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1 Samuel
Chapter Twelve
1 Samuel 12
Chapter Contents
Samuel testifies his integrity. (1-5) Samuel reproves the
people. (6-15) Thunder sent in harvest time. (16-25)
Commentary on 1 Samuel 12:1-5
(Read 1 Samuel 12:1-5)
Samuel not only cleared his own character, but set an
example before Saul, while he showed the people their ingratitude to God and to
himself. There is a just debt which all men to their own good name, especially
men in public stations, which is, to guard it against unjust blame and
suspicions, that they may finish their course with honour, as well as with joy.
And that we have in our places lived honestly, will be our comfort, under any
slights and contempt that may be put upon us.
Commentary on 1 Samuel 12:6-15
(Read 1 Samuel 12:6-15)
The work of ministers is to reason with people; not only
to exhort and direct, but to persuade, to convince men's judgments, and so to
gain their wills and affections. Samuel reasons of the righteous acts of the
Lord. Those who follow God faithfully, he will enable to continue following
him. Disobedience would certainly be the ruin of Israel. We mistake if we think
that we can escape God's justice, by trying to shake off his dominion. If we
resolve that God shall not rule us, yet he will judge us.
Commentary on 1 Samuel 12:16-25
(Read 1 Samuel 12:16-25)
At Samuel's word, God sent thunder and rain, at a season
of the year when, in that country, the like was not seen. This was to convince
them they had done wickedly in asking a king; not only by its coming at an
unusual time, in wheat harvest, and on a clear day, but by the prophet's giving
notice of it before. He showed their folly in desiring a king to save them,
rather than God, or Samuel; promising themselves more from an arm of flesh,
than from the arm of God, or from the power of prayer. Could their prince
command such forces as the prophet could do by his prayers? It startled them
very much. Some will not be brought to see their sins by any gentler methods
than storms and thunders. They entreat Samuel to pray for them. Now they see
their need of him whom shortly before they slighted. Thus many who will not
have Christ to reign over them, would yet be glad to have him intercede for
them, to turn away the wrath of God. Samuel aims to confirm the people in their
religion. Whatever we make a god of, we shall find it deceive us. Creatures in
their own places are good; but when put in God's place, they are vain things.
We sin if we restrain prayer, and in particular if we cease praying for the
church. They only asked him to pray for them; but he promises to do more, to
teach them. He urges that they were bound in gratitude to serve God,
considering what great things he had done for them; and that they were bound in
interest to serve him, considering what he would do against them, if they
should still do wickedly. Thus, as a faithful watchman, he gave them warning,
and so delivered his own soul. If we consider what great things the Lord hath
done for us, especially in the great work of redemption, we can neither want
motive, encouragement, nor assistance in serving him.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on 1 Samuel》
1 Samuel 12
Verse 1
[1] And
Samuel said unto all Israel, Behold, I have hearkened unto your voice in all
that ye said unto me, and have made a king over you.
Said —
While they were assembled together in Gilgal. And this is another instance of
Samuel's great wisdom and integrity. He would not reprove the people for their
sin, in desiring a king, whilst Saul was unsettled in his kingdom; lest through
their accustomed levity, they should as hastily cast off their king, as they
had passionately desired him, and therefore he chuseth this season for it;
because Saul's kingdom was now confirmed by an eminent victory; and because the
people rejoiced greatly, applauded themselves for their desires of a king; and
interpreted the success which God had given them, as a divine approbation of
those desires. Samuel therefore thinks fit to temper their joys, and to excite
them to that repentance which he saw wanting in them, and which he knew to be
necessary, to prevent the curse of God upon their new king, and the whole
kingdom.
Verse 2
[2] And now, behold, the king walketh before you: and I am old and grayheaded;
and, behold, my sons are with you: and I have walked before you from my
childhood unto this day.
Walketh —
Ruleth over you. To him I have fully resigned my power, and own myself one of
his subjects.
Old —
And therefore unable to bear the burden of government.
My sons —
Or, among you, in the same states private persons, as you are; if they have
injured any of you, the law is now open against them; any of you may accuse
them, your king can punish them, I do not intercede for them.
Walked before you —
That is, been your guide and governor; partly, as a prophet; and partly, as a
judge.
Verse 3
[3]
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 you.
Behold — I
here present myself before the Lord, and before your king, ready to give an
account of all my administrations. And this protestation Samuel makes of his
integrity, not out of ostentation; but for his own just vindication, that the
people might not hereafter for the defence of their own irregularities,
reproach his government, and that being publickly acquitted from all faults in
his government, he might more freely reprove the sins of the people, and,
particularly, that sin of theirs in desiring a king, when they had so little
reason for it.
Verse 7
[7] Now
therefore stand still, that I may reason with you before the LORD of all the
righteous acts of the LORD, which he did to you and to your fathers.
Righteous acts —
Heb. the righteousnesses; that is, mercies or benefits the chief subject of the
following discourse; some of their calamities being but briefly named, and that
for the illustration of God's mercy in their deliverances.
Verse 8
[8] When Jacob was come into Egypt, and your fathers cried unto the LORD, then
the LORD sent Moses and Aaron, which brought forth your fathers out of Egypt,
and made them dwell in this place.
This place — In
this land: in which Moses and Aaron are said to settle them; because they
brought them into, and seated them in part of it, that without Jordan; because
they were, under God, the principal authors of their entering into the land of
Canaan; inasmuch as they brought them out of Egypt, conducted them through the
wilderness; and thereby their prayers to God, and counsel to them, preserved
them from ruin, and gave command from God for the distribution of the land
among them, and encouraged them to enter into it. And lastly, Moses substituted
Joshua in his stead, and commanded him to seat them there, which he did.
Verse 9
[9] And
when they forgat the LORD their God, he sold them into the hand of Sisera,
captain of the host of Hazor, and into the hand of the Philistines, and into
the hand of the king of Moab, and they fought against them.
Forgat —
That is, they revolted from him, and carried themselves, as if they had wholly
forgotten his innumerable favours. This he saith to answer an objection, that
the reason why they desired a king, was, because in the time of the judges they
were at great uncertainties, and often exercised with sharp afflictions: to
which he answereth by concession that they were so; but adds, by way of
retortion, that they themselves were the cause of it, by their forgetting God:
so that it was not the fault of that kind of government, but their transgressing
the rules of it.
Fought —
With success, and subdued them.
Verse 11
[11] And
the LORD sent Jerubbaal, and Bedan, and Jephthah, and Samuel, and delivered you
out of the hand of your enemies on every side, and ye dwelled safe.
