enlarging it from time to time till speaking and
+eating become most awkward and painful operations, and the very lip
+sometimes is torn away. Our fathers had terrible experience of the
+tyranny of the drinking customs of their day; and in spite of the
+greater freedom and the greater temperance of our time, there is no
+little tyranny still in the drinking laws of many a class among us. All
+this is just the outcome of the spirit that made the Hebrews so desire
+a king--the shrinking of men's hearts from being unlike others, the
+desire to be like the world. What men dread in such cases is not
+wrong-doing, not sin, not offending God; but incurring the reproof of
+men, being laughed at, boycotted by their fellows. But is not this a
+very unworthy course? Can any man truly respect himself who says, "I do
+this not because I think it right, not even because I deem it for my
+interest, but simply because it is done by the generality of people?"
+Can any man justify himself before God, if the honest utterance of his
+heart must be, "I take this course, not because I deem it well-pleasing
+in Thy sight, but because if I did otherwise, men would laugh at me and
+despise me?" The very statement of the case in explicit terms condemns
+it. Not less is it condemned by the noble conduct of those to whom grace
+has been given to withstand the voice of the multitude and stand up
+faithfully for truth and duty. Was there ever a nobler attitude than
+that of Caleb, when he withstood the clamour of the other spies, and
+followed the Lord fully? or that of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego,
+when alone among myriads, they refused to bow down to the image of gold?
+or that of Luther when, alone against the world, he held unflinchingly
+by his convictions of truth?
+
+Let the young especially ponder these things. To them it often seems a
+terrible thing to resist the general voice, and hold by conscience and
+duty. To confess Christ among a school of despisers, is often like
+martyrdom. But think! What is it to _deny_ Christ? Can that bring any
+peace or satisfaction to those who know His worth? Must it not bring
+misery and self-contempt? If the duty of confessing Him be difficult,
+seek strength for the duty. Pray for the strength which is made perfect
+in your weakness. Cast your thoughts onward to the day of Christ's
+second coming, when the opinion and practice of the world shall all be
+reduced to their essential worthlessness, and the promises to the
+faithful, firm as the everlasting hills, shall be gloriously fulfilled.
+For in that day, Hannah's song shall have a new fulfilment: "He raiseth
+up the poor out of the dust, and lifteth up the beggar out of the
+dunghill, to set them among princes, and make them inherit the throne of
+glory."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+_SAUL BROUGHT TO SAMUEL._
+
+1 SAMUEL ix. 1-14.
+
+
+God's providence is a wonderful scheme; a web of many threads, woven
+with marvellous skill; a network composed of all kinds of materials,
+great and small, but so arranged that the very smallest of them is as
+essential as the largest to the completeness of the fabric.
+
+One would suppose that many of the dramas of the Old Testament were
+planned on very purpose to show how intimately things secular and things
+sacred, as we call them, are connected together; how entirely the
+minutest events are controlled by God, and at the same time how
+thoroughly the freedom of man is preserved. The meeting of two convicts
+in an Egyptian prison is a vital link in the chain of events that makes
+Joseph governor of Egypt; a young lady coming to bathe in the river
+preserves the life of Moses, and secures the escape of the Israelites;
+the thoughtful regard of a father for the comfort of his sons in the
+army brings David into contact with Goliath, and prepares the way for
+his elevation to the throne; the beauty of a Hebrew girl fascinating a
+Persian king saves the whole Hebrew race from massacre and
+extermination.
+
+So in the passage now before us. The straying of some asses from the
+pastures of a Hebrew farmer brings together the two men, of whom the one
+was the old ruler, and the other was to be the new ruler of Israel. That
+these two should meet, and that the older of them should have the
+opportunity of instructing and influencing the younger, was of the
+greatest consequence for the future welfare of the nation. And the
+meeting is brought about in that casual way that at first sight seems to
+indicate that all things happen without plan or purpose. Yet we find, on
+more careful examination, that every event has been planned to fit in to
+every other, as carefully as the pieces of a dissected map, or the
+fragments of a fine mosaic. But of all the actors in the drama, not one
+ever feels that his freedom is in any way interfered with. All of them
+are at perfect liberty to follow the course that commends itself to
+their own minds.
+
+Thus wonderfully do the two things go together--Divine ordination and
+human freedom. How it should be so, it baffles us to explain. But that
+it is so, must be obvious to every thoughtful mind. And it is because we
+see the two things so harmonious in the common affairs of life, that we
+can believe them to act harmoniously in the higher plane of redemption
+and salvation. For in that sphere, too, all things fall out in
+accordance with the Divine plan. "Known unto God are all His works from
+the beginning of the world." Yet this universal predestination in no
+degree interferes with the liberty of man. If men reject God's offers,
+it is because they are personally unwilling to accept of them. If they
+receive His offers, it is because they have been made willing to do so.
+"Ye will not come unto Me that ye might have life," said our Lord to the
+Jews. And yet it is ever true that "it is God that worketh in you both
+to will and to do of His good pleasure."
+
+God having given the people permission to appoint a king, that king has
+now to be found. What kind of person must the first king be--the first
+to supersede the old rule of the Divinely-inspired judges, the first to
+fulfil the cravings of the people, the first to guide the nation which
+had been appointed by God to stand in so close a relation to Himself?
+
+It seemed desirable, that in the first king of Israel, two classes of
+qualities should be united, in some degree contradictory to one another.
+First, he must possess some of the qualities for which the people desire
+to have a king; while at the same time, from God's point of view, it is
+desirable that under him the people should have some taste of the evils
+which Samuel had said would follow from their choice.
+
+To an Oriental people, a stately and commanding personality was
+essential to an ideal king. They liked a king that would look well on
+great occasions, that would be a commanding figure at the head of an
+army, or in the centre of a procession; that would arrest the eye of
+strangers, and inspire at first sight an involuntary respect for the
+nation that had such a ruler at its head. Nor could any one have more
+fully realized the wishes of the people in this respect than Saul. "A
+choice young man and a goodly; there was not among the children of
+Israel a goodlier person than he; from his shoulders and upward he was
+higher than any of the people."
+
+Further, though his tribe was small in number, it was not small in
+influence. And his family was of a superior caste, for Kish was "a
+mighty man of power." And Saul's personal qualities were prepossessing
+and promising. He showed himself ready to comply with his father's
+order about the asses that had strayed, and to undertake a laborious
+journey to look for them. He was interested in his father's business,
+and ready to help him in his time of need. And the business which he
+undertook he seems to have executed with great patience and
+thoroughness. A foot journey over a great part of the territory of
+Benjamin was no easy task. Altogether, he shows himself, as we say, a
+capable man. He is not afraid to face the irksome; he does not consult
+merely for his ease and pleasure; labour does not distress him, and
+difficulties do not daunt him.
+
+All this was so far promising, and it seems to have been exactly what
+the people desired. But on the other hand, there seems to have been,
+from the very beginning, a great want in Saul. He appears from the very
+first to have wanted all that was most conspicuous and most valuable in
+Samuel. It is a circumstance not without its significance, that the very
+name and work of Samuel do not seem to have been familiar or even known
+to him. It was his servant that knew about Samuel, and that told Saul of
+his being in the city, in the land of Zuph (ver. 6). This cannot but
+strike us as very strange. We should have thought that the name of
+Samuel would have been as familiar to all the people of Israel as that
+of Queen Victoria to the people of Great Britain. But Saul does not
+appear to have heard it, as in any way remarkable. Does not this
+indicate a family living entirely outside of all religious connections,
+entirely immersed in secular things, caring nothing about godly people,
+and hardly ever even pronouncing their name? It is singular how utterly
+ignorant worldly men are of what passes in religious circles, if they
+happen to have no near relative, or familiar acquaintance in the
+religious world to carry the news to them from time to time. And as Saul
+thus lived outside of all religious circles, so he seems to have been
+entirely wanting in that great quality which was needed for a king of
+Israel--loyalty to the Heavenly King. Here it was that the difference
+between him and Samuel was so great. Loyalty to God and to God's nation
+was the very foundation of Samuel's life. Anything like self-seeking was
+unknown to him. He had early undergone that momentous change, when God
+is substituted for self as the pivot of one's life. The claims of the
+great King were ever paramount in his eyes. What would please God and be
+honouring to Him, was the first question that rose to his mind. And as
+Israel was God's people, so the interest and the welfare of Israel were
+ever dear to him. And thus it was that Samuel might be relied on not to
+think of himself, not to think of his own wishes or interests, except as
+utterly subordinate to the wishes and interests of his God and his
+nation. It was this that gave such solidity to Samuel's character, and
+made him so invaluable to his people. In every sphere of life it is a
+precious quality. Whether as domestic servants, or clerks, or managers,
+dependent on others, those persons are ever of priceless worth whose
+hearts are thus set on objects outside themselves, and who are proof
+against the common temptations of selfishness and worldliness. And when
+they are the rulers of a nation, and are able to disregard their
+personal welfare in their burning desire to benefit the whole people,
+they rise to the rank of heroes, and after their death, their names are
+enshrined in the memories of a grateful and admiring people.
+
+But in these high qualities, Saul seems to have been altogether wanting.
+For though he was not selfish and self-indulgent at first, though he
+readily obeyed his father in going to search for the strayed asses, he
+had no deep root of unselfishness in his nature, and by-and-bye, in the
+hour of temptation, the cloven foot unhappily appeared. And ere long the
+people would learn, that as Saul had in him no profound reverence for
+the will of God, so he had in him no profound and indefeasible regard
+for the welfare of God's people. The people would come to see what a
+fatal mistake they had made in selecting a king merely for superficial
+qualities, and passing by all that would have allied him, as Samuel was
+allied, to God himself. Now it seems to have been God's purpose that the
+first king of Israel should be a man of this kind. Through him the
+people were to learn that the king who simply fulfilled their notions,
+was capable, when his self-will was developed, of dragging the nation to
+ruin. No! it was not the superficial qualities of Saul that would be a
+blessing to the nation. It was not a man out of all spiritual sympathy
+with the living God that would raise the standing of Israel among the
+kingdoms around, and bring them the submission and respect of foreign
+kings. The intense and consistent godliness of Samuel was probably the
+quality that was not popular among the people. In the worldliness of his
+spirit, Saul was probably more to their liking. Yet it was this
+unworldly but godly Samuel that had delivered them from the bitter yoke
+of the Philistines, and it was this handsome but unspiritual Saul that
+was to bring them again into bondage to their ancient foes. This was the
+sad lesson to be learned from the reign of Saul.
+
+But God did not design altogether to abandon His people. When the
+lesson should be learnt from Saul's history, He would guide them to a
+king of a different stamp. He would give them a king after His own
+heart--one that would make the will of God the great rule, and the
+welfare of the people the great end of his government. David would
+engrave in the history of the nation in deeper letters than even Samuel,
+the all-important lesson, that for kings and countries as much as for
+individuals, "the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom;" that God
+honours them that honour Him, while they that despise Him shall indeed
+be lightly esteemed.
+
+But let us now come to the circumstances that led to the meeting of Saul
+and Samuel. The asses of Kish had strayed. Very probably they had
+strayed at a time when they were specially needed. The operations of the
+farm had to be suspended for want of them perhaps at a season when any
+delay would be especially inconvenient. In all ranks of life, men are
+subject to these vexations, and he is a happy man who does not fret
+under them, but keeps his temper calm, in spite of all the worry.
+Especially is he a happy man who retains his equanimity under the
+conviction that the thing is appointed by God, and that He who overruled
+the loss of Kish's asses to such high events in the history of his son,
+is able so to order all their troubles and worries that they shall be
+found conducive to their highest good. At Kish's order, Saul and one of
+the servants go forth to seek the asses. With the precise localities
+through which they passed, we are not accurately acquainted, such places
+as Shalim or Zuph not having yet been identified. But the tour must have
+been an extensive one, extending over most of the territory of Benjamin;
+and as it must have been necessary to make many a detour, up hill and
+down dale, to this farm and to that, the labour involved must have been
+very great. It was not a superficial but a thorough search.
+
+At last, when they came to the land of Zuph, they had been away so long
+that Saul thought it necessary to return, lest his father should think
+that some evil had befallen them. But the servant had another string to
+his bow. Though Saul was not familiar with the name or the character of
+Samuel, his servant was. What God hides from the wise and prudent, He
+sometimes reveals to babes. It is an interesting thing in the history of
+the Church, how often great people have been indebted to servants for
+important guidance, perhaps even for their first acquaintance with
+saving truth. The little captive maid that ministered in the house of
+Naaman the Syrian was the channel through whom he came to know of the
+prophet of Israel who was able to heal him. Many a distinguished
+Christian has acknowledged, like the Earl of Shaftesbury, his
+obligations to some pious nurse that when he was a child told him Bible
+stories and pressed on his heart the claims of God. Happy those servants
+who are faithful in these circumstances, and of whom it can be said,
+"They have done what they could!" Of this servant of Saul's we know
+nothing whatever, save that, in his master's dilemma, he told him of the
+Lord's servant, and induced him to apply to him to extricate him from
+his difficulty.
+
+It does not appear that the city was Samuel's usual place of abode. It
+was a place to which he had come to hold a religious service, and the
+occasion was evidently one of much importance. It is interesting to
+observe how the difficulty was got over, of their having no present to
+offer to the man of God, in accordance with the custom of the country.
+Saul, though in comfortable circumstances, had absolutely no particle of
+money with him. His servant had but a quarter of a shekel, not designed
+apparently for spending purposes, but perhaps a little keepsake or kind
+of amulet he carried about with him. But there was such hospitality in
+those days that people going about the country had no need for money. So
+it was when our Lord instructed the disciples when sending them out on
+their missionary tour--"Provide neither gold nor silver nor brass in
+your purses, nor scrip for your journey, neither two coats, neither
+shoes, nor yet staves, for the labourer is worthy of his meat." Those
+who have presumed on these instructions, holding that the modern
+missionary does not need any sustenance to be provided for him, but may
+safely trust to the hospitality of the heathen, forget how different was
+the case and the custom among the Hebrew people.
+
+But now, as Saul and his servant came to the city, another providential
+meeting takes place to help them to their object. "As they went up the
+hill to the city, they found young maidens going out to draw water." The
+city was up the hill, and the water supply would naturally be at the
+bottom. From the maidens that were going down to the fountain, they
+obtained information fitted to quicken their movements. They learned
+that the prophet had already arrived. The preparations for the sacrifice
+which he was to offer were now going on. It was just the time to get a
+word with him, if they had business to transact. Very soon he would be
+going up to the high place, and then the solemn rites would begin, and
+be followed by the feast, which would engross his whole attention. If
+they would catch him at the proper moment they must "make haste." That
+they did quicken their pace, we cannot doubt. And it was necessary; for
+just as they reached the city Samuel made his appearance, about to go up
+to the high place. If they had lost that moment, they would probably
+have had no opportunity during the whole day. Nor is it likely that
+Saul, who had no great desire for the company of the prophet, would have
+waited till the sacrifice and the feast were over. The two men were
+brought together just in the nick of time. And thus another essential
+link of God's chain, bringing the old and the new ruler of Israel into
+contact with each other, was happily adjusted, all through means to us
+apparently accidental, but forming parts of the great scheme of God.
+
+From this part of the narrative we may derive two great lessons, the one
+with reference to God, and the other with reference to man.
+
+First, as it regards God, we cannot but see how silently, secretly,
+often slowly, yet surely, He accomplishes His purposes. There are
+certain rivers in nature that flow so gently, that when looking at the
+water only, the eye of the spectator is unable to discern any movement
+at all. Often the ways of God resemble such rivers. Looking at what is
+going on in common life, it is so ordinary, so absolutely quiet, that
+you can see no trace whatever of any Divine plan. Things seem left to
+themselves, and God appears to have no connection with them. And yet,
+all the while, the most insignificant of them is contributing towards
+the accomplishment of the mighty plans of God. By means of ten thousand
+times ten thousand agents, conscious and unconscious, things are moving
+on towards the grand consummation. Men may be instruments in God's
+hands without knowing it. When Cyrus was moving his armies towards
+Babylon, he little knew that he was accomplishing the Divine purpose for
+the humbling of the oppressor and the deliverance of His oppressed
+people. And in all the events of common life, men seem to be so
+completely their own masters, there seems such a want of any influence
+from without, that God is liable to slip entirely out of sight. And yet,
+as we see from the chapter before us, God is really at work. Whether men
+know it or not, they are really fulfilling the purposes of His will.
+Calmly but steadily, like the stars in the silent heavens, men are
+bringing to pass the schemes of God. His wildest enemies are really
+helping to swell His triumphs. Oh, how vain is the attempt to resist His
+mighty hand! The day cometh, when all the tokens of confusion and defeat
+shall disappear, when the bearing even of the fall of a sparrow on the
+plans of God shall be made apparent, and every intelligent creature in
+earth and heaven shall join in the mighty shout--"Alleluiah, for the
+Lord God Omnipotent reigneth."
+
+But again, there is a useful lesson in this chapter for directing the
+conduct of men. You see in what direction the mind of Saul's servant
+moved for guidance in the day of difficulty. It was toward the servant
+of God. And you see likewise how, when Saul and he had determined to
+consult the man of God, they were providentially guided to him. To us,
+the way is open to God Himself, without the intervention of any prophet.
+Let us in every time of trouble seek access to God. Have we not a
+thousand examples of it in Bible history, and in other history too? Men
+say it is not right we should trouble God with trifles. Nay, the living
+God knows not what trouble is, and in His scheme there are no trifles.
+There is no limit one way or other in the command, "_In everything_ by
+prayer and supplication with thanksgiving, let your requests be made
+known unto God." "Acknowledge Him in _all_ your ways, and He will direct
+your steps." But above all, acknowledge Him with reference to the way of
+life eternal. Make sure that you are in the way to heaven. Use well the
+guide book with which you are furnished. Let God's word be a light to
+your feet and a lamp to your path; and then your path shall itself "be
+like the shining light, shining brighter and brighter unto the perfect
+day."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+_FIRST MEETING OF SAMUEL AND SAUL._
+
+1 SAMUEL ix. 15-27.
+
+
+The meeting between Samuel and Saul was preceded by previous meetings
+between Samuel and God. God had prepared the prophet for his visit from
+the future king of Israel, and the first thing brought before us in
+these verses is the communication on this subject which had been made to
+the prophet a day before.
+
+It is very interesting to observe how readily Samuel still lends himself
+for any service he can render on behalf of his people, under the new
+arrangement that God had permitted for their government. We have seen
+how mortified Samuel was at first, when the people came to him with
+their request for a king. He took it as a personal affront, as well as a
+grave public error. Conscious as he was of having done his duty
+faithfully, and of having rendered high service to the nation, and
+reposing calmly, as he probably was, on the expectation that at least
+for some time to come, Israel would move forward peacefully and happily
+on the lines which he had drawn for them, it must have been a staggering
+blow when they came to him and asked him to overturn all that he had
+done, and make them a king. It must have been one of those bewildering
+moments when one's whole life appears lost, and all one's dearest hopes
+and hardest labours lie shattered, like the fragments of a potter's
+vessel. We have seen how, in that sad moment, Samuel carried his sorrows
+to the Lord, and learning thus to view the whole matter from God's point
+of view, how he came to make comparatively little account of his own
+disappointment, and to think only how he could still serve the cause of
+God, how he could still help the people, how he could prevent the vessel
+which he was no longer to steer from dashing against the hidden rocks he
+saw so clearly ahead. It is impossible not to be struck with the beauty
+and purity of Samuel's character in this mode of action.
+
+How many a good man takes offence when slighted or superseded by some
+committee or other body, in connection with a political, social, or
+religious cause which he has tried to help! If they won't have me, he
+says, let them do without me. If they won't allow me to carry out the
+course which I have followed, and which has been undoubtedly highly
+beneficial, I'll have nothing more to do with them. He sulks in his tent
+like Achilles, or goes over to the enemy like Coriolanus. Not so Samuel!
+His love for the people is too deep to allow of such a course. They have
+behaved badly to him, but notwithstanding he will not leave them. Like
+an injured but loving wife, who labours with every art of patient
+affection to reclaim the husband that has abused her and broken her
+heart; like a long-suffering father, who attends with his own hands to
+the neglected work of his dissipated son, to save him if possible from
+the consequences of his folly--Samuel overlooks his personal slight, and
+bears with the public folly of the people, in the endeavour to be of
+some use to them in the important stage of their history on which they
+are entering. He receives Divine communications respecting the man who
+is to supersede him in the government of the people, and instead of
+jealousy and dislike, shows every readiness to help him. It is
+refreshing to find such tokens of magnanimity and disinterestedness.
+However paltry human nature may be in itself, it can become very noble
+when rehabilitated by the Spirit of God. Need we ask which is the nobler
+course? You feel that you have not been treated perhaps by your church
+with sufficient consideration. You fret, you complain, you stay away
+from church, you pour your grievance into every open ear. Would Samuel
+have done so? Is not your conduct the very reverse of his? Side by side
+with his, must not yours be pronounced poor and paltry? Have you not
+need to study the thirteenth chapter of 1 Corinthians, and when you read
+of the charity that "beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth
+all things, endureth all things," ask yourselves whether it might not be
+said of you that you have neither part nor lot in this matter?
+
+The communication that God had made to Samuel was, that on the following
+day He would send to him the man whom he was to anoint as captain over
+Israel, that he might save them from the Philistines; for He had looked
+upon His people, because their cry was come up to Him. There is an
+apparent inconsistency here with what is said elsewhere. In chap. viii.
+13 it is said, that "the Philistines came no more into the coast of
+Israel, and that the hand of the Lord was against the Philistines all
+the days of Samuel." But probably "all the days of Samuel" mean only the
+days when he exerted himself actively against them. As long as Samuel
+watched and checked them, they were kept in restraint; but when he
+ceased to do so, they resumed their active hostility. The concluding
+verses of chap. xiii. (19-23) show that in Saul's time the Philistine
+oppression had become so galling that the very smiths had been removed
+from the land of Israel, and there was no right provision even for
+sharpening ploughshares, or coulters, or axes, or mattocks. Undoubtedly
+Saul removed this oppression for a time, and David's elegy shows how
+beneficial his reign was in some other ways, although the last act of
+his life was an encounter with the Philistines in which he was utterly
+defeated. It is evident that before Saul's time the tyranny of their
+foes had been very galling to the Israelites. The words of God, "their
+cry is come up to Me," indicate quietly a very terrible state of
+distress. They carry us back to the words uttered at the burning bush,
+"I have seen, I have seen the affliction of My people which are in
+Egypt, have heard their cry by reason of their taskmasters; for I know
+their sorrows." God speaks after the manner of men. He needs no cry to
+come into His ears to tell Him of the woes of the oppressed.
+Nevertheless He seems to wait till that cry is raised, till the appeal
+is made to Him, till the consciousness of utter helplessness sends men
+to His footstool. And a very blessed truth it is, that He sympathizes
+with the cry of the oppressed. There is much meaning in the simple
+expression--"their cry is come up to Me." It denotes a very tender
+sympathy, a concern for all that they have been suffering, and a
+resolution to interpose on their behalf. God is never impassive nor
+indifferent to the sorrows and sufferings of His people. All are
+designed to serve as chastenings with a view to ultimate good. The eye
+of God is ever watching to see whether the chastening is sufficient,
+and when it is so, to stop the suffering. In the Inquisitor's chamber,
+the eye of God was ever on the boot and the thumbscrew, on the knife and
+the pincers, on the furnace and all the other instruments of torture. In
+the sick room, He watches the spent and struggling patient, knows every
+paroxysm of pain, knows all the restlessness and tossing of the weary
+night. He understands the anguish of the loving heart when one after
+another of its treasures is torn away. He knows the unutterable distress
+when a child's misconduct brings down grey heirs with sorrow to the
+grave. Appearances may be all the other way, but "the Lord God is
+merciful and gracious, slow to anger and of great compassion." The night
+may be long and weary, but the dawn comes at the appointed time. "Ye
+have heard of the patience of Job, and have seen the end of the Lord,
+that the Lord is very pitiful and of tender mercy."
+
+But now Samuel and Saul have met. Saul is as unfamiliar with Samuel's
+appearance as with his name; he goes up to him and asks where the seer's
+house is. "I am the seer," replies Samuel; but at the moment Samuel was
+not at liberty, and could not converse with Saul. He invites him to go
+up with him to the high place, and take part in the religious service.
+Then he invites him to the feast that was to follow the sacrifice. Next
+day he is to deal with him as a prophet, making important communications
+to him. But in regard to the matter which occupies him at the moment,
+his father's asses, he need trouble himself no more on that head, for
+the asses are found. Then he gives Saul a hint of what is coming. He
+makes an announcement to him that he and his father's house are the
+objects of the whole desire of Israel. It is not very apparent whether
+or not Saul had any inkling of the meaning of this remark. It may be
+that he viewed it as a mere expression of politeness, savouring of the
+customary exaggeration of the East. At all events, his answer was
+couched in those terms of extravagant humility which was likewise matter
+of Eastern custom. "Am not I a Benjamite, of the smallest of the tribes
+of Israel? and my family the least of all the families of the tribe of
+Benjamin? Wherefore then speakest thou so to me?"
+
+The sacrifice next engages the attention of all. Samuel's first meeting
+with Saul takes place over the symbol of expiation, over the sacrifice
+that shows man to be a sinner, and declares that without shedding of
+blood there is no remission of sin. No doubt the circumstance was very
+impressive to Samuel, and would be turned to its proper use in
+subsequent conversation with Saul, whether Saul entered into the spirit
+of it or not. If it be asked, How could a sacrifice take place on the
+height of this city, whereas God had commanded that only in the place
+which He was to choose should such rites be performed?--the answer is,
+that at that time Shiloh lay in ruins, and Mount Zion was still in the
+possession of the Jebusites. The final arrangements had not yet been
+made for the Hebrew ceremonial, and in the present provisional and
+unsettled state of things, sacrifices were not limited to a single
+place.
+
+After the sacrifice, came the feast. It was now that Samuel began to
+give more explicit hints to Saul of the dignity to which he was to be
+raised. The feast was held in "the parlour"--a room adjacent to the
+place of sacrifice, to which Samuel had invited a large company--thirty
+of the chief inhabitants of the town. First Saul and his servant are
+complimented by having the place of honour assigned to them. Then they
+are honoured by having a portion set before them which had been
+specially set apart for them the day before. The speech concerning this
+portion in ver. 24 is somewhat obscure if it be regarded as a speech of
+Samuel's. It seems more natural to regard it as a speech of the cook's.
+It will be observed that the word "Samuel" in the middle of the verse is
+in italics, showing that it is not in the Hebrew, so that it is more
+natural to regard the clause as having "the cook" for its nominative,
+and indeed this talk about the portion is more suitable for the cook
+than for Samuel. Servants were not forbidden to speak during
+entertainments; nor did their masters disdain even to have serious
+conversation with them (see Nehemiah ii. 2-8). There is another
+correction of the Authorized Version that needs to be made. At the end
+of ver. 24 the words "Since I said" are not a literal rendering. The
+original is simply the word which is constantly rendered _saying_. It
+has been suggested ("Speaker's Commentary") that a word or two should be
+supplied to make the sense complete, and the verse would then
+run:--"unto this time hath it been kept for thee [against the festival
+of which Samuel spake], saying, I have invited the people." The part
+thus reserved was the shoulder and its appurtenances. Why this part was
+regarded as more honourable than any other, we do not know, nor is it of
+any moment; the point of importance being, first, that by Samuel's
+express instructions it had been reserved for Saul, and second, that
+these instructions had been given as soon as Samuel made arrangements
+for the feast. To honour Saul as the destined king of Israel was
+Samuel's unhesitating purpose. Some men might have said, It will be
+time enough to show this mark of respect when the man is actually chosen
+king. Had there been the slightest feeling of grudge in the mind of
+Samuel, this is what he would have thought. But instead of grudging Saul
+his new dignity, he is forward to acknowledge it. There shall be no
+holding back on his part of honour for the man whom the Lord delighted
+to honour.
+
+If the words of ver. 24 were really spoken by the cook, they must have
+added a new element of surprise and impression to Saul. It was apparent
+that he had been expected to this feast. The cook had been warned that a
+man of consequence was coming, and had therefore set apart that portion
+to him. Saul must have felt both that a supernatural power had been at
+work, and that some strange destiny--possibly the royal dignity--was in
+reserve for him. To us, pondering the circumstances, what is most
+striking is, the wonderful way in which the fixed purpose of God is
+accomplished, while all the agents in the matter remain perfectly free.
+That Saul and his servant should be present with Samuel at that feast,
+was the fixed decree of heaven. But it was brought about quite
+naturally. There was no constraint on the mind of Saul's servant, when,
+being in the land of Zuph, he proposed that they should go into the
+city, and try to make inquiry of the man of God. There was no constraint
+on the damsels when at a certain time they went down to the fountain for
+water, and on their way met Saul and his servant. There was no
+constraint on Saul and his servant, save that created by common sense,
+when they quickened their pace in order to meet Samuel on the way to the
+sacrifice. Every one of these events fell out freely and naturally. Yet
+all were necessary links in the chain of God's purposes. From God's
+point of view they were necessary, from man's point of view they were
+casual. Thus necessity and freedom harmonized together, as they always
+do in the plans and operations of God. It is absurd to say that the
+predestination of God takes away the liberty of man. It is unreasonable
+to suppose that because God has predestinated all events, we need not
+take any step in the matter of our salvation. Such an idea is founded on
+an utter misunderstanding of the relation in which God has placed us to
+Him. It overlooks the great truth, that God's ways are not our ways, nor
+His thoughts our thoughts. The relation of the Infinite Will to the
+wills of finite creatures is a mystery we cannot fathom; but the effect
+on us should be to impel us to seek that our will may ever be in harmony
+with God's, and that thus the petition in the Lord's prayer may be
+fulfilled, "Thy will be done on earth, as it is in heaven."
+
+The feast is over; Samuel and Saul return to the city, and there, on the
+housetop, they commune together. The twenty-sixth verse seems to narrate
+in detail what is summarily contained in the twenty-fifth. After
+returning from the sacrifice and the feast, they seem to have committed
+themselves to rest. In the early morning, about daybreak, they had their
+conversation on the housetop, and thereafter Samuel sent Saul away,
+convoying him part of the road. What the conversation on the housetop
+was, we are not told; but we have no difficulty in conjecturing. Samuel
+could not but communicate to Saul the treasured thoughts of his lifetime
+regarding the way to govern Israel. He must have recalled to him God's
+purpose regarding His people, beginning with the call of Abraham,
+dwelling on the deliverance from Egypt, and touching on the history of
+the several judges, and the lessons to be derived from each. We may
+fancy the fervour with which he would urge on Saul, that the one thing
+most essential for the prosperity of the nation--the one thing which
+those in power ought continually to watch and aim at, was, loyalty by
+the people to their heavenly King, and the faithful observance of His
+law and covenant. He would dwell emphatically on the many instances in
+which neglect of the covenant had brought disaster and misery, and on
+the wonderful change in their outward circumstances which had come with
+every return of fidelity to their King. Granted, they were soon to have
+a king. They were to change their form of government, and be like the
+rest of the nations. But if they changed their form of government, they
+were not to surrender the palladium of their nation, they were not to
+abandon their "gloria et tutamen." The new king would be tempted like
+all the kings around him to regard his own will as his only rule of
+action, and to fall in with the prevalent notion, that kings were above
+the law, because the king's will was the law, and nothing could be
+higher than that. What an infinite calamity it would be to himself and
+to the nation, if the new king of Israel were to fall into such a
+delusion! Yes, the king _was_ above the law, and the king's will _was_
+the law; but it was the King of kings alone who had this prerogative,
+and woe to the earthly ruler that dared to climb into His throne, and
+take into his puny hands the sceptre of the Omnipotent!
+
+Such, we may well believe, was the tenor of that first meeting of Samuel
+and Saul. We cannot but carry forward our thoughts a little, and think
+what was the last. The last meeting was at Endor, where in darkness and
+utter despair, the king of Israel had thought of his early friend, had
+perhaps recalled his gentle kindness on this first occasion of their
+meeting, and wondered whether he might not be able and willing to throw
+some light once more upon his path. But alas, the day of merciful
+visitation was gone. The first conversation was in the brightness of
+early morning; the last in midnight gloom. The time of day was
+appropriate for each. On that sepulchral night, the worst evils that he
+had dreaded, and against which he had doubtless warned him on that
+housetop, had come to pass. Self-willed and regardless of God, Saul had
+taken his own course, and brought his people to the very verge of ruin.
+Differing, _toto coelo_, from Samuel in his treatment of his
+successor, he had hunted David like a partridge on the mountains, and
+stormed against the man who was to bring back to the nation the
+blessings of which he had robbed it. Brought to bay at last by his
+recklessness and passion, he could only reap the fruit of what he had
+sown; "for God is not mocked; they that sow to the flesh shall of the
+flesh reap corruption, and they that sow to the Spirit shall, of the
+Spirit, reap life everlasting." Again there was to ring out the great
+law of the kingdom,--"Them that honour Me, I will honour; while they
+that despise Me shall be lightly esteemed."
+
+The good words of Samuel fell not into good ground. He had not in Saul a
+congenial hearer. Saul was too worldly a man to care for, or appreciate
+spiritual things. Alas, how often for a similar reason, the best words
+of the best men fail of their purpose! But how is this ever to be cured?
+How is the uncongenial heart to become a fit bed for the good seed of
+the Kingdom? I own, it is a most difficult thing. Those who are
+afflicted with indifference to spiritual truth will not seek a remedy,
+because the very essence of their malady is that they do not care. But
+surely their Christian friends and relatives, and all interested in
+their welfare, will care very much. Have you such persons--persons whose
+worldly hearts show no sympathy with Divine truth--among your
+acquaintances or in your families? Persons so steeped in worldliness
+that the strongest statements of saving truth are as much lost upon them
+as grains of the best wheat would be lost if sown in a heap of sand? O
+how should you be earnest for such in prayer; there is a remedy, and
+there is a Physician able to apply it; the Spirit of God if appealed to,
+can repeat the process that was so effectual at Philippi, when "the Lord
+opened the heart of Lydia, that she _attended_ to the things that were
+spoken by Paul." "If ye then that are evil know how to give good things
+unto your children, how much more shall your Father who is in heaven
+give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+_SAUL ANOINTED BY SAMUEL._
+
+1 SAMUEL x. 1-16.
+
+
+There is a remarkable minuteness of detail in this and other narratives
+in Samuel, suggesting the authenticity of the narrative, and the
+authorship of one who was personally connected with the transactions.
+The historical style of Scripture is very characteristic; sometimes
+great periods of time are passed over with hardly a word, and sometimes
+events of little apparent importance are recorded with what might be
+thought needless minuteness. In Genesis, the whole history of the world
+before the flood is despatched in seven chapters, less than is occupied
+with the history of Joseph. Enoch's biography is in one little verse,
+while a whole chapter is taken up with the funeral of Sarah, and another
+chapter of unusual length with the marrying of Isaac. Yet we can be at
+no loss to discover good reasons for this arrangement. It combines two
+forms of history--annals, and dramatic story. Annals are short, and
+necessarily somewhat dry; but they have the advantage of embracing much
+in comparatively short compass. The dramatic story is necessarily
+diffuse; it occupies a large amount of space; but it has the advantage
+of presenting a living picture--of bringing past events before the
+reader as they happened at the time. If the whole history of the Bible
+had been in the form of annals, it would have been very useful, but it
+would have wanted human interest. If it had been all in the dramatic
+form, it would have occupied too much space. By the combination of the
+two methods, we secure the compact precision of the one, and the living
+interest of the other. In the verses that are to form the subject of the
+present lecture, we have a lively dramatic picture of what took place in
+connection with the anointing of Saul by Samuel as king of Israel. The
+event was a very important one, as showing the pains that were taken to
+impress him with the solemnity of the office, and his obligation to
+undertake it in full accord with God's sacred purpose in connection with
+His people Israel. Everything was planned to impress on Saul that his
+elevation to the royal dignity was not to be viewed by him as a mere
+piece of good fortune, and to induce him to enter on the office with a
+solemn sense of responsibility, and in a spirit entirely different from
+that of the neighbouring kings, who thought only of their royal position
+as enabling them to gratify the desires of their own hearts. Both Saul
+and the people must see the hand of God very plainly in Saul's
+elevation, and the king must enter on his duties with a profound sense
+of the supernatural influences through which he has been elevated, and
+his obligation to rule the people in the fear, and according to the
+will, of God.
+
+Though the servant that accompanied Saul seems to have been as much a
+companion and adviser as a servant, and to have been present as yet in
+all Samuel's intercourse with Saul, yet the act of anointing which the
+prophet was now to perform was more suitable to be done in private than
+in the presence of another; consequently the servant was sent on before
+(ch. ix. 27). It would seem to have been Samuel's intention, while
+paying honour to Saul as one to whom honour was due, and thus hinting at
+his coming elevation, not to make it public, not to anticipate the
+public selection which would follow soon in an orderly way. It was right
+that Saul himself should know what was coming, and that his mind should
+be prepared for it; but it was not right at this stage that others
+should know it, for that would have seemed an interference with the
+choice of the people. It must have been in some quiet corner of the road
+that Samuel took out his vial of sacred oil, and poured it on Saul to
+anoint him king of Israel. The kiss which he gave him was the kiss of
+homage, a very old way of recognizing sovereignty (Ps. ii. 12), and
+still kept up in the custom of kissing the sovereign's hand after
+elevation to office or dignity. To be thus anointed by God's recognised
+servant, was to receive the approval of God Himself. Saul now became
+God's messiah--the Lord's anointed. For the term messiah, as applied to
+Christ, belongs to His kingly office. Though the priests likewise were
+anointed, the title derived from that act was not appropriated by them,
+but by the kings. It was counted a high and solemn dignity, making the
+king's person sacred, in the eyes of every God-fearing man. Yet this was
+not an indelible character; it might be forfeited by unfaithfulness and
+transgression. The only Messiah, the only Anointed One, who was
+incapable of being set aside, was He whom the kings of Israel typified.
+Of Him Isaiah foretold: "Of the increase of His government and peace
+there shall be no end, upon the throne of David and upon his kingdom, to
+order it and to establish it with judgment and with justice, from
+henceforth even for ever." And in announcing the birth of Jesus, the
+angel foretold: "He shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever, and of
+His kingdom there shall be no end."
+
+It is evident that Saul was surprised at the acts of Samuel. We can
+readily fancy his look of astonishment after the venerable prophet had
+given him the kiss of homage,--the searching gaze that asked, "What do
+you mean by that?" Samuel was ready with his answer: "Is it not because
+the Lord hath anointed thee to be captain over His heritage?" But in so
+momentous a matter, involving a supernatural communication of the will
+of God, an assurance even from Samuel was hardly sufficient. It was
+reasonable that Saul should be supplied with tangible proofs that in
+anointing him as king Samuel had complied with the will of God. These
+tangible proofs Samuel proceeded to give. They consisted of predictions
+of certain events that were about to happen--events that it was not
+within the range of ordinary sagacity to foresee, and which were
+therefore fitted to convince Saul that Samuel was in possession of
+supernatural authority, and that the act of consecration which he had
+just performed was agreeable to the will of God.
+
+The first of these proofs was, that when he had proceeded on his journey
+as far as Rachel's tomb, he would meet with two men who would tell him
+that the lost asses had been found, and that his father's anxiety was
+now about his son. It must be owned that the localities here are very
+puzzling. If the meeting with Samuel was near Ramah of Benjamin, Saul,
+in returning to Gibeah, would not have occasion to go near Rachel's
+tomb. We can only say he may have had some reason for taking this route
+unknown to us. Here he would find a confirmation of what Samuel had told
+him on the day before; and his mind being thus relieved of anxiety, he
+would have more freedom to ponder the marvellous things of which Samuel
+had spoken to him.
+
+The next token was to be found in the plain of Tabor, but this Tabor can
+have no connection with the well-known mountain of that name in the
+plain of Esdraelon. Some have conjectured that this Tabor is derived
+from Deborah, Rachel's nurse, who was buried in the neighbourhood of
+Bethel (Gen. xxxv. 8), but there is no probability in this conjecture.
+Here three men, going up to Bethel to a religious festival were to meet
+Saul; and they were to present him, as an act of homage, with two of
+their three loaves. This was another evidence that God was filling men's
+hearts with a rare feeling towards him.
+
+The third token was to be the most remarkable of any. It was to occur at
+what is called "the hill of God." Literally this is "Gibeah of
+God"--God's Gibeah. It seems to have been Saul's own city, but the name
+Gibeah may have been given to the whole hill where the city lay. The
+precise spot where the occurrence was to take place was at the garrison
+of the Philistines. (Thus it appears incidentally that the old enemy
+were again harassing the country.) Gibeah, which is elsewhere called
+Gibeah of Saul, is here called God's Gibeah, because of the sacred
+services of which it was the seat. Here Saul would meet a company of
+prophets coming down from the holy place, with psaltery, and tabret, and
+pipe, and harp, and here his mind would undergo a change, and he would
+be impelled to join the prophets' company. This was a strange token,
+with a strange result.
+
+We must try, first, to form some idea of Saul's state of mind in the
+midst of these strange events.
+
+The thought of his being king of Israel must have set his whole being
+vibrating with high emotion. No mind can take in at first all that is
+involved in such a stroke of fortune. A tumult of feeling surges through
+the mind. It is intoxicated with the prospect. Glimpses of this pleasure
+and of that, now brought within reach, flit before the fancy. The whole
+pulses of Saul's nature must have been quickened. A susceptibility of
+impression formerly unknown must have come to him. He was like a cloud
+surcharged with electricity; he was in that state of nervous excitement
+which craves a physical outlet, whether in singing, or shouting, or
+leaping,--anything to relieve the brain and nervous system, which seem
+to tremble and struggle under the extraordinary pressure.
+
+But mingling with this, there must have been another, and perhaps
+deeper, emotion at work in Saul's bosom. He had been brought into near
+contact with the Supernatural. The thought of the Infinite Power that
+ordains and governs all had been stirred very vividly within him. The
+three tokens of Divine ordination met with in succession at Rachel's
+tomb, in the plain of Tabor, and in the neighbourhood of Gibeah, must
+have impressed him very profoundly. Probably he had never had any very
+distinct impression of the great Supernatural Being before. The worldly
+turn of mind which was natural to him would not occupy itself with any
+such thoughts. But now it was made clear to him not only that there was
+a Supernatural Being, but that He was dealing very closely with him. It
+is always a solemn thing to feel in the presence of God, and to remember
+that He is searching us and knowing us, knowing our sitting down and
+our rising up, and comprehending all our thoughts afar off. At such
+times the sense of our guilt, feebleness, dependence, usually comes on
+us, full and strong. Must it not have been so with Saul? If the prospect
+of kingly power was fitted to puff him up, the sense of God's nearness
+to him was fitted to cast him down. What was he before God? An
+insignificant worm, a guilty sinner, unworthy to be called God's son.
+
+The whole susceptibilities of Saul were in a state of high excitement;
+the sense of the Divine presence was on him, and for the moment a desire
+to render to God some acknowledgment of all the mercy which had come
+upon him. When the company of prophets met him coming down the hill,
+"the Spirit of God came upon him, and he prophesied with them." When in
+the Old Testament the Spirit of God is said to come on one, the meaning
+is not always that He comes in regenerating and sanctifying grace. The
+Spirit of God in Bezaleel, the son of Uri, made him cunning in all
+manner of workmanship, to work in gold, and in silver, and in brass. The
+Spirit of God, when He came upon Samson, magnified his physical
+strength, and fitted him for the most wonderful feats. So the Spirit of
+God, when He came on Saul, did not necessarily regenerate his being;
+alas! in Saul's future life, there is only too much evidence of an
+unchanged heart! Still it might be said of Saul that he was changed into
+another man. Elevated by the prospect before him, but awed at the same
+time by a sense of God's nearness, he had no heart for the pursuits in
+which he would have engaged on his return home had no such change
+occurred. In the mood of mind in which he was now, he could not look at
+anything frivolous: his mind soared to higher things. When therefore he
+met the company of prophets coming down the hill, he was impelled by the
+surge of his feelings to join their company and take part in their song.
+They were returning from the high place where they had been engaged in
+worship, and now they seem to have been continuing the service, sounding
+out the high praises of God, and thankfully remembering His mercies. It
+was the same God who had so wonderfully drawn near to Saul, and
+conferred on him privileges which were as exalted as they were
+undeserved. No wonder the heart of Saul caught the infection, and threw
+itself for the time into the service of praise! No young man could well
+have resisted the impulse. Had he not been chosen out of all the ten
+thousands of Israel for an honour and a function higher than any
+Israelite had ever yet enjoyed? Ought he not, must he not, in all the
+enthusiasm of profoundest wonder, extol the name of Him from whom so
+suddenly, so unexpectedly, yet so assuredly, this marvellous favour had
+come?
+
+But it was an employment very different from what had hitherto been his
+custom. That utter worldliness of mind which we have referred to as his
+natural disposition would have made him scorn any such employment in his
+ordinary mood as utterly alien to his feelings. Too often we see that
+worldly-minded men not only have no relish for spiritual exercises, but
+feel bitterly and scornfully toward those who affect them. The reason is
+not far to seek. They know that religious men count them guilty of sin,
+of great sin, in so neglecting the service of God. To be condemned,
+whether openly or not, galls their pride, and sets them to disparage
+those who have so low an opinion of them. It is not said that Saul had
+felt bitterly toward religious men previous to this time. But whether
+he did so or not, he appears to have kept aloof from them quite as much
+as if he had. And now in his own city he appears among the prophets, as
+if sharing their inspiration, and joining with them openly in the
+praises of God. It is so strange a sight that every one is astonished.
+"Saul among the prophets!" people exclaim. "Shall wonders ever cease?"
+And yet Saul was not in his right place among the prophets. Saul was
+like the stony ground seed in the parable of the sower. He had no depth
+of root. His enthusiasm on this occasion was the result of forces that
+did not work at the heart of his nature. It was the result of the new
+and most remarkable situation in which he found himself, not of any new
+principle of life, any principle that would involve a radical change. It
+is a solemn fact that men may be worked on by outer forces so as to do
+many things that seem to be acts of Divine service, but are not so
+really. A man suddenly raised to a high and influential position feels
+the influence of the change,--feels himself sobered and solemnized by
+it, and for a time appears to live and act under higher considerations
+than he used to acknowledge before. But when he gets used to his new
+position, when the surprise has abated, and everything around him has
+become normal to him, his old principles of action return. A young man
+called suddenly to take the place of a most worthy and honoured father
+feels the responsibility of wearing such a mantle, and struggles for a
+time to fulfil his father's ideal. But ere long the novelty of his
+position wears away, the thought of his father recurs less frequently,
+and his old views and feelings resume their sway. Admission to the
+fellowship of a Church which sustains a high repute may have at first
+not only a restraining, but a stimulating and elevating effect, until,
+the position becoming familiar to one, the emotions it first excited die
+away. This risk is peculiarly incident to those who bear office in the
+Church. Ordination to the ministry, or to any other spiritual office,
+solemnizes one at first, even though one may not be truly converted, and
+nerves one with strength and resolution to throw off many an evil habit.
+But the solemn impression wanes with time, and the carnal nature asserts
+its claims. How earnest and how particular men ought ever to be in
+examining themselves whether their serious impressions are the effect of
+a true change of nature, or whether they are not mere temporary
+experiences, the casual result of external circumstances.
+
+But how is this to be ascertained? Let us recall the test with which our
+Lord has furnished us. "Not every one that saith unto Me, Lord, Lord,
+shall enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he that doeth the will of My
+Father which is in heaven. Many will say unto Me in that day, Lord,
+Lord, have we not prophesied in Thy name, and in Thy name have cast out
+devils, and in Thy name have done many wonderful works? Then will I say
+unto them, I never knew you; depart from Me, ye that work iniquity." The
+real test is a changed will; a will no longer demanding that self be
+pleased, but that God be pleased; a will yielding up everything to the
+will of God; a will continually asking what is right and what is true,
+not what will please me, or what will be a gain to me; a will
+overpowered by the sense of what is due in nature to the Lord and Judge
+of all, and of what is due in grace to Him that loved us and washed us
+from our sins in His own blood. Have you thus surrendered yourselves to
+God? At the heart and root of your nature is there the profound desire
+to do what is well-pleasing in His sight? If so, then, even amid
+abounding infirmities, you may hold that you are the child of God. But
+if still the principle--silent, perhaps, and unavowed, but real--that
+moves you and regulates your life be that of self-pleasing, any change
+that may have occurred otherwise must have sprung only from outward
+conditions, and the prayer needs to go out from you on the wings of
+irrepressible desire, "Create in me a clean heart, O Lord, and renew a
+right spirit within me."
+
+Two things in this part of the chapter have yet to be adverted to. The
+first is that somewhat mysterious question (ver. 12) which some one
+asked on seeing Saul among the prophets--"But who is their father?"
+Various explanations have been given of this question; but the most
+natural seems to be, that it was designed to meet a reason for the
+surprise felt at Saul being among the prophets--viz. that his father
+Kish was a godless man. That consideration is irrelevant; for who, asks
+this person, is the father of the prophets? The prophetic gift does not
+depend on fatherhood. It is not by connection with their fathers that
+the prophetic band enjoy their privileges. Why should not Saul be among
+the prophets as well as any of them? Such men are born not of blood, nor
+of the will of man, nor of the will of the flesh, but of God.
+
+The other point remaining to be noticed is Saul's concealment from his
+uncle of all that Samuel had said about the kingdom. It appears from
+this both that Saul was yet of a modest, humble spirit, and perhaps that
+his uncle would have made an unwise use of the information if he had got
+it. It would be time enough for that to be known when God's way of
+bringing it to pass should come. There is a time to speak and a time to
+keep silence. Saul told enough to the uncle to establish belief in the
+supernatural power of Samuel, but nothing to gratify mere curiosity.
+Thus in many ways Saul commends himself to us in this chapter, and in no
+way does he provoke our blame. He was like the young man in the Gospel
+in whom our Lord found so much that was favourable. Alas, he was like
+the young man also in the particular that made all the rest of little
+effect--"One thing thou lackest."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+_SAUL CHOSEN KING._
+
+1 SAMUEL x. 17-27.
+
+
+When first the desire to have a king came to a height with the people,
+they had the grace to go to Samuel, and endeavour to arrange the matter
+through him. They did not, indeed, show much regard to his feelings;
+rather they showed a sort of childlike helplessness, not appearing to
+consider how much he would be hurt both by their virtual rejection of
+his government, and by their blunt reference to the unworthy behaviour
+of his sons. But it was a good thing that they came to Samuel at all.
+They were not prepared to carry out their wishes by lawless violence;
+they were not desirous to make use of the usual Oriental methods of
+revolution--massacre and riot. It was so far well that they desired to
+avail themselves of the peaceful instrumentality of Samuel. We have seen
+how Samuel carried the matter to the Lord, and how the Lord yielded so
+far to the wish of the nation as to permit them to have a king. And
+Samuel having determined not to take offence, but to continue in
+friendly relations to the people and do his utmost to turn the change to
+the best possible account, now proceeds to superintend the business of
+election. He summons the people to the Lord to Mizpeh; that is, he
+convenes the heads of the various tribes to a meeting, which was not to
+be counted a rough political convention, but a solemn religious
+gathering in the very presence of the Lord. Either before the meeting,
+or at the meeting, the principle must have been settled on which the
+election was to be made. It was, however, not so much the people that
+were to choose as God. The selection was to take place by lot. This
+method was resorted to as the best fitted to show who was the object of
+God's choice. There seems to have been no trace of difference of opinion
+as to its being the right method of procedure.
+
+But before the lot was actually cast, Samuel addressed to the assembly
+one of those stern, terrible exposures of the spirit that had led to the
+transaction which would surely have turned a less self-willed and
+stiff-necked people from their purpose, and constrained them to revert
+to their original economy. "Thus saith the Lord God of Israel: I brought
+up Israel out of Egypt, and delivered you out of the hand of the
+Egyptians, and out of the hand of all kingdoms, and of them that
+oppressed you; and ye have this day rejected your God, who Himself saved
+you out of all your adversities and your tribulations; and ye have said
+unto Him, Nay, but set a king over us." How _could_ the people, we may
+well ask, get over this? How could they prefer an earthly king to a
+heavenly? What possible benefit worth naming could accrue to them from a
+transaction dishonouring to the Lord of heaven, which, if it did not
+make Him their enemy, could not but chill His interest in them?
+
+Perhaps, however, we may wonder less at the behaviour of the Israelites
+on this occasion if we bear in mind how often the same offence is
+committed, and with how little thought and consideration, at the
+present day. To begin with, take the case--and it is a very common
+one--of those who have been dedicated to God in baptism, but who cast
+their baptismal covenant to the winds. The time comes when the
+provisional dedication to the Lord should be followed up by an actual
+and hearty consecration of themselves. Failing that, what can be said of
+them but that they reject God as their King? And with what want of
+concern is this often done, and sometimes in the face of remonstrances,
+as, for instance, by the many young men in our congregations who allow
+the time for decision to pass without ever presenting themselves to the
+Church as desirous to take on them the yoke of Christ! A moment's
+thought might show them that if they do not actively join themselves to
+Christ, they virtually sever themselves from Him. If I make a
+provisional bargain with any one to last for a short time, and at the
+end of that time take no steps to renew it, I actually renounce it. Not
+to renew the covenant of baptism, when years of discretion have been
+reached, is virtually to break it off. Much consideration must be had
+for the consciousness of unworthiness, but even that is not a sufficient
+reason, because our worthiness can never come from what we are in
+ourselves, but from our faith in Him who alone can supply us with the
+wedding garment.
+
+Then there are those who reject God in a more outrageous form. There are
+those who plunge boldly into the stream of sin, or into the stream of
+worldly enjoyment, determined to lead a life of pleasure, let the
+consequences be what they may. As to religion, it is nothing to them,
+except a subject of ridicule on the part of those who affect it.
+Morality--well, if it fall within the fashion of the world, it must be
+respected; otherwise let it go to the winds. God, heaven, hell,--they
+are mere bugbears to frighten the timid and superstitious. Not only is
+God rejected, but He is defied. Not only are His blessing, His
+protection, His gracious guidance scorned, but the devil, or the world,
+or the flesh is openly elevated to His throne. Yet men and women too can
+go on through years of life utterly unconcerned at the slight they offer
+to God, and unmoved by any warning that may come to them "Who is the
+Almighty that we should serve Him? And what profit shall we have if we
+bow down before Him?" Their attitude reminds us of the answer of the
+persecutor, when the widow of his murdered victim protested that he
+would have to answer both to man and to God for the deed of that day.
+"To man," he said, "I can easily answer; and as for God, I will take Him
+in my own hands."
