THE RELIEF OF JABESH-GILEAD.
1Sa 11:1-15.
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. 1Sa 12:12). 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 defense, 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 geld!
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 defense; 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 reveling 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?
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