Bedan —
This was either Samson, as most interpreters believe, who is called Bedan; that
is, in Dan, or of Dan, one of that tribe, to signify that they had no reason to
distrust that God, who could raise so eminent a saviour out of so obscure a
tribe: or, Jair the Gileadite, which may seem best to agree, first, with the
time and order of the judges; for Jair was before Jephthah, but Samson was
after him. Secondly, with other scriptures: for among the sons of a more
ancient Jair, we meet with one called Bedan, 1 Chronicles 7:17, which name seems here given
to Jair the judge, to distinguish him from that first Jair.
Safe — So
that it was no necessity, but mere wantonness, that made you desire a change.
Verse 12
[12] And
when ye saw that Nahash the king of the children of Ammon came against you, ye
said unto me, Nay; but a king shall reign over us: when the LORD your God was
your king.
Your king —
That is, when God was your immediate king and governor, who was both able and
willing to deliver you, if you had cried to him, whereof you and your ancestors
have had plentiful experience; so that you did not at all need any other king;
and your desire of another, was a manifest reproach against God.
Verse 13
[13] Now
therefore behold the king whom ye have chosen, and whom ye have desired! and,
behold, the LORD hath set a king over you.
Ye have chosen —
Though God chose him by lot, yet the people are said to chuse him; either
generally, because they chose that form of government; or particularly, because
they approved of God's choice, and confirmed it.
The Lord — He
hath yielded to your inordinate desire.
Verse 14
[14] 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:
Then, … —
Heb. then shall-ye-be, (that is, walk, or go) after the Lord; that is, God
shall still go before you, as he hath hitherto done, as your leader or
governor, to direct, protect, and deliver you; and he will not forsake you, as
you have given him just cause to do. Sometimes this phrase of going after the
Lord, signifies a man's obedience to God; but here it is otherwise to be
understood, and it notes not a duty to be performed, but a privilege to be
received upon the performance of their duty; because it is opposed to a
threatening denounced in case of disobedience, in the next verse.
Verse 15
[15] 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.
Your fathers —
Who lived under the judges; and you shall have no advantage by the change of
government, nor shall your kings be able to protect you against God's
displeasure. The mistake, if we think we can evade God's justice, by shaking
off his dominion. If we will not let God rule us, yet he will judge us.
Verse 17
[17] Is
it not wheat harvest to day? I will call unto the LORD, and he shall send
thunder and rain; that ye may perceive and see that your wickedness is great,
which ye have done in the sight of the LORD, in asking you a king.
Wheat-harvest — At
which time it was a rare thing in those parts to have thunder or rain; the
weather being more constant in its seasons there, than it is with us.
Rain —
That you may understand that God is displeased with you; and also how foolishly
and wickedly you have done in rejecting the government of that God, at whose
command are all things both in heaven and in earth.
Verse 18
[18] 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.
Samuel —
Who had such power and favour with God. By this thunder and rain, God shewed
them their folly in desiring a king to save them, rather than God or Samuel,
expecting more from an arm of flesh than from the arm of God, or from the power
of prayer. Could their king thunder with a voice like God? Could their prince
command such forces as the prophet could by his prayers? Likewise he intimates,
that how serene soever their condition was now, (like the weather in wheat
harvest) yet if God pleased, he could soon change the face of their heavens,
and persecute them with his storms.
Verse 19
[19] 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.
Thy God —
Whom thou hast so great an interest in, while we are ashamed and afraid to call
him our God.
Verse 20
[20] And
Samuel said unto the people, Fear not: ye have done all this wickedness: yet
turn not aside from following the LORD, but serve the LORD with all your heart;
Fear not —
With a desponding fear, as if there were no hope left for you.
Verse 21
[21] And
turn ye not aside: for then should ye go after vain things, which cannot profit
nor deliver; for they are vain.
Turn aside-After idols; as they had often
done before; and, notwithstanding this warning, did afterwards.
Vain things — So
idols are called, Deuteronomy 32:21; Jeremiah 2:5, and so they are, being mere
nothings, having no power in them; no influence upon us, nor use or benefit to
us.
Verse 22
[22] For
the LORD will not forsake his people for his great name's sake: because it hath
pleased the LORD to make you his people.
His name's sake —
That is, for his own honour, which would suffer much among men, if he should
not preserve and deliver his people in eminent dangers. And this reason God
alledgeth to take them off from all conceit of their own merit; and to assure
them, that if they did truly repent of all their sins, and serve God with all
their heart; yet even in that case their salvation would not be due to their
merits; but the effect of God's free mercy.
To make —
Out of his own free grace, without any desert of yours, and therefore he will
not forsake you, except you thrust him away.
Verse 24
[24] Only
fear the LORD, and serve him in truth with all your heart: for consider how
great things he hath done for you.
Only, … —
Otherwise neither my prayer nor counsels will stand you in any stead.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on 1 Samuel》
12 Chapter 12
Verses 1-5
And Samuel said unto all Israel.
A statesman’s retrospect
The closing years in the life of Samuel, the last and greatest of
the judges, witnessed a transition in the method of governing the nation of
Israel from the theocracy to the monarchy. By the wise, unselfish action of
Samuel, this transition, which might have involved grave national controversy
and bloodshed, was peaceably made. Samuel’s work was, therefore, as a ruler,
transferred to Saul; and though he continued for some years to exercise the
functions of prophet, administrative duties passed into other hands. This
address is a fine example of ancient Hebrew eloquence, and it manifestly
appealed to the conscience and heart of the audience addressed. It touched upon
three important points.
I. Vindication of
personal character and administration. In his splendid review what facts
emerged that should commend the retiring leader to the gratitude and
appreciation of the nation he had sought to serve?
1. His loyalty to the national request for a king. We know how
acutely he had felt his supersession of himself, and how he had directed his
prayer to God in respect of it; but he had waived his own strong objection, and
had dutifully assisted in the appointment of the divinely selected monarch.
2. His long and blameless life. High position magnifies every human
quality, heightens every excellency, and blackens every blot of human
character. But Samuel’s long career furnished no fault on which the most acute
enquiry could fasten, no deviation from the right path that the sternest
rectitude could condemn. What a magnificent challenge.
3. His upright administration. Samuel challenged the people on the
question of his “official life,” as well as on his personal character. His
public duties had been as free from exaction and oppression as his private life
from moral taint. Nothing is more common, it is said, in Eastern lands, even down
to this day, than oppression and exaction on the part of rulers and public men
having charge of the government and taxation of the people.
II. Defence of
God’s previous government of Israel. Note:--
1. The principle of this government. The theocracy, under which
Israel had so long lived and prospered, meant the supreme and recognised
sovereignty of God. By the test of experience, the test of practical results on
the national life, the theocracy had its amplest vindication. Under it the
nation had enjoyed signal prosperity.
