SAMUEL’S DEALINGS WITH THE PEOPLE.
1Sa 12:6-25.
2. HAVING vindicated himself (in the first five verses of this
chapter, 1Sa 12:1-5), 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 (1Sa 12:6-12 vers.).
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 realize 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. 1Sa 12:12 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 Jdg 10:8-9.) 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 be 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 (1Sa
12:13-25). 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
car 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 ship-board 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 vocal humanity
is no humanity. Those who act as if t 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, longsuffering, 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 someone 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 practice 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 I 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"?
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