| JEHOSHAPHAT, (FOURTH) KING OF JUDAH 
					— JORAM, (TENTH) KING OF ISRAEL The Allied Expedition 
					against Moab — Recent Discovery of "the Moabite Stone" — 
					Lessons of its Inscription — The March through the 
					Wilderness of Edom — Want of Water — Interview with Elisha — 
					Divine Deliverance — Defeat of Moab and Advance of the 
					Allies — The Siege of Kir-haraseth — Mesha offers up his 
					Son — Withdrawal of the Allies. 
					(2 Kings 3:5-27.) 
					     
					
					The first public act of Elisha' s wider ministry is 
					connected with an event 
					of which the most strange and unlooked-for confirmation has 
					been brought 
					to light within the last few years. When in August, 1868, 
					the Rev. F. 
					Klein, of the Church Missionary Society, was traveling in 
					Moab, his 
					attention was directed by a friendly Sheik to a black basalt 
					stone, about 
					three feet ten inches in height, two feet in width, and 
					fourteen and a half 
					inches in thickness. The stone bore an inscription of 
					thirty-four straight 
					lines (about one and a quarter inches apart), which on 
					learned investigation 
					was found to be in the ancient Phoenician characters. The 
					place where this 
					memorial- stone, or column, was found was Diban, the 
					ancient Dibon, the 
					northern capital of Moab, north of the river Arnon. So far 
					as can be judged 
					from the shapeless mass of ruins (comp. Jeremiah 48:18) that 
					cover the 
					twin hills on which the ancient city had stood, surrounded 
					by a wall, "it 
					was quite within the old city walls; near what, we presume, 
					was the 
					gateway, close to where the road has crossed it." 
					1 Whether 
					it had originally 
					stood there, is another and not easily answered question. 
					2
					
      
					Before referring to the important evidence derived from this 
					discovery, we 
					shall in a few sentences, give the melancholy history of 
					this stone. It may 
					teach us a lesson about "our unhappy divisions." The 
					unexpected 
					discovery of this stone led, in the first place, to 
					jealousies for its coveted 
					possession among the European communities in Jerusalem. In 
					the end, in 
					their eagerness to make as much profit as was possible out 
					of these 
					contentions, the Arabs quarreled among themselves — and 
					broke up the 
					stone. Happily, most of the fragments have been secured, and 
					some 
					
					
					
					
					
					
					"squeezes" on paper had previously been taken, so that all 
					the important 
					parts of the inscription can be read, and have — with but 
					slight variations 
					— been interpreted by critics of different countries. 
					3      
					Perhaps it may be convenient here to put down such parts of 
					the 
					inscription as are of importance to our present purpose, 
					adding afterwards 
					brief comments in explanation. The inscription begins as 
					follows (we mark 
					the original lines): — 
  
						    
					1. I Mesha am son of Chemoshgad, King of Moab, the 
      
					2. Dibonite. My father reigned over Moab thirty years and I 
					reign- 
      
					3. ed after my father. And I erected this stone to Chemosh 
					at Kirkha 
					[a stone of] 
      
					4. [sa] lvation, for he saved me from all despoilers, and 
					made me see 
					my desire upon all my enemies, upon Om- 
      
					5. [r] i, king of Israel. He afflicted Moab many days, for 
					Chemosh 
					was angry with his count- 
      
					6. [r] y. His son succeeded him, and he also said, I will 
					afflict Moab. 
					In my days he said [Let us go] 
      
					7. And I will see my desire on him and his house. And Israel 
					[said], I 
					will destroy with an everlasting destruction. Now Omri took 
					(had 
					taken) the land 
      
					8. Medeba and.... 4 occupied it.... the days of his son, 
					forty years. 
					And Chemosh [had mercy] 
      
					9. on it in my days, and I built Baal Meon, and made therein 
					the tank, 
					and I [built 
      
					We cannot here continue this quotation, interesting as are 
					the issues 
					involved. What follows describes the reconquest by Mesha of 
					various 
					towns in the north of Moab, formerly occupied by Israel, 
					their 
					reconstruction and the dedication of captive women to "Ashtar-Chemosh"
					
					(Astarte-Chemosh), and of what are described as "vessels of 
					Jehovah," to 
					Chemosh — both at the taking of Nebo, in the northernmost 
					part of 
					Moab. 
      