2. The agency by which administered. This unique method of national
government was carried on by specially selected rulers, appointed as the
exigencies of the times demanded. God raised up men--great men--to meet
emergencies of national life as they arose.
3. The law by which controlled. This law was the nation’s loyalty to
God. When the nation was true to its best traditions, true to the faith and
worship of the living God, true to the sublime morality of the Ten
Commandments, God’s benediction rested upon them, and national prosperity
followed. In this memorable address Samuel referred also to:--
III. The conditions
of continued national prosperity.
1. Changed political conditions do not change moral or religious
obligations. King or no king, God’s claim on the worship and service of Israel
could not be abrogated or diminished. Amid all the changes of their national
life, that was the one thing that was changeless. A new king on the throne, or
a new form of government of the realm, did not and could not alter that. What
is morally wrong cannot be politically right. What is wrong in England is wrong
in India. If it is wrong to break the Sabbath at home, it is wrong to break it
abroad. Christianity knows no geographical limits in the scope of its message,
or the authority of its claims. Public opinion may change and vary, but it
ought not, and must not, override the higher and more authoritative law of God.
2. Righteousness exalteth a nation. John Ruskin, in the opening
paragraph of his “Stones of Venice,” tells us that “Since the first dominion of
men was asserted over the ocean, three thrones, of mark beyond all others, have
been set upon its sands: the thrones of Tyre, Venice, and England. Of the first
of these great powers only the memory remains; of the second, the ruin; the
third, which inherits their greatness, if it forget their example, may be led
through prouder eminence to less pitied destruction.” No lesson is more
urgently needed in our time than this. Vice means weakness and decay; virtue,
devotion, humanity--these mean strength and permanence. The conditions of
national prosperity, then, are clear and uniform. They are reverence for sacred
things, obedience to the law of God in personal, social, and national affairs
alike, consideration for others, and unselfish service to promote their
interests and welfare. (Thomas Mitchell.)
Saul’s confirmation in the kingship
After the great victory over the Ammonites at Jabesh-Gilead,
Samuel said to the people, “Come, and let us go to Gilgal, and renew the
kingdom there.” The people were in a mood to listen to the advice. They were
full of enthusiasm for Saul, and of gratitude to God on account of their
splendid success. And Samuel wisely took advantage of the occasion to confirm
the loyalty, not only of the people to the king, but also of the king and
people to God.
1. After the feast, perhaps in the course of the afternoon, Samuel
solemnly addressed the vast assembly. His aim, in the first part of his speech,
was to show that they had nothing to justify their demand for a king in the
character of his administration.
2. Samuel’s aim in the second part of his speech was to show that
they had nothing to justify their demand for a king in the character of the
Divine administration.
3. But, after convicting them of slighting God in asking for an
earthly sovereign, Samuel now speaks to them about their present duty. (T.
Kirk.)
Samuel’s vindication of himself
No doubt 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 reasons 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. If you have reason to suspect an adviser
of a selfish purpose 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 you feel that what such a man urges comes home to you
with extraordinary weight.
1. 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.
2. In the next place Samuel adverts to his age. What Samuel
delicately points to here is the uniformity of his life. He had not begun on
one line, then changed to another. Such steadiness and uniformity throughout a
long life genders a wonderful weight of character. 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?
3. 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. 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. 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? 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. 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 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,” etc. 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. (W.
G. Blaikie, D. D.)
Samuel on his defence
The scene explains itself. In olden times, meetings of this kind
were held in the open air. In earlier French history, the warriors used to meet
in the month of May, and the king was carried round on a shield, to receive
their homage. When our king Alfred divided the country into “hundreds,” he
directed the heads of families to meet together at fixed seasons, the muster
place being sometimes round a well-known tree, and there is in existence to
this day such a tree, which gave its name to the hundred or wapen-take. And in
the Isle of Man the farmers of the island meet once a year in the open air to
transact business, to this very day. Israel in this chapter is met together in
the same way. They are under a bright eastern sky, the young king stands before
them--a fine figure to behold; perhaps the handsomest man of his time--and by
his side stands an old man, hoary, and grey-headed. We must now leave all the
rest, and think only of this grey-headed old man.
I. The public
man’s influence and temptations. Samuel spent about fifty years in a public
life like this. Consider the influence he would necessarily acquire. If he has
become known for being a sound thinker, competent to advise and willing to do
so, men never mention his name without respect. They will go and ask him for
opinions on matters that it seems almost impertinent to trouble him with. He
seems only to live to assist others. Every house is open to him, and he carries
many matters of importance without opposition. With such influence, consider
what will be his temptations! If he has given a decision favourable to a man
and that man, out of gratitude, sends him a handsome present, how tempting it
will be to receive it. In going the round of his sessions he would probably
receive hospitality from some of the richer men about; it would be his due.
Now, suppose one of these richer men who had entertained him handsomely came
into court, how tempting it would be to listen to him a little more favourably!
What opportunities, too, he has to benefit his family. A man in such a position
has sometimes disagreeable things to do. If he decides one way, he may make a
powerful man his enemy. That enemy may annoy him much, may libel his character
and torment him terribly. The temptation will then be to get rid of such a
tormentor, by oppressing him and putting him down.
II. Fidelity to
trust. We are all in some places of trust. No man lives for himself alone. It
is a very great mistake for any man to suppose that he has no influence. Who is
more respected by any right-minded man than an honourable servant of standing
character? I don’t know anyone more entitled to sympathy and kindness than
those who have grown hoary and grey in service. Well, then, you that are men
and women in the prime of life, whatever be your occupation, put this model
before you, this speech of Samuel’s.
III. The joy of a
pure conscience. Children and young people, in this life of Samuel there is
nothing that you cannot do in your way. Say to yourselves every day as you
begin, “I am determined, God being my helper, to be so faithful in all that I
do, that no man shall charge me with wronging him.” You will fail sometimes,
and be grieved at your failure. Yet be not discouraged, but persevere, and you
may, if spared to be old and grey-headed, totter down the aisle of your church,
or the streets of your village or town, with the consciousness of clean hands.