+
+But there is still another class against whom the charge of rejecting
+God may be made. Not, indeed, in the same sense or to the same degree,
+but with one element of guilt which does not attach to the others,
+inasmuch as they have known what it is to have God for their King. I
+advert to certain Christian men and women who in their early days were
+marked by much earnestness of spirit, but having risen in the world,
+have fallen back from their first attainments, and have more or less
+accepted the world's law. Perhaps it was of their poorer days that God
+had cause to remember "the kindness of their youth and the love of their
+espousals." Then they were earnest in their devotions, full of interest
+in Christian work, eager to grow in grace and in all the qualities of a
+Christlike character. But as they grew in wealth, and rose in the
+world, a change came o'er the spirit of their dream. They must have fine
+houses and equipages, and give grand entertainments, and cultivate the
+acquaintance of this great family and that, and get a recognized
+position among their fellows. Gradually their life comes to be swayed by
+considerations they never would have thought of in early days. Gradually
+the strict rules by which they used to live are relaxed, and an easier
+and more accommodating attitude towards the world is taken up. And as
+surely the glow of their spiritual feelings cools down; the charm of
+their spiritual enjoyments goes off; the blessed hope, even the glorious
+appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ, fades away; and one scheme after
+another of worldly advancement and enjoyment occupies their minds. What
+glamour has passed over their souls to obliterate the surpassing glory
+of Jesus Christ, the image of the invisible God? What evil spell has
+robbed the Cross of its holy influence, and made them so indifferent to
+the Son of God, who loved them and gave Himself for them? Is the gate of
+heaven changed, that they no longer care to linger at it, as in better
+times they used so fondly to do? No. But they have left their first
+love; they have gone away after idols; they have been caught in the
+snares of the god of this world. In so far, they have rejected their God
+that saved them out of all their adversities and tribulations; and if
+they go on to do so after solemn warning, their guilt will be like the
+guilt of Israel, and the day must come when "their own wickedness shall
+correct them, and their backslidings shall reprove them."
+
+But let us come back to the election. The first lot was cast between the
+twelve tribes, and it fell on Benjamin. The next lot was cast between
+the families of Benjamin, and it fell on the family of Matri; and when
+they came to closer quarters, as it were, the lot fell on Saul, the son
+of Kish. Again we see how the most casual events are all under
+government, and conspire to accomplish the purpose of Him who worketh
+all things after the counsel of His own will. "The lot is cast into the
+lap; but the whole disposing thereof is of the Lord."
+
+No doubt Saul had anticipated this consummation. He had had too many
+supernatural evidences to the same effect to have any lingering doubt
+what would be the result of the lot. But it was too much for him. He hid
+himself, and could not be found. And we do not think the worse of him
+for this, but rather the better. It is one of the many favourable traits
+that we find at the outset of his kingly career. However pleasant it
+might be to ruminate on the privileges and honours of royalty, it was a
+serious thing to undertake the leadership of a great nation. In this
+respect, Saul shared the feeling that constrained Moses to shrink back
+when he was appointed to deliver Israel from Egypt, and that constrained
+Jeremiah to remonstrate when he was appointed a prophet unto the
+nations. Many of the best ministers of Christ have had this feeling when
+they were called to the Christian ministry. Gregory Nazianzen actually
+fled to the wilderness after his ordination, and Ambrose, Bishop of
+Milan, in the civil office which he held, tried to turn the people from
+their choice even by acts of cruelty and severity, after they had called
+on him to become their bishop.
+
+But, besides the natural shrinking of Saul from so responsible an
+office, we may believe that he was not unmoved by the solemn
+representation of Samuel that in their determination to have a human
+king the people had been guilty of rejecting God. This may have been
+the first time that that view of the matter seriously impressed itself
+on his mind. Even though it was accompanied by the qualification that
+God in a sense sanctioned the new arrangement, and though the use of the
+lot would indicate God's choice, Saul might well have been staggered by
+the thought that in electing a king the people had rejected God. Even
+though his mind was not a spiritual mind, there was something frightful
+in the very idea of a man stepping, so to speak, into God's place. No
+wonder then though he hid himself! Perhaps he thought that when he could
+not be found the choice would fall on some one else. But no. An appeal
+was again made to God, and God directly indicated Saul, and indicated
+his place of concealment. The stuff or baggage among which Saul was hid
+was the collection of packages which the people would naturally bring
+with them, and which it was the custom to pile up, often as a rampart or
+defence, while the assembly lasted. We can fancy the scene when, the
+pile of baggage being indicated as the hiding-place, the people rushed
+to search among it, knocking the contents asunder very unceremoniously,
+until Saul was at length discovered. From his inglorious place of
+retreat the king was now brought out, looking no doubt awkward and
+foolish, yet with that commanding figure which seemed so suitable for
+his new dignity. And his first encouragement was the shout of the
+people--"God save the king!" How strange and quick the transition! A
+minute ago he was safe in his hiding-place, wondering whether some one
+else might not get the office. Now the shouts of the people indicate
+that all is settled. King of Israel he is henceforward to be.
+
+Three incidents are recorded towards the end of the chapter as throwing
+light on the great event of the day. In the first place, "Samuel told
+the people the manner of the kingdom, and wrote it in a book, and laid
+it up before the Lord." This was another means taken by the faithful
+prophet to secure that this new step should if possible be for good, and
+not for evil. It was a new protest against assimilating the kingdom of
+Israel to the other kingdoms around. No! although Jehovah was no longer
+King in the sense in which He had been, His covenant and His law were
+still binding, and must be observed in Israel to their remotest
+generation. No change could repeal the law of the ten words given amid
+the thunders of Sinai. No change could annul the promise to Abraham, "In
+thee and in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed." No
+change could reverse that mode of approach to a holy God which had been
+ordained for the sinner--through the shedding of atoning blood. The
+destiny of Israel was not changed, as the medium of God's communications
+to the world on the most vital of all subjects in which sinners could be
+interested. And king though he was, Saul would find that there was no
+way of securing the true prosperity of his kingdom but by ruling it in
+the fear of God, and with the highest regard to His will and pleasure;
+while nothing was so sure to drive it to ruin, as to depart from the
+Divine prescription, and plunge into the ways that were common among the
+heathen.
+
+The next circumstance mentioned in the history is, that when the people
+dispersed, and when Saul returned to his home at Gibeah, "there went
+with him a band of men, whose hearts God had touched." They were induced
+to form a bodyguard for the new king, and they did so under no physical
+constraint from him or any one else, but because they were moved to do
+it from sympathy, from the desire to help him and be of service to him
+in the new position to which he had been raised. Here was a remarkable
+encouragement. A friend in need is a friend indeed. Could there have
+been any time when Saul was more in need of friends? How happy a thing
+it was that he did not need to go and search for them; they came to him
+with their willing service. And what a happy start it was for him in his
+new office that these helpers were at hand to serve him! A band of
+willing helpers around one takes off more than half the difficulty of a
+difficult enterprise. Men that enter into one's plans, that sympathize
+with one's aims, that are ready to share one's burdens, that anticipate
+one's wishes, are of priceless value in any business. But they are of
+especial value in the Church of Christ. One of the first things our Lord
+did after entering on His public ministry was to call to Himself the
+twelve, who were to be His staff, His ready helpers wherever they were
+able to give help. Is it not the joy of the Christian minister, as he
+takes up his charge, if there go with him a band of men whose hearts God
+has touched? How lonely and how hard is the ministry if there be no such
+men to help! How different when efficient volunteers are there, in
+readiness for the Sunday-school, and the Band of hope, and the
+missionary society, and the congregational choir, and for visiting the
+sick, and every other service of Christian love! Congregations ought to
+feel that it cannot be right to leave all the work to their minister.
+What kind of battle would it be if all the fighting were left to the
+officer in command? Let the members of congregations ever bear in mind
+that it is their duty and their privilege to help in the work. If we
+wish to see the picture of a prosperous Apostolic Church, let us study
+the last chapter of the Epistle to the Romans. The glory of the
+primitive Church of Rome was that it abounded in men and women whose
+hearts God had touched, and who "laboured much in the Lord."
+
+Do any of us shrink from such work? Are any willing to pray for God's
+work, but unwilling to take part in it personally? Such a state of mind
+cannot but suggest the question, Has the Lord touched your hearts? The
+expression is a very significant one. It implies that one touch of God's
+hand, one breathing of His Spirit, can effect such a change that what
+was formerly ungenial becomes agreeable; a vital principle is imparted
+to the heart. Life can come only from the fountain of life. Hearts can
+be quickened only by the living Spirit of God. In vain shall we try to
+serve Him until our hearts are touched by His Spirit. Would that that
+Spirit were poured forth so abundantly that "one should say, I am the
+Lord's, and another should call himself by the name of Jacob, and
+another should subscribe with his hand to the Lord, and surname himself
+with the name of Israel"!
+
+The last thing to be noticed is the difference of feeling toward Saul
+among the people. While he was received cordially by most, there was a
+section that despised him, that scorned the idea of his delivering the
+nation, and, in token of their contempt, brought him no presents. They
+are called the children of Belial. It was not that they regarded his
+election as an invasion of the ancient constitution of the country, as
+an interference with the sovereign rights of Jehovah, but that, in their
+pride, they refused to submit to him; they would not have him for their
+king. The tokens of Divine authority--the sanction of Samuel, the use
+of the lot, and the other proofs that what was done at Mizpeh had been
+ratified in heaven--made no impression upon them. We are told of Saul
+that he held his peace; he would rather refute them by deeds than by
+words; he would let it be seen, when the opportunity offered, whether he
+could render any service to the nation or not. But does not this ominous
+fact, recorded at the very threshold of Saul's reign, at the very time
+when it became so apparent that he was the Lord's anointed, suggest to
+our minds a corresponding fact, in reference to One who is the Lord's
+Anointed in a higher sense? Is there not in many a disposition to say
+even of the Lord Jesus Christ, "How shall this man save us"? Do not many
+rob the Lord Jesus Christ of His saving power, reducing Him to the level
+of a mere teacher, denying that He shed His blood to take away sin? And
+are there not others who refuse their homage to the Lord from sheer
+self-dependence and pride? They have never been convinced of their sins,
+never shared the publican's feeling, but rather been disposed to boast,
+like the Pharisee, that they were not like other men. And is not Christ
+still to many as a root out of a dry ground, without form or comeliness
+wherefore they should desire Him? Oh for the spirit of wisdom and
+illumination in the knowledge of Him! Oh that, the eyes of our
+understandings being enlightened, we might all see Jesus fairer than the
+children of men, the chief among ten thousand, yea altogether lovely;
+and that, instead of our manifesting any unwillingness to acknowledge
+Him and follow Him, the language of our hearts might be, "Whom have we
+in heaven but Thee? and there is none on the earth that we desire
+besides Thee." "Entreat us not to leave Thee, nor to return from
+following after Thee; for where Thou goest we will go, and where Thou
+lodgest we will lodge; Thy people shall be our people," and Thou Thyself
+our Lord and our God.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+_THE RELIEF OF JABESH-GILEAD._
+
+1 SAMUEL xi.
+
+
+Primitive though the state of society was in those days in Israel, we
+are hardly prepared to find Saul following the herd in the field after
+his election as king of Israel. We are compelled to conclude that the
+opposition to him was far from contemptible in number and in influence,
+and that he found it expedient in the meantime to make no demonstration
+of royalty, but continue his old way of life. If we go back to the days
+of Abimelech, the son of Gideon, we get a vivid view of the awful crimes
+which even an Israelite could commit, under the influence of jealousy,
+when other persons stood in the way of his ambitious designs. It is
+quite conceivable that had Saul at once assumed the style and title of
+royalty, those children of Belial who were so contemptuous at his
+election would have made away with him. Human life was of so little
+value in those Eastern countries, and the crime of destroying it was so
+little thought of, that if Saul had in any way provoked hostility, he
+would have been almost certain to fall by some assassin's hand. It was
+therefore wise of him to continue for a time his old way of living, and
+wait for some opportunity which should arise providentially, to
+vindicate his title to the sceptre of Israel.
+
+Apparently he had not to wait long--according to Josephus, only a month.
+The opportunity arose in a somewhat out-of-the-way part of the country,
+where disturbance had been brewing previous to his election (comp. xii.
+12). It was not the first time that the inhabitants of Gilead and other
+dwellers on the east side of Jordan came to feel that in settling there
+they had to pay dear for their well-watered and well-sheltered pastures.
+They were exposed in an especial degree to the assaults of enemies, and
+pre-eminent among these were their cousins, the Ammonites. Very probably
+the Ammonites had never forgotten the humiliation inflicted on them by
+Jephthah, when he smote them "from Aroer, even till thou come to
+Minnith, even twenty cities, and till thou come to the plain of the
+vineyards, with a very great slaughter." Naturally the Ammonites would
+be desirous both to avenge these defeats and to regain their cities, or
+at least to get other cities in lieu of what they had lost. We do not
+know with certainty the site of Jabesh-Gilead, or the reasons why it was
+the special object of attack by King Nahash at this time. But so it was;
+and as the people of Jabesh-Gilead either knew not or cared not for
+their real defence, the God of Israel, they found themselves too hard
+bestead by the Ammonites, and, exhausted probably by the weary siege,
+proposed terms of capitulation.
+
+This is the first scene in the chapter before us. "The men of Jabesh
+said to Nahash, king of the Ammonites, Make a covenant with us, and we
+will serve thee." The history of the Israelites in time of danger
+commonly presents one or other of two extremes: either pusillanimous
+submission, or daring defiance to the hostile power. In this case it was
+pusillanimous submission, as indeed it commonly was when the people
+followed the motions of their own hearts, and were not electrified into
+opposition by some great hero, full of faith in God. But it was not mere
+cowardice they displayed in offering to become the servants of the
+Ammonites; there was impiety in it likewise. For of their relation to
+God they made no account whatever. By covenant with their fathers,
+ratified from generation to generation, they were God's servants, and
+they had no right voluntarily to transfer to another master the
+allegiance which was due to God alone. The proposal they made was
+virtually a breach of the first commandment. And it was not a case of
+necessity. Instead of humbling themselves before God and confessing the
+sins that had brought them into trouble, they put God altogether aside,
+and basely offered to become the servants of the Ammonites. Even the
+remembrance of the glorious victories of their own Jephthah, when he
+went to war with the Ammonites, in dependence on the God of Israel,
+seems to have had no effect in turning them from the inglorious
+proposal. We see here the sad effect of sin and careless living in
+lowering men's spirits, sapping courage, and discouraging noble effort.
+Oh, it is pitiable to see men tamely submitting to a vile master! Yet
+how often is the sight repeated! How often do men virtually say to the
+devil, "Make a covenant with us, and we will serve thee"! Not indeed in
+the open way in which it used to be believed that one of the popes,
+before his elevation to the papal chair, formally sold his soul to the
+devil in exchange for that dignity. Yet how often do men virtually give
+themselves over to serve a vile master, to lead evil or at least
+careless lives, to indulge in sinful habits which they know they should
+overcome, but which they are too indolent and self-indulged to resist!
+Men and women, with strong proclivities to sin, may for a time resist,
+but they get tired of the battle; they long for an easier life, and they
+say in their hearts, "We will resist no longer; we will become your
+servants." They are willing to make peace with the Ammonites, because
+they are wearied of fighting. "Anything for a quiet life!" They
+surrender to the enemy, they are willing to serve sin, because they will
+not surrender the ease and the pleasures of sin.
+
+But sin is a bad master; his wages are terrible to think of. The terms
+which Nahash offered to the men of Jabesh-Gilead combined insult and
+injury. "On this condition will I make a covenant with you: that I may
+thrust out all your right eyes, and lay it for a reproach unto all
+Israel." "The tender mercies of the wicked are cruel." There is nothing
+in which the pernicious influence of paganism was more notorious in
+ancient times--and indeed, we may say, is more notorious in all
+times--than in the horrible cruelties to which it led. Barbarity was the
+very element in which it lived. And that barbarity was often exemplified
+in cruelly depriving enemies of those members and organs of the body
+which are most needful for the comfort of life. The hands and the eyes
+were especially the victims of this diabolical feeling. Just as you may
+see at this day in certain African villages miserable creatures without
+hands or eyes who have fallen under the displeasure of their chief and
+received this revolting treatment, so it was in those early times. But
+Nahash was comparatively merciful. He was willing to let the men of
+Jabesh off with the loss of one eye only. But as if to compensate for
+this forbearance, he declared that he would regard the transaction as a
+reproach upon all Israel. The mutilated condition of that poor one-eyed
+community would be a ground for despising the whole nation; it would be
+a token of the humiliation and degradation of the whole Israelite
+community. These were the terms of Nahash. His favour could be purchased
+only by a cruel injury to every man's body and a stinging insult to
+their whole nation. But these terms were just too humiliating. Whether
+the men of Jabesh would have been willing to lose their eyes as the
+price of peace we do not know; but the proposed humiliation of the
+nation was something to which they were not prepared at once to submit.
+The nation itself should look to that. The nation should consider
+whether it was prepared to be thus insulted by the humiliation of one of
+its cities. Consequently they asked for a week's respite, that it might
+be seen whether the nation would not bestir itself to maintain its
+honour.
+
+If we regard Nahash as a type of another tyrant, as representing the
+tyranny of sin, we may derive from his conditions an illustration of the
+hard terms which sin usually imposes. "The way of transgressors is
+hard." Oh, what untold misery does one act of sin often bring! One act
+of drunkenness, in which one is led to commit some crime of violence
+that would never have been dreamt of otherwise; one act of dishonesty,
+followed up by a course of deceit and double-dealing, that at last
+culminates in disgrace and ruin; one act of unchastity, leading to loss
+of character and to a downward career ending in utter darkness,--how
+frightful is the retribution! But happy is the young person, when under
+temptation to the service of sin, if there comes to him at the very
+threshold some frightful experience of the hardness of the service, if,
+like the men of Jabesh-Gilead, he is made to feel that the loss and
+humiliation are beyond endurance, and to betake himself to the service
+of another Master, whose yoke is easy, whose burden is light, and whose
+rewards are more precious than silver and gold!
+
+With the activity of despair, the men of Jabesh now publish throughout
+all Israel the terms that Nahash has offered them. At Gibeah of Saul a
+deep impression is made. But it is not the kind of impression that gives
+much hope. "All the people lifted up their voices and wept." It was just
+the way in which their forefathers had acted at the Red Sea, when, shut
+in between the mountains and the sea, they saw the chariots of Pharaoh
+advancing in battle array against them; and again, it was the way in
+which they spent that night in the wilderness after the spies brought
+back their report of the land. It was a sorrowful sight--a whole mass of
+people crying like babies, panic-stricken, and utterly helpless. But, as
+in the two earlier cases, there was a man of faith to roll back the wave
+of panic. As Moses at the Red Sea got courage to go forward, as Caleb,
+the faithful spy, was able to resist all the clamour of his colleagues
+and the people, so on this occasion the spirit that rises above the
+storm, and flings defiance even on the strongest enemies, came mightily
+on one man--on Saul. His conduct at this time is another evidence how
+well he conducted himself in the opening period of his reign. "The
+Spirit of the Lord came upon Saul when he heard the tidings, and his
+anger was kindled greatly." The Spirit of the Lord evidently means here
+that spirit of courage, of noble energy, of dauntless resolution, which
+was needed to meet the emergency that had arisen. His first act was a
+symbolical one, very rough in its nature, but an act of the kind that
+was best fitted to make an impression on an Eastern people. A yoke of
+oxen was hewn in pieces, and the bloody fragments were sent by
+messengers throughout all Israel, with a thundering announcement that
+any one failing to follow Saul would have his own oxen dealt with in a
+similar fashion! It was a bold proclamation for a man to make who
+himself had just been following his herd in the field. But boldness,
+even audacity, is often the best policy. The thundering proclamation of
+Saul brought an immense muster of people to him. A sufficient portion of
+them would set out with the king, hastening down the passes to the
+Jordan valley, and having crossed the river, would bivouac for the night
+in some of the ravines that led up towards the city of Jabesh-Gilead.
+Messengers had been previously pushed forward to announce to the people
+there the approach of the relieving force. Long before daybreak, Saul
+had divided his force into three, who were to approach the beleaguered
+city by different roads and surprise the Ammonites by break of day. The
+plan was successfully carried out. The assault on the Ammonite army was
+made in the morning watch, and continued till midday. It was now the
+turn for the Ammonites to fall under panic. Their assailants seem to
+have found them entirely unprepared. There is nothing with which the
+undisciplined ranks of an Eastern horde are less able to cope than an
+unexpected attack. The defeat was complete, and the slaughter must have
+been terrific; and "it came to pass that they which remained of them
+were scattered, so that two of them were not left together." The men of
+Jabesh-Gilead, who had expected to spend that night in humiliation and
+anguish, would be sure to spend it in a very tumult of joy, perhaps
+rather in a wild excitement than in the calm but intensely relieved
+condition of men of whom the sorrows of death had taken hold, but whom
+the Lord had delivered out of all their distresses.
+
+It is no wonder though the people were delighted with their king. From
+first to last he had conducted himself admirably. He had not delayed an
+hour in taking the proper steps. Though wearied probably with his day's
+work among the herd, he set about the necessary arrangements with the
+utmost promptitude. It was a serious undertaking: first, to rouse to the
+necessary pitch a people who were more disposed to weep and wring their
+hands, than to keep their heads and devise a way of escape in the hour
+of danger; second, to gather a sufficient army to his standard; third,
+to march across the Jordan, attack the foe, confident and well equipped,
+and deliver the beleaguered city. But dangers and difficulties only
+roused Saul to higher exertions. And now, when in one short week he has
+completed an enterprise worthy to rank among the highest in the history
+of the nation, it is no wonder that the satisfaction of the people
+reaches an enthusiastic pitch. It would have been unaccountable had it
+been otherwise. And it is no wonder that their thoughts revert to the
+men who had stood in the way of his occupying the throne. Here is
+another proof that the opposition was more serious and more deadly than
+at first appears. These men were far from contemptible. Even now they
+might be a serious trouble to the nation. Would it not be good policy to
+get rid of them at once? Did they not deserve to die, and ought they not
+at once to be put to death? It is not likely that if this question had
+been mooted in the like circumstances in any of the neighbouring
+kingdoms, there would have been a moment's hesitation in answering it.
+But Saul was full of a magnanimous spirit--nay, it seemed at the time a
+godly spirit. His mind was impressed with the fact that the deliverance
+of that day had come from God. And it was impressed at the same time
+with the grandeur and sublimity of the Divine power that had been
+brought into operation on behalf of Israel. Saul perceived a tremendous
+reality in the fact that "the Lord was their defence; the Holy One of
+Israel was their King." If Israel was encircled by such a garrison, if
+Israel's king was under such a Protector, what need he fear from a gang
+of miscreants like these children of Belial? Why dim the glory of the
+day by an act of needless massacre? Let forbearance to these misguided
+villains be another proof of the respect the nation had to the God of
+Jacob, as the Defender of Israel and Israel's King, and the certainty of
+their trust that He would defend them. And so "Saul said, There shall
+not a man be put to death this day; for to-day the Lord hath wrought
+salvation in Israel."
+
+O Saul, Saul, how well for thee it would have been hadst thou maintained
+this spirit! For then God would not have had to reject thee from being
+king, and to seek among the sheepfolds of Bethlehem a man after His own
+heart to be the leader of His people! And then thou wouldest have had no
+fear for the security of thy throne; thou wouldest not have hunted thy
+rival like a partridge on the mountains; and never, never wouldest thou
+have been tempted, in thy difficulties, to seek counsel from a woman
+with a familiar spirit, on the plea that God was departed from thee!
+
+As we are thinking how well Saul has acted on this occasion, we perceive
+that an old friend has come on the scene who helps us materially to
+understand the situation. Yes, he is all the better of Samuel's
+guidance and prayers. The good old prophet has no jealousy of the man
+who took his place as head of the nation. But knowing well the
+fickleness of the people, he is anxious to turn the occasion to account
+for confirming their feelings and their aims. Seeing how the king has
+acknowledged God as the Author of the victory, he desires to strike
+while the iron is hot. "Come," he says, "let us go to Gilgal, and renew
+the kingdom there." Gilgal was the first place where the people had
+encamped under Joshua on crossing the Jordan. It was the place where the
+twelve stones taken from the empty bed of the river had been set up, as
+a testimony to the reality of the Divine presence in the midst of them.
+In some aspects, one might have thought that Samuel would invite them to
+Ebenezer, where he had set up the stone of help, and that he would add
+another testimony to the record that hitherto the Lord had helped them.
+But Gilgal was nearer to Jabesh-Gilead, and it was memorable for still
+higher traditions. To Gilgal accordingly they went, to renew the
+kingdom. "And there they made Saul king before the Lord in Gilgal, and
+there they sacrificed sacrifices of peace-offerings before the Lord, and
+there Saul and all the men of Israel rejoiced greatly."
+
+The first election of Saul had been effected without any ceremonial, as
+if the people had been somewhat afraid to have a public coronation when
+it was obvious they had carried their point only by Divine sufferance,
+not by Divine command. But now, unequivocal testimony has been borne
+that, so long as Saul pays becoming regard to the heavenly King, the
+blessing and countenance of the Almighty will be his. Let him then be
+set apart with all due enthusiasm for his exalted office. Let his
+consecration take place in the most solemn circumstances--let it be
+"before the Lord in Gilgal;" let it be accompanied with those sacrifices
+of peace-offerings which shall indicate respect for God's appointed
+method of reconciliation; and let it be conducted with such devout
+regard to Him and to His law, that when it is over, the Divine blessing
+shall seem to fall on Saul in the old form of benediction, "The Lord
+bless thee and keep thee; the Lord make His face to shine on thee and be
+gracious to thee; the Lord lift up His countenance on thee and give thee
+peace." Let the impression be deepened that "the God of Israel is He
+that giveth strength and power unto His people." Saul himself will not
+be the worse for having these feelings confirmed, and it will be of the
+highest benefit to the people.
+
+And thus, under Samuel's guidance, the kingdom was renewed. Thus did
+both Saul and the people give unto the Lord the glory due to His name.
+And engaging in the ceremonial as they all did in this spirit, "both
+Saul and all the men of Israel rejoiced greatly." It was, perhaps, the
+happiest occasion in all the reign of Saul. What contributed the chief
+element of brightness to the occasion was--the sunshine of Heaven. God
+was there, smiling on His children. There were other elements too.
+Samuel was there, happy that Saul had conquered, that he had established
+himself upon the throne, and, above all, that he had, in a right noble
+way, acknowledged God as the Author of the victory at Jabesh-Gilead.
+Saul was there, reaping the reward of his humility, his forbearance, his
+courage, and his activity. The people were there, proud of their king,
+proud of his magnificent appearance, but prouder of the super-eminent
+qualities that had marked the commencement of his reign. Nor was the
+pleasure of any one marred by any ugly blot or unworthy deed throwing a
+gloom over the transaction.
+
+For one moment, let us compare the joy of this company with the feelings
+of men revelling in the pleasures of sin and sensuality, or even of men
+storing a pile of gold, the result of some successful venture or the
+legacy of some deceased relative. How poor the quality of the one joy
+compared to that of the other! For what is there outside themselves that
+can make men so happy as the smile of God? Or what condition of the soul
+can be so full, so overflowing with healthy gladness, as when the heart
+is ordered in accordance with God's law, and men are really disposed and
+enabled to love the Lord their God with all their heart, and to love
+their neighbours as themselves?
+
+Is there not something of heaven in this joy? Is it not joy unspeakable
+and full of glory?
+
+One other question: Is it _yours_?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+_SAMUEL'S VINDICATION OF HIMSELF._
+
+1 SAMUEL xii. 1-5.
+
+
+It was a different audience that Samuel had to address at Gilgal from
+either that which came to him to Ramah to ask for a king, or that which
+assembled at Mizpeh to elect one. To both of these assemblies he had
+solemnly conveyed his warning against the act of distrust in God implied
+in their wishing for a king at all, and against any disposition they
+might feel, when they got a king, to pay less attention than before to
+God's will and covenant. The present audience represented the army,
+undoubtedly a great multitude, that had gone forth with Saul to relieve
+Jabesh-Gilead, and that now came with Samuel to Gilgal to renew the
+kingdom. As the audience now seems to have been larger, so it very
+probably represented more fully the whole of the twelve tribes of
+Israel. This may explain to us why Samuel not only returned to the
+subject on which he had spoken so earnestly before, but enlarged on it
+at greater length, and appealed with more fulness to his own past life
+as giving weight to the counsels which he pressed upon them. Besides
+this, the recognition of Saul as king at Gilgal was more formal, more
+hearty, and more unanimous than at Mizpeh, and the institution of
+royalty was now more an established and settled affair. No doubt, too,
+Samuel felt that, after the victory at Jabesh-Gilead, he had the people
+in a much more impressible condition than they had been in before; and
+while their minds were thus so open to impression, it was his duty to
+urge on them to the very uttermost the truths that bore on their most
+vital well-being.
+
+The address of Samuel on this occasion bore on three things: 1 his own
+personal relations to them in the past (vers. 1-5); 2 the mode of God's
+dealing with their fathers, and its bearing on the step now taken (vers.
+6-12); and 3 the way in which God's judgments might be averted and His
+favour and friendship secured to the nation in all time coming (vers.
+13-25).
+
+1. The reason why Samuel makes such explicit reference to his past life
+and such a strong appeal to the people as to its blameless character is,
+that he may establish a powerful claim for the favourable consideration
+of the advice which he is about to give them. The value of an advice no
+doubt depends simply on its own intrinsic excellence, but the _effect_
+of an advice depends partly on other things; it depends, to a great
+extent, on the disposition of people to think favourably of the person
+by whom the advice is given. If you have reason to suspect an adviser of
+a selfish purpose, if you know him to be a man who can plausibly
+represent that the course which he urges will be a great benefit to you,
+while in reality he has no real regard for any interest but his own,
+then, let him argue as he pleases, you do not allow yourselves to be
+moved by anything he may say. But if you have good cause to know that he
+is a disinterested man, if he has never shown himself to be selfish, but
+uniformly devoted to the interests of others, and especially of
+yourselves, you feel that what such a man urges comes home to you with
+extraordinary weight. Now, the great object of Samuel in his reference
+to his past life was to bring the weight of this consideration to bear
+in favour of the advice he was to give to the people. For he could
+appeal to them with the greatest confidence as to his absolute
+disinterestedness. He could show that, with ever so many opportunities
+of acting a selfish part, no man could accuse him of having ever been
+guilty of crooked conduct in all his relations to the people. He could
+establish from their own mouths the position that he was as thoroughly
+devoted to the interests of the nation as any man could be. And
+therefore he called on them to give their most favourable and their most
+earnest attention to the advice which he was about to press on them, the
+more so that he was most profoundly convinced that the very existence of
+the nation in days to come depended on its being complied with.
+
+The first consideration he urged was, that he had listened to their
+voice in making them a king. He had not obstructed nor baulked them in
+their strong feeling, though he might reasonably enough have done so. He
+had felt the proposal keenly as a reflection on himself, but he had
+waived that objection and gone on. He had regarded it as a slur on the
+Almighty, but the Almighty Himself had been pleased to forgive it, and
+he had transacted with Him on their behalf in the same way as before.
+Nothing that he had done in this matter could have an unfriendly aspect
+put on it. He had made the best of an objectionable proposal; and now
+they had not only got their wish, but along with it, objectionable
+though it was, a measure of the sanction of God. "And now, behold, the
+king walketh before you."
+
+In the next place, Samuel adverts to his age. "I am old and grey-headed;
+and, behold, my sons are with you, and I have walked before you from my
+childhood unto this day." You have had abundant opportunities to know
+me, and my manner of life. You know how I began, and you know how I have
+gone on, till now the circle of my years is nearly completed; a new
+generation has grown up; my sons are your contemporaries; I am old and
+grey-headed. You know how my childhood was spent in God's house in
+Shiloh, how God called me to be His prophet, and how I have gone on in
+that exalted office, trying ever to be faithful to Him that called me.
+What Samuel delicately points to here is the uniformity of his life. He
+had not begun on one line, then changed to another. He had not seesawed
+nor zigzagged, one thing at one time, another at another; but from
+infancy to grey hairs he had kept steadfastly to the same course, he had
+ever served the same Master. Such steadiness and uniformity throughout a
+long life genders a wonderful weight of character. The man that has
+borne an honoured name through all the changes and temptations of life,
+through youth and middle age, and even to hoar hairs, that has served
+all that time under the same banner and never brought discredit on it,
+has earned a title to no ordinary esteem. It is this that forms the true
+glory of old age. Men instinctively pay honour to the hoary head when it
+represents a career of uniform and consistent integrity; and Christian
+men honour it all the more when it represents a lifetime of Christian
+activity and self-denial. Examine the ground of this reverence, and you
+will find it to be this: such a mature and consistent character could
+never have been attained but for many a struggle, in early life, of duty
+against inclination, and many a victory of the higher principle over
+the lower, till at length the habit of well-doing was so established,
+that further struggles were hardly ever needed. Men think of him as one
+who has silently but steadily yielded up the baser desires of his nature
+all through his life to give effect to the higher and the nobler. They
+think of him as one who has sought all through life to give that honour
+to the will of God in which possibly they have felt themselves sadly
+deficient, and to encourage among their fellow-men, at much cost of
+self-denial, those ways of life which inflict no damage on our nature
+and bring a serene peace and satisfaction. Of such a mode of life,
+Samuel was an admirable representative. Men of that stamp are the true
+nobles of a community. Loyal to God and faithful to man; denying
+themselves and labouring to diffuse the spirit of all true happiness and
+prosperity; visiting the fatherless and the widows in their affliction,
+and keeping themselves unspotted by the world--happy the community whose
+quiver is full of them! Happy the Church, happy the country, that
+abounds in such worthies!--men, as Thomas Carlyle said of his peasant
+Christian father, of whom one should be prouder in one's pedigree than
+of dukes or kings, for what is the glory of mere rank or accidental
+station compared to the glory of Godlike qualities, and of a character
+which reflects the image of God Himself?
+
+The third point to which Samuel adverts is his freedom from all acts of
+unjust exaction or oppression, and from all those corrupt practices in
+the administration of justice which were so common in Eastern countries.
+"Behold, here I am; witness against me before the Lord and before His
+anointed; whose ox have I taken? or whose ass have I taken? or whom
+have I defrauded? whom have I oppressed? or of whose hand have I
+received any bribe to blind mine eyes therewith? and I will restore it
+to you." It was no small matter to be able to make this challenge, which
+is as fearless in tone as it is comprehensive in range, in the very
+midst of such a sea of corruption as the neighbouring kingdoms of the
+East presented. It would seem as if, down to this day, the people in
+most of these despotic countries had never known any other _regime_ but
+one of unjust exaction and oppression. We have seen, in an earlier
+chapter of this book, how shamefully the very priests abused the
+privilege of their sacred office to appropriate to themselves the
+offerings of God. In the days of our Lord and John the Baptist, what was
+it that rendered "the publicans" so odious but that their exactions went
+beyond the limits of justice and decency alike? Even to this day, the
+same system prevails as corrupt as ever. I have heard from an excellent
+American missionary a tale of a court of justice that came within his
+experience, even at a conspicuous place like Beirut, that shows that
+without bribery it is hardly possible to get a decision on the proper
+side. A claim had been made to a piece of land which he had purchased
+for his mission, and as he refused to pay what on the very face of it
+was obviously unjust, he was summoned before the magistrate. The delays
+that took place in dealing with the case were alike needless and
+vexatious, but the explanation came in a message from the authorities,
+slily conveyed to him, that the wheels of justice would move much faster
+if they were duly oiled with a little American gold. To such a proposal
+he would not listen for a moment, and it was only by threatening an
+exposure before the higher powers that the decision was at last given
+where really there was not the shadow of a claim against him. From the
+same source I got an illustration of the exactions that are made to this
+day in the payment of taxes. The law provides that of the produce of the
+land one tenth shall belong to the Government for the public service.
+There is an officer whose duty it is to examine the produce of every
+farm, and carry off the share that the Government are entitled to. The
+farmer is not allowed to do anything with his produce till this officer
+has obtained the Government share. After harvest the farmers of a
+district will send word to the officer that their produce is ready, and
+invite him to come and take his tenth. The officer will return word that
+he is very busy, and will not be able to come for a month. The delay of
+a month would entail incalculable loss and inconvenience on the farmers.
+They know the situation well; and they send a deputation of their number
+to say that if he will only come at once, they are willing to give him
+two tenths instead of one, the second tenth being for his own use. But
+this too they are assured that he cannot do. And there is nothing for
+them but to remain with him higgling and bargaining, till at last
+perhaps, in utter despair, they promise him a proportion which will
+leave no more than the half available for themselves.
+
+And these are not exceptional instances--they are the common experiences
+of Eastern countries, at least in the Turkish empire. When such
+dishonest practices prevail on every side, it often happens that even
+good men are carried away with them, and seem to imagine that, being
+universal, it is necessary for them to fall in with them too. It was a
+rare thing that Samuel was able to do to look round on that vast
+assembly and demand whether one act of that kind had ever been
+committed by him, whether he had ever deviated even an hairbreadth from
+the rule of strict integrity and absolute honesty in all his dealings
+with them. Observe that Samuel was not like one of many, banded together
+to be true and upright, and supporting each other by mutual example and
+encouragement in that course. As far as appears, he was alone, like the
+seraph Abdiel, "faithful found among the faithless, faithful only he."
+What a regard he must have had for the law and authority of God! How
+rigidly he must have trained himself in public as in private life to
+make the will of God the one rule of his actions! What was it to him
+that slight peccadilloes would be thought nothing of by the public? What
+was it to him that men would have counted it only natural that of the
+money that passed through his hands a little should stick to his
+fingers, provided he was faithful in the main? What was it to him that
+this good man and that good man were in the way of doing it, so that,
+after all, he would be no worse than they? All such considerations would
+have been absolutely tossed aside. "Get thee behind me, Satan," would
+have been his answer to all such proposals. Unbending integrity,
+absolute honesty, unswerving truth, was his rule on every occasion. "How
+can I do this wickedness," would have been his question--"How can I do
+this great wickedness, _and sin against God_?"
+
+Is there nothing here for us to ponder in these days of intense
+competition in business and questionable methods of securing gain?
+Surely the rule of unbending integrity, absolute honesty, and unswerving
+truth is as binding on the Christian merchant as it was on the Hebrew
+judge. Is the Christian merchant entitled to make use of the plea of
+general corruption around him in business any more than Samuel was?
+Some say, How else are we to make a living? We answer, No man is
+entitled even to make a living on terms which shut him out from using
+the Lord's Prayer,--from saying, "Give us this day our daily bread." Who
+would dare to say that bread obtained by dishonesty or deceit is
+God-given bread? Who could ask God to bless any enterprise or
+transaction which had not truth and honesty for its foundation? Better
+let bread perish than get it by unlawful means. For "man doth not live
+by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of
+God." "The blessing of the Lord, it maketh rich, and He addeth no sorrow
+with it." Instead of Christian men accepting the questionable ways of
+the world for pushing business, let them stand out as those who never
+can demean themselves by anything so unprincipled. No doubt Samuel was a
+poor man, though he might have been rich had he followed the example of
+heathen rulers. But who does not honour him in his poverty, with his
+incorruptible integrity and most scrupulous truthfulness, as no man
+would or could have honoured him had he accumulated the wealth of a
+Cardinal Wolsey and lived in splendour rivalling royalty itself? After
+all, it is the true rule, "Seek first the kingdom of God and His
+righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you."
+
+But ere we pass from the contemplation of Samuel's character, it is
+right that we should very specially take note of the root of this
+remarkable integrity and truthfulness of his toward men. For we live in
+times when it is often alleged that religion and morality have no vital
+connection with each other, and that there may be found an "independent
+morality" altogether separate from religious profession. Let it be
+granted that this divorce from morality may be true of religions of an
+external character, where Divine service is supposed to consist of
+ritual observances and bodily attitudes and attendances, performed in
+strict accordance with a very rigid rule. Wherever such performances are
+looked on as the end of religion, they may be utterly dissociated from
+morality, and one may be, at one and the same time, strictly religious
+and glaringly immoral. Nay, further, where religion is held to be in the
+main the acceptance of a system of doctrine, where the reception of the
+doctrines of grace is regarded as the distinguishing mark of the
+Christian, and fidelity to these doctrines the most important duty of
+discipleship, you may again have a religion dissociated from moral life.
+You may find men who glory in the doctrine of justification by faith and
+look with infinite pity on those who are vainly seeking to be accepted
+by their works, and who deem themselves very safe from punishment
+because of the doctrine they hold, but who have no right sense of the
+intrinsic evil of sin, and who are neither honest, nor truthful, nor
+worthy of trust in the common relations of life. But wherever religion
+is spiritual and penetrating, wherever sin is seen in its true
+character, wherever men feel the curse and pollution of sin in their
+hearts and lives, another spirit rules. The great desire now is to be
+delivered from sin, not merely in its punishment, but in its pollution
+and power. The end of religion is to establish a gracious relation
+through Jesus Christ between the sinner and God, whereby not only shall
+God's favour be restored, but the soul shall be renewed after God's
+image, and the rule of life shall be to do all in the name of the Lord
+Jesus. Now we say, You cannot have such a religion without moral
+reformation. And, on the other hand, you cannot rely on moral
+reformation being accomplished without a religion like this. But alas!
+the love of sinful things is very deeply grained in the fallen nature of
+man.
+
+Godlessness and selfishness are frightfully powerful in unregenerate
+hearts. The will of God is a terrible rule of life to the natural man--a
+rule against which he rebels as unreasonable, impracticable, terrible.
+How then are men brought to pay supreme and constant regard to that
+will? How was Samuel brought to do this, and how are men led to do it
+now? In both cases, it is through the influence of gracious, Divine
+love. Samuel was a member of a nation that God had chosen as His own,
+that God had redeemed from bondage, that God dwelt among, protected,
+restored, guided, and blessed beyond all example. The heart of Samuel
+was moved by God's goodness to the nation. More than that, Samuel
+personally had been the object of God's redeeming love; and though the
+hundred-and-third Psalm was not yet written, he could doubtless say,
+"Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless His holy
+name. Who forgiveth all thine iniquities, who healeth all thy diseases,
+who redeemeth thy life from destruction, who crowneth thee with
+loving-kindness and tender mercies, who satisfieth thy mouth with good
+things, so that thy youth is renewed like the eagle's." It is the same
+gracious Divine action, the same experience of redeeming grace and
+mercy, that under the Christian dispensation draws men's hearts to the
+will of God; only a new light has been thrown on these Divine qualities
+by the Cross of Christ. The forgiving grace and love of God have been
+placed in a new setting, and when it is felt that God spared not His own
+Son, but delivered Him up for us all, a new sense of His infinite
+kindness takes possession of the soul. Little truly does any one know of
+religion, in the true sense of the term, who has not got this view of
+God in Christ, and has not felt his obligations to the Son of God, who
+loved him and gave Himself for him. And when this experience comes to be
+known, it becomes the delight of the soul to do the will of God. "For
+the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared unto all men,
+teaching us that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live
+soberly, righteously, and godly in this present world; looking for that
+blessed hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour
+Jesus Christ, who gave Himself for us that He might redeem us from all
+iniquity, and purify to Himself a peculiar people, zealous of good
+works."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+_SAMUEL'S DEALINGS WITH THE PEOPLE._
+
+1 SAMUEL xii. 6-25.
+
+
+2. Having vindicated himself (in the first five verses of this chapter),
+Samuel now proceeds to his second point, and takes the people in hand.
+But before proceeding to close quarters with them, he gives a brief
+review of the history of the nation, in order to bring out the precise
+relation in which they stood to God, and the duty resulting from that
+relation (vers. 6-12).
+
+First, he brings out the fundamental fact of their history. Its grand
+feature was this: "It is the Lord who advanced Moses and Aaron, and
+brought your fathers up out of the land of Egypt." The fact was as
+indisputable as it was glorious. How would Moses ever have been induced
+to undertake the task of deliverance from Egypt if the Lord had not sent
+him? Was he not most unwilling to leave the wilderness and return to
+Egypt? What could Aaron have done for them if the Lord had not guided
+and anointed him? How could the people have found an excuse for leaving
+Egypt even for a day if God had not required them? How could Pharaoh
+have been induced to let them go, when even the first nine plagues only
+hardened his heart, or how could they have escaped from him and his
+army, had the Lord not divided the sea that His ransomed might pass
+over? The fact could not be disputed--their existence as a people and
+their settlement in Canaan were due to the special mercy of the Lord. If
+ever a nation owed everything to the power above, Israel owed everything
+to Jehovah. No distinction could even approach this in its singular
+glory.
+
+And yet there was a want of cordiality on the part of the people in
+acknowledging it. They were partly at least blind to its surpassing
+lustre. The truth is, they did not like all the duties and
+responsibility which it involved. It is the highest honour of a son to
+have a godly father, upright, earnest, consistent in serving God. Yet
+many a son does not realise this, and sometimes in his secret heart he
+wishes that his father were just a little more like the men of the
+world. It is the brightest chapter in the history of a nation that
+records its struggles for God's honour and man's liberty; yet there are
+many who have no regard for these struggles, but denounce their
+champions as ruffians and fanatics. Close connection with God is not, in
+the eyes of the world, the glorious thing that it is in reality. How
+strange that this should be so! "O righteous Father," exclaimed Christ
+in His intercessory prayer, "the world hath not known Thee." He was
+distressed at the world's blindness to the excellence of God. "How
+strange it is," Richard Baxter says in substance somewhere, "that men
+can see beauty in so many things--in the flowers, in the sky, in the
+sun--and yet be blind to the highest beauty of all, the fountain and
+essence of all beauty, the beauty of the Lord!" Never rest, my friends,
+so long as this is true of you. Is not the very fact that to you God,
+even when revealed in Jesus Christ, may be like a root out of a dry
+ground, having no form or comeliness or any beauty wherefore you should
+desire Him--is not that, if it be a fact, alike alarming and appalling?
+Make it your prayer that He who commanded the light to shine out of
+darkness would shine in your heart, to give the light of the knowledge
+of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.
+
+Having emphatically laid down the fundamental fact in the history of
+Israel, Samuel next proceeds to reason upon it. The reasoning rests on
+two classes of facts: the first, that whenever the people forsook God
+they had been brought into trouble; the second, that whenever they
+repented and cried to God He delivered them out of their trouble. The
+prophet refers to several instances of both, but not exhaustively, not
+so as to embrace every instance. Among those into whose hand God gave
+them were Sisera, the Philistines, and the Moabites; among those raised
+up to deliver them when they cried to the Lord were Jerubbaal, and
+Bedan, and Jephthah, and Samuel. The name Bedan does not occur in the
+history, and as the Hebrew letters that form the word are very similar
+to those which form Barak, it has been supposed, and I think with
+reason, that the word Bedan is just a clerical mistake for Barak. The
+use the prophet makes of both classes of facts is to show how directly
+God was concerned in what befell the nation. The whole course of their
+history under the judges had shown that to forsake God and worship idols
+was to bring on the nation disaster and misery; to return to God and
+restore His worship was to secure abundant prosperity and blessing. This
+had been made as certain by past events as it was certain that to close
+the shutters in an apartment was to plunge it into darkness, and that to
+open them was to restore light. Cause and effect had been made so very
+plain that any child might see how the matter stood.
+
+Now, what was it that had recently occurred? They had had trouble from
+the Ammonites. At ver. 11 the prophet indicates--what is not stated
+before--that this trouble with the Ammonites had been connected with
+their coming to him to ask a king. Evidently, the siege of Jabesh-Gilead
+was not the first offensive act the Ammonites had committed. They had no
+doubt been irritating the tribes on the other side of Jordan in many
+ways before they proceeded to attack that city. And if their attack was
+at all like that which took place in the days of Jephthah, it must have
+been very serious and highly threatening. (See Judges x. 8, 9.) Now,
+from what Samuel says here, it would appear that this annoyance from the
+Ammonites was the immediate occasion of the people wishing to have a
+king. Here let us observe what their natural course would have been, in
+accordance with former precedent. It would have been to cry to the Lord
+to deliver them from the Ammonites. As they had cried for deliverance
+when the Ammonites for eighteen years vexed and oppressed all the tribes
+settled on the east side of Jordan, and when they even passed over
+Jordan to fight against Judah and Benjamin and Ephraim, and the Lord
+raised up Jephthah, so ought they to have cried to the Lord at this
+time, and He would have given them a deliverer. But instead of that they
+asked Samuel to give them a king, that he might deliver them. You see
+from this what cause Samuel had to charge them with rejecting God for
+their King. You see at the same time how much forbearance God exercised
+in allowing Samuel to grant their request. God virtually said, "I will
+graciously give up My plan and accommodate myself to theirs. I will give
+up the plan of raising up a special deliverer in special danger, and
+will let their king be their deliverer. If they and their king are
+faithful to My covenant, I will give the same mercies to them as they
+would have received had things remained as they were. It will still be
+true, as I promised to Abraham, that I will be their God and they shall
+be My people."
+
+3. This is the third thing that Samuel is specially concerned to press
+on the people; and this he does in the remaining verses (vers. 13-25).
+They were to remember that their having a king in no sense and in no
+degree exempted them from their moral and spiritual obligations to God.
+It did not give them one atom more liberty either in the matter of
+worship, or in those weightier matters of the law--justice, mercy, and
+truth. It did not make it one iota less sinful to erect altars to Baal
+and Ashtaroth, or to join with any of their neighbours in religious
+festivities in honour of these gods. "If ye will fear the Lord, and
+serve Him, and obey His voice, and not rebel against the commandment of
+the Lord, then shall both ye and also the king that reigneth over you
+continue following the Lord your God; but if ye will not obey the voice
+of the Lord, but rebel against the commandment of the Lord, then shall
+the hand of the Lord be against you, as it was against your fathers."
+
+There is nothing very similar to this in the circumstances in which we
+are placed. And yet it is often needful to remind even Christian people
+of this great truth: that no change of outward circumstances can ever
+bring with it a relaxation of moral duty, or make that lawful for us
+which in its own nature is wrong. Nothing of moral quality can be right
+for us on shipboard which is wrong for us on dry land. Nothing can be
+allowable in India which could not be thought of in England or Scotland.
+The law of the Sabbath is not more elastic on the continent of Europe
+than it is at home. There is no such thing as a geographical religion or
+a geographical Christianity. Burke used to say, looking to the humane
+spirit that Englishmen showed at home and the oppressive treatment they
+were often guilty of to the natives of other countries, that the
+humanity of England was a thing of points and parallels. But a local
+humanity is no humanity. Those who act as if it were, make public
+opinion their god, instead of the eternal Jehovah. They virtually say
+that what public opinion does not allow in England is wrong in England,
+and must be avoided. If public opinion allows it on the continent of
+Europe, or in India, or in Africa, it may be done. Is this not
+dethroning God, and abrogating His immutable law? If God be our King,
+His will must be our one unfailing rule of life and duty wherever we
+are. Truly, there is little recognition of a mutable public opinion
+affecting the quality of our actions, in that sublime psalm that brings
+out so powerfully the omniscience of God,--the hundred and thirty-ninth,
+"Whither shall I go from Thy Spirit, and whither shall I flee from Thy
+presence? If I ascend up into heaven, Thou art there; if I make my bed
+in hell, behold Thou art there. If I take the wings of the morning and
+dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea, even there shall Thy hand lead
+me and Thy right hand shall hold me. If I say, Surely the darkness shall
+cover me, even the night shall be light about me. Yea, the darkness
+hideth not from Thee, but the night shineth as the day; the darkness and
+the light are both alike to Thee."
+
+It was Samuel's purpose, then, to press on the people that the change
+involved in having a king brought no change as to their duty of
+invariable allegiance to God. The lessons of history had been clear
+enough; but they were always a dull-sighted people, and not easily
+impressed except by what was palpable and even sensational. For this
+reason Samuel determined to impress the lesson on them in another way.
+He would show them there and then, under their very eyes, what agencies
+of destruction God held in His hand, and how easily He could bring these
+to bear on them and on their property. "Is it not wheat harvest to-day?"
+You are gathering or about to gather that important crop, and it is of
+vital importance that the weather be still and calm. But I will pray the
+Lord, and He shall send thunder and rain, and you will see how easy it
+is for Him in one hour to ruin the crop which you have been nursing so
+carefully for months back. "So Samuel called unto the Lord; and the Lord
+sent thunder and rain that day: and all the people greatly feared the
+Lord and Samuel. And all the people said unto Samuel, Pray for thy
+servants unto the Lord thy God that we die not; for we have added unto
+all our sins this evil: to ask us a king." It was an impressive proof
+how completely they were in God's hands. What earthly thing could any of
+them or all of them do to ward off that agent of destruction from their
+crops? There were they, a great army, with sword and spear, young,
+strong, and valiant, yet they could not arrest in its fall one drop of
+rain, nor alter the course of one puff of wind, nor extinguish the blaze
+of one tongue of fire. Oh, what folly it was to offer an affront to the
+great God, who had such complete control over "fire and hail, snow and
+vapours, stormy wind fulfilling His word"! What blindness to think they
+could in any respect be better with another king!
+
+Thus it is that in their times of trial God's people in all ages have
+been brought to feel their entire dependence on Him. In days of flowing
+prosperity, we have little sense of that dependence. As the Psalmist
+puts it in the thirtieth Psalm: "In my prosperity I said, I shall never
+be moved." When all goes well with us, we expect the same prosperity to
+continue; it seems stereotyped, the fixed and permanent condition of
+things. When the days run smoothly, "involving happy months, and these
+as happy years," all seems certain to continue. But a change comes over
+our life. Ill-health fastens on us; death invades our circle; relatives
+bring us into deep waters; our means of living fail; we are plunged into
+a very wilderness of woe. How falsely we judged when we thought that it
+was by its own inherent stability our mountain stood strong! No, no; it
+was solely the result of God's favour, for all our springs are in Him;
+the moment He hides His face we are most grievously troubled. Sad but
+salutary experience! Well for you, my afflicted friend, if it burns into
+your very soul the conviction that every blessing in life depends on
+God's favour, and that to offend God is to ruin all!
+
+But now, the humble and contrite spirit having been shown by the people,
+see how Samuel hastens to comfort and reassure them. Now that they have
+begun to fear, he can say to them, "Fear not." Now that they have shown
+themselves alive to the evils of God's displeasure, they are assured
+that there is a clear way of escape from these evils. "Turn not aside
+from following the Lord, but serve the Lord with all your heart." If God
+be terrible as an enemy, He is glorious as a friend. No doubt you
+offered a slight to Him when you sought another king. But it is just a
+proof of His wonderful goodness that, though you have done this, He does
+not cast you off. He will be as near to you as ever He was if you are
+only faithful to Him. He will still deliver you from your enemies when
+you call upon Him. For His name and His memorial are still the same:
+"The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and
+abundant in goodness and in truth, forgiving iniquity and transgression
+and sin, and that will by no means clear the guilty."
+
+Samuel, moreover, reminds them that it was not they that had chosen God;
+it was God that had chosen them. "The Lord will not forsake His people,
+for His great name's sake, because it hath pleased the Lord to make you
+His people." This was a great ground of comfort for Israel. The eternal
+God had chosen them and made them His people for great purposes of His
+own. It was involved in this very choice and purpose of God that He
+would keep His hand on them, and preserve them from all such calamities
+as would prevent them from fulfilling His purpose. Fickle and
+changeable, they might easily be induced to break away from Him; but,
+strong and unchangeable, He could never be induced to abandon His
+purpose in them. And if this was a comfort to Israel then, there is a
+corresponding comfort to the spiritual Israel now. If my heart is in any
+measure turned to God, to value His favour and seek to do His will, it
+is God that has effected the change. And this shows that God has a
+purpose with me. Till that purpose is accomplished, He cannot leave me.
+He will correct me when I sin, He will recover me when I stray, He will
+heal me when I am sick, He will strengthen me when I am weak; "I am
+confident of this very thing: that He which hath begun a good work in me
+will perform it unto the day of Jesus Christ."