					In lines 1-9, first clause of the inscription, Mesha relates 
					the subjugation of 
					Moab by Omri, the father of Ahab, and the deliverance of 
					that country, 
					which he ascribes to Chemosh. This we suppose to have been 
					connected 
					with the retreat of the allied armies from Kir-haraseth, and 
					their evacuation 
					
					
					
					
					
					of the country (2 Kings 3: 25). 5 From all this we infer 
					that the land of 
					Moab, which had apparently recovered its independence 
					during, or 
					immediately after, the reign of Solomon, was, at least in 
					part, reconquered 
					by the warlike Omri. And from the list of towns which in 
					other parts of 
					the inscription Mesha mentions as having been retaken, we 
					conclude that 
					Omri had invaded Moab from the north, while afterwards the 
					allied armies 
					entered it from the south. Accordingly a number of places 
					are named as 
					such which the king of Israel had fortified and Mesha 
					recaptured. All these 
					towns are north of the Arnon. The deep gorge, and the 
					rapid current of 
					that river, would render its passage by a hostile army 
					extremely difficult. 
					Hence the invading army of Omri seems to have been arrested 
					by that 
					obstacle, and Jahaz, which lay north of the Arnon, is 
					the most southern 
					point mentioned in the inscription, as held and fortified by 
					the king of 
					Israel. 
      
					But while Northern Moab was thus occupied by Israel, the 
					southern part 
					of the country seems to have preserved its independence 
					during the reign 
					both of Omri and of Ahab. After the death of the latter, 
					"Moab rebelled" 
					(2 Kings 3:5), under the leadership of their brave king 
					Mesha — a name 
					which is connected with the word "deliverance." He styles 
					his father 
					Chemosh-Gad, which is a compound of the names of the two 
					gods, 
					Chemosh and Gad (the latter the god of fortune). The first 
					intimation of 
					the movement for the recovery of their independence seems to 
					have been 
					the sudden invasion of Judaea by Moab, in alliance with the 
					Ammonites 
					and a tribe of Edomites (2 Chronicles 20). Probably the 
					Moabites had not 
					yet felt themselves sufficiently strong for an attack on the 
					Israelitish 
					stronghold in Northern Moab, and accordingly resolved on 
					making a raid 
					across the undefended boundary of Judah, while at the same 
					time they 
					sought to combine into an anti-Israelitish alliance all the 
					tribes along the 
					eastern line of Palestine. We know that through the Divine 
					help to 
					Jehoshaphat, this expedition signally failed, while in the 
					mutual slaughter 
					which ensued the Edomite allies of Moab were the first to 
					suffer. Hence, 
					the projected anti-Israelitish league was not only broken 
					up, but Edom was 
					drawn into what seems to have been a Palestinian counter 
					league, the 
					pathetic story of which is connected with the so-called 
					"Moabite stone." 
      
					It is impossible to find words for the varied feelings which 
					rise as we 
					realize that after the lapse of 2,500 years a monumental 
					stone should in 
					