There is no joy unmixed in this world. In his old age Samuel could have applied
to himself the words of our great dramatist:--Tho’ I look old, I’m lusty; For
never in my youth did I woo the means of debility. Therefore mine age is as a
lusty winter--Frosty, yet kindly. Let me be your servant. I’ll do the service
of a younger man. But no! the appeal had not its right effect. His countrymen
were not grateful to him, as they ought to have been; they wanted this young
king--something new--and the old man in his old age was to be forgotten. We
must be prepared to be misunderstood--to find even a friend, who ought to know
better, grow cool. But, firm in our upright course, we must fall back on the
approbation of a pure conscience. A man need not skulk and hang his head if his
conscience tells him that he has nothing to be ashamed of; rather will it
whisper to him peace amidst the gloom that might dishearten him. (H. Hiley,
D. D.)
Appointment of the first king in Israel
Israel was in the position of a boat which has been borne downs a
swift stream into the very suction of the rapids. The best would be that she
should be put back; but if it be too late for this, then the best is that there
should be in her a strong arm and a steady eye to keep her head straight. And
thus it was with Israel. She plunged down the fail madly, rashly, wickedly; but
under Samuel’s control, steadily. This part of the chapter we arrange in two
branches:--
I. Samuel’s
conduct after the mortification of his own rejection. The people having
accepted Saul as their king, had been dismissed, and Samuel was left alone, but
his feelings were very different from those which he had in that other moment
of solitude, when he had dismissed the delegates of the people. That struggle
was past. He was now calm. The first moment was a terrible one. It was one of
those periods in human life when the whole meaning of life is perplexed, its
aims and hopes frustrated; when a man is down upon his face and gust after gust
sweeps desolately over his spirit. Samuel was there to feel all the ideas that
naturally suggest themselves in such hours--the instability of human affection--the
nothingness of the highest earthly aims. But by degrees, two thoughts calmed
him. The first was the feeling of identification with God’s cause. “They have
not rejected thee, but they have rejected Me.” The other element of consolation
was the Divine sympathy. If they had been rebellious to their ruler, they had
also been disloyal to Jehovah. Atheism and revolution here, as elsewhere, went
hand-in-hand. We do not know how this sentence was impressed by the Infinite
Mind on Samuel’s mind; all we know is, he had a conviction that God was a
fellow sufferer. The many-coloured phases of human feeling all find themselves
reflected in the lights and shadows of ever-varying sensitiveness which the
different sentences of His conversation exhibit. Be your tone of feeling what
it may, whether you are poor or rich, gay or sad--in society or alone--adored,
loved, betrayed, misunderstood, despised--weigh well His words first, by
thinking what they mean, and you will become aware that one heart in space
throbs in conscious harmony with yours. In its degree, that was Samuel’s
support. Next, Samuel’s cheerful way of submitting to his fate is to be
observed. Another prophet, when his prediction was nullified, built himself a
booth and sat beneath it, fretting in sullen pride, to see the end of Nineveh.
Samuel might have done this; he might have withdrawn himself in offended
dignity from public life, watched the impotent attempts of the people to guide
themselves, and seen dynasty after dynasty fall with secret pleasure. Very
different is his conduct. He addresses himself like a man to the exigencies of
the moment. Now remark in all this, the healthy, vigorous tone of Samuel’s
religion. This man, the greatest and wisest then alive, thought this the great
thing to live for--to establish a kingdom of God on earth--to transform his own
country into a kingdom of God. It is worthwhile to see how he set about it.
From first to last it was in a practical, real way--by activity in every
department of life. Now he is deposed: but he has duties still. He has a king
to look for, public festivals to superintend, a public feast to preside over;
and later on we shall find him becoming the teacher of a school. All this was a
religion for life. His spirituality was no fanciful, shadowy thing; the kingdom
of God to him was to be in this world, and we know no surer sign of enfeebled
religion than the disposition to separate religion from life and life duties.
Listen: What is secularity or worldliness? Meddling with worldly things? or
meddling with a worldly spirit? We brand political existence and thought with
the name “worldly”--we stigmatise first one department of life and then another
as secular; and so religion becomes a pale, unreal thing, which must end, if we
are only true to our principles, in the cloister. Religion becomes feeble, and
the world, deserted and proscribed, becomes infidel.
II. Samuel’s
treatment of his successor, after his own rejection, is remarkable. It was
characterised by two things--courtesy and generosity. When he saw the man who
was to be his successor, he invited him to the entertainment. This is
politeness; what we allude to is a very different thing, however, from that
mere system of etiquette and conventionalisms in which small minds find their
very being, to observe which accurately is life, and to transgress which is
sin. Courtesy is not confined to the high bred; often theirs is but the
artistic imitation of courtesy. The peasant who rises to put before you his
only chair, while he sits upon the oaken chest, is a polite man. Motive
determines everything. Something still more beautiful marks Samuel’s
generosity. The man who stood before him was a Successful rival. One who had
been his inferior now was to supersede him. And Samuel lends him a helping
hand--gracefully assists him to rise above him, entertains him, recommends him
to the people. It is very touching. Samuel and the people did the game
thing--they made Saul king. But the people did it by drawing down Samuel nearer
to themselves. Samuel did it by elevating Saul above himself. One was the
spirit of revolution, the other was the spirit of the Gospel. In our own day it
specially behoves us to try the spirits, whether they be of God. The reality
and the counterfeit, as in this case, are singularly like each other. Three
spirits make their voices heard, in a cry for Freedom, for Brotherhood, for
human Equality. And we must not forget, these names are hallowed by the very
Gospel itself. Unless we realise them we have no Gospel kingdom. Distinguish,
however, well the reality from the baser alloy. The spirit, which longs for
freedom puts forth a righteous claim; for it is written, “If the Son shall make
you free, ye shall be free indeed.” Brotherhood--the Gospel promises
brotherhood also--“One is your master, even Christ; and all ye are brethren.”
Equality--Yes. “There is neither Jew nor Greek, circumcision nor
uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, bond, nor free.” This is the grand
Federation, Brotherhood, Emancipation of the human raze. Now the world’s spirit
aims at bringing all this about by drawing others down to the level on which
each one stands. The Christian spirit secures equality by raising up. The man
that is less wise, less good than I--I am to raise up to my level in these
things. Yes, and in social position too, if he be fit for it. I am to be glad
to see him rise above me, as generously as Samuel saw Saul. And if we could but
all work in this generous rivalry, our rent and bleeding country, sick at
heart, gangrened with an exclusiveness, which narrows our sympathies and
corrupts our hearts, might be all that the most patriotic love would have her.
Once more there is suggested to us the thought that Samuel was now growing old.
They might forget Samuel--they might crowd round his successor--but Samuel’s work
could not be forgotten; years after he was quiet and silent, under ground, his
courts in Bethel and Mizpeh would form the precedents and the germs of the
national jurisprudence. A very pregnant lesson. Life passes, work is permanent.
It is all going--fleeting and withering. Youth goes. Mind decays. That which is
done remains. Deeds never die. (F. W. Robertson, M. A.)