+
+Once more, in answer to the people's request that he would intercede
+for them, Samuel is very earnest. "God forbid that I should sin against
+the Lord in ceasing to pray for you." The great emphasis with which he
+says this shows how much his heart is in it. "What should I do, if I had
+not the privilege of intercessory prayer for you?" There is a wonderful
+revelation of love to the people here. They are dear to him as his
+children are dear to a Christian parent, and he feels for them as warmly
+as he feels for himself. There is a wonderful deepening of interest and
+affection when men's relation to God is realized. The warmest heart as
+yet unregenerate cannot feel for others as the spiritual heart must do
+when it takes in all the possibilities of the spiritual state--all that
+is involved in the favour or in the wrath of the infinite God, in the
+predominance of sin or of grace in the heart, and in the prospect of an
+eternity of woe on the one hand or of glory, honour, and heavenly bliss
+on the other. How is it possible for one to have all these possibilities
+full in one's view and not desire the eternal welfare of loved ones with
+an intensity unknown to others? We know from experience how hard it is
+to get them to do right. Even one's own children seem sometimes to
+baffle every art and endeavour of love, and go off, in spite of
+everything, to the ways of the world. Entreaty and remonstrance are
+apparently in vain. The more one pleads, the less perhaps are one's
+pleas regarded. One resource remains--intercessory prayer. It is the
+only method to which one may resort with full assurance of its ultimate
+efficacy for attaining the dearest object of one's heart. Does the
+thought of giving up intercessory prayer come to one from any quarter?
+No wonder if the insinuation is met by a deep, earnest "God forbid"!
+
+"I bless God," said Mr. Flavel, one of the best and sweetest of the old
+Puritan divines, on the death of his father--"I bless God for a
+religious and tender father, who often poured out his soul to God for
+me; and this stock of prayers I esteem the fairest inheritance on
+earth." How many a man has been deeply impressed even by the very
+thought that some one was praying for him! "Is it not strange," he has
+said to himself, "that he should pray for me far more than I pray for
+myself? What can induce him to take such an interest in me?" Every
+Christian ought to think much of intercessory prayer, and practise it
+greatly. It is doubly blessed: blessed to him who prays and blessed to
+those for whom he prays. Nothing is better fitted to enlarge and warm
+the heart than intercessory prayer. To present to God in succession, one
+after another, our family and our friends, remembering all their wants,
+sorrows, trials, and temptations; to bear before Him the interests of
+this struggling Church and that in various parts of the world, this
+interesting mission and that noble cause; to make mention of those who
+are waging the battles of temperance, of purity, of freedom, of
+Christianity itself, in the midst of difficulty, obloquy, and
+opposition; to gather together all the sick and sorrowing, all the
+fatherless and widows, all the bereaved and dying, of one's
+acquaintance, and ask God to bless them; to think of all the children of
+one's acquaintance in the bright springtide of life, of all the young
+men and young women arrived or arriving at the critical moment of
+decision as to the character of their life, and implore God to guide
+them--O brethren, this is good for one's self; it enlarges one's own
+heart; it helps one's self in prayer! And then what a blessing it is for
+those prayed for! Who can estimate the amount of spiritual blessing
+that has been sent down on this earth in answer to the fervent
+intercessions of the faithful? Think how Moses interceded for the whole
+nation after the golden calf, and it was spared. Think how Daniel
+interceded for his companions in Babylon, and the secret was revealed to
+him. Think how Elijah interceded for the widow, and her son was restored
+to life. Think how Paul constantly interceded for all his Churches, and
+how their growth and spiritual prosperity evinced that his prayer was
+not in vain. God forbid that any Christian should sin against the Lord
+in ceasing to pray for the Church which He hath purchased with His own
+blood. And while we pray for the Church, let us not forget the world
+that lieth in wickedness. For of all for whom the desires of the
+faithful should go up to heaven, surely the most necessitous are those
+who have as yet no value for heavenly blessings. What duty can be more
+binding on us than to "pray for her that prays not for herself"?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+_SAUL AND SAMUEL AT GILGAL._
+
+1 SAMUEL xiii.
+
+
+The first thing that claims our attention in connection with this
+chapter is the question of dates involved in the first verse. In the
+Authorized Version we read, "Saul reigned one year; and when he had
+reigned two years over Israel, Saul chose him three thousand men." This
+rendering of the original is now quite given up. The form of expression
+is the same as that which so often tells us the age of a king at the
+beginning of his reign and the length of his reign. The Revised Version
+is in close, but not in strict, accord with the Hebrew. It runs, "Saul
+was _thirty_ years old when he began to reign, and he reigned two years
+over Israel." A marginal note of the Revised Version says, "The Hebrew
+text has, '_Saul was a year old_.' The whole verse is omitted in the
+unrevised Septuagint, but in a later recension the number _thirty_ is
+inserted." There can be no doubt that something has been dropped out of
+the Hebrew text. Literally translated, it would run, "Saul was a year
+old when he began to reign, and he reigned two years over Israel." A
+figure seems to have dropped out after "Saul was" and another after "he
+reigned." A blot of some kind may have effaced these figures in the
+original manuscript, and the copyist not knowing what they were, may
+have left them blank. The Septuagint conjecture of "thirty" as Saul's
+age is not very felicitous, for at the beginning of Saul's reign his son
+Jonathan was old enough to distinguish himself in the war. Judging from
+probabilities, we should say that the original may have run thus: "Saul
+was forty years old when he began to reign, and he reigned thirty and
+two years over Israel." This would make the length of Saul's reign to
+correspond with the duration of Saul's dynasty as given in Acts xiii.
+21. There it is said that God gave to the people Saul "by the space of
+forty years." If to the thirty-two years which we suppose to have been
+the actual length of Saul's reign we add seven and a half, during which
+his son Ishbosheth reigned, we get in round numbers as the duration of
+his dynasty forty years. This would make Saul about seventy-two at the
+time of his death.
+
+The narrative in this chapter appears to be in immediate connection with
+that of the last. The bulk of the army had gone from Jabesh-Gilead to
+Gilgal, and there, under Samuel, they had renewed the kingdom. There
+they had listened to Samuel's appeal, and there the thunderstorm had
+taken place that helped so well to rivet the prophet's lessons.
+Therefore the bulk of the army was disbanded, but two thousand men were
+kept with Saul at Michmash and near Bethel, and one thousand with
+Jonathan at Gibeah. These were necessary to be some restraint on the
+Philistines, who were strong in the neighbourhood and eager to inflict
+every possible annoyance on the Israelites. Saul, however, does not seem
+to have felt himself in a position to take any active steps against
+them.
+
+But though Saul was inactive, Jonathan did not slumber. Though very
+young, probably under twenty, he had already been considered worthy of
+an important command, and now, by successfully attacking a garrison of
+the Philistines in Geba, he showed that he was worthy of the confidence
+that had been placed in him. It is interesting to mark in Jonathan that
+dash and daring which was afterwards so conspicuous in David, and the
+display of which on the part of David drew Jonathan's heart to him so
+warmly. The news of the exploit of Jonathan soon circulated among the
+Philistines, and would naturally kindle the desire to retaliate. Saul
+would see at once that, as the result of this, the Philistines would
+come upon them in greater force than ever; and it was to meet this
+expected attack that he called for a muster of his people. Gilgal was
+the place of rendezvous, deep down in the Jordan valley; for the higher
+part of the country was so dominated by the enemy that no muster could
+take place there.
+
+So it seemed as if the brilliant achievement of Jonathan was going to
+prove a curse rather than a blessing. In all kinds of warfare, we must
+be prepared for such turns in the order of events. When one side shows a
+great increase of activity, the other does the same. When one achieves
+an advantage, the other rouses itself to restore the balance. It has
+often happened in times of religious darkness that the bold attitude of
+some fearless reformer has roused the enemy to activity and ferocity,
+and thus brought to his brethren worse treatment than before. But such
+reverses are only temporary, and the cause of truth gains on the whole
+by the successful skirmishes of its pioneers. Many persons, when they
+see the activity and boldness which the forces of evil manifest in our
+day, are led to conclude that our times are sadly degenerate; they
+forget that the activity of evil is the proof and the result of the
+vitality and activity of good. No doubt there were faint-hearted persons
+in the host of Israel who would bring hard accusations against Jonathan
+for disturbing the equilibrium between Israel and the Philistines. They
+would shake their heads and utter solemn truisms on the rashness of
+youth, and would ask if it was not a shame to entrust a stripling with
+such power and responsibility. But Jonathan's stroke was the beginning
+of a movement which might have ended in the final expulsion of the
+Philistines from the territories of Israel if Saul had not acted
+foolishly at Gilgal. In this case, it was not the young man, but the
+old, that was rash and reckless. Jonathan had acted with courage and
+vigour, probably also with faith; it was Saul that brought disturbance
+and disaster to the host.
+
+The dreaded invasion of the Philistines was not long of taking place.
+The force which they brought together is stated so high, that in the
+number of the chariots some commentators have suspected an error of the
+copyist, 30,000 for 3,000, an error easily accounted for, as the extra
+cipher would be represented by a slight mark over the Hebrew letter.
+But, be this as it may, the invading host was of prodigiously large
+dimensions. It was so large as to spread a thorough panic through the
+whole community of Israel, for the people "hid themselves in caves, and
+in thickets, and in rocks, and in high places, and in pits." Not content
+with such protection, some of them crossed the Jordan, and took refuge
+in Gilead and in Dan, not far from Jabesh-Gilead, where another enemy
+had been so signally defeated. Saul had remained in Gilgal, where he was
+followed by a host of people, not in any degree impressed by what God
+had done for them at Jabesh-Gilead, not trying to rally their courage by
+the thought that God was still their King and Defender, but full of that
+abject fear which utterly unnerves both mind and body, and prepares the
+way for complete disaster. How utterly prostrated and helpless the
+people were is apparent from that very graphic picture of their
+condition which we find towards the end of the chapter: "There was no
+smith found throughout all the land of Israel; for the Philistines said,
+Lest the Hebrews make to themselves swords or spears; but all the
+Israelites went down to the Philistines to sharpen every man his share,
+and his coulter, and his axe, and his mattock." It requires little
+effort of imagination to see that the condition of the Israelites was,
+humanly speaking, utterly desperate. An enormous array of warriors like
+the Philistines, equipped with all the weapons of war, and confident in
+their prowess and their power, pouring upon a land where the defenders
+had not even swords nor spears, but only clubs and stones and suchlike
+rude resources for the purposes of conflict, presented a scene the issue
+of which could not have been doubtful on all human calculations.
+
+But surely the case was not a whit more desperate than that of their
+forefathers had been, with the sea before them, the mountains on either
+side, and the Egyptian army, in all its completeness of equipment,
+hastening to fall upon their rear. Yet out of that terrible situation
+their Divine King had delivered them, and a few hours after, they were
+all jubilant and triumphant, singing to the Lord who had triumphed
+gloriously, and had cast the horse and his rider into the sea. And no
+one can fail to see that the very gravity of the situation at the
+present time ought to have given birth to a repetition of that spirit
+of faith and prayer which had animated Moses, as it afterwards animated
+Deborah, and Gideon, and many more, and through which deliverance had
+come. On every ground the duty incumbent on Saul at this time was to
+show the most complete deference to the will of God and the most
+unreserved desire to enjoy His countenance and guidance. First, the
+magnitude of the danger, the utter disproportion between the strength of
+the defending people and that of the invading host, was fitted to throw
+him on God. Second, the fact, so solemnly and earnestly urged by Samuel,
+that, notwithstanding the sin committed by the people in demanding a
+king, God was willing to defend and rule His people as of old, _if only
+they had due regard to Him and His covenant_, should have made Saul
+doubly careful to act at this crisis in every particular in the most
+rigid compliance with God's will. Thirdly, the circumstance, which he
+himself had so well emphasized, that the recent victory at Jabesh-Gilead
+was a victory obtained from God, should have led him direct to God, to
+implore a similar interposition of His power in this new and still more
+overwhelming danger. If only Saul had been a true man, a man of faith
+and prayer, he would have risen to the height of the occasion at this
+terrible crisis, and a deliverance as glorious as that which Gideon
+obtained over the Midianites would have signalized his efforts. It was a
+most testing moment in his history. The whole fortunes of his kingdom
+seemed to depend on his choice. _There_ was God, ready to come to his
+help if His help had been properly asked. _There_ were the Philistines,
+ready to swallow them up if no sufficient force could be mustered
+against them. But weighed in the balances, Saul was found wanting. He
+did not honour God; he did not act as knowing that all depended on Him.
+And this want of his would have involved the terrible humiliation and
+even ruin of the nation if Jonathan had not been of a different temper
+from his father, if Jonathan had not achieved the deliverance which
+would not have come by Saul.
+
+Let us now examine carefully how Saul acted on the occasion, all the
+more carefully because, at first sight, many have the impression that he
+was justified in what he did, and consequently that the punishment
+announced by Samuel was far too severe.
+
+It appears that Samuel had instructed Saul to wait seven days for him at
+Gilgal, in order that steps might be properly taken for securing the
+guidance and help of God. There is some obscurity in the narrative here,
+arising from the fact that it was on the first occasion of their meeting
+that we read how Samuel directed Saul to wait seven days for him at
+Gilgal, till he should come to offer burnt-offerings and to show him
+what he was to do (chap. x. 8). We can hardly suppose, however, that
+this first direction, given by Samuel, was not implemented at an earlier
+time. It looks as if Samuel had repeated the instruction to Saul with
+reference to the circumstances of the Philistine invasion. But, be this
+as it may, it is perfectly clear from the narrative that Saul was under
+instructions to wait seven days at Gilgal, at the end, if not before the
+end, of which time Samuel promised to come to him. This was a distinct
+instruction from Samuel, God's known and recognized prophet, acting in
+God's name and with a view to the obtaining of God's countenance and
+guidance in the awful crisis of the nation. The seven days had come to
+an end, and Samuel had not appeared. Saul determined that he would wait
+no longer. "Saul said, Bring hither a burnt-offering to me, and
+peace-offerings. And he offered the burnt-offering."
+
+Now, it has been supposed by some that Saul's offence lay in his taking
+on him the functions of priest, and doing that which it was not lawful
+for any but priests to do. But it does not appear that this was his
+offence. A king is often said to do things which in reality are done by
+his ministers and others. All that is necessarily involved in the
+narrative is, that the king caused the priests to offer the
+burnt-offering. For even Samuel had no authority personally to offer
+sacrifices, and had he been present, the priests would have officiated
+all the same.
+
+The real offence of Saul was that he disregarded the absence of God's
+prophet and representative, of the man who had all along been the
+mediator between God and the king and between God and the people. And
+this was no secondary matter. If Saul had had a real conviction that all
+depended at this moment on his getting God's help, he would not have
+disregarded an instruction received from God's servant, and he would not
+have acted as if Samuel's presence was of no moment. The significant
+thing in Saul's state of mind, as disclosed by his act, was that he was
+not really bent on complying with the will of God. God was not a reality
+to Saul. The thought of God just loomed vaguely before his mind as a
+power to be considered, but not as the power on whom everything
+depended. What he thought about God was, that a burnt-offering must be
+offered up to propitiate Him, to prevent Him from obstructing the
+enterprise, but he did not think of Him as the Being who alone could
+give it success. It was substantially the carnal mind's view of God. It
+says, no doubt there is a God, and He has an influence on things here
+below; and to keep Him from thwarting us, we must perform certain
+services which seem to please Him. But what a pitiful view it is of God!
+As if the High and Lofty One that inhabiteth eternity could be induced
+to bestow or to withhold His favour simply by the slaughter of an
+animal, or by some similar rite!
+
+But this was Saul's idea. "The sacrifice must be offered; the rite must
+be gone through. This piece of outward homage must be paid to the power
+above, but the way of doing it is of little moment. It is a sacred form,
+no more. I am sorry not to have Samuel present, but the fault is not
+mine. He was to be here, and he has not come. And now these frightened
+people are stealing away from me, and if I wait longer, I may be left
+without followers. Priests, bring the animal and offer the sacrifice,
+and let us away to the war!"
+
+How different would have been the acting of a man that honoured God and
+felt that in His favour was life! How solemnized he would have been, how
+concerned for his own past neglect of God, and the neglect of his
+people! The presence of God's prophet would have been counted at once a
+necessity and a privilege. How deeply, in his sense of sin, would he
+have entered into the meaning of the burnt-offering! How earnestly he
+would have pleaded for God's favour, countenance, and blessing! If Jacob
+could not let the angel go at Peniel unless he blessed him, neither
+would Saul have parted from God at Gilgal without some assurance of
+help. "If Thy presence go not with me," he would have said, "carry us
+not up hence." Alas, we find nothing of all this! The servant of God is
+not waited for; the form is gone through, and Saul is off to his work.
+And this is the doing of the man who has been called to be king of
+Israel, and who has been solemnly warned that God alone is Israel's
+defence, and that to offend God is to court ruin!
+
+When Samuel came, Saul was ready with a plausible excuse. On the ground
+of expediency, he vindicated his procedure. He could not deny that he
+had broken his promise (it was a virtual promise) to wait for Samuel,
+but there were reasons exceedingly strong to justify him in doing so.
+Samuel had not come. The people were scattered from him. The Philistines
+were concentrating at Michmash, and might have come down and fallen upon
+him at Gilgal. All very true, but not one of them by itself, nor all of
+them together, a real vindication of what he had done. Samuel, he might
+be sure, would not be an hour longer than he could help. There were far
+more people left to him than Gideon's band, and the God that gave the
+victory to the three hundred would not have let him suffer for want of
+men. The Philistines might have been discomfited by God's tempest on the
+way to Gilgal, as they were discomfited before, on the way to Mizpeh. O
+Saul, distrust of God has been at the bottom of your mind! The faith
+that animated the heroes of former days has had no control of you. You
+have walked by sight, not by faith. Had you been faithful now, and
+honoured God, and waited till His servant sent you off with his
+benediction, prosperity would have attended you, and your family would
+have been permanently settled in the throne. But now your kingdom shall
+not continue. Personally, you may continue to be king for many years to
+come; but the penalty which God affixes to this act of unbelief,
+formality, and presumption is, that no line of kings shall spring from
+your loins. The Lord hath sought Him a man after His own heart, and the
+Lord hath commanded him to be captain over His people.
+
+What a solemn and impressive condemnation have we here, my friends, of
+that far too common practice--deserting principle to serve expediency. I
+don't like to tell a lie, some one may say, but if I had not done so, I
+should have lost my situation. I dislike common work on the Sabbath day,
+but if I did not do it, I could not live. I don't think it right to go
+to Sunday parties or to play games on Sunday, but I was invited by this
+or that great person to do it, and I could not refuse him. I ought not
+to adulterate my goods, and I ought not to give false statements of
+their value, but every one in my business does it, and I cannot be
+singular. What do these vindications amount to, but just a confession
+that from motives of expediency God's commandment may be set aside?
+These excuses just come to this: It was better for me to offend God and
+gain a slight benefit, than it would have been to lose the benefit and
+please God. It is a great deal to lose a small profit in business, or a
+small pleasure in social life, or a small honour from a fellow-man; but
+it is little or nothing to displease God, it is little or nothing to
+treasure up wrath against the day of wrath. Alas for the practical
+unbelief that lies at the bottom of all this! It is the doing of the
+fool who hath said in his heart, There is no God. Look at this history
+of Saul. See what befell him for preferring expediency to principle.
+Know that the same condemnation awaits all who walk in his
+footsteps--all who are not solemnized by that awful, that unanswerable,
+question, "What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and
+lose his own soul?"
+
+Great offence has often been taken at the character here ascribed to the
+man who was to fill the throne after Saul--"The Lord hath sought Him a
+man after His own heart." Was David, the adulterer, the traitor, the
+murderer, a man after God's own heart? But surely it is not meant to be
+affirmed that David was such a man in every aspect, in every particular.
+The point on which the emphasis should rest must surely be that David
+was such a man in that feature in which Saul was so wanting. And
+undoubtedly this was eminently true of him. That which stood out most
+fully in the public character of David was the honour which he paid to
+God, the constancy with which he consulted His will, the prevailing
+desire he had to rule the kingdom in His fear and for His glory. If God
+was but a form to Saul, He was an intense reality to David. If Saul
+could not get it into his mind that he ought to rule for God, David
+could not have got it out of his mind if he had tried. That David's
+character was deformed in many ways cannot be denied; he had not only
+infirmities, but tumours, blotches, defilements, most distressing to
+behold; but in this one thing he left an example to all of us, and
+especially to rulers, which it would be well for all of us to ponder
+deeply: that the whole business of government is to be carried on in the
+spirit of regard to the will of God; that the welfare of the people is
+ever to be consulted in preference to the interests of the prince; that
+for nations, as for individuals, God's favour is life, and His frown
+ruin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+_JONATHAN'S EXPLOIT AT MICHMASH._
+
+1 SAMUEL xiv. 1-23.
+
+
+It has sometimes been objected to the representation occurring at the
+end of the thirteenth chapter of the utter want of arms among the
+Hebrews at this time that it is inconsistent with the narrative of the
+eleventh. If it be true, as stated there, that the Israelites gained a
+great victory over the Ammonites, they must have had arms to accomplish
+that; and, moreover, the victory itself must have put them in possession
+of the arms of the Ammonites. The answer to this is, that the invasion
+of the Philistines subsequent to this in such overwhelming numbers seems
+to have been the cause of the miserable plight to which the Hebrews were
+reduced, and of the loss of their arms.
+
+Whether we are to take the statement as quite literal that in the day of
+battle there was neither sword nor spear found in the hand of any of the
+people save Saul or Jonathan, or whether we are to regard this as just
+an Oriental way of saying that these were the only two who had a
+thorough equipment of arms, it is plain enough that the condition of the
+Hebrew troops was very wretched. That in their circumstances a feeling
+of despondency should have fallen on all save the few who walked by
+faith, need not excite any surprise.
+
+The position of the two armies is not difficult to understand. Several
+miles to the north of Jerusalem, a valley, now named Wady Suweinet, runs
+from west to east, from the central plateau of Palestine down towards
+the valley of the Jordan. The name Mukmas, still preserved, shows the
+situation of the place which was then occupied by the garrison of the
+Philistines. Near to that place, Captain Conder[1] believes that he has
+found the very rocks where the exploit of Jonathan occurred. On either
+side of the valley there rises a perpendicular crag, the northern one,
+called in Scripture Bozez, being extremely steep and difficult of
+ascent. "It seems just possible that Jonathan, with immense labour,
+might have climbed up on his hands and his feet, and his armour-bearer
+after him."
+
+It is evident that Saul had no thought at this time of making any attack
+on the Philistines. How could he, with soldiers so poorly armed and so
+little to encourage them? Samuel does not appear to have been with him.
+But in his company was a priest, Ahiah, the son of Ahitub, grandson of
+Eli, perhaps the same as Ahimelech, afterwards introduced. Saul still
+adhered to the forms of religion; but he had too much resemblance to the
+Church of Sardis--"Thou hast a name that thou livest, and art dead."
+
+The position of the army of Israel with reference to the Philistines
+seems to have been very similar to what it was afterwards when Goliath
+defied the army of the living God. The Israelites could only look on, in
+helpless inactivity. But just as the youthful spirit of David was
+afterwards roused in these circumstances to exertion, so on the present
+occasion was the youthful spirit of Jonathan. It was not the first time
+that he had attacked the garrison of the Philistines. (See xiii. 3.) But
+what he did on the former occasion seems to have been under more equal
+conditions than the seemingly desperate enterprise to which he betook
+himself now. A project of unprecedented daring came into his mind. He
+took counsel with no one about it. He breathed nothing of it to his
+father. A single confidant and companion was all that he thought of--his
+armour-bearer, or aide-de-camp. And even him he did not so much consult
+as attach. "Come," said he, "and let us go over unto the garrison of
+these uncircumcised; it may be that the Lord will work for us; for there
+is no restraint by the Lord to save by many or by few." No words are
+needed to show the daring character of this project. The physical effort
+to climb on hands and feet up a precipitous rock was itself most
+difficult and perilous, possible only to boys, light and lithe of form,
+and well accustomed to it; and if the garrison observed them and chose
+to oppose them, a single stone hurled from above would stretch them,
+crushed and helpless, on the valley below. But suppose they succeeded,
+what were a couple of young men to do when confronted with a whole
+garrison? Or even if the garrison should be overpowered, how were they
+to deal with the Philistine host, that lay encamped at no great
+distance, or at most were scattered here and there over the country, and
+would soon assemble? In every point of view save one, the enterprise
+seemed utterly desperate. But that exception was a very important one.
+The one point of view in which there was the faintest possibility of
+success was, that the Lord God might favour the enterprise. The God of
+their fathers might work for them, and if He did so, there was no
+restraint with Him to work by many or by few. Had He not worked by Ehud
+alone to deliver their fathers from the Moabites? Had he not worked by
+Shamgar alone, when with his ox goad he slew six hundred Philistines?
+Had he not worked by Samson alone in all his wonderful exploits? Might
+he not work that day by Jonathan and his armour-bearer, and, after all,
+only produce a new chapter in that history which had already shown so
+many wonderful interpositions? Jonathan's mind was possessed by the
+idea. After all, if he failed, he could but lose his life. And was not
+that worth risking when success, if it were vouchsafed, might rescue his
+country from degradation and destruction, and fill the despairing hearts
+of his countrymen with emotions of joy and triumph like those which
+animated their fathers when on the shores of Sinai they beheld the horse
+and his rider cast into the sea?
+
+It is this working of faith that must be regarded as the most
+characteristic feature of the attempt of Jonathan. He showed himself one
+of the noble heroes of faith, not unworthy to be enrolled in the
+glorious record of the eleventh chapter of the Hebrews. He showed
+himself pre-eminent for the very quality in which his father had proved
+deficient. Though the earnest lessons of Samuel had been lost on the
+father, they had been blessed to the son. The seed that in the one case
+fell on stony places fell in the other on good ground. While Samuel was
+doubtless disconsolate at the failure of his work with Saul, he was
+succeeding right well, unknown perhaps to himself, with the youth that
+said little but thought much. While in spirit perhaps he was uttering
+words like Isaiah's, "Then said I, I have laboured in vain; I have spent
+my strength for nought and in vain," God was using him in a way that
+might well have led him to add, "Yet surely my judgment is with the
+Lord, and my work with my God." And what encouragement is here for every
+Christian worker! Don't despond when you seem to fail in your first and
+most direct endeavour. In some quiet but thinking little boy or girl in
+that family circle, your words are greatly regarded. And just because
+that young mind sees, and seeing wonders, that father or mother is so
+little moved by what you say, it is the more impressed. If the father or
+the mother were manifestly to take the matter up, the child might
+dismiss it, as no concern of his. But just because father or mother is
+not taking it up, the child cannot get rid of it. "Yes, there _is_ an
+eternity, and we ought all to be preparing for it. Sin is the soul's
+ruin, and unless we get a Saviour, we are lost, Jesus _did_ come into
+the world to save sinners; must we not go to Him? Yes, we must be born
+again. Lord Jesus, forgive us, help us, save us!" Thus it is that things
+hid from the wise and prudent are often revealed to babes; and thus it
+is that out of the mouth of babes and sucklings God perfects praise.
+
+But Jonathan's faith in God was called to manifest itself in a way very
+different from that in which the faith of most young persons has to be
+exercised now. Faith led Jonathan to seize sword and spear, and hurry
+out to an enterprise in which he could only succeed by risking his own
+life and destroying the lives of others. We are thus brought face to
+face with a strange but fascinating development of the religious
+spirit--military faith. The subject has received a new and wonderful
+illustration in our day in the character and career of that great
+Christian hero General Gordon. In the career of Gordon, we see faith
+contributing an element of power, an element of daring, and an element
+of security and success to a soldier, which can come from no other
+source. No one imagines that without his faith Gordon would have been
+what he was or could have done what he did. It is little to say that
+faith raised him high above all ordinary fears, or that it made him
+ready at any moment to risk, and if need be, to sacrifice his life. It
+did a great deal more. It gave him a conviction that he was an
+instrument in God's hands, and that when he was moved to undertake
+anything as being God's will, he would be carried through all
+difficulties, enabled to surmount all opposition, and to carry the point
+in face of the most tremendous odds. And to a great extent the result
+verified the belief. If Gordon could not be said to work miracles, he
+achieved results that even miracles could hardly have surpassed. If he
+failed in the last and greatest hazard of his life, he only showed that
+after much success one may come to believe too readily in one's
+inspiration; one may mistake the voice of one's own feeling for the
+unfailing assurance of God. But that there is a great amount of reality
+in that faith which hears God calling one as if with audible voice, and
+goes forth to the most difficult enterprises in the full trust of Divine
+protection and aid, is surely a lesson which lies on the very surface of
+the life of Gordon, and such other lives of the same kind as Scripture
+shows us, as well as the lives of those military heroes of whom we will
+speak afterwards, whose battle has been not with flesh and blood, but
+with the ignorance and the vice and the disorder of the world.
+
+One is almost disposed to envy Jonathan, with his whole powers of mind
+and body knit up to the pitch of firmest and most dauntless resolution,
+under the inspiration that moved him to this apparently desperate
+enterprise. All the world would have rushed to stop him, insanely
+throwing away his life, without the faintest chance of escape. But a
+voice spoke firmly in his bosom,--I am not throwing away my life. And
+Jonathan did not want certain tokens of encouragement. It was something
+that his armour-bearer neither flinched nor remonstrated. But that was
+not all. To encourage himself and to encourage his companion, he fixed
+on what might be considered a token for them to persevere in one
+alternative, and desist in another. The token was, that if, on observing
+their attempt, the Philistines in the garrison should defy them, should
+bid them tarry till they came to them, that would be a sign that they
+ought to return. But if they should say, "Come up to us," that would be
+a proof that they ought to persevere. Was this a mere arbitrary token,
+without anything reasonable underlying it? It does not seem to have been
+so. In the one case, the words of the Philistines would bear a hostile
+meaning, denoting that violence would be used against them; in the other
+case they would denote that the Philistines were prepared to treat them
+peaceably, under the idea perhaps that they were tired of skulking and,
+like other Hebrews (ver. 21), wishing to surrender to the enemy. In this
+latter case, they would be able to make good their position on the rock,
+and the enemy would not suspect their real errand till they were ready
+to begin their work. It turned out that their reception was in the
+latter fashion. Whether in the way of friendly banter or otherwise, the
+garrison, on perceiving them, invited them to come up, and they would
+"show them a thing." Greatly encouraged by the sign, they clambered up
+on hands and feet till they gained the top of the rock. Then, when
+nothing of the kind was expected, they fell on the garrison and began
+to kill. So sudden and unexpected an onslaught threw the garrison into a
+panic. Their arms perhaps were not at hand, and for anything they knew,
+a whole host of Hebrews might be hastening after their leaders to
+complete the work of slaughter. In this way, nearly twenty Philistines
+fell in half an acre of ground. The rest of the garrison taking to
+flight seems to have spread a panic among the host. Confusion and terror
+prevailed on every side. Every man's sword was against his fellow.
+"There was trembling in the host, in the field, and among the people;
+the spoilers and the garrison, they also trembled, and the earth quaked;
+so it was a very great trembling." Whether this implies that the terror
+and discomfiture of the Philistines was increased by an earthquake, or
+whether it means that there was so much motion and commotion that the
+very earth seemed to quake, it is not very easy to decide; but it shows
+how complete was the discomfiture of the Philistines. Thus wonderfully
+was Jonathan's faith rewarded, and thus wonderfully, too, was the
+unbelief of Saul rebuked.
+
+Seen from the watch-tower at Gibeah, the affair was shrouded in mystery.
+It seemed as if the Philistine troops were retreating, while no force
+was there to make them retreat. When inquiry was made as to who were
+absent, Jonathan and his armour-bearer alone were missed. So perplexed
+was Saul, that, to understand the position of affairs, he had called for
+Ahiah, who had charge of the ark (the Septuagint reads, "the ephod"), to
+consult the oracle. But before this could be done, the condition of
+things became more plain. The noise in the host of the Philistines went
+on increasing, and when Saul and his soldiers came on the spot, they
+found the Philistines, in their confusion, slaughtering one another,
+amid all the signs of wild discomfiture. Nothing loath, they joined in
+harassing the retreating foe. And as the situation revealed itself
+others hastened to take part in the fray. Those Hebrews that had come
+for protection within the Philistine lines now turned against them, all
+the more heartily perhaps because, before that, they had had to place
+their feelings so much under restraint. And the Hebrews that lay hid in
+caves and thickets and pits, when they saw what was going on, rushed
+forth to join in the discomfiture of the Philistines. What a contrast to
+the state of things that very morning--the Israelites in helpless
+feebleness, looking with despair on the Philistines as they lay in their
+stronghold in all the pride of security, and scattered defiant looks and
+scornful words among their foes; now the Philistine garrison surprised,
+their camp forsaken, their army scattered, and the only desire or
+purpose animating the remnant being to escape at the top of their speed
+from the land of Israel, and find shelter and security in their native
+country. "So the Lord saved Israel that day; and the battle passed over
+unto Beth-aven."
+
+And thus the faith of Jonathan had a glorious reward. The inspiration of
+faith vindicated itself, and the noble self-devotion that had plunged
+into this otherwise desperate enterprise, because there was no restraint
+to the Lord to save by many or by few, led thus to a triumph more speedy
+and more complete than even Jonathan could have ventured to dream of.
+None of the judges had wrought a more complete or satisfactory
+deliverance; and even the crossing of the Red Sea under Moses had not
+afforded a more glorious evidence than this achievement of Jonathan's of
+the power of faith, or given more ample testimony to that principle of
+the kingdom of God, which our Lord afterwards enunciated, "If ye have
+faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye shall say unto this mountain,
+Remove hence unto yonder place; and it shall remove; and nothing shall
+be impossible unto you."
+
+This incident is full of lessons for modern times. First, it shows what
+wide and important results may come from _individual conviction_. When
+an individual heart is moved by a strong conviction of duty, it may be
+that God means through that one man's conviction to move the world.
+Modesty might lead a man to say, I am but a unit; I have no influence;
+it will make very little difference what I do with my conviction,
+whether I cherish it or stifle it. Yet it may be of just worldwide
+importance that you be faithful to it, and stand by it steadfastly to
+the end. Did not the Reformation begin through the steadfastness of
+Luther, the miner's son of Eisleben, to the voice that spoke out so
+loudly to himself? Did not Carey lay the foundation of the modern
+mission in India, because he could not get rid of that verse of
+Scripture, "Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel to every
+creature"? Did not Livingstone persevere in the most dangerous, the most
+desperate enterprise of our time, because he could not quench the voice
+that called him to open up Africa or perish? Or to go back to Scripture
+times. A Jewish maiden at the court of the great king of Persia becomes
+the saviour of her whole nation, because she feels that, at the risk of
+her life, she must speak a word for them to the king. Saul of Tarsus,
+after his conversion, becomes impressed with the conviction that he must
+preach the Gospel to the Gentiles, and through his faithfulness to that
+conviction, he lays the foundation of the whole European Church. Learn,
+my friends, every one, from this, never to be faithless to any
+conviction given to you, though, as far as you know, it is given to you
+alone. Make very sure that it comes from the God of truth. But don't
+stifle it, under the notion that you are too weak to bring anything out
+of it. Don't reason that if it were really from God, it would be given
+to others too. Test it in every way you can, to determine whether it be
+right. And if it stands these tests, manfully give effect to it, for it
+may bear seed that will spread over the globe.
+
+Second, this narrative shows what large results may flow from
+_individual effort_. The idea may not have occurred for the first time
+to some one; it may have been derived by him from another; but it has
+commended itself to him, it has been taken up by him, and worked out by
+him to results of great magnitude and importance. Pay a visit to the
+massive buildings and well-ordered institutions of Kaiserswerth, learn
+its ramifications all over the globe, and see what has come of the
+individual efforts of Fliedner. Think how many children have been
+rescued by Dr. Barnardo, how many have been emigrated by Miss
+Macpherson, how many souls have been impressed by Mr. Moody, how many
+orphans have been cared for by Mr. Mueller, how many stricken ones have
+been relieved in the institutions of John Bost. It is true, we are not
+promised that every instance of individual effort will bring any such
+harvest. It may be that we are to be content with very limited results,
+and with the encomium bestowed on the woman in the Gospel, "She hath
+done what she could." But it is also true that none of us can tell what
+possibilities there are in individual effort. We cannot tell but in our
+case the emblem of the seventy-second Psalm may be verified, "There
+shall be an handful of corn in the earth on the top of the mountains;
+the fruit thereof shall shake like Lebanon, and they of the city shall
+flourish like grass of the earth."
+
+Lastly, we may learn from this narrative that the true secret of all
+spiritual success lies in our seeking to be instruments in God's hands,
+and in our lending ourselves to Him, to do in us and by us whatever is
+good in His sight. Thus it was eminently with Jonathan. "It may be that
+the Lord will work for us; for there is no restraint to the Lord to save
+by many or by few." It was not Jonathan that was to work with some help
+from God; it was the Lord that was to work by Jonathan. It was not
+Jonathan's project that was to be carried out; it was the Lord's cause
+that was to be advanced. Jonathan had no personal ends in this matter.
+He was willing to give up his life, if the Lord should require it. It is
+a like consecration in all spiritual service that brings most blessing
+and success. Men that have nothing of their own to gain are the men who
+gain most. Men who sacrifice all desire for personal honour are the men
+who are most highly honoured. Men who make themselves of no reputation
+are the men who gain the highest reputation. Because Christ emptied
+Himself, and took on Him the form of a servant, God highly exalted Him
+and gave Him a name above every name. And those who are like Christ in
+the mortifying of self become like Christ also in the enjoyment of the
+reward. Such are the rules of the kingdom of heaven. "He that loveth his
+life shall lose it, and he that hateth his life in this world shall keep
+it unto life eternal."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] "Tent Work in Palestine."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+_SAUL'S WILFULNESS._
+
+1 SAMUEL xiv. 24-52.
+
+
+That Saul was now suffering in character under the influence of the high
+position and great power to which he had been raised, is only too
+apparent from what is recorded in these verses. No doubt he pays more
+respect than he has been used to pay to the forms of religion. He
+enjoins a fast on his people at a very inconvenient time, under the idea
+that fasting is a proper religious act. He is concerned for the trespass
+of the people in eating their food with the blood. He builds the first
+altar he ever built to God. He consults the oracle before he will commit
+himself to the enterprise of pursuing the retreating enemy by night. He
+is concerned to find the oracle dumb, and tries to discover through
+whose sin it is so. For a ceremonial offence, committed by Jonathan in
+ignorance, he fancies that God's displeasure has come down on the
+people, and he not only insists that Jonathan shall die for this
+offence, but confirms his decision by a solemn oath, sworn in the name
+of God. All this shows Saul plunging and floundering from one mistake to
+another, and crowning his blunders by a proposal so outrageous that the
+indignation of the people arrests his purpose. The idea that the work of
+the day shall be wound up by the execution of the youth through whom
+all the wonderful deliverance has come, and that youth Saul's own son,
+is one that could never have entered into any but a distempered brain.
+Reason seems to have begun to stagger on her throne; the sad process has
+begun which in a more advanced stage left Saul the prey of an evil
+spirit, and in its last and most humiliating stage drove him to consult
+with the witch of Endor.
+
+But how are we to explain his increase of religiousness side by side
+with the advance of moral obliquity and recklessness? Why should he be
+more careful in the service of God while he becomes more imperious in
+temper, more stubborn in will, and more regardless of the obligations
+alike of king and father? The explanation is not difficult to find. The
+expostulation of Samuel had given him a fright. The announcement that
+the kingdom would not be continued in his line, and that God had found a
+worthier man to set over His people Israel, had moved him to the quick.
+There could be no doubt that Samuel was speaking the truth. Saul had
+begun to disregard God's will in his public acts, and was now beginning
+to reap the penalty. He felt that he must pay more attention to God's
+will. If he was not to lose everything, he must try to be more
+religious. There is no sign of his feeling penitent in heart. He is not
+concerned in spirit for his unworthy behaviour toward God. He feels only
+that his own interests as king are imperilled. It is this selfish motive
+that makes him determine to be more religious. The fast, and the
+consultation of the oracle, and the altar, and the oath that Jonathan
+shall die, have all their origin in this frightened, selfish feeling.
+And hence, in their very nature and circumstances, his religious acts
+are unsuitable and unseemly. In place of making things better by such
+services, he makes them worse; no peace of God falls like dew on his
+soul; no joy is diffused throughout his army; discontent reaches a
+climax when the death of Jonathan is called for; and tranquillity is
+restored only by the rebellion of the people, rescuing their youthful
+prince and hero.
+
+Alas, how common has this spirit been in the history of the world! What
+awful tragedies has it led to, what slaughter of heretics, what
+frightful excesses disgraceful to kings, what outrages on the common
+feelings of humanity! Louis XIV. has led a most wicked and profligate
+life, and he has ever and anon qualms that threaten him with the wrath
+of God. To avert that wrath, he must be more attentive to his religious
+duties. He must show more favour to the Church, exalt her dignitaries to
+greater honour, endow her orders and foundations with greater wealth.
+But that is not all. He must use all the arms and resources of his
+kingdom for ridding the Church of her enemies. For twenty years he must
+harass the Protestants with every kind of vexatious interference,
+shutting up their churches on frivolous pretexts, compelling them to
+bury their dead by night, forbidding the singing of psalms in worship,
+subjecting them to great injustice in their civil capacity, and at last,
+by the revocation of the edict that gave them toleration, sweeping them
+from the kingdom in hundreds of thousands, till hardly a Protestant is
+left behind. What the magnificent monarch did on a large scale, millions
+of obscurer men have done on a small. It is a sad truth that terror and
+selfishness have been at the foundation of a great deal of that which
+passes current as religion. Prayers and penances and vows and charities
+in cases without number have been little better than premiums of
+insurance, designed to save the soul from punishment and pain. Nor have
+these acts been confined to that Church which, more than any other, has
+encouraged men to look for saving benefit to the merit of their own
+works. Many a Protestant, roused by his conscience into a state of
+fright, has resolved to be more attentive to the duties of religion. He
+will read his Bible more; he will pray more; he will give more; he will
+go to church more. Alas, the spring of all this is found in no
+humiliation for sin before God, no grief at having offended the Father,
+no humble desire to be renewed in heart and conformed to the image of
+the First-born! And the consequence is, as in the case of Saul, that
+things go, not from bad to better, but from bad to worse. There is no
+peace of God that passeth all understanding; there is no general
+rectification of the disordered faculties of the soul; there is no token
+of heavenly blessing, blessing to the man himself and blessing to those
+about him. A more fiery element seems to come into his temper; a more
+bitter tone pervades his life. To himself it feels as if there were no
+good in trying to be better; to the world it appears as if religion put
+more of the devil into him. But it is all because what he calls religion
+is no religion; it is the selfish bargain-making spirit, which aims no
+higher than deliverance from pain; it is not the noble exercise of the
+soul, prostrated by the sense of guilt, and helpless through
+consciousness of weakness, lifting up its eyes to the hills whence
+cometh its help, and rejoicing in the grace that freely pardons all its
+sin through the blood of Christ, and in the gift of the Holy Spirit that
+renews and sanctifies the soul.
+
+The first thing that Saul does, in the exercise of this selfish spirit,
+is to impose on the people an obligation to fast until the day be over.
+Any one may see that to compel fasting under such circumstances was
+alike cruel and unwise. To fast in the solitude of one's chamber, where
+there is no extra wear and tear of the bodily organs, and therefore no
+special need for recruiting them, is comparatively safe and easy. But to
+fast amid the struggles of battle or the hurry of a pursuit; to fast
+under the burning sun and that strain of the system which brings the
+keenest thirst; to fast under exertions that rapidly exhaust the thews
+and sinews, and call for a renewal of their tissues--to fast in
+circumstances like these involves an amount of suffering which it is not
+easy to estimate. It was cruel in Saul to impose a fast at such a time,
+all the more that, being commander-in-chief of the army, it was his duty
+to do his utmost for the comfort of his soldiers. But it was unwise as
+well as cruel; with energies impaired by fasting, they could not
+continue the pursuit nor make the victory so telling. Perhaps he was
+under the influence of the delusion that the more painful a religious
+service is, the more is it acceptable to God. That idea of penance does
+find a place in our natural notions of religion. Saul, as we have seen,
+grew up with little acquaintance with religious persons and little
+knowledge of Divine things; and now that perforce he is constrained to
+attend to them, it is no wonder if he falls into many a serious error.
+For he probably had no idea of that great rule of God's kingdom, "I will
+have mercy, and not sacrifice."
+
+The folly of Saul's order became apparent when the army came to a wood,
+where, as is common enough in the country, a stream of wild honey poured
+out, probably from the trunk of a hollow tree. Stretching out his rod
+or spear, Jonathan fixed it in a piece of the comb, which he transferred
+with his hand to his mouth. Immediately "his eyes were enlightened;" the
+dull feeling which settles on the eyes amid fatigue and hunger
+disappeared; and with the return of clear vision to his eyes, there
+would come a restoration of vigour to his whole frame. When told for the
+first time of the order which his father had given, he showed no regret
+at having broken it, but openly expressed his displeasure at its having
+ever been imposed. "Then said Jonathan, My father hath troubled the
+land. See, I pray you, how mine eyes have been enlightened, because I
+tasted a little of this honey. How much more if haply the people had
+eaten freely to-day of the spoil of their enemies which they found! for
+had there not been a much greater slaughter among the Philistines?" We
+must bear in mind that Jonathan was a true man of God. He had set out
+that morning in his wonderful exploit in the true spirit of faith and
+full consecration to God. He was in far nearer fellowship with God than
+his father, and yet so far from approving of the religious order to fast
+which his father had given, he regards it with displeasure and distrust.
+Godly men will sometimes be found less outwardly religious than some
+other men, and will greatly shock them by being so. The godly man has an
+unction from the Holy One to understand His will; he goes straight to
+the Lord's business; like our blessed Lord, he finishes the work given
+him to do; while the merely religious man is often so occupied with his
+forms, that, like the Pharisees, he neglects the structure for which
+forms are but the scaffolding; in paying his tithes of mint, anise, and
+cummin, he omits the weightier matters--justice, mercy, and truth.
+
+But the evil caused by Saul's injudicious fast was not yet over. The
+obligation to fast lasted only till sunset, and when the day was ended,
+the people, faint and ravenous, flew upon the spoil--sheep, oxen, and
+calves--and devoured them on the spot, without taking time or pains to
+sever the blood from the flesh. To remedy this, Saul had a great stone
+placed beside him, and ordered the people to bring every man his ox or
+his sheep, and slay them on that stone, that he might see that the blood
+was properly drained from the flesh. Then we gather from the marginal
+reading of ver. 35 that he was proceeding to erect with the stone an
+altar to God, but that he did not carry this purpose completely into
+effect, because he determined to continue the pursuit of the
+Philistines. He saw how much recruited his troops were by their food,
+and he therefore determined to make a new assault. If it had not been
+for the unwise order to fast given early in the day, if the people had
+been at liberty to help themselves to the honey as they passed it, or to
+such other refreshments as they found in their way, they would have been
+some hours earlier in this pursuit, and it would have been so much the
+more effectual.
+
+It would seem, however, that the priest who was in attendance on Saul
+was somewhat alarmed at the abrupt and rather reckless way in which the
+king was making his plans and giving his orders. "Let us draw near
+hither unto God," said he. Counsel was accordingly asked of God whether
+Saul should go down after the Philistines and whether God would deliver
+them into the hand of Israel. But to this inquiry no answer was given.
+It was natural to infer that some sin had separated between God and
+Saul, some iniquity had caused God to hide His face from him. Here was
+a state of things that might well make Saul pause and examine himself.
+Had he done so in an honest spirit, he could hardly have failed to find
+out what was wrong. God had given a wonderful deliverance that day
+through Jonathan. Jonathan was as remarkable for the power of faith as
+Saul for the want of it. Jonathan had been wonderfully blessed that day,
+but now that Saul, through the priest, sought to have a communication
+with God, none was given. Might he not have seen that the real cause of
+this was that Saul wanted what Jonathan possessed? Besides, was Saul
+doing justice to Jonathan in taking the enterprise out of his hands? If
+Jonathan began it, was he not entitled to finish it? Would not Saul have
+been doing a thing alike generous and just had he stood aside at this
+time, and called on Jonathan to complete the work of the day? If the
+king of England was justified in not going to the help of the Black
+Prince, serious though his danger was, but leaving him to extricate
+himself, and thus enjoy the whole credit of his valour, might not Saul
+have let his son end the enterprise which he had so auspiciously begun?
+In these two facts, in the difference between him and Jonathan as to the
+spirit of faith, and in the way in which Saul displaced the man whom God
+so signally countenanced in the morning, the king of Israel might have
+found the cause of the silence of the oracle. And the right thing for
+him would have been to confess his error, stand aside, and call on
+Jonathan to continue the pursuit and, if possible, exterminate the foe.
+
+But Saul took a different course. He had recourse to the lot, to
+determine the guilty party. Now, it does not appear that even the king
+of Israel, with the priest at his side, was entitled to resort to the
+lot to ascertain the mind of God except in cases where all natural
+means of discovering it confessedly failed. But we have just seen that
+in this case the natural means had not failed. Therefore there was no
+obligation on God to order the lot supernaturally so as to bring out the
+truth. In point of fact, the process ended so as to point to the very
+last man in all the army to whom blame was due. It was, as
+mathematicians say, a _reductio ad absurdum_. It is a proof that an
+instrument is out of order if it brings out a result positively
+ludicrous. If near the equator an instrument gives the latitude of the
+polar circle, it is a proof that it is not working rightly. When the lot
+pointed to Jonathan, it was a proof that it was not working rightly. Any
+man might have seen this. And Saul ought to have seen it. And he ought
+to have confessed that he was entirely out of his reckoning. Frankly and
+cordially he should have taken the blame on himself, and at once
+exonerated his noble son.
+
+But Saul was in no mood to take the blame on himself. Nor had he moral
+sagacity enough to see what an outrage it would be to lay the blame on
+Jonathan. Assuming that he was guilty, he asked him what he had done. He
+had done nothing but eat a little honey, not having heard the king's
+order to abstain. The justification was complete. At worst, it was but a
+ceremonial offence, but to Jonathan it was not even that. But Saul was
+too obstinate to admit the plea. By a new oath, he devoted his son to
+death. Nothing could show more clearly the deplorable state of his mind.
+In the eye of reason and of justice, Jonathan had committed no offence.
+He had given signal evidence of the possession in a remarkable degree of
+the favour of God. He had laid the nation under inconceivable
+obligations. All these pleas were for him; and surely in the king's
+breast a voice might have been heard pleading, Your son, your
+first-born, "the beginning of your strength, the excellency of dignity,
+and the excellency of power"! Is it possible that this voice was
+silenced by jealousy, jealousy of his own son, like his after-jealousy
+of David? What kind of heart could this Saul have had when in such
+circumstances he could deliberately say, "God do so, and more also, for
+thou shalt surely die, Jonathan"?
+
+But "the Divine right of kings to govern wrong" is not altogether
+without check. A temporary revolution saved Jonathan. It was one good
+effect of excitement. In calmer circumstances, the people might have
+been too terrified to interfere. But now they were excited--excited by
+their victory, excited by their fast followed by their meal, and excited
+by the terror of harm befalling Jonathan. They had far clearer and more
+correct apprehension of the whole circumstances than the king had. It is
+especially to be noted that they laid great emphasis on the fact that
+that day God had worked by Jonathan, and Jonathan had worked with God.
+This made the great difference between him and Saul. "As the Lord
+liveth, there shall not one hair of his head fall to the ground; for he
+hath wrought with God this day. So the people rescued Jonathan, that he
+died not."
+
+The opportunity of inflicting further damage on the Philistines at this
+time was thus lost through the moral obtuseness, recklessness, and
+obstinacy of Saul. But in many a future campaign Saul as a warrior
+rendered great service to the kingdom. He fought against all his enemies
+on every side. On the east, the Moabites, the Ammonites, and the
+Edomites had to be dealt with; on the north, the kings of Zobah; on the
+south, the Amalekites; and on the west, the Philistines. These campaigns
+are briefly stated, but we may easily see how much of hard military work
+is implied in connection with each. We may understand, too, with what
+honesty David, in his elegy over Saul and Jonathan, might commemorate
+their warlike prowess: "From the blood of the slain, from the fat of the
+mighty, the bow of Jonathan turned not back, and the sword of Saul
+returned not empty." Whether these military expeditions were conducted
+in a better spirit than Saul shows in this chapter we cannot tell.
+Whether further proofs were given of God's presence with Jonathan as
+contrasted with his absence from Saul we do not know. It does not appear
+that there was any essential improvement in Saul. But when Jonathan
+again emerges from the obscurity of history, and is seen in a clear and
+definite light, his character is singularly attractive--one of the
+purest and brightest in the whole field of Scripture.
+
+Evidently the military spirit ruled in Saul, but it did not bring peace
+nor blessing to the kingdom. "He gathered an host," surrounded himself
+with a standing army, so as to be ready and have an excuse for any
+expedition that he wished to undertake. After a brief notice of Saul's
+family, the chapter ends by telling us that "there was sore war against
+the Philistines all the days of Saul; and when Saul saw any strong man
+or any valiant man, he took him unto him." The Philistines were far from
+being permanently subdued; there were not even intervals of peace
+between the two countries. There was bitter war, an open sore,
+perpetually bleeding, a terror on every side, never removed. How
+different it might have been had that one day been better spent! how
+different it would certainly have been had Saul been a man after God's
+own heart! One day's misdeeds may bring a whole generation of sorrow,
+for "one sinner destroyeth much good." Once off the right rail, Saul
+never got on it again; rash and restless, he doubtless involved his
+people in many a disaster, fulfilling all that Samuel had said about
+_taking_ from the people, fulfilling but little that the people had
+hoped concerning deliverance from the hand of the Philistines.
+
+Who does not see what a fearful thing it is to leave God and His ways,
+and give one's self up to the impulses of one's own heart? Fearful for
+even the humblest of us, but infinitely fearful for one of great
+resources and influence, with a whole people under him! How beautiful
+some prayers in the Psalms sound after we have been contemplating the
+wild career of Saul! "Show me Thy ways, O Lord; teach me in Thy paths.
+Lead me in Thy truth and teach me, for Thou art the God of my salvation;
+on Thee do I wait all the day." "Oh that my ways were directed to keep
+Thy statutes! Then shall I not be ashamed, when I have respect unto all
+Thy commandments."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+_THE FINAL REJECTION OF SAUL._
+
+1 SAMUEL xv.
+
+
+Here we find the second portion of God's indictment against Saul, and
+the reason for his final rejection from the office to which he had been
+raised. There is no real ground for the assertion of some critics that
+in this book we have two accounts of Saul's rejection, contradictory one
+of the other, because a different ground is asserted for it in the one
+case from that assigned in the other. The first rejection (1 Sam. xiii.
+13, 14) was the rejection of his house as the permanent dynasty of
+Israel, but it did not imply either that Saul was to cease to reign, or
+that God was to withdraw all countenance and co-operation with him as
+king. The rejection we read of in the present chapter goes further than
+the first. It does not indeed imply that Saul would cease to reign, but
+it does imply that God would no longer countenance him as king, would no
+longer make him his instrument of deliverance and blessing to Israel,
+but would leave him to the miserable feeling that he was reigning
+without authority. More than that, as we know from the sequel, it
+implied that God was about to bring his successor forward, and thereby
+exhibit both to him and to the nation the evidence of his degradation
+and rejection. It is likely that the transactions of this chapter
+occurred when Saul's reign was far advanced. If he had not been guilty
+of fresh disregard of God's will, though David would still have been his
+successor, he would have been spared the shame and misery of going out
+and in before his people like one who bore the mark of Cain, the visible
+expression of the Divine displeasure.