					
					
					
					such unexpected manner have been found to bear testimony to 
					Holy 
					Scripture, and especially to its record of that event from 
					which Mesha 
					dates the recovery of the independence of Moab, 
					6 — all the 
					more that he 
					ascribes the glory of it to Chemosh, his god. 
					7 When from 
					the Moabite 
					inscription we turn to the Biblical narrative, we learn that Mesha, like his 
					predecessors, had been under heavy annual tribute to Israel, 
					which was 
					paid in kind. We read that he "was a sheepmaster." The 
					extensive downs 
					of Moab were covered by numberless flocks, and the tribute 
					which he had 
					to pay consisted of "a hundred thousand lambs, and a hundred 
					thousand 
					wethers — the wool." The wording in the original is not very 
					clear, but as 
					the term used for "lambs" generally designates "fed lambs," 
					we conclude 
					that if it is intended to convey that the wool formed the 
					tribute, it must 
					have been that of "the wethers," and that to this the 
					hundred thousand fed 
					lambs were added. It need scarcely be said that this tribute 
					ceased when 
					Mesha cast off the yoke of Israel. 
      
					The events previously related will sufficiently account for 
					the anxiety of 
					Jehoshaphat that the growing power of Moab should be 
					checked, and a 
					counter league formed effectually to oppose the common 
					enemies of 
					Palestine. As regards any religious scruples to an alliance 
					with Israel, he 
					may have argued that Joram was not like Ahaziah, nor even 
					like Ahab (2 
					Kings 3:2), and that since God Himself had given such signal 
					victory over 
					Moab, a common invasion of their land might even be pleasing 
					in His sight. 
					We rarely fail to find a satisfactory or even a religious 
					reason for doing that 
					on which we set our hearts. But it does seem strange, that 
					the answer 
					which Jehoshaphat returned to the invitation of Joram to 
					join him in the 
					campaign against Moab should have been precisely the same as 
					that which 
					he had given on the disastrous occasion when Ahab asked him 
					to go up 
					against Ramoth-gilead (1 Kings 22:4). Perhaps, however, it 
					was a common 
					mode of expression in such circumstances, or else the sacred 
					historian may 
					have wished to emphasize the folly and wrong of Jehoshaphat' 
					s conduct 
					by using the same terms as formerly in the unhappy alliance 
					with Ahab. 
      
					The plan agreed upon by the two monarchs was to make 
					invasion of Moab 
					from the south. This, not only in order to ensure the 
					co-operation of the 
					king of Edom, who had now joined the anti-Moabite league, 
					and to protect 
					their rear and their communications, but also for important 
					strategic 
					reasons. Northern Moab was, indeed, subject to Israel, but 
					the Arnon 
					
					
					
					
					
					marked the boundary, and no prudent commander would attempt 
					to force 
					such a position as the line of the Arnon in the face of a 
					general like Mesha. 
					On the other hand, by fetching "a seven days' compass," and 
					advancing 
					front the south and through Edom, alike their retreat was 
					covered and 
					supplies would be secured. And if Mesha could be drawn into 
					the 
					wilderness which separated Edom from Southern Moab, and 
					belonged 
					partly to the one, partly to the other country, the whole of 
					Moab might be 
					overrun, and the invading army from the south join hands 
					with the 
					Israelitish garrisons north of the Arnon. 
      
					But once more the incapacity, if not the treachery, of Edom 
					defeated the 
					plans of the allies. Mesha refused to be drawn into the 
					wilderness of 
					Edom. As we understand it, his army was posted on the 
					Moabite side of 
					the boundary, which is here formed by the Wady 'el Ansa, 
					8 
					while higher 
					up it passes into the Wady Tufileh. We suppose that it was 
					here, or in 
					some other dried-up wady close by, that the allies, who were 
					now 
					suffering from want of water, suddenly found themselves in 
					presence of an 
					enemy that swarmed the tangled brushwood and thicket around. 
					Unable to 
					cross the Wady and engage the enemy, who seemed ubiquitous, 
					or to 
					retreat into the wilderness, the position of the allies 
					seemed, humanly 
					speaking, hopeless. 
      