Samuel, seer and statesman
The character of Samuel itself is one which surely sets before us
a type of that class of character which we can see in all departments of public
life. Will you allow me to ask you to notice not merely the greatness of
Samuel, but those causes which seem to have contributed to the formation of
that character which lay at the back of his greatness? First, I may remind you
how great Samuel was in the history of Israel. He has been called the second
Moses, and not without reason.
I. The greatness
of Samuel is seen in the three-fold aspect of his life. He was great as a judge
in an era of considerable political confusion; he was great in that he founded,
or was considered to have founded, what was called the school of prophets; and
he was great also in that, in an era of transition, he acted as a consummate
statesman. We have only to recall the significance of those three statements to
see how widespread and enduring was that quality of Samuel’s greatness. As a
judge in an era of confusion he showed exactly those qualities which were so
much needed. And you mark that he had seen some of the symptoms of moral
deterioration in his early days. He had seen the loose habits which had crept
in in all quarters, he had seen the immoral sons of Eli, and how far the
immorality had crept into the people when in the very precincts of the sacred
place there was such immorality! But that was not all. Where there is a moral
deterioration there is always a deterioration of the religious conception. And
that is what Samuel had perceived, and therefore he realised that alike in
religious thought and in social manners there needed a great reformation. Now
there are a great many ways in which you bring about reformation. You may do it
by legislation, you may do it by sending broadcast through the world the
pressure and persuasion of men. Samuel chose the latter. He knew the only
valuable reformation was a reformation which would strike the heart of the
people. Watch him now as the statesman. There comes a change; there is
inevitably a change in all human life. The development of national life, like
the development of individual life, must go on. And this development must mean
the passing away of things which are very dear. He showed us the example which
will always be the example of wise men in eras of change. When you see a
movement has become movement of the people’s thought do not be so unwise as to
endeavour to withstand it, unless it be a question of right and wrong, but be
wise and direct what you cannot oppose. That is the attitude of Samuel. If you
watch him you see him, a man possessed of singular gifts, of great vigour in
action, practical, with great insight into the causes which underlie national
greatness, and at the same time with that marvellous flexibility that even in
his old age he was ready to adjust himself to the new conditions of the life in
which he found himself.
II. Samuel’s
training for service. If we take him as marked by these features of greatness,
we ask, what was the source, what were the forces which came to the formation
of a character so strong, so youthfully great. There are two things, surely,
which make up the complete man in his later days. One is, of course, the
surroundings of his early life, and the other is the character which was
originally his. The dramatic interest of life surely lies in this, that you
have the raw material of life exposed to certain influences in the home, in the
early training of the school, and in the environment of the dawn of life. Watch
the environing circumstances in the case of Samuel. No person who understands
the influence of home life will, I think, be tempted to undervalue it. Do you
not pity Samuel in the second stage of his life? The child who is suddenly
withdrawn at a tender age from home and is planted down amidst surroundings
which, I think, one may venture without disparagement to call unsympathetic. He
could not find sympathy in the wild men who were leading the loose lives of
Hophni and Phinehas, and Eli must have been but a grave companion for the young
child, but as you watch him he somehow or other identifies himself with the
quiet gravity of the old man. Watch him a step further. There comes a moment in
which the third influence is seen. The first is home, the second is the general
companionship, and the third is the silent influence of the unseen world come
into his life. There comes a moment when he is aware that life does not consist
merely in those factors of home life which he has known, nor in these various
powers of official and national life of which he has had some youthful
experience, but behind all activities of the human life there is the great
presiding power of the unseen; and in the silent watches of the night there is
disclosed to him a consciousness of the great power, the great formative
spirit, the great influence of the Divine which is always at work in the hearts
and lives of men. And now watch the character which is exposed to these
influences. Is there any character in the Bible of which you may say, “The
quiet piety of his life was like a growing thing?” There were no startling
changes. There was the one solid change from the home into the sanctuary, but
for the rest his days were bound each to each by natural piety. Quietly he
ripened under the solemn and sweet influences of the sanctuary.
III. The ripened
character. And now watch him in his later life, and see the other
characteristics. One would have imagined that this child who ripened under
these circumstances would have been a person deficient in practical activity,
deficient in those stronger and manlier virtues which we think can only be
gained in the rude struggle of the more active life. But the man who has been
brought up in this fashion had the qualities within him of that dogged
determination and that entire devotion to duty which never stumbled at any
duty, however arduous, and never shudders or shrinks from any danger; and,
therefore, when he takes the reins of power what promptitude and what decision
there is in all that he does! This is the man who, in the climax of his life,
can show the one great solid quality which was, after all, the true
characteristic of his life--the most complete and absolute disinterestedness.
What are the conditions which we desire to see established in national life? If
Samuel is to be an expression, or a type, or a teaching to us, then surely we
want men who are absolutely free from self-interest. The danger of nations lies
in self-interest. May I venture to say it without being misinterpreted?--this
danger of self-interest in national affairs becomes much more dangerous as the
complexity of life grows, and therefore the opportunities of manipulating affairs
for personal interest begin to multiply upon us. What is the secret of having a
disinterested mind? Jesus Christ was the supreme teacher, remember, and
remember those words which He said, which we ought to write forever in our
hearts--I would emblazon them upon the walls of our Law Courts and our
political assembly rooms--“If thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full
of light.” Is there any inspiration of single-mindedness, is there any way that
we can get the power to rid ourselves of self-interest? The voice of God heard
always, the voice of God in the still hours of the night. That which makes the
difference between man and man lies in this: his relationship to God. And it
was because Samuel had found God in his life so early that God was in his life
all through, and wherever he stood it was God that he saw. How much may we not
be warped by personal interests, by the desire of some gain, by the
opportunities which so often in the hurly-burly of affairs come in temptations
before us! What need there is that we in such hours should be, as Samuel would
have the people, purged from our own offences, all our gods of covetousness and
idolatry put far away, and standing once more as a people hearing the voice of
God. (W. Boyd Carpenter, D. D.)
Verses 1-5
And Samuel said unto all Israel.
A statesman’s retrospect
The closing years in the life of Samuel, the last and greatest of
the judges, witnessed a transition in the method of governing the nation of
Israel from the theocracy to the monarchy. By the wise, unselfish action of
Samuel, this transition, which might have involved grave national controversy
and bloodshed, was peaceably made. Samuel’s work was, therefore, as a ruler,
transferred to Saul; and though he continued for some years to exercise the
functions of prophet, administrative duties passed into other hands. This
address is a fine example of ancient Hebrew eloquence, and it manifestly
appealed to the conscience and heart of the audience addressed. It touched upon
three important points.