+
+Throughout the whole of this chapter, God appears in that more stern and
+rigorous aspect of His character which is not agreeable to the natural
+heart of man. Judgment, we are told, is His strange work; it is not what
+He delights in; but it is a work which He cannot fail to perform when
+the necessity for it arises. There is a gospel which is often preached
+in our day that divests God wholly of the rigid, judicial character; it
+clothes Him with no attributes but those of kindness and love; it
+presents Him in a countenance ever smiling, never stern. It maintains
+that the great work of Christ in the world was to reveal this paternal
+aspect of God's character, to convince men of His fatherly feelings
+towards them, and to divest their minds of all those conceptions of
+indignation and wrath with which our minds are apt to clothe Him, and
+which the theologies of men are so ready to foster. But this is a gospel
+that says, Peace! peace! when there is no peace. The Gospel of Jesus
+Christ does indeed reveal, and reveal very beautifully, the paternal
+character of God; but it reveals at the same time that judicial
+character which insists on the execution of His law. That God will
+execute wrath on the impenitent and unbelieving is just as much a
+feature of the Gospel as that He will bestow all the blessings of
+salvation and eternal life on them that believe. What the Gospel reveals
+respecting the sterner, the judicial, aspect of God's character is,
+that there is no bitterness in His anger against sinners; there is
+nothing in God's breast of that irritation and impatience which men are
+so apt to show when their fellow-men have offended them; God's anger is
+just. The calm, settled opposition of His nature to sin is the feeling
+that dictates the sentence "The soul that sinneth, it shall die." The
+Gospel is indeed a glorious manifestation of the love and grace of God
+for sinners, but it is not an indiscriminate assurance of grace for all
+sinners; it is an offer of grace to all who believe on God's Son, but it
+is an essential article of the Gospel that without faith in Christ the
+saving love and grace of God cannot be known. Instead of reducing the
+character of God to mere good-nature, the Gospel brings His
+righteousness more prominently forward than ever; instead of smoothing
+the doom of the impenitent, it deepens their guilt, and it magnifies
+their condemnation. Yes, my friends, and it is most wholesome for us all
+to look at times steadily in the face this solemn attribute of God, as
+the Avenger of the impenitent. It shows us that sin is not a thing to be
+trifled with. It shows us that God's will is not a thing to be despised.
+There are just two alternatives for thee, O sinner, who art not making
+God's will the rule of thy life. Repent, believe, and be forgiven;
+continue to sin, and be lost for ever.
+
+The transaction in connection with which Saul was guilty of a fresh
+disregard of God's will was an expedition which was appointed for him
+against the Amalekites. This people had been guilty of some very
+atrocious treatment of Israel in the wilderness of Sinai, the details of
+which are not given. Nations having a corporate life, when they continue
+to manifest the spirit of preceding generations, are held responsible
+for their actions, and liable to the penalty. Saul was sent to inflict
+on Amalek the retribution that had been due so long for his perfidious
+treatment of Israel on the way to Canaan. In the narrative, various
+places are mentioned as being in the Amalekite territory, but their
+exact sites are not known; and indeed this matters little, all that it
+is important to know being that the Amalekites were mainly a nomadic
+people, occupying the fringe between Canaan and the desert on the south
+border of Palestine, and doubtless subsisting to a large extent on the
+prey secured by them when they made forays into the territories of
+Israel. Saul gathered a great army to compass the destruction of this
+bitter and hostile people.
+
+In reading of the instructions he received to exterminate them, to "slay
+both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass,"
+we shudder to think of the fearful massacre which this involved. It was
+an order similar to that which the Israelites received to exterminate
+the inhabitants of Canaan, or that to destroy the Midianites, during the
+lifetime of Moses. Though it seems very horrible to us in whose eyes
+human life has become very sacred, it probably excited little feeling of
+the kind in the breasts of the Israelites, accustomed as they were, and
+as all Eastern nations were, to think very little of human life, and to
+witness wholesale slaughter with little emotion. But there is one thing
+in the order that we must not overlook, because it gave a complexion to
+the transaction quite different from that of ordinary massacres. That
+circumstance was, that the prey was to be destroyed as well as the
+people. In the case of an ordinary massacre, the conquering people
+abandon themselves to the licence of their passions, and hasten to
+enrich themselves by appropriating everything of value on which they can
+lay their hands. In the case of the Israelites, there was to be nothing
+of the kind. They were to destroy the prey just as thoroughly as they
+were to destroy the people. They were to enrich themselves in nothing.
+Now, this was a most important modification of the current practice in
+such things. But for this restriction, the extermination of the
+Amalekites would have been a wild carnival of selfish passion. The
+restriction appointed to Saul, like that which Joshua had imposed at
+Jericho, bound the people to the most rigid self-restraint, under
+circumstances when self-restraint was extremely difficult. The
+extermination was to be carried into effect with all the solemnity of a
+judicial execution, and the soldiers were to have no benefit from it
+whatever, any more than the jailer or the hangman can have benefit from
+the execution of some wretched murderer.
+
+Now, let it be observed that it was in entirely disregarding this
+restriction that a chief part of Saul's disobedience lay. "Saul and the
+people spared Agag, and the best of the sheep, and of the oxen, and of
+the fatlings and the lambs, and all that was good, and would not utterly
+destroy them; but everything that was vile and refuse, that they
+destroyed utterly." The sparing of King Agag seems to have been a piece
+of vanity with Saul, for a conqueror returning home with a royal
+prisoner was greatly thought of in those Eastern lands. But the sparing
+of the prey was a matter of pure greed. Observe how the character of the
+transaction was wholly changed by this circumstance. Instead of wearing
+the aspect of a solemn retribution on a sinful nation, on a people laden
+with iniquity, all the more impressive because the ministers of God's
+vengeance abstained from appropriating a vestige of the property, but
+consigned the whole, like a plague-stricken mass, too polluted to be
+touched, to the furnace of destruction--instead of this, it just
+appeared like an ordinary unprincipled foray, in which the victorious
+party slew the other, mainly to get them out of the way and enable them
+without opposition to appropriate their goods. It was this consideration
+that made the offence of Saul so serious, that made his breach of the
+Divine order so guilty. Had he no knowledge of the history of his
+people? Did he not remember what had happened at Jericho in the days of
+Joshua, when Achan stole the wedge of gold and the Babylonian garment,
+and, in spite of the fact that the rest of the people had behaved well
+and that God's purpose in the main was amply carried out, Achan and all
+his family were judicially stoned to death? How could Saul expect that
+such a flagrant violation of the Divine command in the case of the
+Amalekites, perpetrated not on the sly by a single individual, but
+openly by the king and all the people, could escape the retribution of
+God?
+
+Such then was Saul's conduct in the affair of Amalek. The next incident
+in the narrative is the communication that took place regarding it
+between the Lord and Samuel. Speaking after the manner of men, God said,
+It repented Him that He had set up Saul to be king. That these words are
+not to be explained in a strictly literal sense is evident from what is
+said in ver. 29: "The strength of Israel will not lie nor repent, for He
+is not a man that He should repent." The intimation to Samuel was
+equivalent to this: that God was now done with Saul. He had been weighed
+in the balances and found wanting. He had had his time of probation,
+and he had failed. He was joined to his idols, and must now be let
+alone. This last and very flagrant act of disobedience settled the
+matter. "My Spirit shall not always strive with man."
+
+How did Samuel receive the announcement? "It grieved Samuel, and he
+cried to the Lord all night." It is the same word as is translated in
+Jonah, "It displeased Jonah." But there is nothing to show that Samuel
+was displeased with God. The whole transaction was disappointing,
+worrying, heart-breaking. Doubtless he had a certain liking for Saul. He
+admired his splendid figure and many fine kingly qualities. It was a
+terrible struggle to give him up. The Divine announcement threw his mind
+into a tumult. All night he cried unto the Lord. Doubtless his cry was
+somewhat similar to our Lord's cry in Gethsemane, "If it be possible,
+let this cup pass." If it be possible, recover Saul. And observe, Samuel
+had good cause to raise this cry on account of the man who would
+naturally have been Saul's successor. He must have had great complacency
+in Jonathan. If Saul was to be set aside, why should not Jonathan have
+the crown? On whose head would it sit more gracefully? In whose hand
+would the sceptre be held more suitably? But even this plea would not
+avail. It was God's purpose to mark the offence of Saul with a deeper
+stigma, and attach to it in the mind of the nation a more conspicuous
+brand, by cutting off his whole family and transferring the crown to a
+quite different line. It took the whole night to reconcile Samuel to the
+Divine sentence. How very deeply and tenderly must this man's heart have
+been moved by regard for Saul and for the people! In the morning, his
+soul seems to have returned to its quiet rest. His mood seems now to
+have been, "Not my will but Thine be done!"
+
+Next comes the meeting of Saul and Samuel. Samuel seems to have expected
+to meet Saul at Carmel--the Carmel of Nabal (chap. xxv. 2)--but, perhaps
+on purpose to avoid him, Saul hastened to Gilgal. And when they met
+there, Saul, with no little audacity, claimed to have performed the
+commandment of the Lord. That this plea was not advanced in simple
+ignorance, as some have thought, is plain enough from Samuel's reception
+of it and his rebuke. "What meaneth this bleating of sheep in mine ears
+and the lowing of the oxen in my ears?" Facts are stubborn things, and
+they make quick work of sophistry. Oh, says Saul, these are brought as a
+sacrifice to the Lord thy God; they are an extra proof of my loyalty to
+Him. Saul, Saul, is it not enough that thou didst allow the selfish
+greed whether of thyself or of thy people to overbear the Divine
+command? Must thou add the sin of hypocrisy, and pretend that it was a
+pious act? And dost thou imagine that in so doing thou canst impose
+either on Samuel, or on God? O sinners, you _do_ miscalculate fearfully
+when you give to God's servants such false explanations of your sins!
+How long, think you, will the flimsy material hold out? In the case of
+Saul, it did not even enable him to turn the corner. It brought out a
+fact which he must have trembled to hear: that Samuel had had a
+communication about him from God the very night before, and that God had
+spoken very plainly about him. And what had God said? God had proceeded
+on the fact that Saul had disobeyed his voice, and had flown upon the
+spoil to preserve what God had commanded him to destroy. "Nay," says
+Saul, "it was not I that did that, but the people, and they did it to
+sacrifice to the Lord thy God in Gilgal." The excuse hardly needed to be
+exposed. Why did you let the people do so? Why did you not fulfil God's
+command as faithfully as Joshua did at Jericho? Why did you allow
+yourself, or the people either, to tamper with the clear orders given
+you by your King and theirs? "Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice,
+and to hearken than the fat of rams." Moral conduct is more than
+ceremonial form. "Because thou hast rejected the word of the Lord, He
+also hath rejected thee from being king."
+
+This terrible word pierces Saul to the quick. He is thoroughly alarmed.
+He makes acknowledgment of his sin in so far as he had feared the people
+and obeyed their words. He entreats Samuel to forgive him and turn again
+with him that he may worship God. He shows no evidence of true,
+heartfelt repentance. And Samuel refuses to return with him, and refuses
+to identify himself with one whom God hath rejected from being king. But
+Saul is deeply in earnest. He tries to detain Samuel by force. He takes
+hold of his mantle, and holds it so firmly that it rends. It is a
+symbol, says Samuel, of the rending of the kingdom of Israel from thee
+this day, to be given by God to a neighbour of thine that is better than
+thou. And this is God's irreversible sentence. Your day of grace is
+expired, and the Divine sentence is beyond recall. One more appeal does
+Saul make to Samuel. Again he owns his sin, but the request he makes
+shows clearly that what he is most anxious about is that he should not
+appear dishonoured before the people. It is his own reputation that
+concerns him. "Honour me now, I pray thee, before the elders of my
+people and before Israel, and turn again with me, that I may worship
+the Lord thy God." Samuel yields. The abject wretchedness of the man
+seems to have touched him. But it is not said that Samuel worshipped
+with him. Samuel would no doubt continue firm to his purpose not to
+identify himself with Saul as king, or give him any moral support in his
+attitude of disobedience. So far from that, Samuel openly superseded him
+in dealing with Agag; he went out of his way, and did an act which could
+not but appear a frightful one for a venerable prophet of the Lord. It
+is the voice of the real king that sounds in the command, "Bring ye
+hither to me Agag, the king of the Amalekites." We seem to see the royal
+prisoner advancing cringingly before that imperial figure, in whose eye
+there is a look, and in whose face and figure there is a determination,
+that may well make him quail. "Surely," says Agag, imploringly, "the
+bitterness of death is past." Spared by the king, I am not to fare worse
+from the prophet. Samuel knew him a merciless destroyer. "As thy sword
+hath made women childless, so shall thy mother be childless among
+women." And Samuel hewed Agag in pieces before the Lord in Gilgal.
+"Cursed be he that doeth the work of God deceitfully, and cursed be he
+that withholdeth his sword from shedding of blood." It is a scene of
+terror. The swift retribution executed on the one king was but the sign
+of the slower retribution pronounced upon the other. In the one case the
+doom was rapid; in the other it was deferred; in both it was sure. And
+have we not here a sad picture of that retribution which is sure to come
+on the impenitent sinner, and in the procedure of Samuel a foreshadowing
+of Him who cometh from Edom, with dyed garments from Bozrah, who will
+one day speak to His enemies in His wrath and vex them in His hot
+displeasure? Have we not here a foretaste of the opening of the sixth
+seal, when the kings of the earth, and the great men, and the rich men,
+and the chief captains, and the mighty men, shall say to the mountains
+and rocks, Fall on us, and hide us from the face of Him that sitteth on
+the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb: _"for the great day of His
+wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand"?_
+
+And oh! how little in that day will those plausible excuses avail with
+which men try to cover their sins to themselves, and it may be to
+others. How will the hail sweep away the refuges of lies! How will the
+real character of men's hearts, the true tenor of their lives, in
+respect they have set aside God's will and set up their own, be revealed
+in characters that cannot be mistaken! The question to be determined by
+your life was, whether God or you was King. Which did you obey, God's
+will or your own? Did you set aside God's will? Then you are certainly a
+rebel; and never having repented, never having been washed, or
+sanctified, or justified, your portion is with the rebels; the Father's
+house is not for you!
+
+And now the breach between Samuel and Saul is final. "Samuel came no
+more to visit Saul until the day of his death; nevertheless Samuel
+mourned for Saul; and the Lord repented that He had made Saul king over
+Israel."
+
+Saul is cut off now from his best means of grace--he is virtually an
+excommunicated man. Was it hard? Do our sympathies in any degree go with
+him? To our compassion he is entitled in the highest degree, but to
+nothing more. Saul's worst qualities had now become petrified. His
+wilfulness, his selfishness, his passionateness, his jealousy, had now
+got complete control, nor could their current be turned aside. The
+threat of losing his kingdom--perhaps the most terrible threat such a
+man could have felt--had failed to turn him from his wayward course. He
+was like the man in the iron cage in the "Pilgrim's Progress," who gave
+his history: "I left off to watch and be sober; I laid the reins upon
+the neck of my lusts; I sinned against the light of the word and the
+goodness of God; I have grieved the Spirit and He is gone; I tempted the
+devil, and he is come to me; I have provoked God to anger and He has
+left me; I have so hardened my heart that I cannot repent."
+
+It is a terrible lesson that comes to us from the career of Saul. If our
+natural lusts are not under the restraint of a higher power; if by that
+power we are not trained to watch, and check, and overpower them; if we
+allow them to burst all restraint and lord it over us as they
+will,--then will they grow into so many tyrants, who will rule us with
+rods of iron; laugh at the feeble remonstrances of our conscience; scoff
+at every messenger of God; vex His Holy Spirit, and hurl us at last to
+everlasting woe!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+_DAVID ANOINTED BY SAMUEL._
+
+1 SAMUEL xvi. 1-13.
+
+
+The rejection of Saul was laid very deeply to heart by Samuel. No doubt
+there were many engaging qualities in the man Saul, which Samuel could
+not but remember, and which fed the flame of personal attachment, and
+made the fact of his rejection hard to digest. And no doubt, too, Samuel
+was concerned for the peace and prosperity of the nation. He knew that a
+change of dynasty commonly meant civil war--it might lead to the inward
+weakening of a kingdom already weak enough, and its exposure to the
+attacks of hostile neighbours that watched with lynx eyes for any
+opportunity of dashing against Israel. Thus both on personal and on
+public grounds the rejection of Saul was a great grief to Samuel,
+especially as the rejection of Saul implied the rejection of Jonathan,
+and the prophet might ask, with no small reason, where, in all the
+nation, could there be found a better successor.
+
+It was not God's pleasure to reveal to Samuel the tragic events that
+were to stretch Jonathan and his brothers among the dead on the same day
+as their father; but it was His pleasure to introduce him to the man
+who, at a future time, was to rule Israel according to the ideal which
+the prophet had vainly endeavoured to press upon Saul. There is a
+sharpness in God's expostulation with Samuel which implies that the
+prophet's grief for Saul was carried to an excessive and therefore
+sinful length. "How long wilt thou mourn for Saul, seeing I have
+rejected him from reigning over Israel?" Grief on account of others
+seems such a sacred, such a holy feeling, that we are not ready to
+apprehend the possibility of its acquiring the dark hue of sin. Yet if
+God's children abandon themselves to the wildest excess for some sorrow
+which bears to them the character of a fatherly chastening; if they
+refuse to give effect in any way to God's purpose in the matter, and to
+the gracious ends which He designs it to serve, they are guilty of sin,
+and that sin one which is greatly dishonouring to God. It can never be
+right to shut God out of view in connection with our sorrows, or to
+forget that the day is coming--impossible though it may seem--when His
+character shall be so vindicated in all that has happened to His
+children, that all tears shall be wiped from their eyes, and it shall be
+seen that His tender mercies have been over all His works.
+
+It was to Bethlehem, and to the family of Jesse, that Samuel was to go
+to find the destined successor of Saul. The place was not so far distant
+from Ramah as to be quite beyond the sphere of Samuel's acquaintance. Of
+Jesse, one of the leading men of the place, he would probably have at
+least a general knowledge, though it is plain he had not any personal
+acquaintance with him, or knowledge of his family. Bethlehem had already
+acquired a marked place in Hebrew history, and Samuel could not have
+been ignorant of the episode of the young Moabite widow who had given
+such a beautiful proof of filial piety, and among whose descendants
+Jesse and his sons were numbered. The very name of Bethlehem was fitted
+to recall how God honours those that honour Him, and might have rebuked
+that outburst of fear which fell from Samuel, whose first thought was
+that he could not go, because if Saul heard of it he would kill him.
+Well, it is plain enough that, with all his glorious qualities as a
+prophet, Samuel was but a man, subject to the infirmities of men. What
+an honest book the Bible is! its greatest heroes coming down so often to
+the human level and showing the same weaknesses as ourselves! But God,
+who stoops to human weakness, who fortified the failing heart of Moses
+at the burning bush, and the doubting heart of Gideon, and afterwards
+the weary heart of Elijah and the trembling heart of Jeremiah,
+condescends in like manner to the infirmity of Samuel, and provides him
+with an ostensible object for his journey, which was not fitted to
+awaken the jealous temper of the king. Samuel is to announce that his
+coming to Bethlehem is for the purpose of a sacrifice, and the
+circumstances connected with the anointing of a successor to Saul are to
+be gone about so quietly and so vaguely that the great object of his
+visit will hardly be so much as guessed by any.
+
+The question has often been raised, Was this diplomatic arrangement not
+objectionable? Was it not an act of duplicity and deceit? Undoubtedly it
+was an act of concealment, but it does not follow that it was an act of
+duplicity. It was concealment of a thing which Samuel was under no
+obligation to divulge. It was not concealment of which the object was to
+mislead any one, or to induce any one to do what he would not have done
+had the whole truth been known to him. When concealment is practised in
+order to take an unfair advantage of any one, or to secure an unworthy
+advantage over him, it is a detestable crime. But to conceal what you
+are under no obligation to reveal, when some important end is to be
+gained, is a quite different thing. "It is the glory of God to conceal a
+thing;" providence is often just a vast web of concealment; the trials
+of Job were the fruit of Divine concealment; the answers of our Lord to
+the Syrophoenician woman were a concealment; the delay in going to
+Bethany when He heard of the illness of Lazarus was just a concealment
+of the glorious miracle which He intended by-and-bye to perform. One may
+tell the truth, and yet not the whole truth, without being guilty of any
+injustice or dishonesty. It was not on Saul's account at all that Samuel
+was sent to anoint a king at Bethlehem. It was partly on Samuel's
+account and partly on David's. If David was hereafter to fill the
+exalted office of king of Israel, it was desirable that he should be
+trained for its duties from his earliest years. Saul had not been called
+to the throne till middle life, till his character had been formed and
+his habits settled; the next king must be called at an earlier period of
+life. And though the boy's father and brothers may not understand the
+full nature of the distinction before him, they must be made to
+understand that he is called to a very special service of God, in order
+that they may give him up freely and readily to such preparation as that
+service demands. This seems to have been the chief reason of the mission
+of Samuel to Bethlehem. It could not but be known after that, that David
+was to be distinguished as a servant of God, but no idea seems to have
+been conveyed either to his brothers or to the elders of Bethlehem that
+he was going to be king.
+
+The arrangements for the public worship of God in those times--while the
+ark of God was still at Kirjath-jearim--seem to have been far from
+regular, and it appears to have been not unusual for Samuel to visit
+particular places for the purpose of offering a sacrifice. It would seem
+that the ordinary, though not the uniform, occasion for such visits was
+the occurrence of something blameworthy in the community, and if so this
+will explain the terror of the elders of Bethlehem at the visit of
+Samuel, and their frightened question, "Comest thou peaceably?" Happily
+Samuel was able to set their fears at rest, and to assure them that the
+object of his visit was entirely peaceable. It was a religious service
+he was come to perform, such a service as may have been associated with
+the other religious services he was accustomed to hold as he went round
+in circuit in the neighbourhood of Ramah. For this sacrifice the elders
+of Bethlehem were called to sanctify themselves, as were also Jesse and
+his sons. They were to take the usual steps for freeing themselves of
+all ceremonial uncleanness, and after the sacrifice they were to share
+the feast. A considerable interval would necessarily elapse between the
+sacrifice and the feast, for the available portions of the animal had to
+be prepared for food, and roasted on the fire. It was during this
+interval that Samuel made acquaintance with the sons of Jesse. First
+came the handsome and stately Eliab. And strange it is that even with
+the fate of the handsome and stately Saul full in his memory, Samuel
+leapt to the conclusion that this was the Lord's anointed. Could he
+wonder at God's emphatic No! Surely he had seen enough of outward
+appearance coupled with inward unfitness. One trial of that criterion
+had been enough for Israel.
+
+But alas, it is not merely in the choice of kings that men are apt to
+show their readiness to rest in the outward appearance. To what an
+infinite extent has this tendency been carried in the worship of God!
+Let everything be outwardly correct, the church beautiful, the music
+excellent, the sermon able, the congregation numerous and
+respectable--what a pattern such a church is often regarded! Alas! how
+little satisfactory it may be to God. The eye that searches and knows us
+penetrates to the heart,--it is there only that God finds the genuine
+elements of worship. The lowly sense of personal unworthiness, the
+wondering contemplation of the Divine love, the eager longing for mercy
+to pardon and grace to help, the faith that grasps the promises, the
+hope that is anchored within the veil, the kindness that breathes
+benediction all round, the love that beareth all things, believeth all
+things, hopeth all things, endureth all things,--it is these things,
+breathing forth from the hearts of a congregation, that give pleasure to
+God.
+
+Or look at what often happens in secular life. See how intensely eager
+some are about appearances. Why, it is one of the stereotyped rules of
+society that it is necessary "to keep up appearances." Well-born people
+may have become poor, very poor, but they must live to outward
+appearance as if they were rich. Between rivals there may be a deadly
+jealousy, but they must, by courtesy, keep up the form of friendship.
+And in trade a substantial appearance must be given to goods that are
+really worthless. And often, men who are really mean and unprincipled
+must pose as persons very particular about the right and very indignant
+at the wrong. And some, meaner than the common, must put on the cloak of
+religion, and establish a character for sanctity.
+
+The world is full of idolatries, but I question if any idolatry has been
+more extensively practised than the idolatry of the outward appearance.
+If there be less of this in our day than perhaps a generation back, it
+is because in these days of sifting and trial men have learned in so
+many ways by hard experience what a delusion it is to lean on such a
+broken reed. Yes, and we have had men among us who from a point of view
+not directly Christian have exposed the shams and counterfeits of the
+age,--men like Carlyle, who have sounded against them a trumpet blast
+which has been echoed and re-echoed round the very globe. But surely we
+do not need to go outside the Bible for this great lesson. "Thou
+desirest truth in the inward parts, and in the hidden part Thou shalt
+make me to know wisdom;" "If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord
+will not hear me." Or if we pass to the New Testament, what is the great
+lesson of the parable of the Publican and the Pharisee? The Publican was
+a genuine man, an honest, humble, self-emptied sinner. The Pharisee was
+a silly puffed-up pretender. The world seems to think that all high
+profession must be hollow. I need not say that such an opinion is
+utterly untenable. The world would have you profess nothing, lest you
+should not come up to it. Christ says, "Abide in Me, so shall ye bear
+much fruit." It was on this principle that St. Paul professed so much
+and did so much. "The life that I live in the flesh, I live by the faith
+of the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me."
+
+There is nothing to be said of the other sons of Jesse. Only the
+youngest one remained, apparently too young to be at the feast; he was
+in the field, keeping the sheep. "And Jesse sent and brought him in. Now
+he was ruddy, and withal of a beautiful countenance" (_marg._ eyes),
+"and goodly to look to. And the Lord said, Arise, anoint him, for this
+is he." Though goodly to look at, he was too young, too boyish to be
+preferred on the score of "outward appearance." It was qualities unseen,
+and as yet but little developed, that commended him. Greatly astonished
+must Jesse and his other sons have been to see Samuel pouring on the
+ruddy stripling the holy oil, and anointing him for whatever the office
+might be. But it has often been God's way to find His agents in
+unexpected places. Here a great king is found in the sheepfold. In
+Joseph's time a prime minister of Egypt was found in the prison. Our
+Lord found His chief apostle in the school of Gamaliel. The great
+Reformer of the sixteenth century was found in a poor miner's cottage.
+God is never at a loss for agents, and if the men fail that might
+naturally have been looked for to do Him service substitutes for them
+are not far to seek. Out of the very stones He can raise up children to
+Abraham.
+
+But it was not a mere arbitrary arrangement that David should have been
+a shepherd before he was king. There were many things in the one
+employment that prepared the way for the other. In the East the shepherd
+had higher rank and a larger sphere of duties than is common with us.
+The duties of the shepherd, to watch over his flock, to feed and protect
+them, to heal the sick, bind up the broken, and bring again that which
+was driven away, corresponded to those which the faithful and godly
+ruler owed to the people committed to his sceptre. It was from the time
+of David that the shepherd phraseology began to be applied to rulers and
+their people; and we hardly carry away the full lesson that the prophets
+intended to teach in their denunciations of "the shepherds that fed
+themselves and not the flock" when we apply these exclusively to the
+shepherds of souls. So appropriate was the emblem of the shepherd for
+denoting the right spirit and character of rulers, that it was
+ultimately appropriated in a very high and peculiar sense to the person
+and office of the Lord Jesus Christ. But long ere he appeared King David
+had familiarised men's minds with the kind of benefits that flow from
+the sceptre of a shepherd-ruler--the kind of blessings that were to flow
+in their fulness from Christ. Never did he write a more expressive word
+than this, "The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want." On the
+groundwork of his own earthly kingdom he had drawn the pattern of things
+in heavenly places, for describing which in after times no language
+could be found more suitable than that borrowed from his first
+occupation.
+
+But in full harmony with the character of Old Testament typology, the
+glory of the thing symbolized was infinitely greater than the glory of
+the symbol. Much though the nation owed to the godly administration of
+him whom God "took from the sheepfold, and brought from following the
+ewes great with young, to feed Jacob His people and Israel His
+inheritance," these benefits were shadows indeed when compared with the
+blessings procured by the great "Shepherd of Israel," "the good Shepherd
+that giveth His life for the sheep," whose shepherd care does not
+terminate with the life that now is, but will be exercised in eternity
+in feeding them and leading them by living fountains of water, where God
+shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.
+
+There are other points of typical resemblance between David and Christ
+that demand our notice here. If it was a strange-like thing for God to
+find the model king of Israel in a sheepcot at Bethlehem, it was still
+more so to find the Saviour of the world in a workshop at Nazareth. But
+again; King David was chosen for qualities that did not fall in with the
+ordinary conception of what was king-like, but qualities that commended
+him to God; and in the same manner the Lord Jesus Christ, God's Elect,
+in whom His soul delighted, was not marked by those attributes which men
+might have considered suitable in one who was to gain the empire of the
+world. "He shall grow up as a tender plant, and as a root out of a dry
+ground; He hath no form nor comeliness, and when we shall see Him there
+is no beauty that we should desire Him." In bodily form the Lord Jesus
+would seem to have resembled David rather than Saul. There is no reason
+to think that there was any great physical superiority in Christ, that
+He was taller than the common, or that He was distinguished by any of
+those physical features that at first sight captivate men. And even in
+the region of intellectual and spiritual influence, our Lord did not
+conform to the type that naturally commands the confidence and
+admiration of the world. He had a still, quiet manner. His eloquence did
+not flash, nor blaze, nor flow like a torrent. The power of His words
+was due more to their wonderful depth of meaning, going straight to the
+heart of things, and to the aptness of His homely illustrations. Our
+Lord's mode of conquest was very remarkable. He conquered by gentleness,
+by forbearance, by love, by sympathy, by self-denial. He impressed men
+with the glory of sacrifice, the glory of service, the glory of
+obedience, obedience to the one great authority--the will of God--to
+which all obedience is due. He inspired them with a love of
+purity,--purity of heart, purity after the highest pattern. If you
+compare our blessed Lord with those who have achieved great conquests,
+you cannot but see the difference. I do not mean with conquerors like
+Alexander, or Caesar, or Napoleon. Napoleon himself at St. Helena showed
+in a word the vast difference between Christ and them. "Our conquests,"
+said he, "have been achieved by force, but Jesus achieved His by love,
+and to-day millions would die for Him." But look at some who have
+conquered by gentler means. Take such men as Socrates, or Plato, or
+Aristotle. They achieved great intellectual conquests--they founded
+intellectual empires. But the intellect of Jesus Christ was of another
+order from theirs. He propounded no theory of the universe, He did not
+affect to explain the world of reason, He did not profess to lay bare
+the laws of the human mind, or prescribe conditions for the welfare of
+states. What strikes us about Christ's method of influence is its quiet
+homeliness. Yet quiet and homely though it was and is, how prodigious,
+how unprecedented has been its power! What other king of men has wielded
+a tithe of His influence? And that not with one class of society, but
+with all; not only with the poor and uneducated, but with thinkers and
+men of genius as well; not only with men and women who know the world,
+and know their own hearts and all their wants, and apprehend the fitness
+of Christ to supply them, but even with little children, in the simple
+unconsciousness of opening years. For out of the mouths of babes and
+sucklings He hath perfected praise.
+
+Now let us mark this also, in conclusion, that besides being a King
+Himself Jesus makes all His people kings to God. Every Christian is
+designed to be a ruler, an unconscious one it may be, but one who
+exercises an influence in the same direction as Christ's. How can you
+accomplish this? By first of all drinking into Christ's spirit, looking
+out on the world as He did, with compassion, sympathy, self-sacrifice,
+and an ardent desire for its renovation and its happiness. By walking
+"worthy of the vocation wherewith you are called." Not by the
+earthquake, or by the tempest, but by the still small voice. By quiet,
+steady, persistent love, goodness, and self-denial. These are the true
+Christian weapons, often little thought of, but really the armour of
+God, and weapons mighty to the pulling down of strongholds and the
+subjugation of the world to Christ.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+_DAVID'S EARLY LIFE._[2]
+
+1 SAMUEL xvi. 14-23.
+
+
+Before we enter at large into the incident of which these verses form
+the record it is desirable to settle, as far as we can, the order of
+events in the early life of David.
+
+After being anointed by Samuel, David would probably return to his work
+among the sheep. It is quite possible that some years elapsed before
+anything else occurred to vary the monotony of his first occupation. The
+only interruption likely to have occurred to his shepherd life would be,
+intercourse with Samuel. It is rather striking that nothing is said,
+nothing is even hinted, as to the private relations that prevailed in
+youth between him and the venerable prophet who had anointed him with
+the holy oil. But it cannot be supposed that Samuel would just return to
+Ramah without any further communication with the youth that was to play
+so important a part in the future history of the country. If Saul, with
+all his promising qualities at the beginning, had greatly disappointed
+him, he could only be the more anxious on that account about the
+disposition and development of David. The fact that after David became
+the object of the murderous jealousy of Saul, it was to Samuel he came
+when he fled from the court to tell what had taken place, and to ask
+advice (ch. xix. 18, 19), seems to indicate that the two men were on
+intimate terms, and therefore that they had been much together before.
+Whether David derived his views of government from Samuel, or whether
+they were impressed on him directly by the Spirit of God, it is certain
+that they were the very same as those which Samuel cherished so
+intensely, and which he sought so earnestly to impress on Saul. God's
+imperial sovereignty, and the earthly king's entire subordination to
+him; the standing of the people as God's people, God's heritage, and the
+duty of the king to treat them as such, and do all that he could for
+their good; the infinite and inexhaustible privilege involved in this
+relation, making all coquetting with false gods shameful, dishonouring
+to God, and disastrous to the people,--were ruling principles with
+Samuel and David alike. If David was never formally a pupil of Samuel's,
+informally he must have been so to a large extent. Samuel lived in
+David; and the complacency which the old prophet must have had in his
+youthful friend, and his pleasure in observing the depth of his loyalty
+to God, and his eager interest in the highest welfare of the people,
+must have greatly mitigated his distress at the rejection of Saul, and
+revived his hope of better days for Israel.
+
+As David grew in years, but before he ceased to be a boy, he might
+acquire that local reputation as "a mighty valiant man and a man of war"
+which his friend referred to when he first mentioned him to Saul. In him
+as in Jonathan faith gendered a habit of dash and daring which could not
+be suppressed in the days of eager boyhood. The daring insolence of the
+Philistines, whose country lay but a few miles to the west of
+Bethlehem, might afford him opportunities for deeds of boyish valour.
+Jerusalem, the stronghold of the Jebusites, was but two hours distant
+from Bethlehem, and on the part of its people, too, collisions with
+Israelites were doubtless liable to occur. It may have been now, or
+possibly a little later, that the contest occurred with the lion and the
+bear. The country round Bethlehem was not a peaceful paradise, and the
+career of a shepherd was not the easy life of lovesick swains which
+poets dream.
+
+It was at this period of David's life that Saul's peculiar malady took
+that form which suggested the use of music to soothe his nervous
+irritation. His courtiers recommended that he should seek out a cunning
+player on the harp, whose soothing strains would calm him in the
+paroxysms of his ailment. Obviously, it was desirable that one who was
+to be so close to a king so full of the military spirit as Saul should
+have a touch of that spirit himself. David had become known to one of
+the courtiers, who at once mentioned him as in all respects suitable for
+the berth. Saul accordingly sent messengers to Jesse, bidding him send
+to him David his son, who was with the sheep. And David came to Saul.
+But his first visit seems to have been quite short. Saul's attacks were
+probably occasional, and at first long intervals may have occurred
+between them. When he recovered from the attack at which David had been
+sent for, the cunning harper was needed no longer, and would naturally
+return home. He may have been but a very short time with Saul, too short
+for much acquaintance being formed. But it is the way of the historians
+of Scripture, when a topic has once been introduced, to pursue it to its
+issues without note of the events that came between. The writer having
+indicated how David was first brought into contact with Saul, as his
+musician, pursues the subject of their relation, without mentioning that
+the fight with Goliath occurred between. Some critics have maintained
+that in this book we have two accounts of David's introduction to Saul,
+accounts which contradict one another. In the first of them he became
+known to him first as a musician sent for in the height of his attack.
+In the other it is as the conqueror of Goliath he appears before Saul.
+It is the fact that neither Saul nor any of his people knew on this
+occasion who he was that is so strange. According to our view the order
+of events was this: David's first visit to Saul to play before him on
+his harp was a very short one. Some time after the conflict with Goliath
+occurred. David's appearance had probably changed considerably, so that
+Saul did not recognize him. It was now that Saul attached David to
+himself, kept him permanently, and would not let him return to his
+father's house (ch. xviii. 2). And while David acted as musician,
+playing to him on his harp in the paroxysms of his ailment (ch. xviii.
+10), he went out at his command on military expeditions, and acquired
+great renown as a warrior (ch. xviii. 5). Thus, to turn back to the
+sixteenth chapter, the last two verses of that chapter record the
+permanent office before Saul which David came to fill after the
+slaughter of the Philistine. In fact, we find in that chapter, as often
+elsewhere, a brief outline of the whole course of events, some of which
+are filled up in minute detail in the chapter following.
+
+Having thus settled the chronology, or rather the order of events in
+David's early history, it may be well now to examine more fully that
+period of his life, in so far as we have any materials for doing so.
+
+According to the chronology of the Authorized Version, the birth of
+David must have occurred about the year before Christ 1080. It was about
+a hundred years later than the date commonly assigned to the Trojan war,
+and therefore a considerable time before the dawn of authentic history,
+at least among the Greeks or the Romans. The age of David succeeded what
+might be called the heroic age of Hebrew history; in one sense, indeed,
+it was a continuation of that period. Samson, the latest, and in some
+sense the greatest of the Jewish heroes, had perished not very long
+before; and the scene of his birth and of some of his most famous
+exploits lay within a very few miles of Bethlehem. In David's boyhood
+old men would still be living who had seen and talked with the Hebrew
+Hercules, and from whose lips high-spirited boys would hear, with
+sparkling eye and heaving bosom, the story of his exploits and the
+tragedy of his death. The whole neighbourhood would swarm with songs and
+legends illustrative of the deeds of those mighty men of valour, that
+ever since the sojourn in Egypt had been conferring renown on the Hebrew
+name. The mind of boyhood delights in such narratives; they rouse the
+soul, expand the imagination, and create sympathy with all that is brave
+and noble. We cannot doubt that such things had a great effect on the
+susceptible temperament of the youthful David, and contributed some
+elements of that manly and invincible spirit which remained so prominent
+in his character.
+
+But a much more important factor in determining his character and
+shaping his life was the religious awakening in which Samuel had so
+prominent a share. Not a word is said anywhere of the manner in which
+David's heart was first turned to God; but this must have been in his
+earliest years. We think of David as we think of Samuel, or Jeremiah, or
+Josiah, or John the Baptist, as sanctified to the Lord from his very
+childhood. God chose him at the very outset in a more vital sense than
+He afterwards chose him to be king. In the exercise of that mysterious
+sovereignty which we are unable to fathom, God made his youthful heart a
+plot of good soil, into which when the seed fell it bore fruit an
+hundredfold. In strong contrast to Saul, whose early sympathies were
+against the ways and will of God, those of David were warmly for them.
+Samuel would find him an eager and willing listener when he spoke to him
+of God and His ways. How strange are the differences of young persons,
+in this respect, when they come first under the instructions of a
+minister or other servant of God! Some so earnest, so attentive, so
+impressed; so ready to drink in all that is said; treasuring it, hiding
+it in their hearts, rejoicing in it like those that find great spoil.
+Others so hard to bring into line, so glad of an excuse for absence, so
+difficult to interest, so fitful and unconcerned. No doubt much depends
+on the skill of the teacher in working upon anything in their minds that
+gives even a faint response to the truth. And in no case is the aversion
+of the heart beyond the power of the Holy Spirit to influence and to
+change. But for all that, we cannot but acknowledge the mysterious
+sovereignty which through causes we cannot trace makes one man so to
+differ from another; which made Abel so different from Cain, Isaac from
+Ishmael, Moses from Balaam, and David from Saul.
+
+Was David at any time a member of any of the schools of the prophets? We
+cannot say with certainty, but when we ponder what we read about them
+it seems very likely that he was. These schools seem to have enjoyed in
+an eminent degree the gracious power of the Holy Spirit. The hearts of
+the inmates seem to have burned with the glow of devotion; the emotions
+of holy joy with which they were animated could not be restrained, but
+poured out from them, like streams from a gushing fountain, in holy
+songs and ascriptions to God; and such was the overpowering influence of
+this spirit that for a time it infected even cold-hearted men like Saul,
+and bore them along, as an enthusiastic crowd gathers up stragglers and
+sweeps them onward in its current. It seems highly probable that it was
+in connection with these institutions, on which so signal a blessing
+rested, that the devotional spirit became so powerful in David
+afterwards poured out so freely in his Psalms. For surely he could not
+be in the company of men who were so full of the Spirit without sharing
+their experience and pouring forth the feelings that stirred his soul.
+
+We all believe in some degree in the law of heredity, and find it
+interesting to trace the features of forefathers, physical and
+spiritual, in the persons of their descendants. The piety, the humanity,
+and the affectionateness of Boaz and Ruth form a beautiful picture in
+the early Hebrew history, and seem to come before us anew in the
+character of David. Boaz was remarkable for the fatherly interest he
+took in his dependants, for his generous kindness to the poor, and for a
+spirit of gentle piety that breathed even through his secular life. Was
+it not the same spirit that dictated the benediction, "Blessed is he
+that considereth the poor; the Lord will deliver him in time of
+trouble"? Was it not the same interest in the welfare of dependants that
+David showed when "he dealt among the people, even the whole multitude
+of Israel, as well to the women as to the men, to every one a cake of
+bread, and a good piece of flesh, and a flagon of wine? Ruth again was
+remarkable for the extraordinary depth and tenderness of her affection;
+her words to Naomi have never been surpassed as an expression of simple,
+tender feeling: "Entreat me not to leave thee, nor to return from
+following after thee; for whither thou goest I will go, and where thou
+lodgest I will lodge; thy people shall be my people, and thy God my
+God." Does not this extraordinary tenderness seem to have fallen
+undiminished to the man who had such an affection for Jonathan, who
+showed such emotion on the illness of his infant child, and poured out
+such a flood of anguish on the death of Absalom? The history of Boaz and
+Ruth would surely take hold very early of his mind. The very house in
+which he lived, the fields where he tended his sheep, every object
+around him, might have associations with their memory; aged people might
+tell him stories of their benevolence, and pious people give him
+traditions of their godliness, and thus an element would be contributed
+to a character in which the tenderness of a woman and the piety of a
+saint were combined with the courage and energy of a man.
+
+The birthplace of David, Bethlehem, is more remarkable for its moral
+associations than its natural features. Well has it been said by Edward
+Robinson of the place where both David and Jesus were born, "What a
+mighty influence for good has gone forth from this little spot upon the
+human race both for time and for eternity!" It was situated some six
+miles to the south of Jerusalem, and about twice that distance to the
+north of Hebron. The present town is built upon the north and north-east
+slope of a long grey ridge, with a deep valley in front and another
+behind, uniting at no great distance, and running down toward the Dead
+Sea. The country around is hilly, but hardly beautiful; the limestone
+rock gives a bare appearance to the hills, which is not redeemed by
+boldness of form or picturesqueness of outline. The fields, though stony
+and rough, produce good crops of grain; olive groves, fig-orchards, and
+vineyards abound both in the valleys and on the gentler slopes; the
+higher and wilder tracts were probably devoted to the pasturing of
+flocks. The whole tract in which Hebron, Bethlehem, and Jerusalem are
+situated is elevated nearly four thousand feet above the level of Jordan
+and the Dead Sea on the one side, and between two and three thousand
+feet above the Mediterranean on the other. Among these hills and valleys
+David spent his youth, watching the flocks of his father.
+
+We have seen that the life of a shepherd in those scenes was not without
+its times of danger, making great demands on the shepherd's courage and
+affection. In the main, however, it was a quiet life, affording copious
+opportunities for meditation and for quiet study. It was the great
+privilege of David to see much of God in His works and to commune with
+Him therein. The Psalms are full of allusions to the varied aspects of
+nature--the mountains, the rocks, the rivers, the valleys, the forests,
+the lightning, the thunder, the whirlwind.
+
+It is not easy to say how much of the written Word existed in David's
+time, but at the most it could be but a fragment of what we now possess.
+But if the mines of revelation were few, all the more eager was his
+search for their hidden treasures. And David had the advantage of using
+what we may call a pictorial Bible. When he read of the destruction of
+Sodom he could see the dark wall of Moab frowning over the lake near to
+which the guilty cities were consumed by the fire of heaven. When he
+paused to think of the solemn transactions at Machpelah, he could see in
+the distance the very spot where so much sacred dust was gathered. Close
+by his daily haunts one pillar marked the place where God spake to
+Jacob, and another the spot where poor Rachel died. In the dark range of
+Moab yon lofty peak was the spot whence Moses had his view and Balaam
+his vision. It was from that eminence the prophet from Pethor saw a star
+come out of Jacob and a sceptre rise out of Israel that should smite the
+corners of Moab and destroy all the children of Seth. The sympathy with
+God fostered by these studies and meditations was of the closest kind;
+an unusually clear and impressive knowledge seems to have been acquired
+of the purpose of God concerning Israel; drinking in himself the lessons
+of revelation, he was becoming qualified to become the instrument of the
+Holy Spirit for those marvellous contributions to its canon which he was
+afterwards honoured to make.
+
+And among these hills and valleys, too, David would acquire his
+proficiency in the two very different arts which were soon to make him
+famous--the use of the sling and the use of the harp. It seems to have
+been his ambition, whatever he did, to do it in the best possible way.
+His skill in the use of the sling was so perfect that he could project a
+stone even at a small object with unerring certainty. His harp was
+probably a very simple instrument, small enough to be carried about with
+him, but in handling it he acquired the same perfect skill as in
+handling his sling. In his hands it became a wonderfully expressive
+instrument. And hence, when Saul required a skilful musician to soothe
+him, the known gifts of the young shepherd of Bethlehem pointed him out
+as the man.
+
+Of the influence of music in remedying disorders of the nerves there is
+no want of evidence. "Bochart has collected many passages from profane
+writers which speak of the medicinal effects of music on the mind and
+body, especially as appeasing anger and soothing and pacifying a
+troubled spirit" (_Speaker's Commentary_). A whole book was written on
+the subject by Caspar Laescherus, Professor of Divinity at Wittenberg
+(A.D. 1688). Kitto and other writers have added more recent instances.
+It is said of Charles IX. of France that after the massacre of St.
+Bartholomew his sleep was disturbed by nightly horrors, and he could
+only be composed to rest by a symphony of singing boys. Philip V. of
+Spain, being seized with deep dejection of mind that unfitted him for
+all public duties, a celebrated musician was invited to surprise the
+king by giving a concert in the neighbouring apartment to his majesty's,
+with the effect that the king roused himself from his lethargy and
+resumed his duties. We may readily believe that in soothing power the
+harp was not inferior to any of the other instruments.
+
+Still, with all its success, it was but a poor method of soothing a
+troubled spirit compared to the methods that David was afterwards to
+employ. It dealt chiefly with man's physical nature, it soothed the
+nervous system, and removed the hindrance which their disorder caused to
+the action of the powers of the mind. It did not strike at the root of
+all trouble--alienation from God; it did not attempt to create and apply
+the only permanent remedy for trouble--trust in a loving Father's care.
+It was a mere foreshadow, on a comparatively low and earthly ground, of
+the way in which David, as the Psalmist, was afterwards to provide the
+true "oil of joy for the mourner," and to become a guide to the downcast
+soul from the fearful pit and the miry clay up to the third heaven of
+joy and peace. The sounds of his harp could only operate by an influence
+felt alike by saint and sinner in soothing an agitated frame; but with
+the words of his Psalms, the Divine Spirit, by whose inspiration they
+were poured out, was in all coming ages to unite Himself, and to use
+them for showing the sin-burdened soul the true cause of its misery, and
+for leading it by a holy path, sorrowing yet rejoicing, to the home of
+its reconciled Father.
+
+It is a painful thing to see any one in overwhelming trouble; it is
+doubly painful to see kings and others in high places miserable amid all
+their splendours, helpless amid all their resources. Alas, O spirit of
+man, what awful trials thou art subject to! Well mayest thou sometimes
+envy the very animals around thee, which, if they have no such
+capacities of enjoyment as thou hast, have on the other hand no such
+capacities of misery. The higher our powers and position, the more awful
+the anguish when anything goes wrong. Yet hast thou not, O man, a
+capacity to know that thy misery cannot be remedied till the cause of it
+is removed? Prodigal son, there is but one way to escape a miserable
+life. Arise, go to thy Father. See how He is in Christ reconciling the
+world to Himself, not imputing to men their trespasses. Accept His
+offers and be at peace. Receive His Spirit and your disorder shall be
+healed. I own that not even then can we assure you of freedom from
+grievous sorrows. The best of men in this world have often most grievous
+sufferings. But they are strengthened to bear them while they last; they
+are assured that all things work together for good to them that love
+God, to them that are the called according to His purpose; and they know
+that when "the earthly house of their tabernacle is dissolved, they have
+a building of God, an house not made with hands, eternal in the
+heavens."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[2] A few paragraphs on the Life of David are reproduced from the
+author's book "David, King of Israel."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+_DAVID'S CONFLICT WITH GOLIATH._
+
+1 SAMUEL xvii.
+
+
+These irrepressible Philistines were never long recovering from their
+disasters. The victory of Jonathan had been impaired by the exhaustion
+of the soldiers, caused by Saul's fast preventing them from pursuing the
+enemy as far, and destroying their force as thoroughly, as they might
+have done. A new attack was organised against Israel, headed by a
+champion, Goliath of Gath, whose height must have approached the
+extraordinary stature of ten feet. Against this army Saul arrayed his
+force, and the two armies fronted each other on opposite sides of the
+valley of Elah. This valley has generally been identified with that
+which now bears the name of Wady-es-Sumt--a valley running down from the
+plateau of Judah to the Philistine plain, not more than perhaps eight or
+ten miles from Bethlehem. The Philistine champion appears to have been a
+man of physical strength corresponding to the massiveness of his body.
+The weight of his coat of mail is estimated at more than one hundred and
+fifty pounds, and the head of his spear eighteen pounds. Remembering the
+extraordinary feats of Samson, the Philistines might well fancy that it
+was now their turn to boast of a Hercules. Day after day Goliath
+presented himself before the army of Israel, calling proudly for a
+foeman worthy of his steel, and demanding that in default of any one
+able to fight with him and kill him, the Israelites should abandon all
+dream of independence, and become vassals of the Philistines. And
+morning and evening, for nearly six weeks, had this proud challenge been
+given, but never once accepted. Even Jonathan, who had faith enough and
+courage enough and skill enough for so much, seems to have felt himself
+helpless in this great dilemma. The explanation that has sometimes been
+given of his abstention, that it was not etiquette for a king's son to
+engage in fight with a commoner, can hardly hold water; Jonathan showed
+no such squeamishness at Michmash; and besides, in cases of desperation
+etiquette has to be thrown to the winds. Of the host of Israel, we read
+simply that they were dismayed. Nor does Saul seem to have renewed the
+attempt to get counsel of God after his experience on the day of
+Jonathan's victory. The Israelites could only look on in grim
+humiliation, sullenly guarding the pass by the valley into their
+territories, but returning a silent refusal to the demand of the
+Philistines either to furnish a champion or to become their servants.
+
+The coming of David upon the scene corresponded in its accidental
+character to the coming of Saul into contact with Samuel, to be
+designated for the throne. Everything seemed to be casual, yet those
+things which seemed most casual were really links in a providential
+chain leading to the gravest issues. It seemed to be by chance that
+David had three brothers serving in Saul's army; it seemed also to be by
+chance that their father sent his youthful shepherd son to inquire after
+their welfare; it was not by design that as he saluted his brethren
+Goliath came up and David heard his words of defiance; still less was
+it on purpose to wait for David that Saul had sent no one out as yet to
+encounter the Philistine; and nothing could have appeared more
+ridiculous than that the challenge should wait to be answered by the
+stripling shepherd, who, with his sling and shepherd's bag thrown over
+his shoulder, had so little of the appearance of a man of war. It seemed
+very accidental, too, that the only part of the giant's person that was
+not thoroughly defended by his armour, his eyes and a morsel of his
+forehead above them, was the only part of him on which a small stone
+from a sling could have inflicted a fatal injury. But obviously all
+these were parts of the providential plan by which David was at once to
+confer on his country a signal boon, and to raise his name to the
+pinnacle of fame. And, as usual, all the parts of this pre-arranged plan
+fell out without constraint or interference; a new proof that Divine
+pre-ordination does not impair the liberty of man.
+
+One cannot but wonder whether, in offering his prayers that morning,
+David had any presentiment of the trial that awaited him, anything to
+impel him to unwonted fervour in asking God that day to establish the
+works of his hands upon him. There is no reason to think that he had.
+His prayers that morning were in all likelihood his usual prayers. And
+if he was sincere in the expression of his own sense of weakness, and in
+his supplication that God would strengthen him for all the day's duties,
+it was enough. Oh! how little we know what may be before us, on some
+morning that dawns on us just as other days, but which is to form a
+great crisis in our life. How little the boy that is to tell his first
+lie that day thinks of the serpent that is lying in wait for him! How
+little the girl that is to fall in with her betrayer thinks of the
+snare preparing for her body and her soul! How little the party that are
+to be upset in the pleasure boat and consigned to a watery grave think
+how the day is to end! Should we not pray more really, more earnestly if
+we did realise these possibilities? True, indeed, the future is hid from
+us, and we do not usually experience the impulse to earnestness which it
+would impart. But is it not a good habit, as you kneel each morning, to
+think, "For aught I know, this may be the most important day of my life.
+The opportunity may be given me of doing a great service in the cause of
+truth and righteousness; or the temptation may assail me to deny my Lord
+and ruin my soul. O God, be not far from me this day; prepare me for all
+that Thou preparest for me!"
+
+The distance from Bethlehem being but a few hours' walk, David starting
+in the morning would arrive early in the day at the quarters of the
+army. When he heard the challenge of the Philistine he was astonished to
+find that no one had taken it up. There was a mystery about this, about
+the cowardice of his countrymen, perhaps about the attitude of Jonathan,
+that he could not solve. Accordingly, with all that earnestness and
+curiosity with which one peers into all the circumstances surrounding a
+mystery, he asked, what encouragement there was to volunteer, what
+reward was any one to receive who should kill this Philistine? Not that
+he personally was caring about the reward, but he wished to solve the
+mystery. It is evident that the consideration that moved David himself
+was that the Philistine had defied the armies of the living God. It was
+the same arrogant claim to be above the God of Israel, which had puffed
+up their minds when they took possession of the ark and placed it in the
+temple of their god. "You thought so that day," David might mutter,
+"but what did you think next morning, when the mutilated image of your
+god lay prostrate on the floor? Please God, your sensations to-morrow,
+yea, this very forenoon, shall be such as they were then." The spirit of
+faith started into full and high activity, and the same kind of
+inspiration that had impelled Jonathan to climb into the garrison at
+Michmash now impelled David to vindicate the blasphemed name of Jehovah.