					It was in these circumstances that the grand difference in 
					principle between 
					the king of Israel and pious Jehoshaphat appeared, as it 
					always does in 
					seasons of trial and decision between the servants of the 
					Lord and those of 
					"strange gods." Joram could descry nothing but impending 
					ruin, and his 
					only thought concerning Jehovah was that He had brought the 
					three kings 
					together for their destruction. Jehoshaphat, though often 
					and sadly failing 
					through weakness of character, was yet true in the inmost 
					direction of his 
					heart. In his distress he instinctively turned to the Lord 
					for guidance. His 
					inquiry for a "prophet of Jehovah" brought out two facts of 
					infinite 
					comfort: that Elisha, known as the attendant of Elijah, 
					9 
					was — no doubt 
					by Divine direction — present in the camp; and that there 
					was one in the 
					following of the king of Israel — probably one of the 
					superior officers — 
					who knew of it, being evidently in sympathy with that which 
					the prophet 
					represented, as Obadiah had been in the days of Ahab (1 
					Kings 18:3). 
					
					
					
					
      
					We read that the three kings went to the tent of Elisha. 
					This not merely 
					from apprehension that he might refuse to come to them, nor 
					yet from 
					humility; but probably because they may have dreaded the 
					effect upon the 
					host of such words as formerly Micaiah had spoken in similar
					
					circumstances (1 Kings 22:17-28). The reception which this 
					incongruous 
					company of kings met at the hands of the prophet was 
					certainly not 
					encouraging. On the other hand, an appeal for help addressed 
					to the 
					prophet of Jehovah by the heathen king of Edom and the son 
					of Ahab 
					seemed to treat the prophetic office as if it had involved 
					heathen magic and 
					divination, just as Balak of old had sought to employ Balaam 
					against Israel. 
					To an appeal of such a character Elisha could not have 
					listened; it should 
					— as he told the king of Israel — be addressed to the 
					prophets of Baal. 
					How truly Elisha had judged Joram appears from his answer, 
					when with 
					almost incredible dullness, he once more urged — presumably 
					as the 
					reason for his coming — that Jehovah, the God of the 
					prophet, and the old 
					enemy of the house of Ahab, had brought these kings together 
					for their 
					destruction. With such an one it was impossible to argue, 
					and the prophet 
					turned from him to the king of Judah, for whose sake alone 
					he would 
					consent to continue the interview, or would seek the 
					guidance and help of 
					the Lord . 
      
					It has been assumed by a certain school of critics that when 
					Elisha next 
					called for a minstrel, it was to rouse in himself the 
					prophetic faculty, or 
					else that such was the common mode of producing prophetic 
					inspiration. 
					But for the latter assertion there is not a tittle of 
					evidence, 10 while, as 
					regards the former, alike Biblical (1 Samuel 16:16) and 
					heathen testimony 11 
					go to prove that the purpose for which music was employed 
					was to 
					soothe, not to excite the mind. It was not otherwise in the 
					present 
					instance. From the agitation of his interview with Joram 
					Elisha was 
					restored by the minstrel to quietness, and thus prepared for 
					receiving the 
					Divine communication. This was twofold: it gave promise of 
					deliverance 
					from the present straits and of complete victory over Moab. 
					The people 
					were directed to make the Wady full of pits — and then, 
					without sound of 
					wind, or sight of rain, would the Wady be filled with water, 
					and the host 
					set free from their present straits. But this was only 
					preparatory. A 
					complete victory would be granted to them, and in their 
					victorious 
					progress they would destroy all fenced cities and absolutely 
					lay waste the 
					
					
					
					
					
					enemy's country. It is not ours to vindicate the work of 
					warfare here 
					indicated, although not prescribed (v. 19 
					12 ). It seems to 
					be opposed to the 
					express Divine direction in Deuteronomy 20:19, 20. In 
					judging of it some 
					considerations must, however, be kept in view. First and 
					foremost we have 
					to remember the spirit of the times. Nor is the time so far 
					distant when a 
					mode of warfare not very unlike this was common in an 
					enemy's country. 
					As a matter of fact, this mode of laying waste a hostile 
					country seems to 
					have been general at that time among all nations. 
					Accordingly it is 
					frequently represented on the Assyrian monuments, 
					13 and 
					referred to in 
					classical writings. 14 
      