I. Vindication of
personal character and administration. In his splendid review what facts
emerged that should commend the retiring leader to the gratitude and
appreciation of the nation he had sought to serve?
1. His loyalty to the national request for a king. We know how
acutely he had felt his supersession of himself, and how he had directed his
prayer to God in respect of it; but he had waived his own strong objection, and
had dutifully assisted in the appointment of the divinely selected monarch.
2. His long and blameless life. High position magnifies every human
quality, heightens every excellency, and blackens every blot of human
character. But Samuel’s long career furnished no fault on which the most acute
enquiry could fasten, no deviation from the right path that the sternest
rectitude could condemn. What a magnificent challenge.
3. His upright administration. Samuel challenged the people on the
question of his “official life,” as well as on his personal character. His
public duties had been as free from exaction and oppression as his private life
from moral taint. Nothing is more common, it is said, in Eastern lands, even
down to this day, than oppression and exaction on the part of rulers and public
men having charge of the government and taxation of the people.
II. Defence of
God’s previous government of Israel. Note:--
1. The principle of this government. The theocracy, under which
Israel had so long lived and prospered, meant the supreme and recognised
sovereignty of God. By the test of experience, the test of practical results on
the national life, the theocracy had its amplest vindication. Under it the
nation had enjoyed signal prosperity.
2. The agency by which administered. This unique method of national
government was carried on by specially selected rulers, appointed as the
exigencies of the times demanded. God raised up men--great men--to meet
emergencies of national life as they arose.
3. The law by which controlled. This law was the nation’s loyalty to
God. When the nation was true to its best traditions, true to the faith and
worship of the living God, true to the sublime morality of the Ten
Commandments, God’s benediction rested upon them, and national prosperity
followed. In this memorable address Samuel referred also to:--
III. The conditions
of continued national prosperity.
1. Changed political conditions do not change moral or religious
obligations. King or no king, God’s claim on the worship and service of Israel
could not be abrogated or diminished. Amid all the changes of their national
life, that was the one thing that was changeless. A new king on the throne, or
a new form of government of the realm, did not and could not alter that. What
is morally wrong cannot be politically right. What is wrong in England is wrong
in India. If it is wrong to break the Sabbath at home, it is wrong to break it
abroad. Christianity knows no geographical limits in the scope of its message,
or the authority of its claims. Public opinion may change and vary, but it
ought not, and must not, override the higher and more authoritative law of God.
2. Righteousness exalteth a nation. John Ruskin, in the opening
paragraph of his “Stones of Venice,” tells us that “Since the first dominion of
men was asserted over the ocean, three thrones, of mark beyond all others, have
been set upon its sands: the thrones of Tyre, Venice, and England. Of the first
of these great powers only the memory remains; of the second, the ruin; the third,
which inherits their greatness, if it forget their example, may be led through
prouder eminence to less pitied destruction.” No lesson is more urgently needed
in our time than this. Vice means weakness and decay; virtue, devotion,
humanity--these mean strength and permanence. The conditions of national
prosperity, then, are clear and uniform. They are reverence for sacred things,
obedience to the law of God in personal, social, and national affairs alike,
consideration for others, and unselfish service to promote their interests and
welfare. (Thomas Mitchell.)
Saul’s confirmation in the kingship
After the great victory over the Ammonites at Jabesh-Gilead,
Samuel said to the people, “Come, and let us go to Gilgal, and renew the
kingdom there.” The people were in a mood to listen to the advice. They were
full of enthusiasm for Saul, and of gratitude to God on account of their
splendid success. And Samuel wisely took advantage of the occasion to confirm
the loyalty, not only of the people to the king, but also of the king and
people to God.
1. After the feast, perhaps in the course of the afternoon, Samuel
solemnly addressed the vast assembly. His aim, in the first part of his speech,
was to show that they had nothing to justify their demand for a king in the character
of his administration.
2. Samuel’s aim in the second part of his speech was to show that
they had nothing to justify their demand for a king in the character of the
Divine administration.
3. But, after convicting them of slighting God in asking for an
earthly sovereign, Samuel now speaks to them about their present duty. (T.
Kirk.)
Samuel’s vindication of himself
No doubt 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 reasons 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. If you have reason to suspect an adviser
of a selfish purpose 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 you feel that what such a man urges comes home to you
with extraordinary weight.
1. 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.
2. In the next place Samuel adverts to his age. What Samuel
delicately points to here is the uniformity of his life. He had not begun on
one line, then changed to another. Such steadiness and uniformity throughout a
long life genders a wonderful weight of character. 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?
3. 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. 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. 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? 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. 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 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,” etc. 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. (W. G. Blaikie, D. D.)
Samuel on his defence
The scene explains itself. In olden times, meetings of this kind
were held in the open air. In earlier French history, the warriors used to meet
in the month of May, and the king was carried round on a shield, to receive
their homage. When our king Alfred divided the country into “hundreds,” he
directed the heads of families to meet together at fixed seasons, the muster
place being sometimes round a well-known tree, and there is in existence to
this day such a tree, which gave its name to the hundred or wapen-take. And in
the Isle of Man the farmers of the island meet once a year in the open air to
transact business, to this very day. Israel in this chapter is met together in
the same way. They are under a bright eastern sky, the young king stands before
them--a fine figure to behold; perhaps the handsomest man of his time--and by
his side stands an old man, hoary, and grey-headed. We must now leave all the
rest, and think only of this grey-headed old man.
I. The public
man’s influence and temptations. Samuel spent about fifty years in a public
life like this. Consider the influence he would necessarily acquire. If he has
become known for being a sound thinker, competent to advise and willing to do
so, men never mention his name without respect. They will go and ask him for
opinions on matters that it seems almost impertinent to trouble him with. He
seems only to live to assist others. Every house is open to him, and he carries
many matters of importance without opposition. With such influence, consider
what will be his temptations! If he has given a decision favourable to a man
and that man, out of gratitude, sends him a handsome present, how tempting it
will be to receive it. In going the round of his sessions he would probably
receive hospitality from some of the richer men about; it would be his due.
Now, suppose one of these richer men who had entertained him handsomely came
into court, how tempting it would be to listen to him a little more favourably!
What opportunities, too, he has to benefit his family. A man in such a position
has sometimes disagreeable things to do. If he decides one way, he may make a
powerful man his enemy. That enemy may annoy him much, may libel his character
and torment him terribly. The temptation will then be to get rid of such a tormentor,
by oppressing him and putting him down.