+Was it the flash of this inspiration in his eye, was it the tone of it
+in his voice, was it the consciousness that something desperate was to
+follow in the way of personal faith and daring, that roused the temper
+of Eliab, and drew from him a withering rebuke of the presumption of the
+stripling that dared to meddle with such matters? Eliab certainly did
+not spare him. Elder brothers are seldom remiss in rebuking the
+presumption of younger. "Why camest thou down hither? And with whom hast
+thou left those few sheep in the wilderness? I know thy pride and the
+naughtiness of thy heart; for thou art come down that thou mightest see
+the battle." Irritating though such language was, it was borne with
+admirable meekness. "What have I now done? Is there not a cause?" "He
+that ruleth his spirit is greater than he that taketh a city." Eliab
+showed himself defeated by his own temper, a most mortifying defeat;
+David held his temper firmly in command. Which was the greater, which
+the better man? And the short question he put to Eliab was singularly
+apt, "Is there not a cause?" When all you men of war are standing
+helpless and perplexed in the face of this great national insult, is
+there not a cause why I should inquire into the matter, if, by God's
+help, I can do anything for my God and my people?
+
+Undaunted by his brother's volley, he turned to some one else, and
+obtained a similar answer to his questions. Inspiration is a rapid
+process, and the course for him to pursue was now fully determined upon.
+His indignant tone and confident reliance on the God of Israel, so
+unlike the tone of every one else, excited the attention of the
+bystanders; they rehearsed his words to Saul, and Saul sent for him. And
+when he came to Saul, there was not the slightest trace of fear or
+faintheartedness about him. "Let no man's heart fail because of him; thy
+servant will go and fight with this Philistine." Brave words, but, as
+Saul thinks, very foolish. "_You_ go and fight with the Philistine? you
+a mere shepherd boy, who never knew the brunt of battle, and he a man of
+war from his youth?" Yes, Saul, that is just the way for you to speak,
+with your earthly way of viewing things; you, who measure strength only
+by a carnal standard, who know nothing of the faith that removes
+mountains, who forget the meaning of the name ISRA-EL, and never spent
+an hour as Jacob spent his night at Peniel! Listen to the reply of
+faith. "And David said unto Saul, Thy servant kept his father's sheep,
+and there came a lion and a bear, and took a lamb out of the flock; and
+I went out after him and smote him, and delivered it out of his mouth;
+and when he arose against me I caught him by his beard, and smote him
+and slew him. Thy servant slew both the lion and the bear; and this
+uncircumcised Philistine shall be as one of them, seeing he hath defied
+the armies of the living God. David said moreover, The Lord that
+delivered me out of the paw of the lion, and out of the paw of the bear,
+He will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine."
+
+Could there have been a nobler exercise of faith, a finer instance of a
+human spirit taking hold of the Invisible; fortifying itself against
+material perils by realizing the help of an unseen God; resting on His
+sure word as on solid rock; flinging itself fearlessly on a very sea of
+dangers; confident of protection and victory from Him? The only help to
+faith was the remembrance of the encounter with the lion and the bear,
+and the assurance that the same gracious help would be vouchsafed now.
+But no heart that was not full of faith would have thought of that,
+either as an evidence that God worked by him then, or as a sure pledge
+that God would work by him now. How many an adventurer or sportsman,
+that in some encounter with wild animals has escaped death by the very
+skin of his teeth, thinks only of his luck, or the happiness of the
+thought that led him to do so and so in what seemed the very article of
+death? A deliverance of this kind is no security against a like
+deliverance afterwards; it can give nothing more than a hope of escape.
+The faith of David recognized God's merciful hand in the first
+deliverance, and that gave an assurance of it in the other. What! would
+that God that had helped him to rescue a lamb fail him while trying to
+rescue a nation? Would that God that had sustained him when all that was
+involved was a trifling loss to his father fail him in a combat that
+involved the salvation of Israel and the honour of Israel's God? Would
+He who had subdued for him the lion and the bear when they were but
+obeying the instincts of their nature, humiliate him in conflict with
+one who was defying the armies of the living God? The remembrance of
+this deliverance confirmed his faith and urged him to the conflict, and
+the victory which faith thus gained was complete. It swept the decks
+clear of every vestige of terror; it went right to the danger, without
+a particle of misgiving.
+
+There are two ways in which faith may assert its supremacy. One,
+afterwards very familiar to David, is, when it has first to struggle
+hard with distrust and fear; when it has to come to close quarters with
+the suggestions of the carnal mind, grapple with these in mortal
+conflict, strangle them, and rise up victorious over them. For most men,
+most believing men, it is only thus that faith rises to her throne. The
+other way is, to spring to her throne in a moment; to assert her
+authority, free and independent, utterly regardless of all that would
+hamper her, as free from doubt and misgiving as a little child in his
+father's arms, conscious that whatever is needed that father will
+provide. It was this simple, child-like, but most triumphant exercise of
+faith that David showed in undertaking this conflict. Happy they who are
+privileged with such an attainment! Only let us beware of despairing if
+we cannot attain to this prompt, instinctive faith. Let us fall back
+with patience on that other process where we have to fight in the first
+instance with our fears and misgivings, driving them from us as David
+had often to do afterwards: "Why art thou cast down, O my soul, and why
+art thou disquieted in me? Hope in God, for I will yet praise Him who is
+the health of my countenance and my God."
+
+And now David prepared himself for the contest. Saul, ever carnal, and
+trusting only in carnal devices, is fain to clothe him in his armour,
+and David makes trial of his coat of mail; but he is embarrassed by a
+heavy covering to which he is not accustomed, and which only impedes the
+freedom of his arm. It is plain enough that it is not in Saul's panoply
+that he can meet the Philistine. He must fall back on simpler means.
+Choosing five smooth stones out of the brook, with his shepherd's staff
+in one hand and his sling in the other, he drew near to the Philistine.
+When Goliath saw him no words were bitter enough for his scorn. He had
+sought a warrior to fight with; he gets a boy to annihilate. It is a
+paltry business. "Come to me, and I will give thy flesh to the fowls of
+the air and to the beasts of the fields." "Thus saith the Lord, Let not
+the wise man glory in his wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory in
+his might." Was ever such proof given of the sin and folly of boasting
+as in the case of Goliath? And yet, as we should say, how natural it was
+for Goliath! But pride goeth before destruction, and a haughty spirit
+before a fall. In the spiritual conflict it is the surest presage of
+defeat. It was the Goliath spirit that puffed up St. Peter when he said
+to his Master, "Lord, I will go with Thee to prison and to death." It is
+the same spirit against which St. Paul gives his remarkable warning,
+"Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall." Can it be
+said that it is a spirit that Churches are always free from? Are they
+never tempted to boast of the talents of their leading men, the success
+of their movements, and their growing power and influence in the
+community? And does not God in His providence constantly show the sin
+and folly of such boasting? "Because thou sayest, I am rich and
+increased with goods, and have need of nothing, and knowest not that
+thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked."
+
+In beautiful contrast with the scornful self-confidence of Goliath was
+the simplicity of spirit and the meek, humble reliance on God, apparent
+in David's answer: "Thou comest to me with a sword, and with a spear,
+and with a shield; but I come to thee in the name of the Lord of hosts,
+the God of the armies of Israel, whom thou hast defied. This day will
+the Lord deliver thee into my hand; and I will smite thee, and take
+thine head from thee; and I will give the carcases of the Philistines
+this day to the fowls of the air and to the wild beasts of the earth,
+that all the earth may know that there is a God in Israel. And all this
+assembly shall know that the Lord saveth not with sword and spear; for
+the battle is the Lord's, and He will give you into our hand."
+
+What a reality God was to David! He advanced "as seeing Him who is
+invisible." Guided by the wisdom of God, he chose his method of attack,
+with all the simplicity and certainty of genius. Conscious that God was
+with him, he fearlessly met the enemy. A man of less faith might have
+been too nervous to take the proper aim. Undisturbed by any fear of
+missing, David hurls the stone from his sling, hits the giant on the
+unprotected part of his forehead, and in a moment has him reeling on the
+ground. Advancing to his prostrate foe, he seizes his sword, cuts off
+his head, and affords to both friends and foes unmistakable evidence
+that his opponent is dead. Rushing from their tents, the Philistines fly
+towards their own country, hotly pursued by the Israelites. It was in
+these pursuits of flying foes that the greatest slaughter occurred in
+those Eastern countries, and the whole road was strewn with the dead
+bodies of the foe to the very gates of Ekron and Gaza. In this pursuit,
+however, David did not mingle. With the head of the Philistine in his
+hands, he came to Saul. It is said that afterwards he took the head of
+Goliath to Jerusalem, which was then occupied, at least in part, by the
+Benjamites (Judges i. 21), though the stronghold of Zion was in the
+hands of the Jebusites (2 Sam. v. 7). We do not know why Jerusalem was
+chosen for depositing this ghastly trophy. All that it is necessary to
+say in relation to this is, that seeing it was only the stronghold of
+Zion that is said to have been held by the Jebusites, there is no ground
+for the objection which some critics have taken to the narrative that it
+cannot be correct, since Jerusalem was not yet in the hands of the
+Israelites.
+
+It cannot be doubted that David continued to hold the same conviction as
+before the battle, that it was not he that conquered, but God. We cannot
+doubt that after the battle he showed the same meek and humble spirit as
+before. Whatever surprise his victory might be to the tens of thousands
+who witnessed it, it was no surprise to him. He knew beforehand that he
+could trust God, and the result showed that he was right. But that very
+spirit of implicit trust in God by which he was so thoroughly influenced
+kept him from taking any of the glory to himself. God had chosen him to
+be His instrument, but he had no credit from the victory for himself.
+His feeling that day was the very same as his feeling at the close of
+his military life, when the Lord had delivered him out of the hand of
+all his enemies:--"The Lord is my rock, my fortress, and my deliverer;
+the God of my rock, in Him will I trust; He is my shield and the horn of
+my salvation, my high tower and my refuge, my saviour; Thou savest me
+from violence."
+
+While David was preparing to fight with the Philistine, Saul asked Abner
+whose son he was. Strange to say, neither Abner nor any one else could
+tell. Nor could the question be answered till David came back from his
+victory, and told the king that he was the son of Jesse the
+Bethlehemite. We have already remarked that it was strange that Saul
+should not have recognized him, inasmuch as he had formerly given
+attendance on the king to drive away his evil spirit by means of his
+harp. In explanation it has been urged by some that David's visit or
+visits to Saul at that time may have been very brief, and as years may
+have elapsed since his last visit, his appearance may have so changed as
+to prevent recognition. On the part of others, another explanation has
+been offered. Saul may have recognized David at first, but he did not
+know his family. Now that there was a probability of his becoming the
+king's son-in-law, it was natural that Saul should be anxious to know
+his connections. The question put to Abner was, Whose son is this youth?
+The commission given to him was to enquire "whose son the stripling is."
+And the information given by David was, "I am the son of thy servant
+Jesse the Bethlehemite." It may be added that there is some difficulty
+about the text of this chapter. It seems as if somehow two independent
+accounts of David had been mixed together. And in one important version
+of the Septuagint several passages that occur in the received text are
+omitted, certainly with the result of removing some difficulties as the
+passage stands.
+
+It is not possible to read this chapter without some thought of the
+typical character of David, and indeed the typical aspect of the
+conflict in which he was now engaged. We find an emblematic picture of
+the conquest of Messiah and His Church. The self-confident boasting of
+the giant, strong in the resources of carnal might, and incapable of
+appreciating the unseen and invincible power of a righteous man in a
+righteous cause, is precisely the spirit in which opposition to Christ
+has been usually given, "Let us break their bands asunder, and cast away
+their cords from us." The contempt shown for the lowly appearance of
+David, the undisguised scorn at the notion that through such a stripling
+any deliverance could come to his people, has its counterpart in the
+feeling towards Christ and His Gospel to which the Apostle alludes: "We
+preach Christ crucified, to the Jews a stumbling-block, and to the
+Greeks foolishness." The calm self-possession of David, the choice of
+simple but suitable means, and the thorough reliance on Jehovah which
+enabled him to conquer, were all exemplified, in far higher measure, in
+the moral victories of Jesus, and they are still the weapons which
+enable His people to overcome. The sword of Goliath turned against
+himself, the weapon by which he was to annihilate his foe, employed by
+that very foe to sever his head from his body, was an emblem of Satan's
+weapons turned by Christ against Satan, "through death he destroyed him
+that had the power of death, and delivered them who all their lifetime
+were subject to bondage." The representative character of David,
+fighting, not for himself alone but the whole nation, was analogous to
+the representative character of Christ. And the shout that burst from
+the ranks of Israel and Judah when they saw the champion of the
+Philistines fall, and the enemy betake themselves in consternation to
+flight, foreshadowed the joy of redeemed men when the reality of
+Christ's salvation flashes on their hearts, and they see the enemies
+that have been harassing them repulsed and scattered--a joy to be
+immeasurably magnified when all enemies are finally conquered, and the
+loud voice is heard in heaven, "Now is come salvation, and strength, and
+the kingdom of our God and the power of His Christ; for the accuser of
+our brethren is cast down, that accused them before our God day and
+night."
+
+Lastly, while we are instructed by the study of this conflict, let us be
+animated by it too. Let us learn never to quail at carnal might arrayed
+against the cause of God. Let us never fear to attack SIN, however
+apparently invincible it may be. Be it sin within or sin without, sin in
+our hearts or sin in the world, let us go boldly at it, strong in the
+might of God. That God who delivered David from the paw of the wild
+beast, and from the power of the giant, will make us more than
+conquerors--will enable us to spoil "principalities and powers and
+triumph openly over them."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+_SAUL'S JEALOUSY--DAVID'S MARRIAGE._
+
+1 SAMUEL xviii.
+
+
+The conqueror of Goliath had been promised, as his reward, the eldest
+daughter of the king in marriage. The fulfilment of that promise, if not
+utterly neglected, was at least delayed; but if David lost the hand of
+the king's daughter, he gained, what could not have been promised--the
+heart of the king's son. It was little wonder that "the soul of Jonathan
+was knit with the soul of David, and Jonathan loved him as his own
+soul." Besides all else about David that was attractive to Jonathan as
+it was attractive to every one, there was that strongest of all bonds,
+the bond of a common, all-prevailing faith, faith in the covenant God of
+Israel, that had now shown itself in David in overwhelming strength, as
+it had shown itself in Jonathan some time before at Michmash.
+
+To Jonathan David must indeed have appeared a man after his own heart.
+The childlike simplicity of the trust he had reposed in God showed what
+a profound hold his faith had of him, how entirely it ruled his life.
+What depths of congeniality the two young men must have discovered in
+one another; in what wonderful agreement they must have found themselves
+respecting the duty and destiny of the Hebrew people! That Jonathan
+should have been so fascinated at that particular moment shows what a
+pure heart he must have had. If we judge aright, David's faith had
+surpassed Jonathan's; David had dared where Jonathan had shrunk; and
+David's higher faith had obtained the distinction that might naturally
+have been expected to fall to Jonathan. Yet no shadow of jealousy
+darkens Jonathan's brow. Never were hands more cordially grasped; never
+were congratulations more warmly uttered. Is there anything so beautiful
+as a beautiful heart? After well-nigh three thousand years, we are still
+thrilled by the noble character of Jonathan, and well were it for every
+young man that he shared in some degree his high nobility. Self-seekers
+and self-pleasers, look at him--and be ashamed.
+
+The friendship between David and Jonathan will fall to be adverted to
+afterwards; meanwhile we follow the course of events as they are
+detailed in this chapter.
+
+One thing that strikes us very forcibly in this part of David's history
+is the rapidity with which pain and peril followed the splendid
+achievement which had raised him so high. The malignant jealousy of Saul
+towards him appears to have sprung up almost immediately after the
+slaughter of Goliath. "When David was returned from the slaughter of the
+Philistine, the women came out of all the cities of Israel, singing and
+dancing, to meet King Saul, with tabrets, with joy, and with instruments
+of music. And the women answered one another as they played, saying,
+Saul hath slain his thousands, and David his ten thousands. And Saul was
+very wroth, and the saying displeased him; and he said, They have
+ascribed to David ten thousands, and to me they have ascribed but
+thousands; and what can he have more but the kingdom? And Saul eyed
+David from that day and forward." This statement seems (like so many
+other statements in Scripture narratives) to be a condensed one,
+embracing things that happened at different times; it appears to denote
+that as soon as David returned from killing Goliath his name began to be
+introduced by the women into their songs; and when he returned from the
+expeditions to which Saul appointed him when he set him over the men of
+war, and in which he was wonderfully successful, then the women
+introduced the comparison, which so irritated Saul, between Saul's
+thousands and David's ten thousands. The truth is, that David's
+experience, while Saul continued to be his persecutor, was a striking
+commentary on the vanity of human life,--on the singularly tantalizing
+way in which the most splendid prizes are often snatched from men's
+hands as soon as they have secured them, and when they might reasonably
+have expected to enjoy their fruits. The case of a conqueror killed in
+the very moment of victory--of a Wolfe falling on the Plains of Quebec,
+just as his victory made Britain mistress of Canada; of a Nelson
+expiring on the deck of his ship, just as the enemy's fleet was
+helplessly defeated,--these are touching enough instances of the
+deceitfulness of fortune in the highest moments of expected enjoyment.
+But there is something more touching still in the early history of
+David. Raised to an eminence which he never courted or dreamt of, just
+because he had such trust in God and such regard for his country;
+manifesting in his new position all that modesty and all that
+dutifulness which had marked him while his name was still unknown;
+taking his life in his hand and plunging into toils and risks
+innumerable just because he desired to be of service to Saul and his
+country,--surely, if any man deserved a comfortable home and a tranquil
+mind David was that man. That David should have become the worst treated
+and most persecuted man of his day; that for years and years he should
+have been maligned and hunted down, with but a step between him and
+death; that the very services that ought to have brought him honour
+should have plunged him into disgrace, and the noble qualities that
+ought to have made him the king's most trusty counsellor should have
+made him a fugitive and an outlaw from his presence,--all that is very
+strange. It would have been a great trial to any man; it was a peculiar
+trial to a Hebrew. For under the Hebrew economy the principle of
+temporal rewards and punishments had a prominence beyond the common. Why
+was this principle reversed in the case of David? Why was one who had
+been so exemplary doomed to such humiliation and trial,--doomed to a
+mode of life which seemed more suitable for a miscreant than for the man
+after God's own heart?
+
+The answer to this question cannot be mistaken now. But that answer was
+not found so readily in David's time. David's early years bore a close
+resemblance to that period of the career of Job when the hand of God was
+heavy upon him, and thick darkness encompassed one on whose tabernacle
+the candle of the Lord had previously shone very brightly. It pleased
+God, in infinite love, to make David pass through a long period of hard
+discipline and salutary training for the office to which he was to be
+raised. The instances were innumerable in the East of young men of
+promising character being ruined through sudden elevation to supreme
+unchallenged power. The case of Saul himself was a sad instance of this
+doleful effect. It pleased God to take steps to prevent it from
+happening in the case of David. It is said that when Alcibiades, the
+distinguished Athenian, was young, Socrates tried hard to withhold him
+from public life, and to convince him that he needed a long course of
+inward discipline before he could engage safely and usefully in the
+conduct of public affairs. But Alcibiades had no patience for this; he
+took his own way, became his own master, but with the result that he
+lost at once true loftiness of aim and all the sincerity of an upright
+soul. We do not need, however, to illustrate from mere human history the
+benefits that arise from a man bearing the yoke in his youth. Even our
+blessed Lord, David's antitype, "though He was a Son, yet learned He
+obedience by the things which He suffered." And how often has the lesson
+been repeated! What story is more constantly repeated than, on the one
+hand, that of the young man succeeding to a fortune in early life,
+learning every wretched habit of indolence and self-indulgence, becoming
+the slave of his lusts, and after a miserable life sinking into a
+dishonoured grave? And on the other, how often do we find, in the
+biography of the men who have been an honour to their race, that their
+early life was spent amid struggles and acts of self-denial that seem
+hardly credible, but out of which came their resolute character and
+grand conquering power? O adversity, thy features are hard, thy fingers
+are of iron, thy look is stern and repulsive; but underneath thy hard
+crust there lies a true heart, full of love and full of hope; if only we
+had grace to believe this, in times when we are bound with affliction
+and iron; if only we had faith to look forward a very little, when, like
+the patriarch Job, we shall find that, after all, He who frames our lot
+is "very pitiful and of tender mercy"!
+
+In the case of David, God's purpose manifestly was to exercise and
+strengthen such qualities as trust in God, prayerfulness, self-command,
+serenity of temper, consideration for others, and the hope of a happy
+issue out of all his troubles. His trials were indeed both numerous and
+various. The cup of honour dashed from his lips when he had just begun
+to taste it; promises the most solemn deliberately violated, and rewards
+of perilous service coolly withheld from him; faithful services turned
+into occasions of cruel persecution; enforced separation from beloved
+friends; laceration of feelings from Saul's cruel and bloody treatment
+of some who had befriended him; calumnious charges persisted in after
+convincing and generous refutation; ungrateful treatment from those he
+had benefited, like Nabal; treachery from those he had delivered, like
+the men of Keilah; perfidy on the part of some he had trusted, like
+Cush; assassination threatened by some of his own followers, as at
+Ziklag,--these and many other trials were the hard and bitter discipline
+which David had to undergo in the wilderness.
+
+And not only was David thus prepared for the great work of his future
+life, but as a type of the Messiah he foreshadowed the deep humiliation
+through which He was to pass on His way to His throne. He gave the Old
+Testament Church a glimpse of the manner in which "it became Him, by
+whom are all things and for whom are all things, in bringing many sons
+unto glory, to make the Captain of their salvation perfect through
+suffering."
+
+The growth of the malignant passion of jealousy in Saul is portrayed in
+the history in a way painfully graphic. First, it is simply a feeling
+that steals occasionally into his bosom. It needs some outward occasion
+to excite it. Its first great effort to establish itself was when Saul
+heard the Hebrew women ascribing to David ten times as great a slaughter
+as they ascribed to Saul. We cannot but be struck with the ruggedness of
+the women's compliment. To honour David as more ready to incur risk and
+sacrifice for his country, even in encounters involving terrible
+bloodshed, would have been worthy of women, and worthy of good women;
+but to make the standard of compliment the number of lives destroyed,
+the amount of blood shed, indicated surely a coarseness of feeling,
+characteristic of a somewhat barbarous age. But the compliment was quite
+significant to Saul, who saw in it a proof of the preference entertained
+for David, and began to look on him as his rival in the kingdom. The
+next step in the history of Saul's jealousy is its forming itself into
+an evil habit, that needed no outward occasion to excite it, but kept
+itself alive and active by the vitality it had acquired. "And Saul eyed
+David from that day and forward" (ver. 9). If Saul had been a good man,
+he would have been horrified at the appearance of this evil passion in
+his heart; he would have said, "Get thee behind me, Satan;" he would
+have striven to the utmost to strangle it in the womb. Oh! what untold
+mountains of guilt would this not have saved him in after life! And what
+mountains of guilt, darkening their whole life, would the policy of
+resistance and stamping out, when an evil lust or passion betrays its
+presence in their heart, save to every young man and young woman who
+find for the first time evidence of its vitality! But instead of
+stamping it out, Saul nourished it; instead of extinguishing the spark,
+he heaped fuel on the flame. And his lust, having been allowed to
+conceive, was not long of bringing forth. Under a fit of his malady,
+even as David was playing to him with his harp, he launched a javelin
+at him, no doubt in some degree an act of insanity, but yet betraying a
+very horrible spirit. Then, perhaps afraid of himself, he removes David
+from his presence, and sends him out to battle as a captain of a
+thousand. But David only gives fresh proofs of his wisdom and his
+trustworthiness, and establishes his hold more and more on the
+affections of the people. The very fact of his wisdom, the evidence
+which his steady, wise, and faithful conduct affords of God's presence
+with him, creates a new restlessness in Saul, who, with a kind of
+devilish feeling, hates him the more because "the Lord is with him, and
+is departed from Saul."
+
+The next stage in the career of jealousy is to ally itself with cunning,
+under the pretence of great generosity. "Saul said to David, Behold my
+elder daughter Merab, her will I give thee to wife; only be thou valiant
+for me, and fight the Lord's battles. For Saul said, Let not mine hand
+be upon him, but let the hand of the Philistines be upon him." But
+cunning and treachery are close connections, and when this promise ought
+to have been fulfilled, Merab was given to Adriel the Meholathite to
+wife. There remained his younger daughter Michal, who was personally
+attached to David. "And Saul said, I will give him her, that she may be
+a snare to him, and that the hand of the Philistines may be against
+him." The question of dowry was a difficult one to David; but on that
+point the king bade his servants set his mind at rest. "The king
+desireth not any dowry, but an hundred foreskins of the Philistines, to
+be avenged of the king's enemies. And Saul thought to make David fall by
+the hand of the Philistines."
+
+Alas! the history of Saul's malignant passion is by no means exhausted
+even by these sad illustrations of its rise and progress. It swells and
+grows, like a horrid tumour, becoming uglier and uglier continually. And
+the notices are very significant and instructive which we find as to the
+spiritual condition of Saul, in connection with the development of his
+passion. We are told that the Lord was departed from him. When Saul was
+reproved by Samuel for his transgression, he showed no signs of real
+repentance, he continued consciously in a state of enmity with God, and
+took no steps to get the quarrel healed. He preferred the kind of life
+in which he might please himself, though he offended God, to the kind of
+life in which he would have pleased God, while he denied himself. And
+Saul had to bear the awful penalty of his choice. Living apart from God,
+all the evil that was in his nature came boldly out, asserting itself
+without let or hindrance, and going to the terrible length of the most
+murderous and at the same time the meanest projects. Don't let any one
+imagine that religion has no connection with morality! Sham religion, as
+we have already seen, may exist side by side with the greatest
+wickedness; but that religion, the beginning of which is the true fear
+of God, a genuine reverential regard for God, a true sense of His claims
+on us, alike as our Creator and our Redeemer,--_that_ religion lays its
+hand firmly on our moral nature, and scares and scatters the devices of
+the evil that still remains in the heart. Let us take warning at the
+picture presented to us in this chapter of the terrible results, even in
+the ordinary affairs of life, of the evil heart of unbelief that departs
+from the living God. The other side of the case, the effect of a true
+relation to God in purifying and guiding the life, is seen in the case
+of David. God being with him in all that he does, he is not only kept
+from retaliating on Saul, not only kept from all devices for getting rid
+of one who was so unjust and unkind to himself, but he is remarkably
+obedient, remarkably faithful, and by God's grace remarkably successful
+in the work given him to do. It is indeed a beautiful period of David's
+life--the most blameless and beautiful of any. The object of unmerited
+hatred, the victim of atrocious plots, the helpless object of a despot's
+mad and ungoverned fury, yet cherishing no trace of bitter feeling,
+dreaming of no violent project of relief, but going out and in with
+perfect loyalty, and straining every nerve to prove himself a laborious,
+faithful, and useful servant of the master who loathed him.
+
+The question of David's marriage is a somewhat difficult one, appearing
+to involve some contradictions. First of all we read that a daughter of
+Saul, along with great riches, had been promised to the man who should
+kill Goliath. But after David kills him, there is no word of this
+promise being fulfilled, and even afterwards, when the idea of his being
+the king's son-in-law is brought forward, there is no hint that he ought
+to have been so before. Are we to understand that it was an unauthorized
+rumour that was told to David (ch. xvii. 25-27) when it was said that
+the victor was to get these rewards? Was it that the people recalled
+what had been said by Caleb about Kirjath-sepher, a town in that very
+neighbourhood, and inferred that surely Saul would give his daughter to
+the conqueror, as Caleb had given his? This is perhaps the most
+reasonable explanation, because when David came into Saul's presence
+nothing of the kind was said to him by the king; and also because, if
+Saul had really promised it, there was no reason at the time why he
+should not have kept his promise; nay, the impulsive nature of the
+king, and the great love of Jonathan toward David, and the love with
+which David inspired women, would rather have led Saul to be forward in
+fulfilling it, and in constituting a connection which would then have
+been pleasant to all. If it be said that this would have been a natural
+thing for Saul to do, even had there been no promise, the answer is that
+David was such a stripling, and even in his father's household occupied
+so humble a place, as to make it reasonable that he should wait, and
+gain a higher position, before any such thing should be thought of.
+Accordingly, when David became older, and acquired distinction as a
+warrior, his being the king's son-in-law had become quite feasible.
+First, Saul proposes to give him his elder daughter Merab. The murderous
+desire dictates the proposal, for Saul already desires David's death,
+though he has not courage himself to strike the blow. But when the time
+came, for some reason that we do not know of Merab was given to Adriel
+the Meholathite. David's action at an after period showed that he
+regarded this as a cruel wrong (2 Sam. iii. 13). Saul, however, still
+desired to have that hold on David which his being his son-in-law would
+have involved, and now proposed that Michal his younger daughter should
+be his wife. The proposal was accepted, but David could bring no dowry
+for his wife. The only dowry the king sought was a hundred foreskins of
+the Philistines. And the hundred foreskins David paid down in full tale.
+
+What a distressing view these transactions give us of the malignity of
+Saul's heart! When parents have sacrificed the true happiness of their
+daughters by pressing on them a marriage of splendid misery, the motive,
+however selfish and heartless, has not usually been malignant. The
+marriage which Saul urged between David and Michal was indeed a marriage
+of affection, but as far as he was concerned his sin in desiring it, as
+affording facilities for getting rid of him, was on that account all the
+greater. For nothing shows a wickeder heart than being willing to
+involve another, and especially one's own child, in a lifelong sorrow in
+order to gratify some feeling of one's own. Saul was not merely trifling
+with the heart and happiness of his child, but he was deliberately
+sacrificing both to his vile passion. The longer he lives, Saul becomes
+blacker and blacker. For such are they from whom the Spirit of the Lord
+has departed.
+
+We may well contrast David and Saul at this period of their lives; but
+what a strange thing it is that further on in life David should have
+taken this leaf from Saul's book, and acted in this very spirit towards
+Uriah the Hittite? Not that Uriah was, or was to be, son-in-law to the
+king; alas! there was an element of blackness in the case of David which
+did not exist in that of Saul; but it was in the very spirit now
+manifested by Saul towards himself that David availed himself of Uriah's
+bravery, of Uriah's faithfulness, of Uriah's chivalrous readiness to
+undertake the most perilous expeditions--availed himself of these to
+compass his death. What do we learn from this? The same seeds of evil
+were in David's heart as in Saul's. But at the earlier period of David's
+life he walked humbly with God, and God's Spirit poured out on him not
+only restrained the evil seed, but created a pure, holy, devoted life,
+as if there were nothing in David but good. Afterwards, grieving the
+Holy Spirit, David was left for a time to himself, and then the very
+evil that had been so offensive in Saul came creeping forth drew itself
+up and claimed that it should prevail. It was a blessed thing for David
+that he was not beyond being arrested by God's voice, and humbled by His
+reproof. He saw whither he had been going; he saw the emptiness and
+wickedness of his heart; he saw that his salvation depended on God in
+infinite mercy forgiving his sin and restoring His Spirit, and for these
+blessings he pled and wrestled as Jacob had wrestled with the angel at
+Peniel. So we may well see that for any one to trust in his heart is to
+play the fool; our only trust must be in Him who is able to keep us from
+falling, and to present us faultless before the presence of His glory
+with exceeding joy. "_He that abideth in Me, and I in him, the same
+bringeth forth much fruit, for without Me ye can do nothing. If a man
+abide not in Me, he is cast forth as a root and withered, and men take
+them and cast them into the fire and they are burned._"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+_SAUL'S FURTHER EFFORTS AGAINST DAVID._
+
+1 SAMUEL xix.
+
+
+A new stage of his wicked passion is now reached by Saul; he communes
+with his servants, and even with his son, with a view to their killing
+David. Ordinary conspirators are prone to confine their evil designs to
+their own breasts; or if they do have confidants, to choose for that
+purpose persons as vile as themselves, whom they bind to secrecy and
+silence. Saul must have been sadly overpowered by his passion when he
+urged his very son to become a murderer, to become the assassin of his
+friend, of the man with whom God manifestly dwelt, and whom God
+delighted to honour. It is easy to understand what line Saul would take
+with Jonathan. Heir to the throne, he was specially affected by the
+popularity of David; if David were disposed of, his seat would be in no
+danger. The generous prince did his utmost to turn his father from the
+horrid project: "He spake good of David unto Saul, and said unto him,
+Let not the king sin against his servant, against David; because he hath
+not sinned against thee, and because his works have been to thee-ward
+very good. For he did put his life in his hand, and slew the Philistine,
+and the Lord wrought a great salvation for all Israel: thou sawest it
+and didst rejoice: wherefore then wilt thou sin against innocent blood,
+to slay David without a cause?" For the moment the king was touched by
+the intercession of Jonathan. Possibly he was rebuked by the burst of
+generosity and affection,--a spirit so opposite to his own; possibly he
+was impressed by Jonathan's argument, and made to feel that David was
+entitled to very different treatment. For the time, the purpose of Saul
+was arrested, and "David was in his presence as in times past."
+"Ofttimes," says Bishop Hall, "wicked men's judgments are forced to
+yield unto that truth against which their affections maintain a
+rebellion. Even the foulest hearts do sometimes retain good notions;
+like as, on the contrary, the holiest souls give way sometimes to the
+suggestions of evil. The flashes of lightning may be discerned in the
+darkest prison. But if good thoughts look into a wicked heart, they stay
+not there; as those that like not their lodging, they are soon gone;
+hardly anything distinguishes between good and evil but continuance. The
+light that shines into a holy heart is constant, like that of the sun,
+which keeps due times, and varies not his course for any of these
+sublunary occasions."
+
+But, as the heathen poet said, "You may expel nature with a thunderbolt,
+but it always returns." The evil spirit, the demon of jealousy, returned
+to Saul. And strange to say, his jealousy was such that nothing was more
+fitted to excite it than eminent service to his country on the part of
+David. A new campaign had opened against the Philistines. David had had
+a splendid victory. He slew them with a great slaughter, so that they
+fled before him. We may be sure that in these circumstances the songs of
+the women would swell out in heartier chorus than ever. And in Saul's
+breast the old jealousy burst out again, and sprang to power. A fit of
+his evil spirit was on him, and David was playing on his harp in order
+to beguile it away. He sees Saul seize a javelin, he instinctively knows
+the purpose, and springs aside just as the javelin flies past and lodges
+in the wall. The danger is too serious to be encountered any longer.
+David escapes to his house, but hardly before messengers from Saul have
+arrived to watch the door, and slay him in the morning. Knowing her
+father's plot, Michal warns David that if he does not make his escape
+that night his life is sure to go.
+
+Michal lets him down through a window, and David makes his escape. Then,
+to give him a sufficient start, and prolong the time a little, she has
+recourse to one of those stratagems of which Rebecca, and Rahab, and
+Jeroboam's wife, and many another woman have shown themselves
+mistresses--she gets up a tale, and pretends to the messengers that
+David is sick. The men carry back the message to their master. There is
+a peculiar ferocity, an absolute brutality, in the king's next order,
+"Bring him up to me in the bed that I may slay him." Evidently he was
+enraged, and he either felt that it would be a satisfaction to murder
+David with his own hand when unable to defend himself, or he saw that
+his servants could not be trusted with the dastardly business. The
+messengers enter the house, and instead of David they find an image in
+the bed, with a pillow of goat's hair for his bolster. When Michal is
+angrily reproached by her father for letting him escape, she parries the
+blow by a falsehood--"He said unto me, Let me go; why should I kill
+thee?"
+
+On this somewhat mean conduct of hers a light is incidentally shed by
+the mention of the image which she placed in the bed in order to
+personate David. What sort of image was it? The original shows that it
+was one of the class called "teraphim"--images which were kept and used
+by persons who in the main worshipped the one true God. They were not
+such idols as represented Baal or Ashtoreth or Moloch, but images
+designed to aid in the worship of the God of Israel. The use of them was
+not a breach of the first commandment, but it was a breach of the
+second. We see plainly that David and his wife were not one in religion;
+there was discord there. The use of the images implied an unspiritual or
+superstitious state of mind; or at least a mind more disposed to follow
+its own fancies as to the way of worshipping God than to have a severe
+and strict regard to the rule of God. It is impossible to suppose that
+David could have either used, or countenanced the use of these images.
+God was too much a spiritual reality to him to allow such material media
+of worship to be even thought of. He knew too much of worship inspired
+by the Spirit to dream of worship inspired by shapes of wood or stone.
+When we read of these images we are not surprised at the defects of
+character which we see in Michal. That she loved David and had pleasure
+in his company there is no room to doubt. But their union was not the
+union of hearts that were one in their deepest feelings. The sublimest
+exercises of David's soul Michal could have no sympathy with.
+Afterwards, when David brought the ark from Kirjath-jearim to Mount
+Zion, she mocked his enthusiasm. How sad when hearts, otherwise
+congenial and loving, are severed on the one point on which congeniality
+is of deepest moment! Agreement in earthly tastes and arrangements, but
+disagreement in the one thing needful--alas, how fatal is the drawback!
+Little blessing can they expect who disregard this point of difference
+when they agree to marry. If the one that is earnest does so in the
+expectation of doing good to the other, that good is far more likely to
+be done by a firm stand at the beginning than by a course which may be
+construed to mean that after all the difference is of no great moment.
+
+If the title of the fifty-ninth Psalm can be accepted as authentic, it
+indicates the working of David's mind at this period of his history. It
+is called "Michtam of David, when Saul sent, and they watched the house
+to kill him." It is not to be imagined that it was composed in the
+hurried interval between David reaching his house and Michal sending him
+away. That David had a short time of devotion then we may readily
+believe, and that the exercises of his heart corresponded generally to
+the words of the psalm, which might be committed afterwards to writing
+as a memorial of the occasion. From the words of the psalm it would
+appear that the messengers sent by Saul to apprehend him were men of
+base and cowardly spirit, and that they were actuated by the same
+personal hatred to him that marked Saul himself. No doubt the piety of
+David brought to him the enmity, and the success of David the rivalry,
+of many who would be emboldened by the king's avowed intention, to pour
+out their insults and calumnies against him in the most indecent
+fashion. Perhaps it is to show the estimate he formed of their spirit,
+rather than to denote literally their nationality, that the Psalmist
+calls on God to "awake to visit all _the heathen_." Prowling about the
+city under cloud of darkness, coming and going and coming again to his
+house, "they return at evening; they make a noise like a dog, and go
+about the city. Behold, they belch out with their mouth; swords are in
+their lips; for who, say they, doth hear?" Thus showing his estimate of
+his enemies, the Psalmist manifests the most absolute reliance on the
+protection and grace of God. "But Thou, O Lord, shalt laugh at them;
+Thou shalt have all the heathen in derision. Because of his strength
+will I wait upon Thee; for God is my defence. The God of my mercy shall
+prevent me; God shall let me see my desire upon mine enemies." He does
+not ask that they may be slain, but he asks that they may be
+conspicuously dishonoured and humbled, and made to go about the city
+like dogs, in another sense--not like dogs seeking to tear upright men
+in pieces, but like those starved, repulsive, cowardly brutes, familiar
+in Eastern cities, that would do anything for a morsel of food. His own
+spirit is serene and confident--"Unto Thee, O my strength, will I sing;
+for God is my defence, and the God of my mercy."
+
+It may be that the superscription of this psalm is not authentic, and
+that the reference is either to some other passage in David's life, or
+in the life of some other psalmist, when he was especially exposed to
+the ravings of a murderous and calumnious spirit, and in the midst of
+unscrupulous enemies thirsting for his life. The psalm is eminently
+fitted to express the feelings and experiences of the Church of Christ
+in times of bitter persecution. For calumny has usually been the
+right-hand instrument of the persecutor. To justify himself, he has
+found it necessary to denounce his victim. Erroneous opinions, it is
+instinctively felt, are no such offence as to warrant the wholesale
+spoliation and murder which vehement persecution calls for. Crimes of a
+horrible description are laid to the charge of the persecuted. And even
+where the sword of persecution in its naked form is not employed, but
+opposition and hatred vent themselves on the more active servants of God
+in venomous attacks and offensive letters, it is not counted enough to
+denounce their opinions. They must be charged with meanness, and double
+dealing, and vile plots and schemes to compass their ends. They are
+spoken of (as St. Paul and his companions were) as the offscourings of
+the earth, creatures only to be hunted out of sight and spoiled of all
+influence. Happy they who can bear all in the Psalmist's tranquil and
+truthful spirit; and can sum up their feelings like him--"I will sing of
+Thy power; yea, I will sing aloud of Thy mercy in the morning; for Thou
+hast been my defence and refuge in the day of my trouble."
+
+But let us return to David. Can we think of a more desolate condition
+than that in which he found himself after his wife let him down through
+a window? It is night, and he is alone. Who could be unmoved when place
+in such a position? Forced to fly from his home and his young wife, just
+after he had begun to know their sweets, and no prospect of a happy
+return! Driven forth by the murderous fury of the king whom he had
+served with a loyalty and a devotion that could not have been surpassed!
+His home desolated and his life threatened by the father of his wife,
+the man whom even nature should have inspired with a kindly interest in
+his welfare! What good had it done him that he had slain that giant?
+What return had he got for his service in ever so often soothing the
+nerves of the irritable monarch with the gentle warblings of his harp?
+What good had come of all his perilous exploits against the Philistines,
+of the hundred foreskins of the king's enemies, of the last great
+victory which had brought so unprecedented advantage to Israel? Would it
+not have been better for him never to have touched a weapon, never to
+have encountered a foe, but kept feeding that flock of his father's, and
+caring for those irrational creatures, who had always returned his
+kindness with gratitude, and been far more like friends and companions
+than that terrible Saul? Such thoughts might perhaps hover about his
+bosom, but certainly they would receive no entertainment from him. They
+might knock at his door, but they would not be admitted. A man like
+David could never seriously regret that he had done his duty. He could
+never seriously wish that he had never responded to the call of God and
+of his country. But he might well feel how empty and unprofitable even
+the most successful worldly career may become, how maddening the changes
+of fortune, how intolerable the unjust retributions of men in power. His
+ill-treatment was so atrocious that, had he not had a refuge in God, it
+might have driven him to madness or to suicide. It drove him to the
+throne of grace, where he found grace to help him in his time of need.
+
+It was no wonder that the fugitive thought of Samuel. If he could get
+shelter with him Saul would surely let him alone, for Saul could have no
+mind to meddle with Samuel again. But more than that; in Samuel's
+company he would find congenial fellowship, and from Samuel's mature
+wisdom and devotion to God's law learn much that would be useful in
+after life. We can easily fancy what a cordial welcome the old prophet
+would give the youthful fugitive. Was not David in a sense his son,
+seeing that he had chosen him from among all the sons of Jesse, and
+poured on him the holy oil? If an old minister has a special interest
+in one whom he has baptized, how much more Samuel in one whom he had
+anointed! And there was another consideration that would have great
+effect with Samuel. Old Christians feel very tenderly for young
+believers who have had hard lines in serving God. It moves them much
+when those on whom they have very earnestly pressed God's ways have
+encountered great trials in following them. Gladly would they do
+anything in their power to soothe and encourage them. Samuel's words to
+David would certainly be words of exceeding tenderness. They must have
+fallen like the dew of Hermon on his fevered spirit. Doubtless they
+would tend to revive and strengthen his faith, and assure him that God
+would keep him amid all his trials, and at last set him on high, because
+he had known his name.
+
+From Ramah, his ordinary dwelling-place, Samuel had gone with David to
+Naioth, perhaps under the idea that they would elude the eye of Saul.
+Not so, however. Word of David's place of abode was carried to the king.
+Saul was deeply in earnest in his effort to get rid of David,--surely a
+very daring thing when he must have known God's purpose regarding him.
+Messengers were accordingly sent to Naioth. It was the seat of one of
+the schools of the prophets, and David could not but be deeply
+interested in the work of the place, and charmed with its spirit. Here,
+under the wing of Samuel, he did dwell in safety; but his safety did not
+come in the way in which perhaps he expected. Saul's purpose was too
+deeply seated to be affected by the presence of Samuel. Nay, though
+Samuel in all likelihood had told him how God had caused him to anoint
+David as his successor, Saul determined to drag him even from the hands
+of Samuel. But Saul never counted on the form of opposition he was to
+encounter. The messengers went to Naioth, but their hearts were taken
+hold of by the Spirit who was then working in such power in the place,
+and from soldiers they were turned into prophets. A second batch of
+messengers was sent, and with the same result. A third batch followed,
+and still the same miraculous transformation. Determined not to be
+baffled, and having probably exhausted the servants whom he could trust,
+Saul went himself to Ramah. But Saul was proof no more than his servants
+against the marvellous spiritual force that swept all before it. When he
+came to Ramah, the Spirit of the Lord was upon him, and he went on and
+prophesied all the way from Ramah to Naioth. And there, stripping
+himself of his royal robes and accoutrements, he prophesied before
+Samuel in like manner, and lay down, just as one of the prophets, and
+continued so a whole day and night. It was a repetition of what had
+taken place at "the hill of God" when Saul returned from his search
+after the asses (1 Sam. x. 10, 11), and it resuscitated the proverb that
+had been first used on that occasion, is Saul also among the prophets?
+Transformed and occupied as Saul was now, he was in no mood to carry out
+his murderous project against David, who in the view of this most
+unexpected form of deliverance might well sing, "My safety cometh from
+the Lord, who made heaven and earth."
+
+The question cannot but press itself on us, What was the character of
+the influence under which Saul was brought on this remarkable occasion?
+Observe the phenomena so far as they are recorded. In the first place,
+nothing is said of any appeal to Saul's reason and conscience. In the
+second place, no such conduct followed this experience as would have
+followed it, had his reason and conscience been impressed. He was
+precisely the same wicked man as before. In the third place, there is no
+evidence of anything else having taken place than a sort of contagious
+impression being produced on his physical nature, something
+corresponding to the effect of mesmerism or animal magnetism. In earnest
+religious movements of a very solid character, it has been often
+remarked that another unusual experience runs alongside of them; in some
+persons in contact with them a nervous susceptibility is developed,
+which sometimes causes prostration, and sometimes a state of trance; and
+it has been found that many persons are liable to the state of trance
+whose hearts and lives are in no way transformed by the religious
+impression. It seems to have been some such experience that befell Saul.
+He was entranced, but he was not changed. He was for the time another
+man, but there was no permanent change; after a time, his old spirit
+returned. Evidently he was a man of great nervous susceptibility, and it
+is plain from many things that his nerves had become weakened. He fell
+for the time under the strong influence of the prophetic company; but
+David did not trust him, for he fled from Naioth.
+
+And yet, even if this was all that happened to Saul, there was something
+providential and merciful in it that might have led on to better
+results. Was it not in some sense a dealing of God with Saul? Was it not
+a reminder of that better way which Saul had forsaken, and in forsaking
+which he had come to so much guilt and trouble? Was it not a gracious
+indication that even yet, if he would return to God, though he could not
+get back the kingdom he might personally be blessed? Whatever of this
+kind there might be in it, it was trampled by Saul under foot. He had
+made his bed, and, thorny though it was, he was determined to lie on it.
+He would not change his life; he would not return to God.
+
+Does not God, in His merciful providence, often deal with transgressors
+as he dealt with Saul, placing them in circumstances that make it
+comparatively easy for them to turn from their sins and change their
+life? Your marriage, a death in your circle, a change of residence, a
+change of fortune, forming a new acquaintance, coming under a new
+ministry,--oh! friends, if there be in you the faintest dissatisfaction
+with your past life, the faintest desire for a better, take advantage of
+the opportunity, and turn to God. Summon courage, break with your
+associates in sin (the loss will be marvellously small), give up your
+dissipated pleasures, betake yourselves to the great matters that
+concern your welfare evermore. Mark in the providence that gave you the
+opportunity, the kind hand of a gracious Father, sadly grieving over
+your erring life, and longing for your return. Harden not your heart as
+in the provocation in the day of temptation in the wilderness. Don't
+drive the angel out of your way, who stands in your path, as he stood in
+Balaam's, to stop your progress in the ways of sin. Who knows whether
+ever again you shall have the same opportunity? And even if you have, is
+it not certain that the disinclination you feel now will be stiffer and
+stronger then? Be a man, and face the irksome. Whatever you do,
+determine to do right. It is childish to stand shivering over a duty
+which you know ought to be done. "Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do
+it with thy might; for there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor
+wisdom, in the grave, whither thou goest."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+_DAVID AND JONATHAN._
+
+1 SAMUEL xx.
+
+
+We have no means of determining how long time elapsed between the events
+recorded in the preceding chapter and those recorded in this. It is not
+unlikely that Saul's experience at Naioth led to a temporary improvement
+in his relations to David. The tone of this chapter leads us to believe
+that at the time when it opens there was some room for doubt whether or
+not Saul continued to cherish any deliberate ill-feeling to his
+son-in-law. David's own suspicions were strong that he did; but Jonathan
+appears to have thought otherwise. Hence the earnest conversation which
+the two friends had on the subject; and hence the curious but crooked
+stratagem by which they tried to find out the truth.
+
+But before we go on to this, it will be suitable for us at this place to
+dwell for a little on the remarkable friendship between David and
+Jonathan--a beautiful oasis in this wilderness history,--one of the
+brightest gems in this book of Samuel.
+
+It was a striking proof of the ever mindful and considerate grace of
+God, that at the very opening of the dark valley of trial through which
+David had to pass in consequence of Saul's jealousy, he was brought
+into contact with Jonathan, and in his disinterested and sanctified
+friendship, furnished with one of the sweetest earthly solaces for the
+burden of care and sorrow. The tempest suddenly let loose on him must
+have proved too vehement, if he had been left in Saul's dark palace
+without one kind hand to lead him on, or the sympathy of one warm heart
+to encourage him; the spirit of faith might have declined more seriously
+than it did, had it not been strengthened by the bright faith of
+Jonathan. It was plain that Michal, though she had a kind of attachment
+to David, was far from having a thoroughly congenial heart; she loved
+him, and helped to save him, but at the same time bore false witness
+against him (chap. xix. 17). In his deepest sorrows, David could have
+derived little comfort from her. Whatever gleams of joy and hope,
+therefore, were now shed by human companionship across his dark
+firmament, were due to Jonathan. In merciful adaptation to the
+infirmities of his human spirit, God opened to him this stream in the
+desert, and allowed him to refresh himself with its pleasant waters; but
+to show him, at the same time, that such supplies could not be
+permanently relied on, and that his great dependence must be placed, not
+on the fellowship of mortal man, but on the ever-living and ever-loving
+God, Jonathan and he were doomed, after the briefest period of
+companionship, to a lifelong separation, and the friendship which had
+seemed to promise a perpetual solace of his trials, only aggravated
+their severity, when its joys were violently reft away.
+
+In another view, David's intercourse with Jonathan served an important
+purpose in his training. The very sight he constantly had of Saul's
+outrageous wickedness might have nursed a self-righteous
+feeling,--might have encouraged the thought, so agreeable to human
+nature, that as Saul was rejected by God for his wickedness, so David
+was chosen for his goodness. The remembrance of Jonathan's singular
+virtues and graces was fitted to rebuke this thought; for if regard to
+human goodness had decided God's course in the matter, why should not
+Jonathan have been appointed to succeed his father? From the
+self-righteous ground on which he might have been thus tempted to stand,
+David would be thrown back on the adorable sovereignty of God; and in
+deepest humiliation constrained to own that it was God's grace only that
+made him to differ from others.
+
+Ardent friendships among young men were by no means uncommon in ancient
+times; many striking instances occurred among the Greeks, which have
+sometimes been accounted for by the comparatively low estimation in
+which female society was then held. "The heroic companions celebrated by
+Homer and others," it has been remarked, "seem to have but one heart and
+soul, with scarcely a wish or object apart, and only to live, as they
+are always ready to die, for one another.... The idea of a Greek hero
+seems not to have been thought complete without such a brother in arms
+by his side."[3]
+
+But there was one feature of the friendship of Jonathan and David that
+had no parallel in classic times,--it was friendship between two men, of
+whom the younger was a most formidable rival to the older. It is
+Jonathan that shines most in this friendship, for he was the one who had
+least to gain and most to lose from the other. He knew that David was
+ordained by God to succeed to his father's throne, yet he loved him; he
+knew that to befriend David was to offend his father, yet he warmly
+befriended him; he knew that he must decrease and David increase, yet no
+atom of jealousy disturbed his noble spirit. What but divine grace could
+have enabled Jonathan to maintain this blessed temper? What other
+foundation could it have rested on but the conviction that what God
+ordained must be the very best, infinitely wise and good for him and for
+all? Or what could have filled the heart thus bereaved of so fair an
+earthly prospect, but the sense of God's love, and the assurance that He
+would compensate to him all that He took from him? How beautiful was
+this fruit of the Spirit of God! How blessed it would be if such
+clusters hung on every branch of the vine!
+
+Besides being disinterested, Jonathan's friendship for David was of an
+eminently holy character. Evidently Jonathan was a man that habitually
+honoured God, if not in much open profession, yet in the way of deep
+reverence and submission. And thus, besides being able to surrender his
+own prospects without a murmur, and feel real happiness in the thought
+that David would be king, he could strengthen the faith of his friend,
+as we read afterwards (chap. xxiii. 16): "Jonathan, Saul's son, arose
+and went to David into the wood, and strengthened his hand in God." At
+the time when they come together in the chapter before us, Jonathan's
+faith was stronger than David's. David's faltering heart was saying,
+"There is but a step between me and death" (ver. 3), while Jonathan in
+implicit confidence in God's purpose concerning David was thus looking
+forward to the future,--"Thou shalt not only while yet I live show me
+the kindness of the Lord that I die not; but also thou shalt not cut
+off thy kindness from my house for ever; no, not when the Lord hath cut
+off the enemies of David every one from the face of the earth." There
+has seldom, if ever, been exhibited a finer instance of triumphant
+faith, than when the prince, with all the resources of the kingdom at
+his beck, made this request of the helpless outlaw. What a priceless
+blessing is the friendship of those who support and comfort us in great
+spiritual conflicts, and help us to stand erect in some great crisis of
+our lives! How different from the friendship that merely supplies the
+merriment of an idle hour, at the expense, perhaps, of a good
+conscience, and to the lasting injury of the soul!
+
+But let me now briefly note the events recorded in this chapter. It is a
+long chapter, one of those long chapters in which incidents are recorded
+with such fulness of detail, as not only to make a very graphic
+narrative, but to supply an incidental proof of its authenticity.
+
+First of all, we have the preliminary conversation between David and
+Jonathan, as to the real feeling of Saul toward David. Incidentally, we
+learn how much Saul leant on Jonathan: "My father will do nothing,
+either great or small, but he will show it me,"--a proof that Jonathan
+was, like Joseph before him, and like Daniel after him, eminently
+trustworthy, and as sound in judgment as he was noble in character.
+Guileless himself, he suspected no guile in his father. But David was
+not able to take so favourable a view of Saul. So profound was his
+conviction to the contrary, that in giving his reason for believing that
+Saul had concealed from his son his real feeling in the matter, and the
+danger in which he was, he used the solemn language of adjuration: "As
+the Lord liveth, and as thy soul liveth, there is but a step between me
+and death." Viewed from the human point, this was true; viewed from
+under the Divine purpose and promise, it could not be true. Yet we
+cannot blame David, knowing as he did what Saul really felt, for
+expressing his human fears, and the distress of mind to which the
+situation gave birth.