					It may be of interest here to recall two points which might 
					otherwise be 
					overlooked. It will be remembered that the inscription on 
					the "Moabite 
					stone" makes the following special reference to this mode of 
					warfare: "In 
					my days he said, [Let us go,] and I will see my desire on 
					him and his 
					house. And Israel (said), I will destroy with an everlasting 
					destruction." 
					Thus the Moabite stone to a certain extent bears testimony 
					to the very 
					words which Elisha had used. Again, it may be doubted 
					whether, if Israel 
					had not adopted this mode of warfare, the retreat of the 
					allied army from 
					Kir-haraseth would not have been followed by a most 
					formidable Moabite 
					invasion into Palestine. As it was, the repair of the havoc 
					wrought in his 
					country must have engaged all the energies of Mesha. And to 
					this work of 
					necessary restoration and recuperation the closing part of 
					the Moabite 
					inscription bears testimony. 
      
					We return to the narrative of what happened on the morrow of 
					the 
					interview with Elisha. As directed by the prophet, pits had 
					been dug — as 
					we imagine, either in the rear or along the sides of the 
					camp of Israel, 
					although we know too little of the actual circumstances to 
					venture on any 
					more detailed statement. However it may have been, the 
					Divine prediction 
					by Elisha was literally fulfilled. Once more it all happened 
					in the orderly 
					succession of events, while, if viewed by itself, the issue 
					would seem, as in 
					the highest sense it was, miraculous. And this indeed holds 
					true of the 
					record of most Biblical miracles, that they are the 
					statement of effects, 
					without the assignment or explanation of the causes that led 
					up to them. In 
					the present instance, it was no doubt a sudden storm that 
					had burst in the 
					mountains of Moab which sent a rush of water down the Wady 
					by which 
					Israel was camped. The prophetic historian, who loves to 
					connect 
					
					
					
					
					
					Jehovah's deliverance with the loved services of the 
					sanctuary, reminds us 
					that it was "when the meat-offering was offered," that 
					"there came water 
					by the way of Edom," — to disappear as suddenly as it had 
					come, when 
					the object had been served. 
      
					The Israelites in their camp had seen it, and hastened to 
					quench their thirst. 
					The Moabites also saw it, but to them it seemed as the 
					eastern sun shone 
					on the water in the pits, reddened as it was by the color of 
					the soil, that 
					they were gazing on pools of blood. Their late expedition 
					into Judah 
					suggested a ready explanation of the strange sight. Perhaps 
					their 
					superstition might lead them to imagine that Chemosh, of 
					whose help we 
					read so much in the Moabite inscription, had now granted to 
					Moab a 
					success precisely similar to that of Judah. The kings were 
					destroyed — 
					they had smitten one another: now, therefore, Moab to the 
					spoil! 
					Meantime, the commanders of the allied army would naturally 
					keep their 
					men within their camp, so as to allow the disorderly rush of 
					Bedawin, 
					intent on spoil, to cross the Wady and approach them quite 
					closely, before 
					suddenly sallying forth to inflict indiscriminate slaughter. 
					Mesha was too 
					wary to risk another defeat of the same kind. He retreated 
					before Israel, 
					evacuating every fortified town, till he reached the 
					stronghold of Kir- 
					haraseth, where he resolved to make a final stand. The 
					Jewish army slowly 
					followed the retreating enemy, destroying every town and 
					laying waste the 
					country around. Their progress was arrested at the walls of 
					Kir-haraseth. 
      