II. Fidelity to
trust. We are all in some places of trust. No man lives for himself alone. It
is a very great mistake for any man to suppose that he has no influence. Who is
more respected by any right-minded man than an honourable servant of standing
character? I don’t know anyone more entitled to sympathy and kindness than
those who have grown hoary and grey in service. Well, then, you that are men
and women in the prime of life, whatever be your occupation, put this model
before you, this speech of Samuel’s.
III. The joy of a
pure conscience. Children and young people, in this life of Samuel there is
nothing that you cannot do in your way. Say to yourselves every day as you
begin, “I am determined, God being my helper, to be so faithful in all that I
do, that no man shall charge me with wronging him.” You will fail sometimes,
and be grieved at your failure. Yet be not discouraged, but persevere, and you
may, if spared to be old and grey-headed, totter down the aisle of your church,
or the streets of your village or town, with the consciousness of clean hands.
There is no joy unmixed in this world. In his old age Samuel could have applied
to himself the words of our great dramatist:--Tho’ I look old, I’m lusty; For
never in my youth did I woo the means of debility. Therefore mine age is as a
lusty winter--Frosty, yet kindly. Let me be your servant. I’ll do the service
of a younger man. But no! the appeal had not its right effect. His countrymen
were not grateful to him, as they ought to have been; they wanted this young
king--something new--and the old man in his old age was to be forgotten. We
must be prepared to be misunderstood--to find even a friend, who ought to know
better, grow cool. But, firm in our upright course, we must fall back on the
approbation of a pure conscience. A man need not skulk and hang his head if his
conscience tells him that he has nothing to be ashamed of; rather will it
whisper to him peace amidst the gloom that might dishearten him. (H. Hiley,
D. D.)
Appointment of the first king in Israel
Israel was in the position of a boat which has been borne downs a
swift stream into the very suction of the rapids. The best would be that she
should be put back; but if it be too late for this, then the best is that there
should be in her a strong arm and a steady eye to keep her head straight. And
thus it was with Israel. She plunged down the fail madly, rashly, wickedly; but
under Samuel’s control, steadily. This part of the chapter we arrange in two
branches:--
I. Samuel’s
conduct after the mortification of his own rejection. The people having
accepted Saul as their king, had been dismissed, and Samuel was left alone, but
his feelings were very different from those which he had in that other moment
of solitude, when he had dismissed the delegates of the people. That struggle
was past. He was now calm. The first moment was a terrible one. It was one of
those periods in human life when the whole meaning of life is perplexed, its
aims and hopes frustrated; when a man is down upon his face and gust after gust
sweeps desolately over his spirit. Samuel was there to feel all the ideas that
naturally suggest themselves in such hours--the instability of human
affection--the nothingness of the highest earthly aims. But by degrees, two
thoughts calmed him. The first was the feeling of identification with God’s
cause. “They have not rejected thee, but they have rejected Me.” The other
element of consolation was the Divine sympathy. If they had been rebellious to
their ruler, they had also been disloyal to Jehovah. Atheism and revolution
here, as elsewhere, went hand-in-hand. We do not know how this sentence was
impressed by the Infinite Mind on Samuel’s mind; all we know is, he had a
conviction that God was a fellow sufferer. The many-coloured phases of human
feeling all find themselves reflected in the lights and shadows of ever-varying
sensitiveness which the different sentences of His conversation exhibit. Be
your tone of feeling what it may, whether you are poor or rich, gay or sad--in
society or alone--adored, loved, betrayed, misunderstood, despised--weigh well
His words first, by thinking what they mean, and you will become aware that one
heart in space throbs in conscious harmony with yours. In its degree, that was
Samuel’s support. Next, Samuel’s cheerful way of submitting to his fate is to
be observed. Another prophet, when his prediction was nullified, built himself
a booth and sat beneath it, fretting in sullen pride, to see the end of
Nineveh. Samuel might have done this; he might have withdrawn himself in
offended dignity from public life, watched the impotent attempts of the people
to guide themselves, and seen dynasty after dynasty fall with secret pleasure.
Very different is his conduct. He addresses himself like a man to the
exigencies of the moment. Now remark in all this, the healthy, vigorous tone of
Samuel’s religion. This man, the greatest and wisest then alive, thought this
the great thing to live for--to establish a kingdom of God on earth--to
transform his own country into a kingdom of God. It is worthwhile to see how he
set about it. From first to last it was in a practical, real way--by activity
in every department of life. Now he is deposed: but he has duties still. He has
a king to look for, public festivals to superintend, a public feast to preside
over; and later on we shall find him becoming the teacher of a school. All this
was a religion for life. His spirituality was no fanciful, shadowy thing; the
kingdom of God to him was to be in this world, and we know no surer sign of
enfeebled religion than the disposition to separate religion from life and life
duties. Listen: What is secularity or worldliness? Meddling with worldly
things? or meddling with a worldly spirit? We brand political existence and
thought with the name “worldly”--we stigmatise first one department of life and
then another as secular; and so religion becomes a pale, unreal thing, which
must end, if we are only true to our principles, in the cloister. Religion
becomes feeble, and the world, deserted and proscribed, becomes infidel.
II. Samuel’s
treatment of his successor, after his own rejection, is remarkable. It was
characterised by two things--courtesy and generosity. When he saw the man who
was to be his successor, he invited him to the entertainment. This is
politeness; what we allude to is a very different thing, however, from that
mere system of etiquette and conventionalisms in which small minds find their
very being, to observe which accurately is life, and to transgress which is
sin. Courtesy is not confined to the high bred; often theirs is but the
artistic imitation of courtesy. The peasant who rises to put before you his
only chair, while he sits upon the oaken chest, is a polite man. Motive
determines everything. Something still more beautiful marks Samuel’s
generosity. The man who stood before him was a Successful rival. One who had
been his inferior now was to supersede him. And Samuel lends him a helping
hand--gracefully assists him to rise above him, entertains him, recommends him
to the people. It is very touching. Samuel and the people did the game
thing--they made Saul king. But the people did it by drawing down Samuel nearer
to themselves. Samuel did it by elevating Saul above himself. One was the spirit
of revolution, the other was the spirit of the Gospel. In our own day it
specially behoves us to try the spirits, whether they be of God. The reality
and the counterfeit, as in this case, are singularly like each other. Three
spirits make their voices heard, in a cry for Freedom, for Brotherhood, for
human Equality. And we must not forget, these names are hallowed by the very
Gospel itself. Unless we realise them we have no Gospel kingdom. Distinguish,
however, well the reality from the baser alloy. The spirit, which longs for
freedom puts forth a righteous claim; for it is written, “If the Son shall make
you free, ye shall be free indeed.” Brotherhood--the Gospel promises
brotherhood also--“One is your master, even Christ; and all ye are brethren.”