+
+Next, we find a device agreed on between David and Jonathan, to
+ascertain the real sentiments of Saul. It was one of those deceitful
+ways to which, very probably, David had become accustomed in his
+military experiences, in his forays against the Philistines, where
+stratagems may have been, as they often were, a common device. It was
+probable that David would be missed from Saul's table next day, as it
+was the new moon and a feast; if Saul inquired after him, Jonathan was
+to pretend that he had asked leave to go to a yearly family sacrifice at
+Bethlehem; and the way in which Saul should take this explanation would
+show his real feeling and purpose about David. In the event of Saul
+being enraged, and commanding Jonathan to bring David to him, David
+implored Jonathan not to comply; rather kill him with his own hand than
+that; for there was nothing that David dreaded so much as falling into
+the hands of Saul. Jonathan surely did not deserve that it should be
+thought possible for him to surrender David to his father, or to conceal
+anything from him that had any bearing on his welfare. But inasmuch as
+David had put the matter in the form he did, it seemed right to Jonathan
+that a very solemn transaction should take place at this time, to make
+their relation as clear as day, and to determine the action of the
+stronger of them to the other, in time to come.
+
+This is the third thing in the chapter. Jonathan, takes David into the
+field, that is, into some sequestered Wady, at some distance from the
+town, where they would be sure to enjoy complete solitude; and there
+they enter into a solemn covenant. Jonathan takes the lead. He begins
+with a solemn appeal to God, calling on Him not as a matter of mere form
+or propriety, but of real and profound significance. First, he binds
+himself to communicate faithfully to David the real state of things on
+the part of his father, whether it should be for good or for evil. And
+then he binds David, whom by faith he sees in possession of the kingly
+power, in spite of all that Saul may do against him, first to be kind to
+himself while he lived, and not cut him off, as new kings so often
+massacred all the relations of the old; and also after his death to show
+kindness to his family, and never cease to remember them, not even when
+raised to such a pitch of prosperity that all his enemies were cut off
+from the earth. One knows not whether most to wonder at the faith of
+Jonathan, or the sweetness of his nature. It is David, the poor outlaw,
+with hardly a man to stand by him, that appears to Jonathan the man of
+power, the man who can dispose of all lives and sway all destinies;
+while Jonathan, the king's son and confidential adviser, is somehow
+reduced to helplessness, and unable even to save himself. But was there
+ever such a transaction entered into with such sweetness of temper? The
+calmness of Jonathan in contemplating the strange reverse of fortune
+both to himself and to David, is exquisitely beautiful; nor is there in
+it a trace of that servility with which mean natures worship the rising
+sun; it is manly and generous while it is meek and humble; such a
+combination of the noble and the submissive as was shown afterwards, in
+highest form, in the one perfect example of the Lord Jesus Christ.
+
+Next comes a statement of the way in which Jonathan was to announce to
+David the result. It might not be safe for him to see David personally,
+but in that case he would let him know what had transpired about him
+through a preconcerted signal, in reference to the place where he would
+direct an attendant to go for some arrows. As it happened, a personal
+interview was obtained with David; but before that, the telegraphing
+with the arrows was carried out as arranged.
+
+On the first day of the feast, David's absence passed unnoticed, Saul
+being under the impression that he had acquired ceremonial uncleanness.
+But as that excuse could only avail for one day, Saul finding him absent
+the second day, asked Jonathan what had become of him. The excuse agreed
+on was given. It excited the deepest rage of Saul. But his rage was not
+against David so much as against Jonathan for taking his part. Saul did
+not believe in the excuse, otherwise he would not have ordered Jonathan
+to send and fetch David. If David was at Bethlehem, Saul could have sent
+for him himself; if he lay concealed in the neighbourhood, Jonathan
+alone would know his hiding-place, therefore Jonathan must get hold of
+him. If this be the true view, the stratagem of Jonathan had availed
+nothing; the plain truth would have served the purpose no worse. As it
+was, Jonathan's own life was in the most imminent danger. Remonstrating
+with his father for seeking to destroy David, he narrowly escaped his
+father's javelin, even though, a moment before, in his jealousy of
+David, Saul had professed to be concerned for the interests of Jonathan.
+"Thou son of the perverse rebellious woman, do not I know that thou hast
+chosen the son of Jesse to thine own confusion, and to the confusion of
+thy mother's nakedness?" What strange and unworthy methods will not
+angry men and women resort to, to put vinegar into their words and make
+them sting! To try to wound a man's feelings by reviling his mother, or
+by reviling any of his kindred, is a practice confined to the dregs of
+society, and nauseous, to the last degree, to every gentle and
+honourable mind. In Saul's case, the offence was still more infamous
+because the woman reviled was his own wife. Surely if her failings
+reflected on any one, they reflected on her husband rather than her son.
+But that it was any real failing that Saul denounced when he called her
+"the perverse rebellious woman," we greatly doubt. To a man like Saul,
+any assertion of her rights by his wife, any refusal to be his abject
+slave, any opposition to his wild and wicked designs against David,
+would mean perversity and rebellion. We are far from thinking ill of
+this nameless woman because her husband denounced her to her son. But
+when we see Saul in one breath trying to kill his son with a javelin and
+to destroy his wife's character by poisoned words, and at the same time
+thirsting for the death of his son-in-law, we have a mournful exhibition
+of the depth to which men are capable of descending from whom the Spirit
+of the Lord hath departed.
+
+No wonder that Jonathan arose from the table in fierce anger, and did
+eat no meat the second day of the month. One wonders how the feast went
+on thereafter, but one does not envy the guests. Did Saul drown his
+stormy feelings in copious draughts of wine, and turn the holy festival
+into a bacchanalian rout, amid whose boisterous mirth and tempestuous
+exhilaration the reproaches of conscience would be stifled for the
+hour?
+
+The third day has come, on which, by preconcerted agreement, Jonathan
+was to reveal to David his father's state of mind. David is in the
+agreed-on hiding-place; and Jonathan, sallying forth with his servant,
+shoots his arrows to the place which was to indicate the existence of
+danger. Then, the lad having gone back to the city, and no one being on
+the spot to observe them or interrupt them, the two friends come
+together and have an affecting meeting. When Jonathan parted from David
+three days before, he had not been without hopes of bringing to him a
+favourable report of his father. David expected nothing of the kind; but
+even David must have been shocked and horrified to find things so bad as
+they were now reported. In an act of unfeigned reverence for the king's
+son, David bowed himself three times to the ground. In token of much
+love they kissed one another; while under the dark cloud of adversity
+that had risen on them both, and that now compelled them to separate,
+hardly ever again (as it turned out) to see one another in the flesh,
+"they wept one with another until David exceeded."
+
+ "They wept as only strong men weep,
+ When weep they must, or die."
+
+One consolation alone remained, and it was Jonathan that was able to
+apply it. "Jonathan said to David, Go in peace, forasmuch as we have
+sworn both of us in the name of the Lord, saying, The Lord be between me
+and thee, and between my seed and thy seed for ever." Yes, even in that
+darkest hour, Jonathan could say to David, "Go _in peace_." What peace?
+"Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on Thee,
+because he trusteth in Thee." "The angel of the Lord encampeth about
+them that fear Him, and delivereth them." "Many are the afflictions of
+the righteous, but the Lord delivereth them out of them all."
+
+We cannot turn from this chapter without adding a word on the
+friendships of the young. It is when hearts are tender that they are
+most readily knit to each other, as the heart of Jonathan was knit to
+the heart of David. But the formation of friendships is too important a
+matter to be safely left to casual circumstances. It ought to be gone
+about with care. If you have materials to choose among, see that you
+choose the best. At the foundation of all friendship lies congeniality
+of heart--a kindred feeling of which one often becomes conscious by
+instinct at first sight. But there must also be elements of difference
+in friends. It is a great point to have a friend who is above us in some
+things, and who will thus be likely to draw us up to a higher level of
+character, instead of dragging us down to a lower. And a friend is very
+useful, if he is rich in qualities where we are poor. As it is in _In
+Memoriam_--
+
+ "He was rich where I was poor,
+ And he supplied my want the more
+ As his unlikeness fitted mine."
+
+But surely, of all qualities in a friend or companion who is to do us
+good, the most vital is, that he fears the Lord. As such friendships are
+by far the most pleasant, so they are by far the most profitable. And
+when you have made friends, stick by them. Don't let it be said of you
+that your friend seemed to be everything to you yesterday, but nothing
+to-day. And if your friends rise above you in the world, rejoice in
+their prosperity, and banish every envious feeling; or if you should
+rise above them, do not forget them, nor forsake them, but, as if you
+had made a covenant before God, continue to show kindness to them and to
+their children after them. Pray for them, and ask them to pray for you.
+
+Perhaps it was with some view to the friendship of Jonathan and his
+father that Solomon wrote, "There is a friend that sticketh closer than
+a brother." Jonathan was such a friend to David. But the words suggest a
+higher friendship. The glory of Jonathan's love for David fades before
+our Lord's love for His brethren. If Jonathan were living among us, who
+of us could look on him with indifference? Would not our hearts warm to
+him, as we gazed on his noble form and open face, even though _we_ had
+never been the objects of his affection? In the case of Jesus Christ, we
+have all the noble qualities of Jonathan in far higher excellence than
+his, and we have this further consideration, that for us He has laid
+down His life, and that none who receive His friendship can ever be
+separated from His love. And what an elevating and purifying effect that
+friendship will have! In alliance with Him, you are in alliance with all
+that is pure and bright, all that is transforming and beautifying; all
+that can give peace to your conscience, joy to your heart, lustre to
+your spirit, and beauty to your life; all that can make your garments
+smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia; all that can bless you and make
+you a blessing. And once you are truly His, the bond can never be
+severed; David had to tear himself from Jonathan, but you will never
+have to tear yourselves from Christ. Your union is cemented by the blood
+of the everlasting covenant; and by the eternal efficacy of the prayer,
+"Father, I will that they also whom Thou hast given me be with me where
+I am."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[3] Thirlwall's "History of Greece."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+_DAVID AT NOB AND AT GATH._
+
+1 SAMUEL xxi.
+
+
+We enter here on a somewhat painful part of David's history. He is not
+living so near to God as before, and in consequence his course becomes
+more carnal and more crooked. We saw in our last chapter the element of
+distrust rising up somewhat ominously in that solemn adjuration to
+Jonathan, "Truly as the Lord liveth, and as thy soul liveth, there is
+but a step between me and death." These words, it is true, gave
+expression to an undoubted and in a sense universal truth, a truth which
+all of us should at all times ponder, but which David had special cause
+to feel, under the circumstances in which he was placed. It was not the
+fact of his giving solemn expression to this truth that indicated
+distrust on the part of David, but the fact that he did not set over
+against it another truth which was just as real,--that God had chosen
+him for His service, and would not allow him to perish at the hand of
+Saul. When a good man sees himself exposed to a terrible danger which he
+has no means of averting, it is no wonder if the contemplation of that
+danger gives rise for the moment to fear. But it is his privilege to
+enjoy promises of protection and blessing at the hand of the unseen God,
+and if his faith in these promises be active, it will not only
+neutralize the fear, but raise him high above it. Now, the defect in
+David's state of mind was, that while he fully realized the danger, he
+did not by faith lay hold of that which was fitted to neutralize it. It
+was Jonathan rather than David who by faith realized at this time
+David's grounds of security. All through Jonathan's remarks in chapter
+xx. you see him thinking of God as David's Protector,--thinking of the
+great purposes which God meant to accomplish by him, and which were a
+pledge that He would preserve him now,--thinking of David as a coming
+man of unprecedented power and influence, whose word would determine
+other men's destinies, and dispose of their fortunes. David seems to
+have been greatly indebted to Jonathan for sustaining his faith while he
+was with him; for after he parted from Jonathan, his faith fell very
+low. Time after time, he follows that policy of deceit which he had
+instructed Jonathan to pursue in explaining his absence from the feast
+in Saul's house. It is painful in the last degree to see one whose faith
+towered to such a lofty height in the encounter with Goliath, coming
+down from that noble elevation, to find him resorting for
+self-protection to the lies and artifices of an impostor.
+
+We cannot excuse it, but we may account for it. David was wearied out by
+Saul's restless and incessant persecution. We read in Daniel of a
+certain persecutor that he should "wear out the saints of the Most
+High," and it was the same sad experience from which David was now
+suffering. It does not appear that he was gifted naturally with great
+patience, or power of enduring. Rather we should suppose that one of
+such nimble and lively temperament would soon tire of a strained and
+uneasy attitude. It appears that Saul's persistency in injustice and
+cruelty made David at last restless and impatient. All the more would he
+have needed in such circumstances to resort to God, and seek from Him
+the oil of grace to feed his patience, and bear him above the
+infirmities of his nature. But this was just what he seems not to have
+done. Carnal fear therefore grew apace, and faith fell into a state of
+slumber. The eye of sense was active, looking out on the perils around
+him; the eye of faith was dull, hardly able to decipher a single
+promise. The eye of sense saw the vindictive scowl of Saul, the javelin
+in his hand, and bands of soldiers sent out on every side to seize David
+or slay him; the eye of faith did not see--what it might have seen--the
+angel of the Lord encamping around him and delivering him. It was God's
+purpose now to allow David to feel his own weakness; he was to pass
+through that terrible ordeal when, tossed on a sea of trials, one feels
+like Noah's dove, unable to find rest for the sole of one's foot, and
+seems on the very eve of dropping helpless into the billows, till the
+ark presents itself, and a gracious hand is put forth to the rescue.
+Left to himself, tempted to make use of carnal expedients, and taught
+the wretchedness of such expedients; learning also, through this
+discipline, to anchor his soul more firmly on the promise of the living
+God, David was now undergoing a most essential part of his early
+training, gaining the experience that was to qualify him to say with
+such earnestness to others, "O taste and see that the Lord is good:
+blessed is the man that trusteth in Him."
+
+On leaving Gibeah, David, accompanied with a few followers, bent his
+steps to Nob, a city of the priests. The site of this city has not been
+discovered; some think it stood on the north-eastern ridge of Mount
+Olivet; this is uncertain, but it is evident that it was very close to
+Jerusalem (see Isa. x. 32). Its distance from Gibeah would therefore be
+but five or six miles, much too short for David to have had there any
+great sense of safety. It appears to have become the seat of the sacred
+services of the nation, some time after the destruction of Shiloh.
+David's purpose in going there seems to have been simply to get a
+shelter, perhaps for the Sabbath day, and to obtain supplies. Doeg,
+indeed, charged Ahimelech, before Saul, with having inquired of the Lord
+for David, but Ahimelech with some warmth denied the charge.[4] The
+privilege of consulting the Urim and Thummim seems to have been confined
+to the chief ruler of the nation; if with the sanction of the priest
+David had done so now, he might have justly been charged with treason;
+probably it was because he believed Doeg rather than Ahimelech, and
+concluded that this royal privilege had been conceded by the priests to
+David, that Saul was so enraged, and inflicted such dreadful retribution
+on them. Afterwards, when Abiathar fled to David with the high priest's
+ephod, through which the judgment of Urim and Thummim seems to have been
+announced, David regarded that circumstance as an indication of the
+Divine permission to him to make use of the sacred oracle.
+
+But what shall we say of the untruth which David told Ahimelech, to
+account for his coming there without armed attendants? "The king hath
+commanded me a business, and hath said unto me, Let no man know
+anything of the business whereabout I send thee, and what I have
+commanded thee; and I have commanded my servants to such and such a
+place." Here was a statement not only not true, but the very opposite of
+the truth; spoken too to God's anointed high priest, and in the very
+place consecrated to God's most solemn service; everything about the
+speaker fitted to bring God to his mind, and to recall God's protection
+of him in time past; yet the first thing he did on entering the sacred
+place was to utter a falsehood, prompted by distrust, prompted by the
+feeling that the pledged protection of the God of truth, before whose
+shrine he now stood, was not sufficient. How plain the connection
+between a deficient sense of God's truthfulness, and a deficient regard
+to truth itself! What could have tempted David to act thus? According to
+some, it was altogether an amiable and generous desire to keep Ahimelech
+out of trouble, to screen him from the responsibility of helping a known
+outlaw. But considering the gathering distrust of David's spirit at the
+time, it seems more likely that he was startled at the fear which
+Ahimelech expressed when he saw David coming alone, as if all were not
+right between him and Saul, as if the truce that had been agreed on
+after the affair of Naioth had now come to an end. Probably David felt
+that if Ahimelech knew all, he would be still more afraid, and do
+nothing to help him; moreover, the presence of Doeg the Edomite was
+another cause of embarrassment, for Saul had once ordered all his
+servants to kill David, and if the fierce Edomite were told that David
+was now simply a fugitive, he might be willing enough to do the deed.
+Anyhow, David now lent himself to the devices of the father of lies. And
+so the brave spirit that had not quailed before Goliath, and that had
+met the Philistines in so many terrific encounters, now quailed before a
+phantom of its own devising, and shrank from what, at the moment, was
+only an imaginary danger.
+
+David succeeded in getting from Ahimelech what he wanted, but not
+without difficulty. For when David asked for five loaves of bread, the
+priest replied that he had no common bread, but only shewbread; he had
+only the bread that had been taken that day from off the table on which
+it stood before the Lord, and replaced by fresh bread, according to the
+law. The priest was willing to give that bread to David, if he could
+assure him that his attendants were not under defilement. It will be
+remembered that our Lord adverted to this fact, as a justification of
+His own disciples for plucking the ears of corn and eating them on the
+Sabbath. The principle underlying both was, that when a ceremonial
+obligation comes into collision with a moral duty, the lesser obligation
+is to give place to the heavier. The keeping of the Sabbath free from
+all work, and the appropriation of the shewbread to the use of the
+priests alone, were but ceremonial obligations; the preservation of life
+was a moral duty. It is sometimes a very difficult thing to determine
+duty, when moral obligations appear to clash with each other, but there
+was no difficulty in the collision of the moral and the ceremonial. Our
+Lord would certainly not have sided with that body of zealots, in the
+days of conflict between the Maccabees and the Syrians, who allowed
+themselves to be cut in pieces by the enemy, rather than break the
+Sabbath by fighting on that day.
+
+David had another request to make of Ahimelech. "Is there not here under
+thy hand spear or sword? for I have neither brought my sword nor my
+weapons with me, because the king's business required haste." It was a
+strange place to ask for military weapons. Surely the priests would not
+need to defend themselves with these. Yet it happened that there was a
+sword there which David knew well, and which he might reasonably
+claim,--the sword of Goliath. "Give it me," said David; "there is none
+like that." We read before, that David carried Goliath's head to
+Jerusalem. Nob was evidently in the Jerusalem district, and as the sword
+was there, there can be little doubt that it was at Nob the trophies had
+been deposited.
+
+So far, things had gone fairly well with David at Nob. But there was a
+man there "detained before the Lord,"--prevented probably from
+proceeding on his journey because it was the Sabbath day,--whose
+presence gave no comfort to David, and was, indeed, an omen of evil.
+Doeg, the Edomite, was the chief of the herdmen of Saul. Why Saul had
+entrusted that office to a member of a nation that was notorious for its
+bitter feelings towards Israel, we do not know; but the herdman seems to
+have been like his master in his feelings towards David; he would
+appear, indeed, to have joined the hereditary dislike of his nation to
+the personal dislike of his master. Instinctively, as we learn
+afterwards, David understood the feelings of Doeg. It would have been
+well for him, when a shudder passed over him as he caught the scowling
+countenance of the Edomite, had his own conscience been easier than it
+was. It would have been well for him had he been ruled by that spirit of
+trust which triumphed so gloriously the day he first got possession of
+that sword. It would have been well for him had he been free from the
+disturbing consciousness of having offended God by borrowing the devices
+of the father of lies and bringing them into the sanctuary, to pollute
+the air of the house of God. No wonder, though, David was restless
+again! "And David arose, and fled that day for fear of Saul, and went to
+Achish the king of Gath."
+
+How different his state and prospects now from what they had been a
+little time before! Then the world smiled on him; fame and honour,
+wealth and glory, flowed in on him; God was his Father; conscience was
+calm; he hardly knew the taste of misery. But how has his sky become
+overcast! A homeless and helpless wanderer, with scarcely an attendant
+or companion; in momentary fear of death; fain to beg a morsel of bread
+where he could get it; a creature so banned and cursed that kindness to
+him involved the risk of death; his heart bleeding for the loss of
+Jonathan; his soul clouded by distrust of God; his conscience troubled
+by the vague sense of unacknowledged sin! And yet he is destined to be
+king of Israel, the very ideal of a good and prosperous monarch, and the
+earthly type of the Son of God! Like a lost sheep, he has gone astray
+for a time, but the Good Shepherd will leave the ninety-and-nine and go
+among the mountains till He find him; and his experience will give a
+wondrous depth to that favourite song of young and old of every age and
+country, "_He restoreth my soul_: He leadeth me in the paths of
+righteousness, for His name's sake."
+
+And now we must follow him to Gath, the city of Goliath. Down the slope
+of Mount Olivet, across the brook Kedron, and past the stronghold of
+Zion, and probably through the very valley of Elah where he had fought
+with the giant, David makes his way to Gath. It was surely a strange
+place to fly to, a sign of the despair in which David found himself!
+What reception could the conqueror of Goliath expect in his city? What
+retribution was due to him for the hundred foreskins, and for the deeds
+of victory which had inspired the Hebrew singers when they sang of the
+tens of thousands whom David had slain?
+
+It will hardly do to say that he reckoned on not being recognised. It is
+more likely that he relied on a spirit not unknown among barbarous
+princes towards warriors dishonoured at home, as when Themistocles took
+refuge among the Persians, or Coriolanus among the Volscians. That he
+took this step without much reflection on its ulterior bearings is well
+nigh certain. For, granting that he should be favourably received, this
+would be on the understanding that his services would be at the command
+of his protector, or at the very least it would place him under an
+obligation of gratitude that would prove highly embarrassing at some
+future time. Happily, the scheme did not succeed. The jealousy of the
+Philistine nobles was excited. "The servants of Achish said unto him, Is
+not this David, the king of the land? Did they not sing one to another
+of him in dances, saying, Saul hath slain his thousands, and David his
+ten thousands?" David began to feel himself in a false position. He laid
+up these words in his heart, and was sore afraid of Achish. The misery
+of his situation and the poverty of his resources may both be inferred
+from the unworthy device to which he resorted to extricate himself from
+his difficulty. He feigned himself mad, and conducted himself as madmen
+commonly do. "He scrabbled on the door of the gate, and let his spittle
+fall down upon his beard." But the device failed. "Have I need of
+madmen," asked the king, "that ye have brought this fellow to play the
+madman in my presence? shall this fellow come into my house?" A Jewish
+tradition alleges that both the wife and daughter of Achish were mad; he
+had plenty of that sort of people already: no need of more! The title of
+the thirty-fourth Psalm tells us, "he drove him away, and he departed."
+
+Have any of you ever been tempted to resort to a series of devices and
+deceits either to avoid a danger or to attain an object? Have you been
+tempted to forsake the path of straightforward honesty and truth, and to
+pretend that things were different with you from what they really were?
+I do not accuse you of that wickedness which they commit who
+deliberately imprison conscience, and fearlessly set up their own will
+and their own interests as their king. What you have done under the
+peculiar circumstances in which you found yourselves is not what you
+would ordinarily have done. In this one connection, you felt pressed to
+get along in one way or another, and the only available way was that of
+deceit and device. You were very unhappy at the beginning, and your
+misery increased as you went on. Everything about you was in a
+constrained, unnatural condition,--conscience, temper, feelings, all out
+of order. At one time it seemed as if you were going to succeed; you
+were on the crest of a wave that promised to bear you to land, but the
+wave broke, and you were sent floundering in the broken water. You were
+obliged to go from device to device, with a growing sense of misery. At
+last the chain snapped, and both you and your friends were confronted
+with the miserable reality. But know this: that it would have been
+infinitely, worse for you if your device had succeeded than that it
+failed. If it had succeeded, you would have been permanently entangled
+in evil principles and evil ways, that would have ruined your soul.
+Because you failed, God showed that He had not forsaken you. David
+prospering at Gath would have been a miserable spectacle; David driven
+away by Achish is on the way to brighter and better days.
+
+For, if we can accept the titles of some of the Psalms, it would seem
+that the carnal spell, under which David had been for some time, burst
+when Achish drove him away, and that he returned to his early faith and
+trust. It was to the cave of Adullam that he fled, and the hundred and
+forty-second Psalm claims to have been written there. So also the
+thirty-fourth Psalm, as we have seen, bears to have been written "when
+he changed his behaviour" (feigned madness) "before Abimelech"
+(Achish?), "who drove him away, and he departed." So much uncertainty
+has been thrown of late years on these superscriptions, that we dare not
+trust to them explicitly; yet recognising in them at least the value of
+old traditions, we may regard them as more or less probable, especially
+when they seem to agree with the substance of the Psalms themselves.
+With reference to the thirty-fourth, we miss something in the shape of
+confession of sin, such as we should have expected of one whose lips had
+_not_ been kept from speaking guile. In other respects the psalm fits
+the situation. The image of the young lions roaring for their prey might
+very naturally be suggested by the wilderness. But the chief feature of
+the psalm is the delightful evidence it affords of the blessing that
+comes from trustful fellowship with God. And there is an expression that
+seems to imply that that blessing had not been _always_ enjoyed by the
+Psalmist; he had lost it once; but there came a time when (ver. 4) "I
+sought the Lord, and He answered me, and delivered me from all my
+fears." And the experience of that new time was so delightful that the
+Psalmist had resolved that he would always be on that tack: "I will
+bless the Lord _at all times_; His praise shall _continually_ be in my
+mouth." How changed the state of his spirit from the time when he
+feigned madness at Gath! When he asks, "What man is he that desireth
+life and loveth many days that he may see good?" (ver. 12)--what man
+would fain preserve his life from harassing anxiety and bewildering
+dangers?--the prompt reply is, "Keep thy tongue from evil, and thy lips
+from speaking guile." Have nothing to do with shifts and pretences and
+false devices; be candid and open, and commit all to God. "O taste and
+see that the Lord is good: blessed is the man that trusteth in Him. O
+fear the Lord, _ye His saints_" (for you too are liable to forsake the
+true confidence), "for there is no want to them that fear Him. The young
+lions do lack and suffer hunger, but they that seek the Lord shall not
+lack any good thing. The righteous cry, and the Lord heareth, and
+delivereth them out of all their troubles.... Many are the afflictions
+of the righteous; but the Lord delivereth them out of them all."
+
+"The sorrows of death compassed me, and the pains of hell gat hold upon
+me; I found trouble and sorrow. Then called I upon the name of the Lord:
+O Lord, I beseech Thee, deliver my soul. Gracious is the Lord, and
+righteous; yea, our God is merciful. The Lord preserveth the simple; I
+was brought low, and He helped me. Return unto thy rest, O my soul, for
+the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee" (Psalm cxvi. 3-7).
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[4] See 1 Sam. xxii. 15:--"Have I to-day begun to inquire of God for
+him? be it far from me: let not the king impute anything unto his
+servant, nor to all the house of my father; for thy servant knoweth
+nothing of all this, less or more" (R.V.) To deny beginning to do a
+thing is much the same as to deny doing it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+_DAVID AT ADULLAM, MIZPEH, AND HARETH._
+
+1 SAMUEL xxii.
+
+
+The cave of Adullam, to which David fled on leaving Gath, has been
+placed in various localities even in modern times; but as the Palestine
+Exploration authorities have placed the town in the valley of Elah, we
+may regard it as settled that the cave lay there, not far indeed from
+the place where David had had his encounter with Goliath. It was a
+humble dwelling for a king's son-in-law, nor could David have thought of
+needing it on the memorable day when he did such wonders with his sling
+and stone. These "dens and caves of the earth"--effects of great
+convulsions in some remote period of its history--what service have they
+often rendered to the hunted and oppressed! How many a devout saint, of
+whom the world was not worthy, has blessed God for their shelter! With
+how much purer devotion and loftier fellowship, with how much more
+sublime and noble exercises of the human spirit have many of them been
+associated, than some of the proudest and costliest temples that have
+been reared in name--often little more--to the service of God!
+
+If David at first was somewhat an object of jealousy to his own family,
+in this the day of his trials they showed a different spirit. "When his
+brethren and all his father's house heard of it, they went down thither
+to him." As the proverb says, "Blood is thicker than water," and often
+adversity draws families together between whom prosperity has been like
+a wedge. If our relations are prospering while we are poor, we think of
+them as if they had moved away from us; but when their fortunes are
+broken, and the world turns its back on them, we get closer, our
+sympathy revives. We think all the better of David's family that when
+they heard of his outlaw condition they all went down to him. Besides
+these, "every one that was in distress, and every one that was in debt,
+and every one that was discontented, gathered themselves unto him; and
+he became a captain over them; and there were with him about four
+hundred men." The account here given of the circumstances of this band
+is not very flattering, but there are two things connected with it to be
+borne in mind: in the first place, that the kind of men who usually
+choose the soldier's calling are not your men of plodding industry, but
+men who shrink from monotonous labour; and, in the second place, that
+under the absolute rule of Saul there might be many very worthy persons
+in debt and discontented and in distress, men who had come into that
+condition because they were not so ready to cringe to despotism as their
+ruler desired. Mixed and motley therefore though David's troop may have
+been, it was far from contemptible; and their adherence was fitted
+greatly to encourage him, because it showed that public feeling was with
+him, that his cause was not looked on as desperate, that his standard
+was one to which it was deemed safe and hopeful to resort.
+
+But if, at the first glance, the troop appeared somewhat disreputable,
+it was soon joined by two men, the one a prophet, the other a priest,
+whose adherence must have brought to it a great accession of moral
+weight. The prophet was Gad (ver. 5), who next to Samuel seems to have
+stood highest in the nation as a man of God, a man of holy counsel, and
+elevated, heavenly character. His open adherence to David (which seems
+to be implied in ver. 5) must have had the best effects both on David
+himself and on the people at large. It must have been a great blessing
+to David to have such a man as Gad beside him; for, with all his
+personal piety, he seems to have required a godly minister at his side.
+No man derived more benefit from the communion of saints, or was more
+apt to suffer for want of it; for, as we have seen, he had begun to
+decline in spirituality when he left Samuel at Naioth, and still more
+when he was parted from Jonathan. When Gad joined him, David must have
+felt that he was sent to him from the Lord, and could not but be full of
+gratitude for so conspicuous an answer to his prayers. It would seem
+that Gad remained in close relation to David to the close of his life.
+It was he that came from the Lord to offer him his choice between three
+forms of chastisement after his offence in numbering the people; and
+from the fact of his being called "David's seer" (2 Sam. xxiv. 11) we
+conclude that he and David were intimately associated. It was he also
+that instructed David to buy the threshing-floor of Araunah the
+Jebusite, and thus to consecrate to God a spot with which, to the very
+end of time, the most hallowed thoughts must always be connected.
+
+The other eminent person that joined David about this time was Abiathar
+the priest. But before adverting to this, we must follow the thread of
+the narrative and especially note the tragedy that occurred at Nob, the
+city of the priests.
+
+From the mode of life which David had to follow and the difficulty of
+obtaining subsistence for his troop at one place for any length of time,
+he was obliged to make frequent changes. On leaving the cave of Adullam,
+which was near the western border of the tribe of Judah, he traversed
+the whole breadth of that tribe, and crossing the Jordan, came to the
+territories of Moab. He was concerned for the safety of his father and
+mother, knowing too well the temper of Eastern kings, and how they
+thirsted for the blood, not only of their rivals, but of all their
+relations. He feared that they would not be let alone at Bethlehem or in
+any other part of Saul's kingdom. But what led him to think of the king
+of Moab? Perhaps a tender remembrance of his ancestress Ruth, the damsel
+from Moab, who had been so eminent for her devotion to her
+mother-in-law. Might there not be found in the king of Moab somewhat of
+a like disposition, that would look with pity on an old man and woman
+driven from their home, not indeed, like Naomi, by famine, but by what
+was even worse, the shameful ingratitude and murderous fury of a wicked
+king? If such was David's hope, it was not without success; his father
+and his mother dwelt with the king of Moab all the time that David was
+in the hold.
+
+But it was not God's purpose that David should lurk in a foreign land.
+The prophet Gad directed him to return to the land of Judah. It was
+within the boundaries of that tribe, accordingly, that the rest of
+David's exile was spent, with the exception of the time at the very end
+when he again resorted to Philistine territory. His first hiding-place
+was the forest of Hareth.
+
+While David was here, Saul, encamped in military state at Gibeah,
+delivered an extraordinary speech to the men of his own tribe. "Hear
+now, ye Benjamites; will the son of Jesse give every one of you fields
+and vineyards, and make you all captains of thousands, and captains of
+hundreds; that all of you have conspired against me, and there is none
+that showeth me that my son hath made a league with the son of Jesse,
+and there is none of you that is sorry for me, or that showeth me that
+my son hath stirred up my servant against me, to lie in wait, as at this
+day?" It would have been difficult for any other man to condense so much
+that was vile in spirit into the dimensions of a little speech like
+this. It begins with a base appeal to the cupidity of his countrymen,
+the Benjamites, among whom he was probably in the habit of distributing
+the possessions of his enemies, as, for instance, the Gibeonites, who
+dwelt near him, and whom he slew, contrary to the covenant made with
+them by Joshua (2 Sam. xxi. 2). It accuses his people of having
+conspired against him, because they had not spoken to him of the
+friendship of his son with David, although that fact must have been
+notorious. It accuses the noble Jonathan of having stirred up David
+against Saul, while neither Jonathan nor David had ever lifted a little
+finger against him, and both the one and the other might have been
+trusted to serve him with unflinching fidelity if he had only given them
+a fair chance. It indicates that nothing would be more agreeable to Saul
+than any information about David or those connected with him that would
+give him an excuse for some deed of overwhelming vengeance. Did ever man
+draw his own portrait in viler colours than Saul in this speech?
+
+There was one bosom--let us hope only one--in which it awoke a response.
+It was that of Doeg the Edomite. He told the story of what he had seen
+at Nob, adding thereto the unfounded statement that Ahimelech had
+inquired of the Lord for David. Ahimelech and the whole college of
+priests were accordingly sent for, and they came. The charge brought
+against him was a very offensive one; in so far, it was a statement of
+facts, but of facts placed in an odious light, of facts coloured with a
+design which Ahimelech never entertained. Oh, how many an innocent man
+has suffered in this way! Even in courts of justice, by pleaders whose
+interest is on the other side, and sometimes by judges (like Jeffreys)
+steeped in hatred and prejudice, how often have acts that were quite
+innocent been put to the account of treason, or put to the account of
+malice, or cunningly forged into a chain, indicating a deliberate design
+to injure another! It can never be too earnestly insisted on that to be
+just to a man you must not merely ascertain the real facts of his case,
+but you must put the facts in their true light, and not colour them with
+prejudices of your own or with suppositions which the man repudiates.
+
+The conduct of Ahimelech was manly and straightforward, but indiscreet.
+He admitted the facts, with the exception of the statement that he had
+inquired of the Lord for David. He vindicated right manfully the
+faithful, noble services of David, services that ought to have excluded
+the very idea of treason or conspiracy. He protested that he knew
+nothing of any ground the king had against David, or of any cause that
+could have led him to believe that in helping him he was offending Saul.
+But just because Ahimelech's defence was so true and so complete, it was
+most offensive to Saul. What is there a despot likes worse to hear than
+that he is entirely in the wrong? What words irritate him so much as
+those which prove the entire innocence of some one with whom he is
+angry? Saul was angry both with David and with Ahimelech. Ahimelech had
+the great misfortune to prove to him that in both cases there was no
+shadow of ground for his anger. In proportion as Saul's reason should
+have been satisfied, his temper was excited. What an uncontrollable
+condition that temper must have been in when the death of Ahimelech was
+decreed, and all his father's house! We do not wonder that no one could
+be found in his bodyguard to execute the order. Did this not stagger and
+sober the king? Far from it. His fit of rage was so hot and imperious
+that he would not be baulked. Turning to Doeg, he commanded him to fall
+on the priests. And this vile man had the brutality to execute the
+order, and to plunge his sword into the heart of fourscore and five
+unarmed persons that wore the garments which even in heathen nations
+usually secured protection and safety. And as if it were not enough to
+kill the men, their city, Nob, was utterly destroyed. Men and women,
+children and sucklings, oxen and asses and sheep--a thorough massacre
+was made of them all. Had Nob been a city of warriors that had resisted
+the king's armies with haughty insolence, harassed them by sorties,
+entrapped them by stratagems, and exasperated them by hideous cruelty to
+their prisoners, but at last been overpowered, it could not have had a
+more terrible doom. And had Saul never committed any other crime, this
+would have been enough to separate him from the Lord for ever, and to
+bring down on him the horrors of the night at Endor and of the day that
+followed on Mount Gilboa.
+
+This cruel and sacrilegious murder must have told against Saul and his
+cause with prodigious effect. There could not have been a single priest
+or Levite throughout the kingdom whose blood would not boil at the news
+of the massacre, and whose sympathies would not be enlisted, more or
+less, on behalf of David, now openly proclaimed by Saul as his rival,
+and probably known to have been anointed by Samuel as his successor. Not
+only the priests and Levites, but every rightminded man throughout the
+land would share in this feeling, and many a prayer would be offered for
+David that God would protect him, and spare him to be a blessing to his
+country. The very presence in his camp of Abiathar, the son of
+Ahimelech, who escaped the massacre, with his ephod,--an official means
+of consulting God in all cases of difficulty,--would be a visible proof
+to his followers and to the community at large, that God was on his
+side. And when the solemn rites of the national worship were performed
+in his camp, and when, at each turn of public affairs, the high priest
+was seen in communication with Jehovah, the feeling could not fail to
+gain strength that David's cause was the cause of God, and the cause of
+the country, and that, in due time, his patient sufferings and his noble
+services would be crowned with the due reward.
+
+But if the news of the massacre would tend on the whole to improve
+David's position with the people, it must have occasioned a terrible
+pang to David himself. There was, indeed, one point of view in which
+something of the kind was to be looked for. Long ago, it had been
+foretold to Eli, when he tolerated so calmly the scandalous wickedness
+of his sons, "Behold, the days come that I will cut off thine arm, and
+the arm of thy father's house, but there shall not be an old man in
+thine house. And thou shalt see an enemy in My habitation, in all the
+wealth which God shall give Israel: and there shall not be an old man in
+thy house for ever." Ahimelech was a grandson of Eli, and the other
+massacred priests were probably of Eli's blood. Here, then, at last, was
+the fulfilment of the sentence announced to Eli; doomed as his house had
+been, their subsistence for years back was of the nature of a respite;
+and here, at length, was the catastrophe that had been so distinctly
+foretold.
+
+That consideration, however, would not be much, if any, consolation to
+David. If the falsehood which he had told to Ahimelech was really
+dictated by a desire to save the high priest from conscious implication
+with his affairs--with the condition of one who was now an outlaw and a
+fugitive, it had failed most terribly of the desired effect. The issue
+of the lie only served to place David's duplicity in a more odious
+light. There is one thing in David, when he received the information,
+that we cannot but admire--his readiness to take to himself his full
+share of blame. "I have occasioned the death of all thy father's house."
+And more than that, he did not even protest that it was impossible to
+have foreseen what was going to happen. For at the very time when he was
+practising the falsehood on Ahimelech, he owns that he had a
+presentiment of mischief to follow, "I knew it that day, when Doeg the
+Edomite was there, that he would surely tell Saul." Nor did he excuse
+himself on the ground that the massacre was the fulfilment of the
+longstanding sentence on Eli's house. He knew well that that
+circumstance in no degree lessened his own guilt, or the guilt of Doeg
+and Saul. Though God may use men's wicked passions to bring about His
+purposes, that in no degree lessens the guilt of these passions. It
+seems as if David never could have forgiven himself his share in this
+dreadful business. And what a warning this conveys to us! Are you not
+sometimes tempted to think that sin to you is not a very serious matter,
+because you will get forgiveness for it, the atoning work of the Saviour
+will cleanse you from its guilt? Be it so; but what if your sin has
+involved others, and if no atoning blood has been sprinkled on them?
+What of the youth whom your careless example first led to drink, and who
+died a miserable drunkard? What of the clerk whom you instructed to tell
+a lie? What of the companion of your sensuality whom you drove nearer to
+hell? Alas, alas! sin is like a network, the ramifications of which go
+out on the right hand and on the left, and when we break God's law, we
+cannot tell what the consequences to others may be! And how can we be
+ever comforted if we have been the occasion of ruin to any? It seems as
+if the burden of that feeling could never be borne; as if the only way
+of escape were, to be put out of existence altogether!
+
+The superscription of the fifty-second Psalm bears--"Maschil of David;
+when Doeg the Edomite came and told Saul, David is come to the house of
+Ahimelech." There is not much in this title to recommend it, as the
+information that was given by Doeg to Saul is not stated accurately. We
+might have expected, too, that if Doeg was alone in the Psalmist's eye,
+the atrocious slaughter of the priests would have had a share of
+reprobation, as well as the sharp, calumnious, mischievous tongue which
+is the chief object of denunciation. And though Doeg, as the chief of
+Saul's bondmen, might be a rich man, that position would hardly have
+entitled him to be called a mighty man, nor to assume the swaggering
+tone of independence here ascribed to him. Whoever was really the object
+of denunciation in this psalm, seems however to have belonged to the
+same class with Doeg, in respect of his wicked tongue and love of
+mischief. It is indeed a wretched character that is delineated: the
+Psalmist's enemy is at once mischievous and mighty; and not only is he
+mischievous, but he boasts himself in it. He is shameless and without
+conscience, bent on doing all the evil that he can. Let him only have a
+chance of bringing a railing accusation against God's servants, and he
+does it with delight. But his conduct is senseless as it is wicked. God
+is unchangeably good, and His goodness is a sure defence to His servants
+against all the calumnious devices of the greatest and strongest of men.
+It is the tongue of this evil man that is his instrument of mischief. It
+is utterly unscrupulous, sharp as a razor, cunning, devouring. A liar is
+a serious enemy, one who is utterly unprincipled, clever withal, and who
+trains himself with great skill to do mischief with his tongue. It is
+painful to be at the mercy of a calumniator who does not launch against
+you a clumsy and incredible calumny, but one that has an element of
+probability in it, only fearfully distorted. Especially when the
+calumniator is one that _deviseth_ mischief, who loves evil more than
+good, to whom truth is too tame to be cared for, who delights in
+falsehood because it is more piquant, more exciting. To those who have
+learned to regard it as the great business of life to spread light,
+order, peace, and joy, such men appear to be monsters, and indeed they
+are; but it is a painful experience to lie at their mercy.
+
+To this class belonged Doeg, a monster in human form, to whom it was no
+distress, but apparently a congenial employment, to murder in cold blood
+a very hecatomb of men consecrated to the service of God. No doubt it
+would appal David to think that such a man was now leagued with Saul as
+his bitter and implacable enemy. But his faith saw him in the same
+prostrate position in which his faith had seen Goliath. Men cannot defy
+God in vain. Men dare not defy that truth and that mercy which are
+attributes of God. "God shall likewise destroy thee for ever: He shall
+take thee away, and pluck thee out of thy dwelling-place, and root thee
+out of the land of the living. The righteous also shall see, and fear,
+and shall laugh at him."
+
+What became of Doeg we do not know. The historian does not introduce his
+name again. Before David came to power, he had probably received his
+doom. Had he still survived, we should have been likely again to fall in
+with his name. The Jews have a tradition that he was Saul's
+armour-bearer at the battle of Gilboa, and that the sword by which he
+and his master fell, was no other than that which had slain the priests
+of the Lord. As for the truth of this we cannot say. But even supposing
+that no special judgment befell him, we cannot fancy him as other than a
+most miserable man. With such a heart and such a tongue, with the load
+of a guilty life lying heavy on his soul, and that life crowned by such
+an infamous proceeding as the massacre of the priests, we cannot think
+of him as one who enjoyed life, but as a man of surly and gloomy nature,
+to whom life grew darker and darker, till it was extinguished in some
+miserable ending. In contrast with such a career, how bright and how
+much to be desired was David's anticipated future:--"I am like a green
+olive-tree in the house of my God: I trust in the mercy of God for ever
+and ever. I will praise Thy name for ever, because Thou hast done it:
+and I will wait on Thy name, for it is good before Thy saints."
+
+"Many sorrows shall be to the wicked; but he that trusteth in the Lord,
+mercy shall compass him about."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+_DAVID AT KEILAH, ZIPH, AND MAON._
+
+1 SAMUEL xxiii.
+
+
+The period of David's life shortly sketched in this chapter, must have
+been full of trying and exciting events. If we knew all the details,
+they would probably be full of romantic interest; many a tale of
+privation, disease, discomfort, on the one hand, and of active conflicts
+and hairbreadth escapes on the other. The district which he frequented
+was a mountainous tract, bordering on the west coast of the Dead Sea,
+and lying exposed more or less to the invasions of the neighbouring
+nations. In the immediate neighbourhood of Ziph, Maon, and Carmel, the
+country--a fine upland plain--is remarkably rich and fertile; but
+between these places and the Dead Sea it changes to a barren wilderness;
+the rocky valleys that run down to the margin of the sea, parched by the
+heat and drought, produce only a dry stunted grass. Innumerable caves
+are everywhere to be seen, still affording shelter to outlaws and
+robbers. But at Engedi (now Ain-Jidy, "the fountain of the goat"), the
+last place mentioned in this chapter, the traveller finds a little plain
+on the shore of the Dead Sea, where the soil is remarkably rich; a
+delicious fountain fertilizes it; shut in between walls of rock, both
+its climate and its products are like those of the tropics; it only
+wants cultivation to render it a most prolific spot.
+
+By what means did David obtain sustenance for himself and his large
+troop in these sequestered regions? Bayle, in the article in his famous
+Dictionary on "David,"--an article which gave the cue to much that has
+been said and written against him since,--speaks of them as a troop of
+robbers, and compares them to the associates of Catiline, and even Dean
+Stanley calls them "freebooters." Both expressions are obviously
+unwarranted. The only class of persons whom David and his troop regarded
+as enemies were the open enemies of his country,--that is, either
+persons who lived by plunder, or the tribes on whom Saul, equally with
+himself, would have made war. That David regarded himself as entitled to
+attack and pillage the Hebrew settlers in his own tribe of Judah is
+utterly inconsistent with all that we know both of his character and of
+his history. If David had a weakness, it lay in his extraordinary
+partiality for his own people, contrasted with his hard and even harsh
+feelings towards the nations that so often annoyed them. Nothing was too
+good for a Hebrew, nothing too severe for an alien. In after life, we
+see how his heart was torn to its very centre by the judgment that fell
+upon his people after his offence in numbering the people (2 Sam. xxiv.
+17); while the record of his severity to the Ammonites cannot be read
+without a shudder (2 Sam. xii. 31). Besides, in this very narrative, in
+the account of his collision with Nabal (1 Sam. xxv. 7), we find David
+putting in the very forefront of his message to the churl the fact that
+all the time he and his troop were in Carmel the shepherds of Nabal
+sustained no hurt, and his flocks no diminution. Instead of fleecing
+his own countrymen, he sent them presents when he was more successful
+than usual against their common foes (1 Sam. xxx. 26). Unquestionably
+therefore such terms as "robbers" and "freebooters" are quite
+undeserved.
+
+One chief source of support would obviously be the chase--the wild
+animals that roamed among these mountains, the wild goat and the coney,
+the pigeon and the partridge, and other creatures whose flesh was clean.
+Possibly, patches of soil, like the oasis at Engedi, would be
+cultivated, and a scanty return obtained from the labour. A third
+employment would be that of guarding the flocks of the neighbouring
+shepherds both from bears, wolves, and lions, and from the attacks of
+plundering bands, for which service some acknowledgment was certainly
+due. At the best, it was obviously a most uncomfortable mode of life,
+making not a little rough work very necessary; an utter contrast to the
+peaceful early days of Bethlehem, and rendering it infinitely more
+difficult to sing, "The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want."
+
+Acting as guardian to the shepherds in the neighbourhood, and being the
+avowed foe of all the Arab tribes who were continually making forays
+from their desert haunts on the land of Judah, David was in the very
+midst of enemies. Hence probably the allusions in some of the psalms.
+"Consider mine enemies, for they are many, and they hate me with cruel
+hatred." "Mine enemies would daily swallow me up, for there be many that
+fight against me, O Thou Most High." "My soul is among lions, and I lie
+even among them that are set on fire, even the sons of men whose teeth
+are spears and arrows and their tongue a sharp sword." Could we know all
+his trials and difficulties, we should be amazed at his tranquillity.
+One morning, an outpost brings him word that Saul is marching against
+him. He hastily arranges a retreat, and he and his men clamber over the
+mountains, perhaps under a burning sun, and reach their halting-place at
+night, exhausted with thirst, hunger, and fatigue. Scarcely have they
+lain down, when an alarm is given that a body of Bedouins are plundering
+the neighbouring sheepfolds. Forgetful of their fatigues, they rush to
+their arms, pursue the invaders, and rescue the prey. Next morning,
+perhaps, the very men whose flock he had saved, refuse to make him any
+acknowledgment. Murmurs rise from his hungry followers, and a sort of
+mutiny is threatened if he will not allow them to help themselves. To
+crown all, he learns by-and-bye, that the people whom he has delivered
+have turned traitors and are about to give him up to Saul. Wonderful was
+the faith that could rise above such troubles, and say, "Mine eyes are
+ever toward the Lord, for He shall pluck my feet out of the net."
+
+In illustration of these remarks let us note first what took place in
+connection with Keilah. This was a place of strength and importance not
+far from the land of the Philistines. A rumour reaches him that the
+Philistines are fighting against it and robbing the threshing-floors.
+The first thing he does, on hearing this rumour, is to inquire of God
+whether he should go and attack the Philistines. It is not a common
+case. The Philistines were a powerful enemy; probably their numbers were
+large, and it was a serious thing for David to provoke them when he had
+so many enemies besides. This was evidently the feeling of his
+followers. "Behold, we be afraid here in Judah: how much more then if we
+go to Keilah against the armies of the Philistines?" But David is in an
+admirable frame of mind, and his only anxiety is about knowing
+precisely the will of God. He inquires again, and when he gets his
+answer he does not hesitate an instant. It was about this time that
+Abiathar the son of Ahimelech came to him, bringing an ephod from Nob,
+perhaps the only sacred thing that in the hurry and horror of his flight
+he was able to carry away. And now, in his time of need, David finds the
+value of these things; he knows the privilege of fearing God, and of
+having God at his right hand. The fears of his men appear now to be
+overcome; he goes to Keilah, attacks the Philistines, smites them with a
+very great slaughter, brings away their cattle and rescues the people.
+It is a great deliverance, and David, with peace and plenty around him,
+and the benedictions of the men of Keilah, breathes freely and praises
+God.
+
+But his sense of ease and tranquillity was of short duration. Saul hears
+of what has taken place, and hears that David has taken up his quarters
+within the town of Keilah. He chuckles over the news with fiendish
+satisfaction, for Keilah is a fortified town; he will be able to shut up
+David within its walls and lay siege to the place, and when he has taken
+it, David will be at his mercy. But Saul, as usual, reckons without his
+host. David has received information that leads him to suspect that Saul
+is meditating mischief against him, and it looks as if he had come to
+Keilah only to fall into a trap,--to fall into the hands of Saul. But
+though a new danger has arisen, the old refuge still remains. "Bring
+hither the ephod," he says to Abiathar. And communication being again
+established with Heaven, two questions are asked: Will Saul come down to
+Keilah, to destroy the city for David's sake? Yes, he will. Will the men
+of Keilah whom David has saved from the Philistines distinguish
+themselves for their gratitude or for their treachery? They will become
+traitors; they will deliver David up to Saul. So there is nothing for it
+but for David to escape from Keilah. The worst of it is, he has no other
+place to go to. He goes forth from Keilah, as his father Abraham went
+forth from Ur of the Chaldees, not knowing whither. He and his followers
+went "whithersoever they could go." Treachery was a new foe, and when
+the treachery was on the part of those on whom he had just conferred a
+signal benefit, it was most discouraging; it seemed to indicate that he
+could never be safe.
+
+Flying from Keilah, he takes refuge in a part of the wilderness near
+Ziph. Being very rocky and mountainous, it affords good opportunities
+for hiding; but in proportion as it is advantageous for that purpose, it
+is unfavourable for getting sufficient means of subsistence. A wood in
+the neighbourhood of Ziph afforded the chance of both. In this wood
+David enjoys the extraordinary privilege of a meeting with Jonathan.
+What a contrast to his treatment from the men of Keilah! If, on turning
+his back on them, he was disposed to say, "All men are liars," the
+blessed generosity of Jonathan modifies the sentiment. In such
+circumstances, the cheering words of his friend and the warmth of his
+embrace must have come on David with infinite satisfaction. They were to
+him what the loving words of the dying thief were to the Saviour, amid
+the babel and blasphemy of Calvary. Who, indeed, does not see in the
+David of this time, persevering in his work under such fearful
+discouragements, under the treachery of men with hearts like Judas
+Iscariot, experiencing the worst treatment from some whom he had
+benefited already, and from others whom he was to benefit still
+more--who can fail to see the type of Christ, patiently enduring the
+cross at the hands and in the stead of the very men whom by His
+sufferings He was to save and bless? For David, like our blessed Lord,
+though not with equal steadfastness, drinks the cup which the Father has
+given him; he holds to the work which has been given him to do.
+
+The brief note of Jonathan's words to David in the wood is singularly
+beautiful and suggestive. "Jonathan, Saul's son, arose and went to David
+into the wood, and strengthened his hand in God. And he said unto him,
+Fear not; for the hand of Saul my father shall not find thee; and thou
+shalt be king over Israel, and I shall be next unto thee, and that also
+Saul my father knoweth." To begin with the last of Jonathan's words,
+what a lurid light they throw on the conduct of Saul! He was under no
+misapprehension as to the Divine destiny of David. He must have known
+therefore that in fighting against David, he was fighting against God.
+It looks unaccountable madness; yet what worse is it than a thousand
+other schemes in which, to carry out their ends, men have trampled on
+every moral precept, as if there were no God, no lawgiver, ruler, or
+judge above, no power in hell or heaven witnessing their actions to
+bring them all into judgment?
+
+In his words to David the faith and piety of Jonathan were as apparent
+as his friendship. He strengthened his hand in God. Simple but beautiful
+words! He put David's hand as it were into God's hand, in token that
+they were one, in token that the Almighty was pledged to keep and bless
+him, and that when he and his God were together, no weapon formed
+against him would ever prosper. Surely no act of friendship is so true
+friendship as this. To remind our Christian friends in their day of
+trouble of their relation to God, to encourage them to think of His
+interest in them and His promises to them; to drop in their ear some of
+His assurances--"I will never leave thee nor forsake thee,"--is surely
+the best of all ways to encourage the downcast, and send them on their
+way rejoicing.
+
+And what a hallowed word that was with which Jonathan began his
+exhortation--"Fear not." The "fear not's" of Scripture are a remarkable
+garland. All of them have their root in grace, not in nature. They all
+imply a firm exercise of faith. And Jonathan's "fear not" was no
+exception. If David had not been a man of faith, it would have sounded
+like hollow mockery. "The hand of Saul my father shall not find thee."