					As we consider the situation of that fortress, we scarcely 
					wonder that the 
					allies found themselves unable to do more than harass the 
					garrison by 
					posting sharpshooters on the hills around ("the slingers 
					went about it"), 
					and attempt to reduce it by hunger. The position of Kir-Moab, 
					"the 
					fortress of Moab," (Isaiah 15: 1
					15 ), Kir-hareseth (Isaiah 
					16:7), Kir-haresh 
					(Isaiah 16:7), or Kir-haraseth — for it bears all these 
					names, which seem to 
					mean "fortress of brickwork," — has been ascertained beyond 
					reasonable 
					doubt. The Chaldee paraphrast designates it (Isaiah 15:1) 
					Keraka 
					deMoabh, which exactly answers to the modern name Kerak. A
					
					continuous ascent from the south, amidst Alpine scenery, 
					leads up to 
					Kerak, which lies 3,720 feet above the Mediterranean. From 
					the last crest, 
					whence there is a magnificent prospect far away, we look 
					down into the 
					"Wady of Kerak, some 1800 feet of nearly sheer precipice on 
					the opposite 
					side." 16 Along that Wady winds among rocks the road, so 
					narrow that a 
					
					
					
					
					few resolute men could hold it against an army. As the Wady 
					widens, the 
					ground is cultivated "with olives, figs, pomegranates, and a 
					few vineyards 
					and patches of corn." Soon Kerak itself is seen, towering 
					high aloft. To 
					reach it, we must first descend into the valley. Then an 
					hour's climb up the 
					opposite cliff brings the traveler to an arched tunnel of 
					about eighty yards 
					in length, through which he emerges into the city of Kerak.
					
      
					The plateau on which the town stands is almost level, and 
					measures from 
					800 to 1000 yards on each face of the triangle which the 
					city forms, and of 
					which the north-eastern side is the longest. Here, and to a 
					less degree at the 
					south-west angle, the plateau is connected with the heights 
					which surround 
					Kerak on every side. But everywhere else the town is cut off 
					from the 
					encircling range by "Wadies (in part) from 1000 to 1500 feet 
					deep, with 
					steeply scarped or else rugged sides." 
					17 If we imagine this 
					isthmus of rock, 
					jutting into and rising above a sea of deep Wadies, itself 
					surrounded by a 
					broad wall with towers and other defenses, and crowned by a 
					city to 
					which there were only two entrances, each through a tunnel 
					in the side of 
					the cliff — we can form a picture of Kir-haraseth, as it 
					appeared to the 
					Jewish host that gazed on it from the heights around. 
      
					But although the allied army could not reduce the city, "the 
					slingers" 
					posted on the overlooking heights might inflict serious 
					losses on the 
					garrison. In fact, the place would soon have become 
					untenable. In these 
					circumstances Mesha endeavored, at the head of 700 
					swordsmen, to cut 
					his way through the besieging army in the direction where 
					the king of 
					Edom was posted — either because this was the weakest point 
					in the 
					camp of the allies, or probably because he may have expected 
					less 
					resistance in that quarter. Driven back into the city, the 
					frenzy of despair 
					seized him. The idea underlying sacrifice was in heathen 
					worship also that 
					of substitution, though not as provided by the mercy of God, 
					but in order 
					to appease His wrath. It was not the infinite compassion and 
					love of God 
					which provided a ransom, but the despair of mercy and 
					goodness that 
					suggested such means as the last hope of expiation. Hence 
					that which was 
					nearest and dearest to a man was offered up to propitiate, 
					if possible, a 
					god who was not known to be full of compassion. And so the 
					king of 
					Moab now took his eldest son, who should have succeeded him 
					on the 
					throne, and in sight of besiegers and besieged offered him 
					on the wall as a 
					burnt offering. Thus would he conciliate Chemosh; thus also 
					would he 
					
					
					
					
					
					show his devotion to his country. It was a horrible, 
					sickening spectacle, 
					which made deepest impression on all onlookers — friend as 
					well as foe. 
					The undertaking on which Israel had engaged its allies 
					became hateful to all 
					— and the allied army retired from before Kir-haraseth. So 
					ended the 
					campaign against Moab. 
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