SAUL’S WILFULNESS.
1Sa 14:24-51.
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 imperiled. 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 tranquility 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 1
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 rapacity, 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 lock 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 I 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 cumin, 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 1Sa 14:35 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 Cod 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."
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