+Was not Saul with his well-equipped force, at that very moment, within a
+few miles of him, while he, with his half-starved followers was at his
+very wits' end, not knowing where to turn to next? "Thou shalt be king
+over Israel." Nay, friend, I should be well pleased, David might have
+said, if I were again feeding my father's flocks in Bethlehem, with all
+that has happened since then obliterated, reckoned as if it had never
+been. "And I shall be next unto thee." O Jonathan, how canst thou say
+that? Thou art the king's eldest son, the throne ought to be thine,
+there is none worthier of it; the very fact that thou canst say that to
+me shows what a kingly generosity is in thy bosom, and how well entitled
+thou art to reign over Israel! Yes, David, but does not the very fact of
+Jonathan using such words show that he is in closest fellowship with
+God? Only a man pervaded through and through by the Spirit of God could
+speak thus to the person who stands between him and what the world
+would call his reasonable ambition. In that spirit of Jonathan there is
+a goodness altogether Divine. Oh what a contrast to his father, to Saul!
+What a contrast to the ordinary spirit of jealousy, when some one is
+like to cut us out of a coveted prize! Some one at school is going to
+beat you at the competition. Some one in business is going to get the
+situation for which you are so eager. Some one is going to carry off the
+fair hand to which you so ardently aspire. Where, oh where, in such
+cases, is the spirit of Jonathan? Look at it, study it, admire it; and
+in its clear and serene light, see what a black and odious spirit
+jealousy is; and oh, seek that _you_, by the grace of God, may be, not a
+Saul, but a Jonathan!
+
+It would appear that Saul had left the neighbourhood of Ziph in despair
+of finding David, and had returned to Gibeah. But the distance was
+small--probably not more than a long day's journey. And after a time,
+Saul is recalled to Ziph by a message from the Ziphites. "Then came up
+the Ziphites to Saul to Gibeah, saying, Doth not David hide himself with
+us in strong holds in the woods, in the hill of Hachilah, which is on
+the south of Jeshimon? Now therefore, O king, come down according to all
+the desire of thy soul to come down; and our part shall be to deliver
+him into the king's hand." The men of Keilah had not gone the length of
+treachery, for when they were thinking of it, David escaped; but even if
+they had, they would have had something to say for themselves. Was it
+not better to give up David and let him suffer, than to keep him in
+their city, and let both him and them and their city share the fate, as
+they would have been sure to do, of Ahimelech and the city of Nob,--that
+is, be utterly destroyed? But the men of Ziph were in no such dilemma.
+Their treachery was simple meanness. They no doubt wished to ingratiate
+themselves with Saul. They had no faith either in David, or in God's
+promises regarding him. Disbelieving God, they acted inhumanly to man.
+They let Saul know his best opportunity, and when he came on the spot,
+apparently of a sudden, David and his troop were surrounded, and their
+escape seemed to be cut off. Here was a strange commentary on the strong
+assurance of Jonathan, "Saul my father shall not find thee." Has he not
+found me, only to too good purpose? But man's extremity is God's
+opportunity. When Saul seems ready to pounce on David, a messenger
+arrives, "Haste thee, and come, for the Philistines have invaded the
+land." The danger was imminent, and Saul could not afford to lose an
+hour. And thus, on the very eve of seizing the prey he had been hunting
+for years, he is compelled to let it go.
+
+It is edifying to observe all the different ways in which the Divine
+protection toward David had been shown, all the time that he had been
+exposed to the hostility of Saul. First of all, when Saul spoke to his
+servants and to Jonathan that they should kill David, Jonathan was
+raised up to take his side, and by his friendly counsels, arrested for
+the time the murderous purpose of Saul. Next, when Saul hurled a javelin
+at David, a rapid movement saved his life. The third time, he was let
+down through a window by his wife, in time to escape. The fourth time,
+the messengers that were sent to apprehend him were filled with the
+Spirit of God, and even Saul, determined to make up for their lack of
+service, underwent the same transformation. The fifth time, when he was
+in Keilah, he was supernaturally warned of the unkind treachery of the
+men of Keilah, and thus escaped the snare. And now, a sixth escape is
+effected, in the very article of death, so to speak, by a Philistine
+invasion. Thus was illustrated that wonderful diversity of plan that
+characterises the ways of God, that "variety in unity" which we may
+trace alike in the kingdom of nature, of providence, and of grace. A
+similar variety is seen in His deliverances of Israel. At one time the
+sea is divided, at another the sun stands still; Gideon delivers by
+lamps and pitchers, Shamgar by his ox-goad, Samson by the jawbone of an
+ass, Jephthah by his military talents, David by his sling and stone,
+Daniel by his skill in dreams, Esther by her beauty and power of
+fascination. To remember such things ought to give you confidence in
+times of perplexity and danger. If it be God's purpose to deliver you,
+He has thousands of unseen methods, to any one of which He may resort,
+when, to the eye of sense, there seems not the shadow of a hope. And one
+reason why He seems at times to doom His children to inevitable ruin, is
+that He may call their faith and their patience into higher exercise,
+and teach them more impressively the sublime lesson--"Stand still, and
+see the salvation of God."
+
+The fifty-fourth Psalm bears an inscription that would refer it to this
+occasion. There are some expressions in the psalm that hardly agree with
+this reference; but the general situation is quite in keeping with it.
+"Save me, O God," the Psalmist cries, "by Thy name, and judge me by Thy
+strength." The danger from which he needs to be saved comes from
+strangers that are risen up against him, and opposers that seek after
+his soul; persons "that have not set God before them." To be saved by
+God's _name_ is to be saved through attributes which are manifestly
+Divine; to be judged by God's _strength_, is to be vindicated, to be
+shown to be under God's favour and protection, by the manifest exercise
+of His power. The petitions are such as David might well have made after
+his conversation with Jonathan. The psalm is evidently the song of one
+whose hand had been "strengthened in God." Its great central truth is,
+"God is mine helper; the Lord is with them who (like Jonathan) uphold my
+soul." And there comes after that a happy exercise of the spirit of
+trust, enabling the Psalmist to say, "He hath delivered me out of all
+trouble." This result is wonderful and beautiful. How remarkable that in
+that wilderness of Judah, amid a life of hardship, exposure, and peril,
+with a powerful king thirsting for his blood, and using his every device
+to get hold of him, he should be able to say of God, "He hath delivered
+me out of all trouble." It is the faith that removes mountains: it is
+the faith that worked so wonderfully when the lad with the sling and
+stones went out so bravely against the giant. What wonders cannot faith
+perform when it gets clear of all the entanglements of carnal feeling,
+and stands, firm and erect, on the promise of God! How infinitely would
+such a faith relieve and sustain us in the common troubles and anxieties
+of life, and in deeper perplexities connected with the cause of God!
+Take this short clause as marking out the true quality and highest
+attainment of simple faith, and resolve that you will not rest in your
+own endeavours till your mind reaches the state of tranquillity which it
+describes so simply,--"He hath delivered me out of all trouble."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+_DAVID TWICE SPARES THE LIFE OF SAUL._
+
+1 SAMUEL xxiv., xxvi.
+
+
+The invasion of the Philistines had freed David from the fear of Saul
+for a time, but only for a time. He knew full well that when the king of
+Israel had once repelled that invasion he would return to prosecute the
+object on which his heart was so much set. For a while he took refuge
+among the rocks of Engedi, that beautiful spot of which we have already
+spoken, and which has been embalmed in Holy Writ, as suggesting a fair
+image of the Beloved One--"My beloved is unto me as a cluster of
+camphire in the vineyards of Engedi" (Song of Solomon i. 14). The
+mountains here and throughout the hill country of Judea are mostly of
+limestone formation, abounding, like all such rocks, in caverns of large
+size, in which lateral chambers run off at an angle from the main
+cavity, admitting of course little or no light, but such that a person
+inside, while himself unseen, may see what goes on at the entrance to
+the cave. In the dark sides of such a cave, David and his men lay
+concealed when Saul was observed by him to enter and lie down, probably
+unattended, to enjoy the mid-day sleep which the heat of the climate
+often demands. We cannot fail to remark the singular providence that
+concealed from Saul at this time the position of David. He had good
+information of his movements in general; the treacherous spirit which
+was so prevalent, greatly aided him in this; but on the present
+occasion, he was evidently in ignorance of his situation. If only he had
+known, how easy it would have been for him with his three thousand
+chosen men to blockade the cave, and starve David and his followers into
+surrender!
+
+The entrance of the king being noticed by David's men, they urged their
+master to avail himself of the opportunity of getting rid of him which
+was now so providentially and unexpectedly presented to him. We can
+hardly think of a stronger temptation to do so than that under which
+David now lay. In the first place, there was the prospect of getting rid
+of the weary life he was leading,--more like the life of a wild beast
+hunted by its enemies, than of a man eager to do good to his fellows,
+with a keen relish for the pleasures of home and an extraordinary
+delight in the services of God's house. Then there was the prospect of
+wearing the crown and wielding the sceptre of Israel,--the splendours of
+a royal palace, and its golden opportunities of doing good. Further,
+there was the voice of his followers urging him to the deed, putting on
+it a sacred character by ascribing to it a Divine permission and
+appointment. And still further, there was the suddenness and
+unexpectedness of the opportunity. Nothing is more critical than a
+sudden opportunity of indulging an ardent passion; with scarcely a
+moment for deliberation, one is apt to be hurried blindly along, and at
+once to commit the deed. With all his noble nature, Robert the Bruce
+could not refrain from plunging his dagger into the heart of the
+treacherous Comyn, even in the convent of the Minorite friars. The
+discipline of David's spirit must at this time have been admirable. Not
+only did he restrain himself, but he restrained his followers too. He
+would neither strike his heartless enemy, nor suffer another to strike
+him. On the first of the two occasions of his sparing him--recorded in
+the twenty-fourth chapter--he might naturally believe that his
+forbearance would turn Saul's heart and end the unjust quarrel. On the
+second occasion of the same sort--recorded in the twenty-sixth
+chapter--he could have had no hope of the kind. It was a pure sense of
+duty that restrained him. He acted in utter contempt of what was
+personal and selfish, and in deepest reverence for what was holy and
+Divine. How different from the common spirit of the world! Young people,
+who are so ready to keep up a sense of wrong, and wait an opportunity of
+paying back your schoolfellows, study this example of David. Ye grown
+men, who could not get such-a-one to vote for you, or to support your
+claim in your controversy, and who vowed that you would never rest till
+you had driven him from the place, how does your spirit compare with
+that of David? Ye statesmen, who have received an affront from some
+barbarous people, utterly ignorant of your ways, and who forthwith issue
+your orders for your ships of war to scatter destruction among their
+miserable villages, terrifying, killing, mutilating, no matter how many
+of the wretches that have no arms to meet you in fair fight--think of
+the forbearance of David. And think too of many passages in the New
+Testament that give the idea of another treatment and another species of
+victory:--"Therefore, if thine enemy hunger, feed him; if he thirst,
+give him drink; for in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on his
+head. Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good."
+
+The special consideration that held back the arm of David from killing
+Saul was that he was the Lord's anointed. He held the office of king by
+Divine appointment,--not merely as other kings may be regarded as
+holding it, but as God's lieutenant, called specially, and selected for
+the office. For David to remove him would be to interfere with the
+Divine prerogative. It would be so much the more inexcusable as God had
+many other ways of removing him, any one of which He might readily
+employ. "David said furthermore, As the Lord liveth, the Lord shall
+smite him; or his day shall come to die; or he shall descend into
+battle, and perish. The Lord forbid that I should stretch forth mine
+hand against the Lord's anointed."
+
+Let us briefly follow the narrative on each of the two occasions.
+
+First, when David saw Saul asleep at the entrance of the cave near
+Engedi, he crept towards him as he lay, and removed a loose piece of his
+garment. When Saul rose up and proceeded on his way, David boldly
+followed him, believing that after sparing the king's life he was safe
+from attack either from him or his people. His respectful salutation,
+drawing the king's attention, was followed by an act of profound
+obeisance. David then addressed Saul somewhat elaborately, his address
+being wholly directed to the point of disabusing the king's mind of the
+idea that he had any plot whatever against his life. His words were very
+respectful but at the same time bold. Taking advantage of the act of
+forbearance which had just occurred, he demanded of the king why he
+listened to men's words, saying, Behold, David seeketh thy hurt. He
+protested that for himself nothing would induce him to stretch forth his
+hand against the Lord's anointed. That very day, he had had the chance,
+but he had forborne. His people had urged him, but he would not comply.
+_There_ was the skirt of his garment which he had just cut off: it would
+have been as easy for him, when he did that, to plunge his sword into
+the heart of the king. Could there be a plainer proof that Saul was
+mistaken in supposing David to be actuated by murderous or other sinful
+feelings against him? And yet Saul hunted for his life to take it.
+Rising still higher, David appealed to the great Judge of all, and
+placed the quarrel in His hands. To vary the case, he quoted a proverb
+to the effect that only where there was wickedness in the heart could
+wickedness be found in the life. Then, with the easy play of a versatile
+mind, he put the case in a comical light: did it become the great king
+of Israel to bring his hosts after one so insignificant--"after a dead
+dog, after a flea"? Was ocean to be tossed into tempest "to waft a
+feather or to drown a straw"? Once more, and to sum up the whole case,
+he appealed solemnly to God, virtually invoking His blessing on whoever
+was innocent in this quarrel, and calling down His wrath and destruction
+on the party that was really guilty.
+
+The effect on Saul was prompt and striking. He was touched in his
+tenderest feelings by the singular generosity of his opponent. He broke
+down thoroughly, welcomed the dear voice of David, "lifted up his voice
+and wept." He confessed that he was wrong, that David had rewarded him
+good and he had rewarded David evil. David had given him that day a
+convincing proof of his integrity; though it seemed that the Lord had
+delivered him into his hand, he killed him not. He had reversed the
+principle on which men were accustomed to act when they came upon an
+enemy, and had him in their power. And all these acknowledgments of
+David's superior goodness Saul made, while knowing well and frankly
+owning that David should be the king, and that the kingdom should be
+established in his hand. One favour only Saul would beg of David in
+reference to that coming time--that he would not massacre his family, or
+destroy his name out of his father's house--a request which it was easy
+for David to comply with. Never would he dream of such a thing, however
+common it was in these Eastern kingdoms. David sware to Saul, and the
+two parted in peace.
+
+How glad David must have been that he acted as he did! Already his
+forbearance has had a full reward. It has drawn out the very best
+elements of Saul's soul; it has placed Saul in a light in which we can
+think of him with interest, and even admiration. How can this be the man
+that so meanly plotted for David's life when he sent him against the
+Philistines? that gave him his daughter to be his wife in order that he
+might have more opportunities to entangle him? that flung the murderous
+javelin at his head? that massacred the priests and destroyed their city
+simply because they had shown him kindness? Saul is indeed a riddle, all
+the more that this generous fit lasted but a very short time; and soon
+after, when the treacherous Ziphites undertook to betray David, Saul and
+his soldiers came again to the wilderness to destroy him.
+
+It has been thought by some, and with reason, that something more than
+the varying humour of Saul is necessary to account for his persistent
+efforts to kill David. And it is believed that a clue to this is
+supplied by expressions of which David made much use, and by certain
+references in the Psalms, which imply that to a great extent he was the
+victim of calumny, and of calumny of a very malignant and persistent
+kind. In the address on which we have commented David began by asking
+why Saul _listened to men's words_, saying, Behold, David seeketh thy
+life? And in the address recorded in the twenty-sixth chapter (ver. 19)
+David says very bitterly, "If they be the children of men that have
+stirred thee up against me, cursed be they before the Lord; for they
+have driven me out this day from abiding in the inheritance of the Lord,
+saying, Go, serve other gods." Turning to the seventh Psalm, we find in
+it a vehement and passionate appeal to God in connection with the bitter
+and murderous fury of an enemy, who is said in the superscription to
+have been Cush the Benjamite. The fury of that man against David was
+extraordinary. Deliver me, O Lord, "lest he tear my soul like a lion,
+rending it in pieces when there is none to deliver." It is plain that
+the form of calumny which this man indulged in was accusing David of
+"rewarding evil to him that was at peace with him," an accusation not
+only not true, but outrageously contrary to the truth, seeing he had
+"delivered him that without cause was his enemy." It is not unlikely
+therefore that at Saul's court David had an enemy who had the bitterest
+enmity to him, who never ceased to poison Saul's mind regarding him, who
+put facts in the most offensive light, and even after the first act of
+David's generosity to Saul not only continued, but continued more
+ferociously than ever to inflame Saul's mind, and urge him to get rid of
+this intolerable nuisance. What could have inspired Cush, or indeed any
+one, with such a hatred to David we cannot definitely say; much of it
+was due to that instinctive hatred of holy character which worldly men
+of strong will show in every age, and perhaps not a little to the
+apprehension that if David did ever come to the throne, many a wicked
+man, now fattening on the spoils of the kingdom through the favour of
+Saul, would be stript of his wealth and consigned to obscurity.
+
+It would seem, then, that had Saul been left alone he would have left
+David alone. It was the bitter and incessant plotting of David's enemies
+that stirred him up. Jealousy was only too active a feeling in his
+breast, and it was easy to work upon it, and fill him with the idea
+that, after all, David was a rebel and a traitor. These things David
+must have known; knowing them, he made allowance for them, and did not
+suffer his heart to become altogether cold to Saul. The kindly feelings
+which Saul expressed when he dismissed from his view all the calumnies
+with which he had been poisoned, and looked straight at David, made a
+deep impression on his rival, and the fruit of them appeared in that
+beautiful elegy on Saul and Jonathan, which must seem a piece of
+hypocrisy if the facts we have stated be not kept in view: "Saul and
+Jonathan were pleasant and lovely in their lives, and in their death
+they were not divided."
+
+In the second incident, recorded in the twenty-sixth chapter, when David
+again spared the life of Saul, not much more needs to be said. Some
+critics would hold it to be the same incident recorded by another hand
+in some earlier document consulted by the writer of 1 Samuel, containing
+certain variations such as might take place at the hand of a different
+historian. But let us observe the differences of the two chapters. (1)
+The scene is different; in the one case it is near Engedi, in the other
+in the wilderness, near the hill Hachilah, which is before Jeshimon.
+(2) The place where Saul was asleep is different; in the one case a
+cave; in the other case a camp, protected by a trench. (3) The trophy
+carried off by David was different; in the one case the skirt of his
+garment, in the other a spear and cruse of water. (4) The position of
+David when he made himself known was different; in the one case he went
+out of the cave and called after Saul; in the other he crossed a gully
+and spoke from the top of a crag. (5) His way of attracting attention
+was different; in the one case he spoke directly to Saul, in the other
+he rallied Abner, captain of the host, for failing to protect the person
+of the king. But we need not proceed further with this list of
+differences. Those we have adverted to are enough to repel the assertion
+that there were not two separate incidents of the same kind. And surely
+if the author was a mere compiler, using different documents, he might
+have known if the incidents were the same. If it be said that we cannot
+believe that two events so similar could have happened, that this is too
+improbable to be believed, we may answer by referring to similar cases
+in the Gospels, or even in common life. Suppose a historian of the
+American civil war to describe what took place at Bull Run. First he
+gives an account of a battle there between the northern and southern
+armies, some incidents of which he describes. By-and-bye he again speaks
+of a battle there, but the incidents he gives are quite different. Our
+modern critics would say it was all one event, but that the historian,
+having consulted two accounts, had clumsily written as if there had been
+two battles. We know that this fancy of criticism is baseless. In the
+American civil war there were two battles of Bull Run between the same
+contending parties at different times. So we may safely believe that
+there were two instances of David's forbearance to Saul, one in the
+neighbourhood of Engedi, the other in the neighbourhood of Ziph.
+
+And all that needs to be said further respecting the second act of
+forbearance by David is that it shines forth all the brighter because it
+was the second, and because it happened so soon after the other. We may
+see that David did not put much trust in Saul's profession the first
+time, for he did not disband his troop, but remained in the wilderness
+as before. It is quite possible that this displeased Saul. It is also
+possible that that inveterate false accuser of David from whom he
+suffered so much would make a great deal of this to Saul, and would
+represent to him strongly that if David really was the innocent man he
+claimed to be, after receiving the assurance he got from him he would
+have sent his followers to their homes, and returned in peace to his
+own. That he did nothing of the kind may have exasperated Saul, and
+induced him to change his policy, and again take steps to secure David,
+as before. Substantially, David's remonstrance with Saul on this second
+occasion was the same as on the first. But at this time he gave proof of
+a power of sarcasm which he had not shown before. He rated Abner on the
+looseness of the watch he kept of his royal master, and adjudged him
+worthy of death for not making it impossible for any one to come
+unobserved so near the king, and have him so completely in his power.
+The apology of Saul was substantially the same as before; but how could
+it have been different? The acknowledgment of what was to happen to
+David was hardly so ample as on the last occasion. David doubtless
+parted from Saul with the old conviction that kindness was not wanting
+in his personal feelings, but that the evil influences that were around
+him, and the fits of disorder to which his mind was subject, might
+change his spirit in a single hour from that of generous benediction to
+that of implacable jealousy.
+
+But now to draw to a close. We have adverted to that high reverence for
+God which was the means of restraining David from lifting up his hand
+against Saul, because he was the Lord's anointed. Let us now notice more
+particularly what an admirable spirit of self-restraint and patience
+David showed in being willing to bear all the risk and pain of a most
+distressing position, until it should please God to bring to him the
+hour of deliverance. The grace we specially commend is that of waiting
+for God's time. Alas! into how many sins, and even crimes, have men been
+betrayed through unwillingness to wait for God's time! A young man
+embarks in the pursuits of commerce; but the gains to be derived from
+ordinary business come in far too slowly for him; he makes haste to be
+rich, engages in gigantic speculation, plunges into frightful gambling,
+and in a few years brings ruin on himself and all connected with him.
+How many sharp and unhandsome transactions continually occur just
+because men are impatient, and wish to hurry on some consummation which
+their hearts are set on! Nay, have not murders often taken place just to
+hasten the removal of some who occupied places that others were eager to
+fill? And how often are evil things done by those who will not wait for
+the sanction of honourable marriage?
+
+But even where no act of crime has been committed, impatience of God's
+time may give rise to many an evil feeling that does not go beyond one's
+own breast. Many a son who will succeed to an inheritance on the death
+of his father, or of some other relative, is tempted to wish, more or
+less consciously, for an event the last to be desired by a filial heart.
+You may say, it is human nature; how could any one help it? The example
+of David shows how one may help it. The heart that is profoundly
+impressed with the excellence of the Divine will, and the duty and
+privilege of loyally accepting all His arrangements, can never desire to
+anticipate that will in any matter, great or small. For how can any good
+come in the end from forcing forward arrangements out of the Divine
+order? If, for the moment, this brings any advantage in one direction,
+it is sure to be followed by far greater evils in another. Do we all
+realize the full import of our prayer when we say, "Thy will be done on
+earth as it is in heaven"? Of one thing you may be very sure, there is
+no impatience in heaven for a speedier fulfilment of desirable events
+than the will of God has ordained. There is no desire to force on the
+wheels of Providence if they do not seem to be moving fast enough. So
+let it be with us. Let us fix it as a first principle in our minds, as
+an immovable rule of our lives, that as God knows best how to order His
+providence, so any interference with Him is rash and perilous, and
+wicked too; and with reference both to events which are not lawfully in
+our hands, and the time at which they are to happen, let us realize it
+as alike our duty and our interest to say to God, in the spirit of full
+and unreserved trust--"Not our will, but Thine be done."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+_DAVID AND NABAL._
+
+1 SAMUEL xxv.
+
+
+We should be forming far too low an estimate of the character of the
+people of Israel if we did not believe that they were very profoundly
+moved by the death of Samuel. Even admitting that but a small proportion
+of them are likely to have been in warm sympathy with his ardent
+godliness, he was too remarkable a man, and he had been too conspicuous
+a figure in the history of the nation, not to be greatly missed, and
+much spoken of and thought of, when he passed away.
+
+Cast in the same mould with their great leader and legislator Moses, he
+exerted an influence on the nation only second to that which stood
+connected with the prophet of the Exodus. He had not been associated
+with such stirring events in their history as Moses; neither had it been
+his function to reveal to them the will of God, either so
+systematically, or so comprehensively, or so supernaturally; but he was
+marked by the same great spirituality, the same intense reverence for
+the God of Israel, the same profound belief in the reality of the
+covenant between Israel and God, and the same conviction of the
+inseparable connection between a pure worship and flowing prosperity on
+the one hand, and idolatrous defection and national calamity on the
+other.
+
+No man except Moses had ever done more to rivet this truth on the minds
+and hearts of the people. It was the lifelong aim and effort of Samuel
+to show that it made the greatest difference to them in every way how
+they acted toward God, in the way of worship, trust, and obedience. He
+made incessant war on that cold worldly spirit, so natural to us all,
+that leaves God out of account as a force in our lives, and strives to
+advance our interests simply by making the most of the conditions of
+material prosperity.
+
+No doubt with many minds the name of Samuel would be associated with a
+severity and a spirituality and a want of worldliness that were
+repulsive to them, as indicating one who carried the matter, to use a
+common phrase, too far. But at Samuel's death even these men might be
+visited with a somewhat remorseful conviction that, if Samuel had gone
+too far, they had not gone half far enough. There might come from the
+retrospect of his career a wholesome rebuke to their worldliness and
+neglect of God; for surely, they would feel, if there be a God, we ought
+to worship Him, and it cannot be well for us to neglect Him altogether.
+
+On the other hand, the career of Samuel would be recalled with intense
+admiration and gratitude by all the more earnest of the people. What an
+impressive witness for all that was good and holy had they not had among
+them! What a living temple, what a Divine epistle, written not in tables
+of stone, but in fleshy tables of the heart! What glory and honour had
+not that man's life been to the nation,--so uniform, so consistent, so
+high in tone! What a reproof it carried to low and selfish living, what
+a splendid example it afforded to old and young of the true way and end
+of life, and what a blessed impulse it was fitted to give them in the
+same direction, showing so clearly "what is good, and what doth the Lord
+require of thee but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly
+with thy God."
+
+By a remarkable connection, though perhaps not by design, two names are
+brought together in this chapter representing very opposite phases of
+human character--Samuel and Nabal. In Samuel we have the high-minded
+servant of God, trained from infancy to smother his own will and pay
+unbounded regard to the will of his Father in heaven; in Nabal we see
+the votary of the god of this world, enslaved to his worldly lusts,
+grumbling and growling when he is compelled to submit to the will of
+God. Samuel is the picture of the serene and holy believer, enjoying
+unseen fellowship with God, and finding in that fellowship a blessed
+balm for the griefs and trials of a wounded spirit; Nabal is the picture
+of the rich but wretched worldling who cannot even enjoy the bounties of
+his lot, and is thrown into such a panic by the mere dread of losing
+them that he actually sinks into the grave. Under the one picture we
+would place the words of the Apostle in the third chapter of
+Philippians--"Whose god is their belly, whose glory is in their shame,
+who mind earthly things;" under the other the immediately following
+words, "Our conversation is in heaven." Such were the two men to whom
+the summons to appear before God was sent about the same time; the one
+ripe for glory, the other meet for destruction; the one removed to
+Abraham's bosom, the other to the pit of woe; each to the master whom he
+served, and each to the element in which he had lived. Look on this
+picture and on that, and say which you would be like. And as you look
+remember how true it is that as men sow so do they reap. The one sowed
+to the flesh, and of the flesh he reaped corruption; the other sowed to
+the Spirit, and of the Spirit he reaped life everlasting. The continuity
+of men's lives in the world to come gives an awful solemnity to that
+portion of their lives which they spend on earth:--"He that is unjust,
+let him be unjust still: and he that is filthy, let him be filthy still:
+and he that is righteous, let him be righteous still: and he that is
+holy, let him be holy still."
+
+There is another lesson to be gathered from a matter of external order
+before we proceed to the particulars of the narrative. This chapter,
+recording David's collision with Nabal, and showing us how David lost
+his temper, and became hot and impetuous and impatient in consequence of
+Nabal's treatment, comes in between the narrative of his two great
+victories over the spirit of revenge and impatience. It gives us a very
+emphatic lesson--how the servant of God may conquer in a great fight and
+yet be beaten in a small. The history of all spiritual warfare is full
+of such cases. In the presence of a great enemy, the utmost vigilance is
+maintained; every effort is strained, every stimulus is applied. In the
+presence of a small foe, the spirit of confidence, the sense of
+security, is liable to leave every avenue unguarded, and to pave the way
+for signal defeat. When I am confronted with a great trial, I rally all
+my resources to bear it, I realize the presence of God, I say, "Thou God
+seest me"; but when it is a little trial, I am apt to meet it unarmed
+and unguarded, and I experience a humiliating fall. Thus it is that men
+who have in them the spirit of martyrs, and who would brave a dungeon
+or death itself rather than renounce a testimony or falter in a duty,
+often suffer defeat under the most ordinary temptations of everyday
+life,--they lose their temper on the most trifling provocations; almost
+without a figure, they are "crushed before the moth."
+
+Whether the death of Samuel brought such a truce to David as to allow
+him to join in the great national gathering at his funeral we do not
+know with certainty; but immediately after we find him in a region
+called "the wilderness of Paran," in the neighbourhood of the Judean
+Carmel. It was here that Nabal dwelt. This Carmel is not to be
+confounded with the famous promontory of that name in the tribe of
+Asher, where Elijah and the priests of Baal afterwards had their
+celebrated contest; it was a hill in the tribe of Judah, in the
+neighbourhood of the place where David had his encampment. A descendant
+of the lion-hearted Judah and of the courageous Caleb, this Nabal came
+of a noble stock; but cursed with a narrow heart, a senseless head, and
+a grovelling nature, he fell as far below average humanity as his great
+ancestors had risen above it. With all his wealth and family connection,
+he appears to us now as poor a creature as ever lived,--a sort of
+"golden beast," as was said of the Emperor Caligula; and we cannot think
+of him without reflecting how little true glory or greatness mere wealth
+or worldly position confers,--how infinitely more worthy of honour are
+the sterling qualities of a generous Christian heart. It is plain that
+in an equitable point of view Nabal owed much to David; but what he owed
+could not be enforced by an action at law, and Nabal was one of those
+poor creatures that acknowledge no other obligation.
+
+The studied courtesy and modesty with which David preferred his claim is
+interesting; it could not but be against the grain to say anything on
+the subject; if Nabal had not had his "understanding blinded" he would
+have spared him this pain; the generous heart is ever thinking of the
+services that others are rendering, and will never subject modesty to
+the pain of urging its own. "Ye shall greet him in my name," said David
+to his messengers; "and thus shall ye say to him that liveth in
+prosperity, Peace be both to thee, and peace to thy house, and peace be
+to all that thou hast" No envying of his prosperity--no grudging to him
+his abundance; but only the Christian wish that he might have God's
+blessing with it, and that it might all turn to good. It was the time of
+sheep-shearing, when the flocks were probably counted and the increase
+over last year ascertained; and by a fine old custom it was commonly the
+season of liberality and kindness. A time of increase should always be
+so; it is the time for helping poor relations (a duty often strangely
+overlooked), for acknowledging ancient kindnesses, for relieving
+distress, and for devising liberal things for the Church of Christ.
+David gently reminded Nabal that he had come at this good time; then he
+hinted at the services which he and his followers had done him; but to
+show that he did not wish to press hard on him, he merely asked him to
+give what might come to his hand; though, as the anointed king of
+Israel, he might have assumed a more commanding title, he asked him to
+give it to "thy son, David." So modest, gentle, and affectionate an
+application, savouring so little of the persecuted, distracted outlaw,
+savouring so much of the mild self-possessed Christian
+gentleman,--deserved treatment very different from what it received.
+The detestable niggardliness of Nabal's heart would not suffer him to
+part with anything which he could find an excuse for retaining. But
+greed so excessive, even in its own eyes, must find some cloak to cover
+it; and one of the most common and most congenial to flinty hearts
+is--the unworthiness of the applicant. The miser is not content in
+simply refusing an application for the poor, he must add some abusive
+charge to conceal his covetousness--they are lazy, improvident,
+intemperate; or if it be a Christian object he is asked to
+support,--these unreasonable people are always asking. Any excuse rather
+than tell the naked truth, "We worship our money; and when we spend it,
+we spend it on ourselves." Such was Nabal. "Who is David? and who is the
+son of Jesse? There be many servants now-a-days that break away every
+man from his master. Shall I then take _my_ bread, and _my_ water, and
+_my_ flesh that I have killed for _my_ shearers, and give it unto men,
+that I know not whence they be?"
+
+As often happens, excessive selfishness overreached itself. Insult added
+to injury was more than David chose to bear; for once, he lost
+self-command, and was borne along by impetuous passion. Meek men, when
+once their temper is roused, usually go to great extremes. And if
+David's purpose had not been providentially arrested, Nabal and all that
+belonged to him would have been swept before morning to destruction.
+
+With the quickness and instinctive certainty of a clever woman's
+judgment, Abigail, Nabal's wife, saw at once how things were going. With
+more than the calmness and self-possession of many a clever woman, she
+arranged and despatched the remedy almost instantaneously after the
+infliction of the wrong. How so superior a woman could have got yoked
+to so worthless a man we can scarcely conjecture, unless on the vulgar
+and too common supposition that the churl's wealth and family had
+something to do with the match. No doubt she had had her punishment. But
+luxury had not impaired the energy of her spirit, and wealth had not
+destroyed the regularity of her habits. Her promptness and her prudence
+all must admire, her commissariat skill was wonderful in its way; and
+the exquisite tact and cleverness with which she showed and checked the
+intended crime of David--all the while seeming to pay him a
+compliment--could not have been surpassed. "Now therefore, my lord, as
+the Lord liveth, and as thy soul liveth, seeing the Lord _hath
+withholden thee_ from coming to shed blood, and from avenging thyself
+with thine own hand, now let thine enemies and they that seek evil to my
+lord be as Nabal." But the most remarkable of all her qualities is her
+faith; it reminds us of the faith of Rahab of Jericho, or of the faith
+of Jonathan; she had the firm persuasion that David was owned of God,
+that he was to be the king of Israel, and that all the devices men might
+use against him would fail; and she addressed him--poor outlaw though he
+was--as one of whose elevation to sovereign power, after what God had
+spoken, there could not be the shadow of a doubt. Her liberality, too,
+was very great. And there was a truthful, honest tone about her. Perhaps
+she spoke even too plainly of her husband, but the occasion admitted of
+no sort of apology for him; there was no deceit about her, and as little
+flattery. Her words had a wholesome honest air, and some of her
+expressions were singularly happy. When she spoke of the soul of my lord
+as "bound in the bundle of life with the Lord thy God," she seemed to
+anticipate the very language in which the New Testament describes the
+union of Christ and His people, "Your life is hid with Christ in God."
+She had a clear conception of the "sure mercies of David," certainly in
+the literal, and we may hope also in the spiritual sense.
+
+The revengeful purpose and rash vow of David were not the result of
+deliberate consideration; they were formed under the influence of
+excitement,--most unlike the solemn and prayerful manner in which the
+expedition at Keilah had been undertaken. God unacknowledged had left
+David to misdirected paths. But if we blame David, as we must, for his
+heedless passion, we must not less admire the readiness with which he
+listens to the reasonable and pious counsel of Abigail. With the ready
+instinct of a gracious heart he recognises the hand of God in Abigail's
+coming,--this mercy had a heavenly origin; and cordially praises Him for
+His restraining providence and restraining grace. He candidly admits
+that he had formed a very sinful purpose; but he frankly abandons it,
+accepts her offering, and sends her away in peace. "Blessed be the Lord
+God of Israel, which sent thee this day to me; and blessed be thy
+advice, and blessed be thou which hast kept me this day from coming to
+shed blood, and from avenging myself with mine own hand." It is a mark
+of sincere and genuine godliness to be not less thankful for being kept
+from sinning than from being rescued from suffering.
+
+And it was not long before David had convincing proof that it is best to
+leave vengeance in the hands of God. "It came to pass, about ten days
+after, that the Lord smote Nabal that he died." Having abandoned himself
+at his feast to the beastliest sensuality, his nervous system underwent
+a depression corresponding to the excitement that had accompanied the
+debauch. In this miserable state of collapse and weakness, the news of
+what had happened gave him a fright from which he never recovered. A few
+days of misery, and this wretched man went to his own place, there to
+join the great crowd of selfish and godless men who said to God, "Depart
+from us," and to whom God will but echo their own wish--"Depart from
+Me!"
+
+When David heard of his death, his satisfaction at the manifest
+interposition of God on his behalf, and his thankfulness for having been
+enabled to conquer his impetuosity, overcame for the time every other
+consideration. Full of this view, he blessed God for Nabal's death,
+rejoicing over his untimely end more perhaps than was altogether
+becoming. We, at least, should have liked to see David dropping a tear
+over the grave of one who had lived without grace and who died without
+comfort. Perhaps, however, we are unable to sympathize with the
+earnestness of the feeling produced by God's visible vindication of him;
+a feeling that would be all the more fervent, because what had happened
+to Nabal must have been viewed as a type of what was sure to happen to
+Saul. In the death of Nabal, David by faith saw the destruction of all
+his enemies--no wonder though his spirit was lifted up at the sight.
+
+If it were not for a single expression, we should, without hesitation,
+set down the thirty-seventh Psalm as written at this period. The
+twenty-fifth verse seems to connect it with a later period; even then it
+seems quite certain that, when David wrote it, the case of Nabal (among
+other cases perhaps) was full in his view. The great fact in providence
+on which the psalm turns is the sure and speedy destruction of the
+wicked; and the great lesson of the psalm to God's servants is not to
+fret because of their prosperity, but to rest patiently on the Lord, who
+will cause the meek to inherit the earth. Many of the minor expressions
+and remarks, too, are quite in harmony with this occasion: "Trust in the
+Lord and do good, so shalt thou dwell in the land, and verily _thou
+shalt be fed_." "Cease from _anger_, and forsake _wrath_; fret not
+thyself in any wise to do evil." "The _meek_ shall inherit the earth."
+"The mouth of the righteous speaketh _wisdom_,"--unlike Nabal, a fool by
+name and a fool by nature. The great duty enforced is that of waiting on
+the Lord; not merely because it is right in itself to do so, but because
+"He shall bring forth thy righteousness as the light and thy judgment as
+the noonday."
+
+The chapter ends with Abigail's marriage to David. We are told, at the
+same time, that he had another wife, Ahinoam the Jezreelite, and that
+Michal, Saul's daughter, had been taken from him, and given to another.
+These statements cannot but grate upon our ear, indicating a laxity in
+matrimonial relations very far removed from our modern standard alike of
+duty and of delicacy. We cannot acquit David of a want of patience and
+self-restraint in these matters; undoubtedly it is a blot in his
+character, and it is a blot that led to very serious results. It was an
+element of coarseness in a nature that in most things was highly
+refined. David missed the true ideal of family life, the true ideal of
+love, the true ideal of purity. His polygamy was not indeed imputed to
+him as a crime; it was tolerated in him, as it had been tolerated in
+Jacob and in others; but its natural and indeed almost necessary effects
+were not obviated. In his family it bred strife, animosity, division;
+it bred fearful crimes among brothers and sisters; while, in his own
+case, his unsubdued animalism stained his conscience with the deepest
+sins, and rent his heart with terrible sorrows. How dangerous is even
+one vulnerable spot--one unsubdued lust of evil! The fable represented
+that the heel of Achilles, the only vulnerable part of his body, because
+his mother held him by it when she dipped him in the Styx, was the spot
+on which he received his fatal wound. It was through an unmortified lust
+of the flesh that nearly all David's sorrows came. How emphatic in this
+view the prayer of the Apostle--"I pray God that your whole spirit and
+soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of the Lord." And
+how necessary and appropriate the exhortation, "Put on the _whole_
+armour of God"--girdle, breastplate, sandals, helmet, sword--all; leave
+no part unprotected, "that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day,
+and having done all to stand."
+
+Thus, then, it appears, that for all that was beautiful in David he was
+not a perfect character, and not without stains that seriously affected
+the integrity and consistency of his life. In that most important part
+of a young man's duty--to obtain full command of himself, yield to no
+unlawful bodily indulgence, and do nothing that, directly or indirectly,
+can tend to lower the character or impair the delicacy of women,--David,
+instead of an example, is a beacon. Greatly though his early trials were
+blessed in most things, they were not blessed in all things. We must
+not, for this reason, turn from him as some do, with scorn. We are to
+admire and imitate the qualities that were so fine, especially in early
+life. Would that many of us were like him in his tenderness, his
+godliness, and his attachment to his people! His name is one of the
+embalmed names of Holy Writ,--all the more that when he did become
+conscious of his sin, no man ever repented more bitterly; and no man's
+spirit, when bruised and broken, ever sent more of the fragrance as "of
+myrrh and aloes and cassia out of the ivory palaces."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+_DAVID'S SECOND FLIGHT TO GATH._
+
+1 SAMUEL xxvii.; xxviii. 1, 2; xxix.
+
+
+We are not prepared for the sad decline in the spirit of trust which is
+recorded in the beginning of the twenty-seventh chapter. The victory
+gained by David over the carnal spirit of revenge, shown so signally in
+his sparing the life of Saul a second time, would have led us to expect
+that he would never again fall under the influence of carnal fear. But
+there are strange ebbs and flows in the spiritual life, and sometimes a
+victory brings its dangers, as well as its glory. Perhaps this very
+conquest excited in David the spirit of self-confidence; he may have had
+less sense of his need of daily strength from above; and he may have
+fallen into the state of mind against which the Apostle warns us, "Let
+him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall."
+
+In his collision with Nabal we saw him fail in what seemed one of his
+strong points--the very spirit of self-control which he had exercised so
+remarkably toward Saul; and now we see him fail in another of his strong
+points--the spirit of trust toward God. Could anything show more clearly
+that even the most eminent graces of the saints spring from no native
+fountain of goodness within them, but depend on the continuance of their
+vital fellowship with Him of whom the Psalmist said, "All my springs
+are in Thee"? (Psalm lxxxvii. 7). Carelessness and prayerlessness
+interrupt that fellowship; the supply of daily strength ceases to come;
+temptation arises, and they become weak like other men. "_Abide_ in Me,"
+said our Lord, with special emphasis on the need of permanence in the
+relation; and the prophet says, "They that wait on the Lord," as a
+habitual exercise, "shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with
+wings as eagles; they shall run and not be weary, and they shall walk
+and not faint."
+
+The most strange thing about David's new decline is, that it led him to
+try a device which he had tried before, and which had proved a great
+failure. We see him retreating before an enemy he had often conquered;
+retreating, too, by a path every foot of which he had traversed, and
+with whose bitter ending he was already familiar. Just as before, his
+declension begins with distrust; and just as before, dissimulation is
+the product of the distrustful spirit. He is brought into the most
+painful dilemma, and into experience of the most grievous disaster; but
+God, in His infinite mercy, extricates him from the one and enables him
+to retrieve the other. It is affliction that brings him to his senses
+and drives him to God; it is the returning spirit of prayer and trust
+that sustains him in his difficulties, and at last brings to him, from
+the hand of God, a merciful deliverance from them all.
+
+Our first point of interest is the growth and manifestation of the
+spirit of distrust. "David said in his heart, I shall now perish one day
+by the hand of Saul; there is nothing better for me than that I should
+speedily escape into the land of the Philistines." We find it difficult
+to account for the sudden triumph of this very despondent feeling. It
+is hardly enough to say that David could have had no confidence in
+Saul's expressions of regret and declared purposes of amendment. That
+was no new feature of the case. Perhaps one element of the explanation
+may be, that Saul, with his three thousand men, had not only become
+familiar with all David's hiding-places, but had stationed troops in
+various parts of the district that would so hamper his movements as to
+hem him in as in a prison. Then also there may have been some new
+outbreak of the malignant fury of Cush the Benjamite, and other enemies
+who were about Saul, rousing the king to even more earnest efforts than
+ever to apprehend him. There is yet another circumstance in David's
+situation, that has not, we think, obtained the notice it deserves, but
+which may have had a very material influence on his decision. David had
+now two wives with him, Abigail the widow of Nabal, and Ahinoam the
+Jezreelitess. He would naturally be desirous to provide them with the
+comforts of a settled home. A band of young men might put up with the
+risks and discomforts of a roaming life, which it would not be possible
+for women to bear. The rougher sex might think nothing of midnight
+removals, and attacks in the dark, and scampers over wild passes and
+rugged mountains at all hours of the day and night, and snatches of food
+at irregular times, and all the other experiences which David and his
+men had borne patiently and cheerfully in the earlier stages of their
+outlaw history. But for women this was unsuitable. It is true that this
+alone would not have led David to say, "I shall one day perish by the
+hand of Saul." But it would increase his sense of difficulty; it would
+make him feel more keenly the embarrassments of his situation; it would
+help to overwhelm him. And when he was thus at his wit's end, the sense
+of danger from Saul would become more and more serious. The tension of a
+mind thus pressed on every side is something terrible. Pressed and
+tortured by invincible difficulties, David gives way to despair--"I
+shall one day perish by the hand of Saul."
+
+Let us observe the manner in which this feeling grew to such strength as
+to give rise to a new line of conduct. It got entrance into _his heart_.
+It hovered about him in a somewhat loose form, before he took hold of
+it, and resolved to act upon it. It approached him in the same manner in
+which temptation approaches many a one, first presenting itself to the
+imagination and the feelings, trying to get hold of them, and then
+getting possession of the will, and turning the whole man in the desired
+direction. Like a skilful adversary who first attacks an outpost,
+apparently of little value, but when he has got it erects on it a
+battery by which he is able to conquer a nearer position, and thus
+gradually approaches, till at last the very citadel is in his hands,--so
+sin at first hovers about the outposts of the soul. Often it seems at
+first just to play with the imagination; one fancies this thing and the
+other, this sensual indulgence or that act of dishonesty; and then,
+having become familiar with it there, one admits it to the inner
+chambers of the soul, and ere long the lust bringeth forth sin. The
+lesson not to let sin play even with the imagination, but drive it
+thence the moment one becomes conscious of its presence, cannot be
+pressed too strongly. Have you ever studied the language of the Lord's
+Prayer?--"Lead us not _into_ temptation." You are being led into
+temptation whenever you are led to think, with interest and half
+longing, of any sinful indulgence. Wisdom demands of you that the
+moment you are conscious of such a feeling you resolutely exclaim, "Get
+thee behind me, Satan!" It is the tempter trying to establish a foothold
+in the outworks, meaning, when he has done so, to advance nearer and
+nearer to the citadel, till at last you shall find him in strong
+possession, and your soul entangled in the meshes of perdition.
+
+The conclusion to which David came, under the influence of distrust, as
+to the best course for him to follow shows what opposite decisions may
+be arrived at, according to the point of view at which men take their
+stand. "There is nothing better for me than that I should escape
+speedily into the land of the Philistines." From a more correct point of
+view, nothing could have been worse. Had Moses thought of his prospects
+from the same position, he would have said, "There is nothing better for
+me than to remain the son of Pharaoh's daughter, and enjoy all the good
+things to which Providence has so remarkably called me;" but standing on
+the ground of faith, his conclusion was precisely the opposite. Looking
+abroad over the world with the eye of sense, the young man may say,
+"There is nothing better for me than that I should rejoice in my youth,
+and that my heart should cheer me in the days of my youth, and that I
+should walk in the ways of mine heart and in the sight of mine eyes."
+But the eye of faith sees ominous clouds and gathering storms in the
+distance, which show that there could be nothing worse.
+
+As usual, David's error was connected with the omission of prayer. We
+find no clause in this chapter, "Bring hither the ephod." He asked no
+counsel of God; he did not even sit down to deliberate calmly on the
+matter. The impulse to which he yielded required him to decide at once.
+The word "speedily" indicates the presence of panic, the action of a
+tumultuous force on his mind, inducing him to act as promptly as one
+does in raising one's arm to ward off a threatened blow. Possibly he had
+the feeling that, if God's mind were consulted, it would be contrary to
+his desire, and on that ground, like too many persons, he may have
+shrunk from honest prayer. How different from the spirit of the
+psalm--"Show me Thy ways, O Lord, teach me Thy paths; lead me in Thy
+truth and teach me, for Thou art the God of my salvation; on Thee do I
+wait all the day." Dost thou imagine, David, that the Lord's arm is
+shortened that it cannot save, and His ear heavy that it cannot hear?
+Would not He who delivered you in six troubles cause that in seven no
+evil should touch thee? Has He not promised that thou shalt be hid from
+the scourge of the tongue, neither shalt thou be afraid of destruction
+when it cometh? Dost thou not know that thy seed shall be great and
+thine offspring as the grass of the earth? Thou shalt come to thy grave
+in a full age, like as a shock of corn cometh in in his season.
+
+So "David arose, and he passed over with the six hundred men that were
+with him, unto Achish the son of Maoch, king of Gath." It is thought by
+some that this was a different king from the former, the name Achish
+like the name Pharaoh being used by all the kings. At first the
+arrangement seemed to succeed. Achish appears to have received him
+kindly. "David dwelt with Achish at Gath, he and his men, every man with
+his household, even David with his two wives." The emphasis laid on the
+household and the wives shows how difficult it had been to provide for
+them before. And Saul, at last, gave up the chase, and sought for him no
+more. Of course, in giving him a friendly reception, Achish must have
+had a view to his own interest. He would calculate on making use of him
+in his battles with Saul, and very probably give an incredulous smile if
+he heard anything of the scruples he had shown to lift up his hand
+against the Lord's anointed.
+
+Availing himself of the favourable impression made on Achish, David now
+begs to have a country town allotted to him as his residence, so as to
+avoid what appeared the unseemliness of his dwelling in the royal city
+with him. There was much common sense in the demand, and Achish could
+not but feel it. Gath was but a little place, and Achish, if he was but
+lord of Gath, was not a very powerful king. The presence in such a place
+of a foreign prince, with a retinue of soldiers six hundred strong, was
+hardly becoming. Possibly Achish's own body guard did not come up in
+number and in prowess to the troop of David. The request for a separate
+residence was therefore granted readily, and Ziklag was assigned to
+David. It lay near the southern border of the Philistines, close to the
+southern desert. At Ziklag he was away from the eye of the lords of the
+Philistines that had always viewed him with such jealousy; he was far
+away from the still greater jealousy of Saul; and with Geshurites, and
+Gezrites, and Amalekites in his neighbourhood, the natural enemies of
+his country, he had opportunities of using his troop so as at once to
+improve their discipline and promote the welfare of his native land.
+
+There was another favourable occurrence in David's experience at this
+time. From a parallel passage (1 Chron. xii.) we learn that during his
+residence among the Philistines he was constantly receiving important
+accessions to his troop. One set of men who came to him, Benjamites, of
+the tribe of Saul, were remarkably skilful in the use of the bow and the
+sling, able to use either right hand or left with equal ease. The men
+that came to him were not from one tribe only, but from many. A very
+important section were from Benjamin and Judah. At first David seemed to
+have some suspicion of their sincerity. Going out to meet them he said
+to them, "If ye be come peaceably to me to help me, my heart shall be
+knit unto you; but if ye be come to betray me to my enemies, seeing
+there is no wrong in my hands, the God of our fathers look thereon and
+rebuke it." The answer was given by Amasai, in the spirit and rhythmical
+language of prophecy: "Thine are we, David, and on thy side, thou son of
+Jesse; peace, peace be unto thee, and peace be to thine helpers; for thy
+God helpeth thee." Thus he was continually receiving evidence of the
+favour in which he was held by his people, and his band was continually
+increasing, "until it was a great host, like the host of God." It
+seemed, up to this point, as if Providence had favoured his removal to
+the land of the Philistines, and brought to him the security and the
+prosperity which he could not find in the land of Judah. But it was
+ill-gained security and only mock-prosperity; the day of his troubles
+drew on.
+
+The use which, as we have seen, he made of his troop was to invade the
+Geshurites, the Gezrites, and the Amalekites. In taking this step David
+had a sinister purpose. It would not have been so agreeable to the
+Philistines to learn that the arms of David had been turned against
+these tribes as against his own countrymen. When therefore he was asked
+by Achish where he had gone that day, he returned an answer fitted, and
+indeed intended, to deceive. Without saying in words, "I have been
+fighting against my own people in the south of Judah," he led Achish to
+believe that he had, and he was pleased when his words were taken in
+that sense. Achish, we are told, believed David, believed that he had
+been in arms against his countrymen. "He hath made his people Israel
+utterly to abhor him; therefore he shall be my servant for ever." Could
+there have been a more lamentable spectacle? one of the noblest of men
+stained by the meanness of a false insinuation; David, the anointed of
+the God of Israel, ranged with the common herd of liars!
+
+Nor was this the only error into which his crooked policy now led him.
+To cover his deceitful course he had recourse to an act of terrible
+carnage. It was deemed by him important that no one should be able to
+carry to Achish a faithful report of what he had been doing. To prevent
+this he made a complete massacre, put to death every man, woman, child
+of the Amalekites and other tribes whom he now attacked. Such massacres
+were indeed quite common in Eastern warfare. The Bulgarian and other
+massacres of which we have heard in our own day show that even yet,
+after an interval of nearly three thousand years, they are not foreign
+to the practice of Eastern nations. In point of fact, they were not
+thought more of, or worse of, than any of the other incidents of war.
+War was held to bind up into one bundle the whole lives and property of
+the enemy, and give to the conqueror supreme control over it. To destroy
+the whole was just the same in principle as to destroy a part. If the
+destruction of the whole was necessary in order to carry out the objects
+of the campaign, it was not more wicked to perpetrate such destruction
+than to destroy a part.
+
+True, according to our modern view, there is something mean in falling
+on helpless, defenceless women and children, and slaughtering them in
+cold blood. And yet our modern ideas allow the bombardment or the
+besieging of great cities, and the bringing of the more slow but
+terrible process of starvation to bear against women and children and
+all, in order to compel a surrender. Much though modern civilisation has
+done to lessen the horrors of war, if we approve of all its methods we
+cannot afford to hold up our hands in horror at those which were judged
+allowable in the days of David. Yet surely, you may say, we might have
+expected better things of David. We might have expected him to break
+away from the common sentiment, and to show more humanity. But this
+would not have been reasonable. For it is very seldom that the
+individual conscience, even in the case of the best men, becomes
+sensible at once of the vices of its age. How many good men in this
+country, in the early part of this century, were zealous defenders of
+slavery, and in America down to a much later time! There is nothing more
+needful for us in studying history, even Old Testament history, than to
+remember that very remarkable individual excellence may be found in
+connection with a great amount of the vices of the age. We cannot
+attempt to show that David was not guilty of a horrible carnage in his
+treatment of the Amalekites. All we can say is, he shared in the belief
+of the time that such carnage was a lawful incident of war. We cannot
+but feel that in the whole circumstances it left a stain upon his
+character; and yet he may have engaged in it without any consciousness
+of barbarity, without any idea that the day would come when his friends
+would blush for the deed.
+
+The Philistines were now preparing a new campaign under Achish against
+Saul and his kingdom, and Achish determined that David should go with
+him; further, that he should go in the capacity of "keeper of his head,"
+or captain of his body guard, and that this should not be a temporary
+arrangement, but permanent--"for ever." It is difficult for us to
+conceive the depth of the embarrassment into which this intimation must
+have plunged David. We must bear in mind how scrupulous and sensitive
+his conscience was as to raising his hand against the Lord's anointed;
+and we must take into account the horror he must have felt at the
+thought of rushing in deadly array against his own dear countrymen, with
+most of whom he had had no quarrel, and who had never done him any harm.
+When Achish made him head of his body guard he paid a great compliment
+to his fidelity and bravery; but in proportion as the post was
+honourable it was disagreeable and embarrassing. For David and his men
+would have to fight close to Achish, under his very eye; and any
+symptoms of holding back from the fray--any inclination to be off, or to
+spare the foe, which natural feeling might have dictated in the hour of
+battle, must be resisted in presence of the king. Perhaps David reckoned
+that if the Israelites were defeated by the Philistines he might be able
+to make better terms for them--might even be of use to Saul himself, and
+thus render such services as would atone for his hostile attitude. But
+this was a wretched consolation. David was entangled so that he could
+neither advance nor retreat. Before him was GOD, closing His path in
+front; behind him was MAN, closing it in rear; and we may well believe
+he would have willingly given all he possessed if only his feet could
+have been clear and his conscience upright as before.
+
+Still, he does not appear to have returned to a candid frame of mind,
+but rather to have continued the dissimulation. He had gone with Achish
+as far as the battlefield, when it pleased God, in great mercy, to
+extricate him from his difficulty by using the jealousy of the lords of
+the Philistines as the means of his dismissal from the active service of
+King Achish. But instead of gladly retiring when he received intimation
+that his services were dispensed with, we find him (chap. xxix. 8)
+remonstrating with Achish, speaking as if it were a disappointment not
+to be allowed to go with him, and as if he thirsted for an opportunity
+of chastising his countrymen. It is sad to find him continuing in this
+strain. We are told that the time during which he abode in the country
+of the Philistines was a full year and four months. It was to all
+appearance a time of spiritual declension; and as distrust ruled his
+heart, so dissimulation ruled his conduct. It could hardly have been
+other than a time of merely formal prayers and comfortless spiritual
+experience. If he would but have allowed himself to believe it, he was
+far happier in the cave of Adullam or the wilderness of Engedi, when the
+candle of the Lord shone upon his head, than he was afterwards amid the
+splendour of the palace of Achish, or the princely independence of
+Ziklag.
+
+The only bright spot in this transaction was the very cordial testimony
+borne by Achish to the faultless way in which David had uniformly served
+him. It is seldom indeed that such language as Achish employed can be
+used of any servant--"I know that thou art good in my sight, as an angel
+of God." Achish must have been struck with the utter absence of
+treachery and of all self-seeking in David. David had shown that
+singular, unblemished trustworthiness that earned such golden opinions
+for Joseph in the house of Potiphar and from the keeper of the prison.
+In this respect he had kept his light shining before men with a clear,
+unclouded lustre. Even amid his spiritual backsliding and sad distrust
+of God, he had never stained his hands with greed or theft, he had in
+all these respects kept himself unspotted of the world.
+
+The chapter of David's history which we have now been pursuing is a very
+painful one, but the circumstances in which he was placed were extremely
+difficult and trying. It is impossible to justify the course he took.
+By-and-bye we shall see how God chastised him for it, and by chastising
+him brought him to Himself. But to those who are disposed to be very
+severe on him we might well say, He that is without sin among you, let
+him first cast a stone at him. Who among you have not been induced at
+times to try carnal and unworthy expedients for extricating yourselves
+from difficulty? Who, in days of boyhood or girlhood, never told a
+falsehood to cover a fault? Who of you have been uniformly accustomed to
+carry to God every difficulty and trial, with the honest, immovable
+determination to do simply and solely what might seem to be agreeable to
+God's will? Have we not all cause to mourn over conduct that has
+dishonoured God and distressed our consciences? May He give all of us
+light to see wherein we have come short in the past, or wherein we are
+coming short in the present. And from the bottom of our hearts may we be
+taught to raise our prayer, From all the craft and cunning of Satan;
+from all the devices of the carnal mind; from all that blinds us to the
+pure and perfect will of God--good Lord, deliver us.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+_SAUL AT ENDOR._
+
+1 SAMUEL xxviii. 3-25.
+
+
+For a considerable time Saul had been drifting along like a crippled
+vessel at sea, a melancholy example of a man forsaken of God. But as his
+decisive encounter with the Philistines drew on, the state of
+helplessness to which he had been reduced became more apparent than
+ever. He had sagacity enough to perceive that the expedition which the
+Philistines were now leading against him was the most formidable that
+had ever taken place in his day. It was no ordinary battle that was to
+be fought; it was one that would decide the fate of the country. The
+magnitude of the expedition on his part is apparent from an expression
+in the fourth verse--"Saul gathered all Israel together." The place of
+encounter was not any of the old battle-fields with the Philistines.
+Usually the engagements had taken place in some of the valleys that ran
+down from the territories of Dan, or Benjamin, or Judah into the
+Philistine plain, or on the heights above these. But such places were
+comparatively contracted, and did not afford scope for great bodies of
+troops. This time the Philistines chose a wider and more commanding
+battlefield. Advancing northwards along their own maritime plain, and
+beyond it along the plain of Sharon, they turned eastwards into the
+great plain of Esdraelon or Jezreel, and occupied the northern side of
+the plain. The troops of Saul were encamped on the southern side,
+occupying the northern slope of Mount Gilboa. There the two armies faced
+each other, the wide plain stretching between.
+
+It was a painful moment for Saul when he got his first view of the
+Philistine host, for the sight of it filled him with consternation. It
+would appear to have surpassed that of Israel very greatly in numbers,
+in resources, as it certainly did in its confident spirit. Yet, if Saul
+had been a man of faith, none of these things would have moved him. Was
+it not in that very neighbourhood that Barak, with his hasty levies, had
+inflicted a signal defeat on the Canaanites? And was it not in that very
+plain that the hosts of Midian lay encamped in the days of Gideon, when
+the barley cake rolling into their camp overturned and terrified the
+host, and a complete discomfiture followed? Why should not the Lord work
+as great a deliverance now? If God was with them, He was more than all
+that could be against them. Might not this be another of the days
+foretold by Moses, when one should chase a thousand, and two put ten
+thousand to flight?
+
+Yes, _if_ God was with them. All turned upon that _if_. And Saul felt
+that God was not with them, and that they could not count on any such
+deliverance as, in better times, had been vouchsafed to their fathers.
+
+And why, O Saul, when you felt thus, did you not humble yourself before
+God, confess all your sins, and implore Him to show you mercy? Why did
+you not cry, "Return, O Lord, how long? And let it repent Thee
+concerning Thy servants"? Would you have found God inexorable? Would His
+ear have been heavy that it could not hear? Don't you remember how
+Moses said that when Israel, in sore bondage, should cry humbly to God,
+the Lord would hear his cry, and have mercy on him? Why, O Saul, do you
+not fall in the dust before Him?
+
+Somehow Saul felt that he could not. Among other effects of sin and
+rebellion, one of the worst is a stiffening of the soul, making it hard
+and rigid, so that it cannot bend, it cannot melt, it cannot change its
+course. The long career of wilfulness that Saul had followed had
+produced in him this stiffening effect; his spirit was hardened in its
+own ways, and incapable of all exercise of contrition or humiliation, or
+anything essentially different from the course he had been following.
+There are times in the life of a deeply afflicted woman when the best
+thing she could do would be to weep, but that is just the thing she
+cannot do. There are times when the best thing an inveterate sinner
+could do would be to fling himself before God and sob for mercy, but
+fling himself before God and sob he cannot. Saul was incapable of that
+exercise of soul which would have saved him and his people. Most
+terrible effect of cherished sin! It dries up the fountains of
+contrition and they will not flow. It stiffens the knees and they will
+not bend. It paralyses the voice and it will not cry. It blinds the eyes
+and they see not the Saviour. It closes the ears and the voice of mercy
+is unheard. It drives the distressed one to wells without water, to
+refuges of lies, to trees twice dead, to physicians who have no
+medicines, to gods who have no salvation; all he feels is that his case
+is desperate, and yet somewhere or other he must have help!
+
+Saul did not neglect the outward means by which in other days God had
+been accustomed to direct the nation. He tried every authorized way he
+could think of for getting guidance from above. He believed in a
+heavenly power, and he asked its guidance and its help. But God took no
+notice of him. He answered him neither by dreams, nor by Urim, nor by
+prophets. Men, though in heart rebellious against God's will, will go
+through a great deal of mechanical service in the hope of securing His
+favour. It is not their muscles that get stiffened, but their souls.
+What a strange conception they must have of God when they fancy that
+mere external services will please Him! How little Saul knew of God when
+he supposed that, overlooking all the rebellion of his heart, God would
+respond to a mechanical effort or efforts to communicate with Him! Don't
+you know, O Saul, that your iniquities have separated between you and
+your God, and your sins have hid His face from you that He will not
+hear? Nothing will have the least effect on Him till you own your sin.
+"I will go and return unto My place, until they acknowledge their
+offence and seek My face." And this is just what you will not, cannot
+do! How infinitely precious would one tear of genuine repentance have
+been in that dark hour! It would have saved thousands of the Israelites
+from a bloody death; it would have saved the nation from defeat and
+humiliation; it would have removed the obstacle to fellowship with the
+Hope of Israel, who would have stood true to His ancient
+character,--"the Saviour thereof in time of trouble."
+
+But Saul's day of grace was over, and accordingly we find him driven to
+the most humbling expedient to which a man can stoop--seeking counsel
+from a quarter against which, in his more prosperous days, he had
+directed his special energies, as a superstitious, demoralizing agency.
+He had been most zealous in exterminating a class of persons, abounding
+in Eastern countries, who pretend to know the secrets of the future, and
+to have access to the inhabitants of the unseen world. Little could he
+have dreamt in those days of fiery zeal that a time would come when he
+would rejoice to learn that one poor wretch had escaped the vigilance of
+his officers, and still carried on, or pretended to carry on, a
+nefarious traffic with the realms of the departed! It shows how little
+man is acquainted with the inner feelings of other men--how little he
+knows even himself. Doubtless he thought, in the days of exterminating
+zeal, that it was sheer folly and drivelling superstition that
+encouraged these sorcerers, and that by clearing them away he would be
+ridding the land of a mass of rubbish that could be of service to no
+one. He did not consider that there are times of wretchedness and
+despair when the soul that knows not God will seek counsel even of men
+with a familiar spirit--he little dreamt that such would be the case
+with himself. "Is thy servant a dog that he should do this thing?" he
+would have asked with great indignation in those early days, if it had
+been insinuated that he would ever be tempted to resort to such
+counsellors. "What better could I ever be of anything they could tell
+me? Surely it would be wiser to meet any conceivable danger full in the
+face than to seek after such counsel as they could give!" He did not
+consider that when man's spirit is overwhelmed within him, and his
+craving for help is like the passion of a madman, he will clutch like a
+drowning man at a straw, he will even resort to a woman with a familiar
+spirit, if, peradventure, some hint can be got to extricate him from his
+misery.
+
+But to this complexion it came at last. With dreadful sacrifice of
+self-respect, Saul had to ask his advisers to seek out for him a woman
+of this description. They were able to tell him of such a woman residing
+at Endor, about ten miles from where they were. With two attendants he
+set out after nightfall, disguised, and found her. Naturally, she was
+afraid to do anything in the way of business in the face of such
+measures as the king had taken against all of her craft, nor would she
+stir until she had got a solemn promise that she would not be molested
+in any way. Then, when all was ready, she asked whom she should call up.
+"Call up Samuel," said Saul. To the great astonishment of the woman
+herself, she sees Samuel rising up. A shriek from her indicates that she
+is as much astonished and for the moment frightened as anyone can be.
+Evidently she did not expect such an apparition. The effect was much too
+great for the cause. She sees that in this apparition a power is
+concerned much beyond what she can wield. Instinctively she apprehends
+that the only man of importance enough to receive such a supernatural
+visit must be the head of the nation. "Why did you deceive me?" she
+said, "for thou art Saul." "Never mind that," is virtually Saul's reply;
+"but tell me what you have seen." The Revised Version gives her answer
+better than the older one--"I saw a god arise out of the earth." "What
+is his appearance?" earnestly asks Saul. "He is an old man, and he is
+covered with a mantle." And Saul sees that it is really Samuel.
+
+But what was it that really happened, and how did it come about? That
+the woman was able, even if she really had the aid of evil spirits, to
+bring Samuel into Saul's presence we cannot believe. Nor could she
+believe it herself. If Samuel really appeared--and the narrative assumes
+that he did--it must have been by a direct miracle, God supernaturally
+clothing his spirit in something like its old form, and bringing him
+back to earth to speak to Saul. In judgment it seemed good to God to let
+Saul have his desire, and to give him a real interview with Samuel. "He
+gave him his request, but sent leanness to his soul." So far from having
+his fears allayed and his burden removed, Saul was made to see from
+Samuel's communication that there was nothing but ruin before him; and
+he must have gone back to the painful duty of the morrow staggering
+under a load heavier than before.
+
+Samuel begins the conversation; and he does so by reproaching Saul for
+having disquieted him, and brought him back from his peaceful home above
+to mingle again in the strife and turmoil of human things. Nothing can
+exceed the haggard and weird desolation of Saul's answer. "I am sore
+distressed; for the Philistines make war against me, and God is departed
+from me and answereth me no more, neither by prophets nor by dreams:
+therefore I have called thee, that thou mayest make known unto me what I
+shall do." Was ever a king in such a plight? Who would have thought,
+when Samuel and Saul first came together, and Saul listened so
+respectfully to the prophet counselling him concerning the kingdom, that
+their last meeting should be like this? In all Saul's statement there is
+no word that carries such a load of meaning and of despair as this--"God
+is departed from me." It is the token of universal confusion and
+calamity. And Saul felt it, and as no one understood these things like
+Samuel, he had sought Samuel to counsel his wayward son, to tell him
+what to do.
+
+It is not every sinner that makes the discovery in this life what awful
+results follow when God is departed from him. But if the discovery does
+not dawn on one in this life, it will come on him with overwhelming
+force in the life to come. Men little think what they are preparing for
+themselves when they say to God, "Depart from us, for we desire not the
+knowledge of Thy ways." The service of God is irksome; the restraints of
+God's law are distressing; they like a free life, freedom to please
+themselves. And so they part company with God. The form of Divine
+service may be kept up or it may not: but God is not their God, and
+God's will is not their rule. They have left God's ways, they have
+followed their own. And when conscience has sometimes given them a
+twinge, when God has reminded them by the silent monitor of His claims,
+their answer has been, Let us alone, what have we to do with Thee?
+Depart from us, leave us in peace. Ah! how little have you considered
+that the most awful thing that could happen to you is just for God to
+depart from you! If we could conceive the earth a sensitive being, and
+somehow to get a dislike for the sun, and to pray the sun to depart from
+her, how awful would be the fulfilment! Losing all the genial influences
+that brighten her surface, that cover her face with beauty and enrich
+her soil with abundance, all the foul and slimy creatures of darkness
+would creep out, all the noxious influences of dissolution and death
+would riot in their terrible freedom! And is not this but a poor faint
+picture of man forsaken by God! O sinner, if ever thy wish should be
+fulfilled, how wilt thou curse the day in which thou didst utter it!
+When vile lusts rise to uncontrollable authority--when those whom you
+love turn hopelessly wicked, when you find yourselves joyless, helpless,
+hopeless, when you try to repent and cannot repent, when you try to pray
+and cannot pray, when you try to be pure and cannot be pure--what a
+terrible calamity you will then feel it that God is departed from you!
+Trifle not, O man, with thy relation to God; and let not thy history be
+such that it shall have to be written in the words of the prophet--"But
+they rebelled and vexed His Holy Spirit; therefore He was turned to be
+their enemy and He fought against them" (Isaiah lxiii. 10).
+
+There was no comfort for Saul in Samuel's reply, but much the contrary.
+Why should he have asked advice of the Lord's servant, when he owned
+that he was forsaken by the Lord Himself? What could the servant do for
+him if the Master was become his enemy? What can a priest or a minister
+do for any man if God has turned His face away from him? Can he make God
+deny Himself, and become favourable to one who has scorned or sinned
+away His Holy Spirit? Saul was experiencing no more than he had just
+reason to expect since that fatal day when he had first deliberately set
+up his own will above God's will in the affair of Amalek. In the course
+which he began then, he had persistently continued, and God was now just
+executing the threatenings which Saul had braved. And next day would
+witness the last of his sad history. The Lord would deliver Israel into
+the hands of the Philistines; in the collision of the armies he and his
+sons would be slain; disaster to his arms, death to himself, and
+destruction to his dynasty would all come together on that miserable
+day.
+
+It is no wonder that Saul was utterly prostrated: "He fell straightway
+all along on the earth, and was sore afraid, because of the words of
+Samuel; and there was no strength in him; for he had eaten no bread all
+the day, nor all the night." He could not have expected that the
+interview with Samuel would be a pleasant one, but he never imagined
+that it would announce such awful calamities. Have you not known
+sometimes the terrible sensation when you had heard there was something
+wrong with some of your friends, and on going to inquire, discovered
+that the calamity was infinitely worse than you had ever dreamt of? A
+momentary paralysis comes over one; you are stunned and made helpless by
+the tidings. We may even be tempted to think that surely Samuel was too
+hard on Saul; might he not have tempered his awful message by some
+qualifying word of hope and mercy? The answer is, Samuel spoke the
+truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. We are all prone to
+the thought that when evil men get their doom there will surely be
+something to modify or mitigate its rigour. Samuel's words to Saul
+indicate no such relaxation. Moral law will vindicate itself as natural
+law vindicates itself--"Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also
+reap."
+
+The last incident in the chapter is interesting and pleasing. We might
+have thought that such a calling as that followed by the witch of Endor
+would have destroyed all the humanities in her nature; that she would
+have looked on the king's distress with a cold, stoical eye, and that
+her only concern would be to obtain for herself a fee adapted to the
+occasion. But she shows much of the woman left in her after all. When
+she rehearses her service, and the peril of her life at which it has
+been rendered, to prepare the way for her asking a favour, the favour
+which she does ask is not for herself at all,--it is on Saul's own
+behalf, that she might be permitted the honour of preparing for him a
+meal. Saul's mind is too much occupied and too much agitated to care
+for anything of the kind. Still prostrate on the ground he says, "I will
+not eat." Men overwhelmed by calamity hate to eat, they are too excited
+to experience hunger. It was only when his servants, thinking how much
+he had gone through already, how much more he had to go through on the
+morrow, and how utterly unfit his exhausted body was for the strain--it
+was then only that he yielded to the request of the woman. And the woman
+showed that, for all her sinister business, she was equal to the
+occasion of entertaining a king. The "fat calf in the house"
+corresponded to the "fatted calf" in the parable of the prodigal son. It
+was not the custom even in families of the richer class to eat meat at
+ordinary meals; it was reserved for feasts and extraordinary occasions;
+and in order to be ready for any emergency a calf was kept close to the
+house, whose flesh, from the delicate way in which it was reared and
+fed, was tender enough to be served even at so hasty a meal. With cakes
+of unleavened bread, this dish could be presented very rapidly, and,
+unlike the hasty meals which are common among us, was really a more
+substantial and nourishing entertainment than ordinary. It is touching
+to mark these traces of womanly feeling in this unhappy being, reminding
+us of the redeeming features of Rahab the harlot. What effect the whole
+transaction had on the woman we are not told, and it would be vain to
+conjecture.
+
+And now Saul retraces his dark and dreary way southward to the heights
+of Gilboa. We can hardly exaggerate his miserable condition. He had much
+to think of, and he would have needed a clear, unclouded mind. We can
+think of him only as miserably distracted, and unable to let his mind
+settle on anything. It would have needed his utmost resources to
+arrange for the battle of to-morrow, a battle in which he knew that
+defeat was coming, but which he might endeavour, nevertheless, to make
+as little disastrous as possible. Moreover, he knew it was to be the
+last day of his life, and troubled thoughts could not but steal in on
+him as to what should happen when he stood before God. No doubt, too,
+there were many sad thoughts about his sons, who were to be involved in
+the same fate as himself. Was there no way of saving any of them? The
+arrangement of his temporal effects, too, would claim attention, for,
+restless and excitable as he had been, it was not likely that his
+private affairs would be in very good order. Anon his thoughts might
+wander back to his first interview with Samuel, and bitter remorse would
+send its pang through him as he thought how differently he might have
+left the kingdom if he had faithfully followed the counsels of the
+prophet. Possibly amid all these gloomy thoughts one thought of a
+brighter order might steal into his mind--how thoroughly David, who
+would come to the throne after him, would retrieve his errors and
+restore prosperity, and make the kingdom what it had never been under
+him, a model kingdom, worthy to shadow forth the glories of Messiah's
+coming reign. Poor distracted man, he was little fitted either to fight
+a battle with the Philistines or to encounter the last enemy on his own
+account. What a lesson to be prepared beforehand! On a deathbed,
+especially a sudden one, distractions can hardly fail to visit us--this
+thing and the other thing needing to be arranged and thought of. Happy
+they who at such a moment can say, "I am now ready to depart." "Into Thy
+hands I commend my spirit, for Thou hast redeemed me, O Lord God of
+truth."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+_DAVID AT ZIKLAG._
+
+1 SAMUEL xxx.
+
+
+After David had received from King Achish the appointment of captain of
+his body guard, he had with his troops accompanied the Philistine army,
+passing along the maritime plain to the very end of their journey--to
+the spot selected for battle, close to "the fountain which is in
+Jezreel." It seems to have been only after the whole Philistine host
+were ranged in battle array that the presence of David and his men, who
+remained in the rear to protect the king, arrested the attention of the
+lords of the Philistines, and on their remonstrance they were sent away.
+It is probable that David's return to Ziklag, and the expedition in
+which he had to engage to recover his wives and his property, took place
+at or about the very time when Saul made his journey to Endor, and when
+the fatal battle of Gilboa was raging. We have seen that though David
+never, like Saul, threw off the authority of God, he had been following
+ways of his own, ways of deceit and unfaithfulness. He too had been
+exposing himself to the displeasure of God, and on him, as on Saul, some
+retribution behoved to fall. But in the two cases we see the difference
+between judgment and chastisement. In the case of Saul it was judgment
+that came down; his life and his career were terminated avowedly as the
+punishment of his offence. In the case of David the rod was lifted to
+correct, not to destroy; to bring him back, not to drive him for ever
+away; to fit him for service, not to cut him asunder, or appoint him his
+portion with the hypocrites. There is every reason to believe that the
+awful disaster that befell David on his return to Ziklag was the means
+of restoring him to a trustful and truthful frame.
+
+It appears from the chapter now before us that, in the absence of David
+and his troop, severe reprisals had been taken by the Amalekites for the
+defeat and utter destruction which they had lately inflicted on a
+portion of their tribe. We must remember that the Amalekites were a
+widely dispersed people, consisting of many tribes, each living
+separately from the rest, but so related that in any emergency they
+would readily come to one another's help. News of the extermination of
+the tribes whom David had attacked, and whom he had utterly destroyed
+lest any of them should bring word to Achish of his real employment, had
+been brought to their neighbours; and these neighbours determined to
+take revenge for the slaughter of their kinsmen. The opportunity of
+David's absence was taken for invading Ziklag, for which purpose a large
+and well-equipped expedition had been got together; and as they met with
+no opposition, they carried everything before them. Happily, however, as
+they found no enemies they did not draw the sword; they counted it
+better policy to carry off all that could be transported, so as to make
+use of the goods, and sell the women and children into slavery, and as
+they had a great multitude of beasts of burden with them (ver. 17) there
+could be no difficulty in carrying out this plan. It seems very strange
+that David should have left Ziklag apparently without the protection of
+a single soldier; but what seems to us folly had all the effect of
+consummate wisdom in the end; the passions of the Amalekites were not
+excited by opposition or by bloodshed; their destructive propensities
+were satisfied with destroying the town of Ziklag, and every person and
+thing that could be removed was carried away unhurt. But for days to
+come David could not know that their expedition had been conducted in
+this unusually peaceful way; his imagination and his fears would picture
+far darker scenes.
+
+It must have been an awful moment to David--hardly less so than to Saul
+when he saw the host of the Philistines near Jezreel--to reach what had
+been recently so peaceful a home and find it a mass of smoking ruins. If
+he had been disposed to congratulate himself on the success of the
+policy which had dictated his escape from the land of Judah, and his
+settling at Ziklag under protection of King Achish, how in one moment
+must the rottenness of the whole plan have flashed upon him, and how
+awed must he have been at the proof now so clearly afforded that the
+whole arrangement had been frowned on by the God of heaven! What an
+agony of suspense and distress he must have been in till more definite
+news could be obtained; and what a burst of despair must have been heard
+through the camp when it became known to his followers that the worst
+that could be conceived had happened--that their houses were all
+destroyed, their property seized, and their wives and children carried
+off, to be disgraced, or sold, or butchered, as might suit the fancy of
+their masters! And then, that remorseless massacre that they had lately
+inflicted on the kinsmen of their invaders, how likely it would be to
+exasperate their passions against them! What mercy would they show
+whose neighbours had received no mercy? What a dreadful fate would these
+helpless women and children be now experiencing!
+
+It was probably one of the bitterest of the many bitter hours that David
+ever spent. First there was the natural feeling of disappointment, after
+a long and weary march, when the comforts of home had been so eagerly
+looked forward to, and each man seemed already in the embrace of his
+family, to find home utterly obliterated, and its place marked by
+blackened ruins. Then there was the far more intense pang to every
+affectionate heart, caused by the carrying off of the members of their
+families; this, it appears, was the predominant feeling of the camp:
+"the soul of the people was grieved, every man for his sons and for his
+daughters." And somehow David was the person blamed, partly perhaps
+through that hasty but unjust feeling that blames the leader of an
+expedition for all the mishaps attending it, and partly also, it may be,
+because Ziklag had been left utterly undefended. "What business had he
+to march us all at the heels of these uncircumcised Philistines, as if
+we ought to make common cause with them, only to march us back again
+just as we came, to gain nothing there and to lose everything here!" To
+all this was added a further element of excitement: it was not merely
+calamities known and seen that worked in the minds of the people; the
+gloom of dreaded but uncertain horrors helped to excite them still more.
+Imagination would quickly supply the place of evidence in picturing the
+situation of their wives and children. The feelings of the troops were
+so fearfully excited against David that they spoke of stoning him. The
+very men that had lately approached him with the beautiful salutation,
+"Peace, peace be to thee, and peace be to thine helpers, for thy God
+helpeth thee," now spoke of stoning him. How like the spirit and the
+conduct of their descendants a thousand years later, shouting at one
+time, "Hosanna to the Son of David," and but a few days after, "Crucify
+Him, crucify Him." The state of David's feelings must have been all the
+more terrible for the uneasy conscience he had in the matter, for he had
+too much cause to feel that the dissembling policy which he had been
+pursuing had caused another massacre, more frightful than that of the
+priests after his visit to Nob.
+
+It is probable that at this awful moment the mind of David was visited
+by a blessed influence from above. The wail of woe that spread through
+his camp, and the dismal ruins that covered the site of his recent home,
+seem to have spoken to him in that tone of rebuke which the words of the
+prophet afterwards conveyed, "Thou art the man!" Under great excitement
+the mind works with great rapidity, and passes almost with the speed of
+lightning from one mood to another. It is quite possible that under the
+same electric shock, as we may call it, that brought David to a sense of
+his sin he was guided back to his former confidence in the mercy and
+grace of his covenant God. In one instant, we may believe, the miserable
+hollowness of all those carnal devices in which he had been trusting
+would flash upon his mind, and God--his own loving Father and covenant
+God--would appear waiting to be gracious and longing for his return. And
+now the prodigal son is in his Father's arms, weeping, sobbing,
+confessing, but at the same time feeling the luxury of forgiveness,
+rejoicing, trusting and delighting in His protection and blessing.
+
+It may indeed be objected that we are proceeding too much on mere
+imagination in supposing that David's return to a condition of holy
+trust in God was effected in this rapid way. The view may be wrong, and
+we do not insist on it. What we found on is the very short interval
+between his last act of dissimulation in professing to desire to
+accompany Achish to battle, and his manifest restoration to the spirit
+of trust, evinced in the words, applied to him when the people spoke of
+stoning him, "But David strengthened himself in the Lord his God" (ver.
+6). These words show that he has got back to the true track at last, and
+from that moment prosperity returns. What a blessed thing it was for him
+that in that hour of utmost need he was able to derive strength from the
+thought of God,--able to think of the Most High as watching him with
+interest, and still ready to deliver him!
+
+It was a somewhat similar incident, though not preceded by any such
+previous backsliding--a similar manifestation of the magical power of
+trust--that took place in the life of a more modern David, one who in
+serving God and doing good to man had to encounter a life of wandering,
+privation, and danger seldom surpassed--the African missionary and
+explorer, David Livingstone. In the course of his great journey from St.
+Paul de Loanda on the west coast of Africa to Quilimane on the east, he
+had to encounter many an angry and greedy tribe, whom he was too poor to
+be able to pacify by the ordinary method of valuable presents. On one
+occasion, in the fork at the confluence of the river Loangwa and the
+river Zambesi, he found one of those hostile tribes. It was necessary
+for him to have canoes to cross--they would lend him only one. In other
+respects they showed an attitude of hostility, and the appearances all
+pointed to a furious attack the following day. Livingstone was troubled
+at the prospect,--not that he was afraid to die, but because it seemed
+as if all his discoveries in Africa would be lost, and his sanguine
+hopes for planting commerce and Christianity among its benighted and
+teeming tribes knocked on the head. But he remembered the words of the
+Lord Jesus Christ, "Go ye therefore into all the world, and preach the
+gospel unto every creature, and lo, I am with you alway, even unto the
+end of the world." On this promise he rested, and steadied his
+fluttering heart. "It is the word of a gentleman," he said, "the word of
+one of the most perfect honour. I will not try, as I once thought, to
+escape by night, but I will wait till to-morrow, and leave before them
+all. Should such a man as I be afraid? I will take my observations for
+longitude tonight, though it should be my last. My mind is now quite at
+rest, thank God." He waited as he had said, and next morning, though the
+arrangements of the natives still betokened battle, he and his men were
+allowed to cross the river in successive detachments, without
+molestation, he himself waiting to the last, and not a hair of their
+heads being hurt. It was a fine instance of a believing Christian
+strengthening himself in his God. When faith is genuine, and the habit
+of exercising it is active, it can remove mountains.
+
+The first result of the restored feeling of trust in David was his
+giving honour to God's appointed ordinance by asking counsel of Him,
+through Abiathar the priest, as to the course he should follow. It is
+the first time we read of him doing so since he left his own country. At
+first one wonders how he could have discontinued so precious a means of
+ascertaining the will of God and the path of duty. But the truth is,
+when a man is left to himself he cares for no advice or direction but
+his own inclination. He is not desirous to be led; he wishes only to go
+comfortably. Indifference to God's guidance explains much neglect of
+prayer.
+
+David has now made his application, and he has got a clear and decided
+answer. He can feel now that he is treading on solid ground. How much
+happier he must have been than when driving hither and thither, scheming
+and dissembling, and floundering from one device of carnal wisdom to
+another! As for his people, he can think of them now with far more
+tranquillity; have they not been all along in God's keeping, and is it
+not true that He that keepeth Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps?
+
+We need not dwell at great length on the incidents that immediately
+followed. No events could have fallen out more favourably. One-third of
+his troops was indeed so exhausted that they had to be left at the brook
+Besor. With the other four hundred he set out in search of the foe. The
+special providence of God, so clearly and frequently displayed on this
+occasion, provided a guide for David in the person of an Egyptian slave,
+who, having fallen sick, had been abandoned by his master, and had been
+three days and nights without meat or drink. Careful treatment having
+resuscitated this young man, and a solemn assurance having been given
+him that he would neither be killed nor given back to his master (the
+latter alternative seems to have been as terrible as the other), he
+conducts them without loss of time to the camp of the Amalekites. Each
+day's journey brought them nearer and nearer to the great wilderness
+where, some five or six hundred years before, their fathers had
+encountered Amalek at Rephidim, and had gained a great victory over
+them, after not a few fluctuations, through the uplifted arms of Moses,
+the token of reliance on the strength of God. Through the same good hand
+on David, the Amalekites, surprised in the midst of a time of careless
+and uproarious festivity, were completely routed, and all but destroyed.
+Every article they had stolen, and every woman and child they had
+carried off, were recovered unhurt. Such a deliverance was beyond
+expectation. When the Lord turned again the captivity of Ziklag, they
+were like men that dream.
+
+The happy change of circumstances was signalized by David by two
+memorable acts, the one an act of justice, the other an act of
+generosity. The act of justice was his interfering to repress the
+selfishness of the part of his troops who were engaged in the fight with
+Amalek, some of whom wished to exclude the disabled portion, who had to
+remain at the brook Besor, from sharing the spoil. The objectors are
+called "the wicked men and the men of Belial." It is a significant
+circumstance that David had been unable to inspire all his followers
+with his own spirit--that even at the end of his residence in Ziklag
+there were wicked men and men of Belial among them. No doubt these were
+the very men that had been loudest in their complaints against David,
+and had spoken of stoning him when they came to know of the calamity at
+Ziklag. Complaining men are generally selfish men. They objected to
+David's proposal to share the spoil with the whole body of his
+followers. Their proposal was especially displeasing to David at a time
+when God had given them such tokens of undeserved goodness. It was of
+the same sort as the act of the unforgiving servant in the parable, who,
+though forgiven his ten thousand talents, came down with unmitigated
+ferocity on the fellow-servant that owed him an hundred pence.
+
+The act of generosity was his distribution over the cities in the
+neighbourhood of the spoil which he had taken from the Amalekites. If he
+had been of a selfish nature he might have kept it all for himself and
+his people. But it was "the spoil of the enemies of the Lord." It was
+David's desire to recognise God in connection with this spoil, both to
+show that he had not made his onslaught on the Amalekites for personal
+ends, and to acknowledge, in royal style, the goodness which God had
+shown him. That it was an act of policy as well as a recognition of God
+may be readily acknowledged. Undoubtedly David was desirous to gain the
+favourable regard of his neighbours, as a help toward his recognition
+when the throne of Israel should become empty. But we may surely admit
+this, and yet recognise in his actions on this occasion the generosity
+as well as the godliness of his nature. He was one of those men to whom
+it is more blessed to give than to receive, and who are never so happy
+themselves as when they are making others happy. The Bethel mentioned in
+ver. 27 as first among the places benefited can hardly be the place
+ordinarily known by that name, which was far distant from Ziklag, but
+some other Bethel much nearer the southern border of the land. The most
+northerly of the places specified of whose situation we are assured was
+Hebron, itself well to the south of Judah, and soon to become the
+capital where David reigned. The large number of places that shared his
+bounty was a proof of the royal liberality with which it was spread
+abroad.
+
+And in this bounty, this royal profusion of gifts, we may surely
+recognise a fit type of "great David's greater Son." How clearly it
+appeared from the very first that the spirit of Jesus Christ exemplified
+His own maxim which we have just quoted, "It is more blessed to give
+than to receive." Once only, and that in His infancy, when the wise men
+laid at His feet their myrrh, frankincense, and gold, do we read of
+anything like a lavish contribution of the gifts of earth being given to
+Him. But follow Him through the whole course of His earthly life and
+ministry, and see how just was the image of Malachi that compared Him to
+the sun--"the Sun of Righteousness with healing in His wings." What a
+gloriously diffusive nature He had, dropping gifts of fabulous price in
+every direction without money and without price! "Jesus went about in
+all Galilee" (it was now the turn of the north to enjoy the benefit),
+"teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom,
+and healing all manner of diseases and all manner of sickness among the
+people." Listen to the opening words of the Sermon on the Mount; what a
+dropping of honey as from the honeycomb we have in those beatitudes,
+which so wonderfully commend the precious virtues to which they are
+attached! Follow Jesus through any part of His earthly career, and you
+find the same spirit of royal liberality. Stand by Him even in the last
+hour of His mortal life, and count His deeds of kindness. See how He
+heals the ear of Malchus, though He healed no wounds of His own. Listen
+to Him deprecating the tears of the weeping women, and turning their
+attention to evils among themselves that had more need to be wept for.
+Hear the tender tones of His prayer, "Father, forgive them, for they
+know not what they do." Observe the gracious look He casts on the thief
+beside Him in answer to his prayer--"Verily I say unto thee, this day
+shalt thou be with Me in Paradise." Mark how affectionately He provides
+for His mother. See Him after His resurrection saying to the weeping
+Mary, Woman, why weepest thou? Count that multitude of fishes which He
+has brought to the nets of His disciples, in token of the riches of
+spiritual success with which they are to be blessed. And mark, on the
+day of Pentecost, how richly from His throne in glory He sheds down the
+Holy Spirit, and quickens thousands together with the breath of
+spiritual life. "Thou hast ascended on high, Thou hast led captivity
+captive, Thou hast received gifts for men; yea, for the rebellious also,
+that the Lord God might dwell among them."
+
+It is a most blessed and salutary thing for you all to cherish the
+thought of the royal munificence of Christ. Think of the kindest and
+most lavish giver you ever knew, and think how Christ surpasses him in
+this very grace as far as the heavens are above the earth. What
+encouragement does this give you to trust in Him! What a sin it shows
+you to commit when you turn away from Him! But remember, too, that Jesus
+Christ is the image of the invisible God. Remember that He came to
+reveal the Father. Perhaps we are more disposed to doubt the royal
+munificence of the Father than that of the Son. But how unreasonable is
+this! Was not Jesus Christ Himself, with all the glorious fulness
+contained in him, the gift of God--His unspeakable gift? And in every
+act of generosity done by Christ have we not just an exhibition of the
+Father's heart? Sometimes we think hardly of God's generosity in
+connection with His decree of election. Leave that alone; it is one of
+the deep things of God; remember that every soul brought to Christ is
+the fruit of God's unmerited love and infinite grace; and remember too
+what a vast company the redeemed are, when in the Apocalyptic vision, an
+early section of them--those that came out of "the great
+tribulation"--formed a great multitude that no man could number.
+Sometimes we think that God is not generous when He takes away very
+precious comforts, and even the most cherished treasures of our hearts
+and our homes. But that is love in disguise; "What I do thou knowest not
+now, but thou shalt know hereafter." And sometimes we think that He is
+not generous when He is slow to answer our prayers. But He designs only
+to encourage us to perseverance, and to increase and finally all the
+more reward our faith. Yes, truly, whatever anomalies Providence may
+present, and they are many; whatever seeming contradictions we may
+encounter to the doctrine of the exceeding riches of the grace of God,
+let us ascribe all that to our imperfect vision and our imperfect
+understanding. Let us correct all such narrow impressions at the cross
+of Christ. Let us reason, like the Apostle: "He that spared not His own
+Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also
+freely give us all things?" And let us feel assured that when at last
+God's ways and dealings even with this wayward world are made plain, the
+one conclusion which they will go to establish for evermore is--that GOD
+IS LOVE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+_THE DEATH OF SAUL._
+
+1 SAMUEL xxxi.
+
+
+The plain of Esdraelon, where the battle between Saul and the
+Philistines was fought, has been celebrated for many a deadly encounter,
+from the very earliest period of history. Monuments of Egypt lately
+deciphered make it very plain that long before the country was possessed
+by the Israelites the plain had experienced the shock of contending
+armies. The records of the reign of Thotmes III., who has sometimes been
+called the Alexander the Great of Egypt, bear testimony to a decisive
+fight in his time near Megiddo, and enumerate the names of many towns in
+the neighbourhood, most of which occur in Bible history, of which the
+spoil was carried to Egypt and placed in the temples of the Egyptian
+gods. Here, too, it was afterwards that Barak encountered the
+Canaanites, and Gideon the Midianites and Amalekites; here "Jehu smote
+all that remained of the house of Ahab in Jezreel, and all his great
+men, and his familiar friends, and his priests, until he left none
+remaining;" here Josiah was slain in his great battle with the
+Egyptians; here was the great lamentation after Josiah's death,
+celebrated by Zechariah, "the mourning of Hadad-Rimmon in the valley of
+Megiddo;" in short, in the words of Dr. Clarke, "Esdraelon has been the
+chosen place of encampment in every great contest carried on in the
+country, until the disastrous march of Napoleon Bonaparte from Egypt
+into Syria. Jews, Gentiles, Saracens, Crusaders, Egyptians, Persians,
+Druses, Turks, Arabs, and French, warriors out of every nation which is
+under heaven, have pitched their tents upon the plains of Esdraelon, and
+have beheld their banners wet with the dews of Tabor and Hermon." So
+late as 1840, when the Pacha of Egypt had seized upon Syria, he was
+compelled to abandon the country when the citadel of Acre, which guards
+the entrance of the plain of Esdraelon by sea, was bombarded and
+destroyed by the British fleet. It is no wonder that in the symbolical
+visions of the Apocalypse, a town in this plain, Ar-Mageddon, is
+selected as the battlefield for the great conflict when the kings of the
+whole earth are to be gathered together unto the battle of the great day
+of Almighty God. As in the plains of Belgium, the plains of Lombardy, or
+the carse of Stirling, battle after battle has been fought in the space
+between Jezreel and Gilboa, to decide who should be master of the whole
+adjacent territory.
+
+The Philistine host are said to have gathered themselves together and
+pitched in Shunem (chap. xxviii. 4), and afterwards to have gathered all
+their hosts to Aphek, and pitched by the fountain which is in Jezreel
+(xxix. 1). That is to say, they advanced from a westward to a northward
+position, which last they occupied before the battle. Saul appears from
+the beginning to have arranged his troops on the northern slopes of
+Mount Gilboa, and to have remained in that position during the battle.
+It was an excellent position for fighting, but very unfavourable for a
+retreat. Apparently the Philistines began the battle by moving
+southwards across the plain till they reached the foot of Gilboa, where
+the tug of war began. Notwithstanding the favourable position of the
+Hebrews, they were completely defeated. The archers appear to have done
+deadly execution; as they advanced nearer to the host of Israel, the
+latter would move backward to get out of range; while the Philistines,
+gaining confidence, would press them more and more, till the orderly
+retreat became a terrible rout. So utterly routed was the Israelite army
+that they do not appear to have tried a single rally, which, as they had
+to retreat over Mount Gilboa, it would have been so natural for them to
+do. Panic and consternation seem to have seized them very early in the
+battle; that they would be defeated was probably a foregone conclusion,
+but the attitude of a retreating army seems to have been assumed more
+quickly and suddenly than could have been supposed. If the Philistine
+army, seeing the early confusion of the Israelites, had the courage to
+pour themselves along the valleys on each side of Gilboa, no way of
+retreat would be left to their enemy except over the top of the hill.
+And when that was reached, and the Israelites began to descend, the
+arrows of the pursuing Philistines would fall on them with more deadly
+effect than ever, and the slaughter would be tremendous.
+
+Saul seems never to have been deficient in personal courage, and in the
+course of the battle he and his staff were evidently in the very
+thickest of the fight. "The Philistines followed hard upon Saul and upon
+his sons; and the Philistines slew Jonathan, and Abinadab, and
+Melchi-shua, the sons of Saul." Saul himself was greatly distressed in
+his flight by reason of the archers. Finding himself wounded, and being
+provided with neither chariot nor other means of escape, a horror
+seized him that if once the enemy got possession of him alive they would
+subject him to some nameless mutilation or horrible humiliation too
+terrible to be thought of. Hence his request to his armour-bearer to
+fall on him. When the armour-bearer refused, he took a sword from him
+and killed himself.
+
+It may readily be allowed that to one not ruled habitually by regard to
+the will of God this was the wisest course to follow. If the Philistine
+treatment of captive kings resembled the Assyrian, death was far rather
+to be chosen than life. When we find on Assyrian monuments such
+frightful pictures as those of kings obliged to carry the heads of their
+sons in processions, or themselves pinned to the ground by stakes driven
+through their hands and feet, and undergoing the horrible process of
+being flayed alive, we need not wonder at Saul shrinking with horror
+from what he might have had to suffer if he had been taken prisoner.
+
+But what are we to think of the moral aspect of his act of suicide? That
+in all ordinary cases suicide is a daring sin, who can deny? God has not
+given to man the disposal of his life in such a sense. It is a daring
+thing for man to close his day of grace sooner than God would have
+closed it. It is a reckless thing to rush into the presence of his Maker
+before His Maker has called him to appear. It is a presumptuous thing to
+calculate on bettering his condition by plunging into an untried
+eternity. No doubt one must be tender in judging of men pressed hard by
+real or imaginary terrors, perhaps their reason staggering, their
+instincts trembling, and a horror of great darkness obscuring
+everything. Yet how often, in his last written words, does the suicide
+bear testimony against himself when he hopes that God will forgive him,
+and beseeches his friends to forgive him. Does not this show that in
+his secret soul he is conscious that he ought to have borne longer,
+ought to have quitted himself more like a man, and suffered every
+extremity of fortune before quenching the flame of life within him?
+
+The truth is, that the suicide of Saul, as of many another, is an act
+that cannot be judged by itself, but must be taken in connection with
+the course of his previous life. We have said that to one not habitually
+ruled by regard to the will of God, self-destruction at such a moment
+was the wisest course. That is to say, if he merely balanced what
+_appeared_ to be involved in terminating his life against what was
+involved in the Philistines taking him and torturing him, the former
+alternative was by far the more tolerable. But the question comes
+up,--if he had not habitually disregarded the will of God, would he ever
+have been in that predicament? The criminality of many an act must be
+thrown back on a previous act, out of which it has arisen. A drunkard in
+a midnight debauch quarrels with his father, and plunges a knife into
+his heart. When he comes to himself he is absolutely unconscious of what
+he has done. He tells you he had no wish nor desire to injure his
+father. It was not his proper self that did it, but his proper self
+over-mastered, over-thrown, brutalized by the monster drink. Do you
+excuse him on this account? Far from it. You excuse him of a deliberate
+design against his father's life. But you say the possibility of that
+deed was involved in his getting drunk. For a man to get drunk, to
+deprive himself for the time of his senses, and expose himself to an
+influence that may cause him to commit a most horrible and unnatural
+crime, is a fearful sin. Thus you carry back the criminality of the
+murder to the previous act of getting drunk. So in regard to the
+suicide of Saul. The criminality of that act is to be carried back to
+the sin of which he was guilty when he determined to follow his own will
+instead of the will of God. It was through that sin that he was brought
+into his present position. Had he been dutiful to God he would never
+have been in such a dilemma. On the one hand he never would have been so
+defeated and humiliated in battle; and on the other hand he would have
+had a trust in the Divine protection even when a bloody enemy like the
+Philistines was about to seize him. It was the true source alike of his
+public defeat and of his private despair that he indicated when he said
+to Samuel, "God is departed from me;" and he might have been sure that
+God would not have departed from him if he had not first departed from
+God.
+
+It is a most important principle of life we thus get sight of, when we
+see the bearing that one act of sin has upon another. It is very seldom
+indeed that the consequences of any sin terminate with itself. Sin has a
+marvellous power of begetting, of leading you on to other acts that you
+did not think of at first, of involving you in meshes that were then
+quite out of your view. And this multiplying process of sin is a course
+that may begin very early. Children are warned of it in the hymn--"He
+that does one fault at first, and lies to hide it, makes it two." A sin
+needs to be covered, and another sin is resorted to in order to provide
+the covering. Nor is that all. You have a partner in your sin, and to
+free yourself you perhaps betray your partner. That partner may be not
+only the weaker vessel, but also by far the heavier sufferer, and yet,
+in your wretched selfishness, you deny all share of the sin, or you
+leave your partner to be ruined. Alas! alas! how terrible are the ways
+of sin. How difficult it often is for the sinner to retrace his steps!
+And how terrible is the state of mind when one says, I must commit this
+sin or that--I have no alternative! How terrible was Saul's position
+when he said, "I must destroy myself." Truly sin is a hard, unfeeling
+master--"The way of transgressors is hard." He only that walketh
+uprightly walketh surely. "Blessed are the undefiled in the way, that
+walk in the law of the Lord."
+
+The terrible nature of the defeat which the Israelites suffered on this
+day from the Philistines is apparent from what is said in the seventh
+verse--"And when the men of Israel that were on the other side of the
+valley, and they that were beyond Jordan, saw that the men of Israel
+fled, and that Saul and his sons were dead, they forsook their cities
+and fled; and the Philistines came and dwelt in them." The plain of
+Esdraelon is interrupted, and in a sense divided into two, by three
+hills--Tabor, Gilboa, and Little Hermon. On the eastern side of these
+hills the plain is continued on to the Jordan valley. The effect of the
+battle of Gilboa was that all the rich settlements in that part of the
+plain had to be forsaken by the Israelites and given up to the
+Philistines. More than that, the Jordan valley ceased to afford the
+protection which up to this time it had supplied against enemies from
+the west. For the most part, the trans-Jordanic tribes were exposed to
+quite a different set of enemies. It was the Syrians from the north, the
+Moabites and the Ammonites from the east, and the Midianites and
+Amalekites from the remoter deserts, that were usually the foes of
+Reuben, Gad, and Manasseh. But on this occasion a new foe assailed them.
+The Philistines actually crossed the Jordan, and the rich pastures of
+Gilead and Bashan, with the flocks and herds that swarmed upon them,
+became the prey of the uncircumcised. Thus the terror of the
+Philistines, hitherto confined to the western portion of the country,
+was spread, with all its attendant horrors, over the length and breadth
+of Israel. We get a vivid view of the state of the country when David
+was called to take charge of it. And we get a vivid view of the worse
+than embarrassment, the fatal crime, into which David would have been
+led if he had remained in the Philistine camp and taken any part in this
+campaign.
+
+How utterly crushed the Philistines considered the Israelites to be, and
+how incapable of striking any blow in their own defence, is apparent
+from the humiliating treatment of the bodies of Saul and his sons, the
+details of which are given in this chapter and in the parallel passage
+in 1 Chronicles (chap. x.). If there had been any possibility of the
+Israelites being stung into a new effort by the dishonour done to their
+king and princes, that dishonour would not have been so terribly
+insulting. But there was no such possibility. The treatment was doubly
+insulting. Saul's head, severed from his body, was put in the temple of
+Dagon (1 Chron. x.); his armour was hung up in the house of Ashtaroth;
+and his body was fastened to the wall of Beth-shan. The same treatment
+seems to have been bestowed on his three sons. The other part of the
+insult arose from the idolatrous spirit in which all this was done. The
+tidings of the victory were ordered to be carried to the house of their
+idols as well as to their people (1 Sam. xxxi. 9). The trophies were
+displayed in the temples of these idols. The spirit of vaunting, which
+had so roused David against Goliath because he defied the armies of the
+living God, appeared far more offensively than ever. Not only was Israel
+defeated, but in the view of the Philistines Israel's God as well. Dagon
+and Ashtaroth had triumphed over Jehovah. The humiliation suffered in
+the days when the ark of God brought such calamities to them and their
+gods was now amply avenged. The image of Dagon was not found lying on
+its face, all shattered save the stump, after the heads of Saul and his
+sons had been placed in his temple. Yes, and the nobles at least of the
+Philistines would boast that the slaughter of Goliath by David, and the
+placing of his head and his armour near Jerusalem--probably in the holy
+place of Israel--were amply avenged. Well was it for David, we may say
+again, that he had no share in this terrible battle! Henceforth
+undoubtedly there would be no more truce on his part towards the
+Philistines. Had they not dishonoured the person of his king? had they
+not insulted the dead body of Jonathan his noble friend? had they not
+hurled new defiance against the God of Israel? had they not spread
+robbery and devastation over the whole length and breadth of the
+country, and turned every happy family into a group of cowering slaves?
+Were this people to be any longer honoured with his friendship? "O my
+soul, come not thou into their secret; unto their assembly, mine honour,
+be not thou united!"
+
+The only redeeming incident, in all this painful narrative, is the
+spirited enterprise of the men of Jabesh-gilead, coming to Beth-shan by
+night, removing the bodies of Saul and his sons from the wall, and
+burying them with all honour at Jabesh. Beth-shan was a considerable
+distance from Gilboa, where Saul and his sons appear to have fallen;
+but probably it was the largest city in the neighbourhood, and therefore
+the best adapted to put the remains of the king and the princes to open
+shame. Jabesh-gilead was somewhere on the other side of the Jordan,
+distant from Beth-shan several miles. It was highly creditable to its
+people that, after a long interval, the remembrance of Saul's first
+exploit, when he relieved them from the cruel threats of the Ammonites,
+was still strong enough to impel them to the gallant deed which secured
+honourable burial for the bodies of Saul and his sons. We are conscious
+of a reverential feeling rising in our hearts toward this people as we
+think of their kindness to the dead, as if the whole human race were one
+family, and a kindness done nearly three thousand years ago were in some
+sense a kindness to ourselves.
+
+That first exploit of Saul's, rescuing the men of Jabesh-gilead, seems
+never to have been surpassed by any other enterprise of his reign. As we
+now look back on the career of Saul, which occupies so large a portion
+of this book, we do not find much to interest or refresh us. He belonged
+to the order of military kings. He was not one of those who were devoted
+to the intellectual, or the social, or the religious elevation of his
+kingdom. His one idea of a king was to rid his country of its enemies.
+"He fought," we are told, "against all his enemies on every side,
+against Moab, and against the children of Ammon, and against Edom, and
+against the king of Zobah, and against the Philistines: and
+whithersoever he turned himself he vexed them. And he did valiantly and
+smote Amalek, and delivered Israel out of the hands of them that spoiled
+them." That success gave him a good name as king, but it did not draw
+much affection to him; and it had more effect in ridding the people of
+evil than in conferring on them positive good. Royalty bred in Saul what
+it bred in most kings of the East, an imperious temper, a despotic will.
+Even in his own family he played the despot. And if he played the despot
+at home he did so not less in public. All that we can say in his favour
+is, that he did not carry his despotism so far as many. But his jealous
+and in so far despotic temper could not but have had an evil effect on
+his people. We cannot suppose that when jealousy was so deep in his
+nature David was the only one of his officers who experienced it. The
+secession of so many very able men to David, about the time when he was
+with the Philistines, looked as if Saul could not but be jealous of any
+man who rose to high military eminence. That Saul was capable of
+friendly impulses is very different from saying that his heart was warm
+and winning. The most vital want in him was the want of godliness. He
+had little faith in the nation as God's nation, God's heritage. He had
+little love for prophets, or for men of faith, or for any who attached
+great importance to moral and spiritual considerations. His persecution
+of David and his murder of the priests are deep stains than can never be
+erased. And that godless nature of his became worse as he went on. It is
+striking that the last transaction in his reign was a decided failure in
+the very department in which he had usually excelled. He who had gained
+what eminence he had as a military king, utterly failed, and involved
+his people in utter humiliation, in that very department. His abilities
+failed him because God had forsaken him. The Philistines whom he had so
+often defeated crushed him in the end. To him the last act of life was
+very different from that of Samson--Samson conquering in his death;
+Saul defeated and disgraced in his.
+
+Need we again urge the lesson? "Them that honour Me I will honour; but
+they that despise Me shall be lightly esteemed." You dare not leave GOD
+out in your estimate of the forces that bear upon your life. You dare
+not give to Him a secondary place. God must have the first place in your
+regards. Are you really honouring Him above all, prizing His favour,
+obeying His will, trusting in His word? Are you even trying, amid many
+mortifying failures, to do so? It is not the worst life that numbers
+many a failure, many a confession, many a prayer for mercy and for grace
+to help in time of need, provided always your heart is habitually
+directed to God as the great end of existence, the Pole Star by which
+your steps are habitually to be directed, the Sovereign whose holy will
+must be your great rule, the Pattern whose likeness should be stamped on
+your hearts, the God and Father of your Lord Jesus Christ, whose love,
+and favour, and blessing are evermore the best and brightest inheritance
+for all the children of men.
+
+
+
+
+ END OF VOL. 1.
+
+
+ Printed by Hazell, Watson, & Viney, Ld., London and Aylesbury.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Expositor's Bible: The First Book
+of Samuel, by W. G. Blaikie
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