Equality--Yes. “There is neither Jew nor Greek, circumcision nor
uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, bond, nor free.” This is the grand
Federation, Brotherhood, Emancipation of the human raze. Now the world’s spirit
aims at bringing all this about by drawing others down to the level on which
each one stands. The Christian spirit secures equality by raising up. The man
that is less wise, less good than I--I am to raise up to my level in these
things. Yes, and in social position too, if he be fit for it. I am to be glad
to see him rise above me, as generously as Samuel saw Saul. And if we could but
all work in this generous rivalry, our rent and bleeding country, sick at
heart, gangrened with an exclusiveness, which narrows our sympathies and
corrupts our hearts, might be all that the most patriotic love would have her.
Once more there is suggested to us the thought that Samuel was now growing old.
They might forget Samuel--they might crowd round his successor--but Samuel’s
work could not be forgotten; years after he was quiet and silent, under ground,
his courts in Bethel and Mizpeh would form the precedents and the germs of the
national jurisprudence. A very pregnant lesson. Life passes, work is permanent.
It is all going--fleeting and withering. Youth goes. Mind decays. That which is
done remains. Deeds never die. (F. W. Robertson, M. A.)
Samuel, seer and statesman
The character of Samuel itself is one which surely sets before us
a type of that class of character which we can see in all departments of public
life. Will you allow me to ask you to notice not merely the greatness of
Samuel, but those causes which seem to have contributed to the formation of
that character which lay at the back of his greatness? First, I may remind you
how great Samuel was in the history of Israel. He has been called the second
Moses, and not without reason.
I. The greatness
of Samuel is seen in the three-fold aspect of his life. He was great as a judge
in an era of considerable political confusion; he was great in that he founded,
or was considered to have founded, what was called the school of prophets; and
he was great also in that, in an era of transition, he acted as a consummate
statesman. We have only to recall the significance of those three statements to
see how widespread and enduring was that quality of Samuel’s greatness. As a
judge in an era of confusion he showed exactly those qualities which were so
much needed. And you mark that he had seen some of the symptoms of moral
deterioration in his early days. He had seen the loose habits which had crept
in in all quarters, he had seen the immoral sons of Eli, and how far the
immorality had crept into the people when in the very precincts of the sacred
place there was such immorality! But that was not all. Where there is a moral
deterioration there is always a deterioration of the religious conception. And
that is what Samuel had perceived, and therefore he realised that alike in
religious thought and in social manners there needed a great reformation. Now
there are a great many ways in which you bring about reformation. You may do it
by legislation, you may do it by sending broadcast through the world the
pressure and persuasion of men. Samuel chose the latter. He knew the only
valuable reformation was a reformation which would strike the heart of the
people. Watch him now as the statesman. There comes a change; there is
inevitably a change in all human life. The development of national life, like
the development of individual life, must go on. And this development must mean
the passing away of things which are very dear. He showed us the example which
will always be the example of wise men in eras of change. When you see a
movement has become movement of the people’s thought do not be so unwise as to
endeavour to withstand it, unless it be a question of right and wrong, but be
wise and direct what you cannot oppose. That is the attitude of Samuel. If you
watch him you see him, a man possessed of singular gifts, of great vigour in
action, practical, with great insight into the causes which underlie national
greatness, and at the same time with that marvellous flexibility that even in
his old age he was ready to adjust himself to the new conditions of the life in
which he found himself.
II. Samuel’s
training for service. If we take him as marked by these features of greatness,
we ask, what was the source, what were the forces which came to the formation
of a character so strong, so youthfully great. There are two things, surely,
which make up the complete man in his later days. One is, of course, the
surroundings of his early life, and the other is the character which was
originally his. The dramatic interest of life surely lies in this, that you
have the raw material of life exposed to certain influences in the home, in the
early training of the school, and in the environment of the dawn of life. Watch
the environing circumstances in the case of Samuel. No person who understands
the influence of home life will, I think, be tempted to undervalue it. Do you
not pity Samuel in the second stage of his life? The child who is suddenly
withdrawn at a tender age from home and is planted down amidst surroundings
which, I think, one may venture without disparagement to call unsympathetic. He
could not find sympathy in the wild men who were leading the loose lives of
Hophni and Phinehas, and Eli must have been but a grave companion for the young
child, but as you watch him he somehow or other identifies himself with the
quiet gravity of the old man. Watch him a step further. There comes a moment in
which the third influence is seen. The first is home, the second is the general
companionship, and the third is the silent influence of the unseen world come
into his life. There comes a moment when he is aware that life does not consist
merely in those factors of home life which he has known, nor in these various
powers of official and national life of which he has had some youthful
experience, but behind all activities of the human life there is the great
presiding power of the unseen; and in the silent watches of the night there is
disclosed to him a consciousness of the great power, the great formative
spirit, the great influence of the Divine which is always at work in the hearts
and lives of men. And now watch the character which is exposed to these influences.
Is there any character in the Bible of which you may say, “The quiet piety of
his life was like a growing thing?” There were no startling changes. There was
the one solid change from the home into the sanctuary, but for the rest his
days were bound each to each by natural piety. Quietly he ripened under the
solemn and sweet influences of the sanctuary.
III. The ripened
character. And now watch him in his later life, and see the other
characteristics. One would have imagined that this child who ripened under
these circumstances would have been a person deficient in practical activity,
deficient in those stronger and manlier virtues which we think can only be
gained in the rude struggle of the more active life. But the man who has been
brought up in this fashion had the qualities within him of that dogged
determination and that entire devotion to duty which never stumbled at any
duty, however arduous, and never shudders or shrinks from any danger; and,
therefore, when he takes the reins of power what promptitude and what decision
there is in all that he does! This is the man who, in the climax of his life,
can show the one great solid quality which was, after all, the true
characteristic of his life--the most complete and absolute disinterestedness.
What are the conditions which we desire to see established in national life? If
Samuel is to be an expression, or a type, or a teaching to us, then surely we
want men who are absolutely free from self-interest. The danger of nations lies
in self-interest. May I venture to say it without being misinterpreted?--this
danger of self-interest in national affairs becomes much more dangerous as the
complexity of life grows, and therefore the opportunities of manipulating
affairs for personal interest begin to multiply upon us. What is the secret of
having a disinterested mind? Jesus Christ was the supreme teacher, remember,
and remember those words which He said, which we ought to write forever in our
hearts--I would emblazon them upon the walls of our Law Courts and our political
assembly rooms--“If thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of
light.” Is there any inspiration of single-mindedness, is there any way that we
can get the power to rid ourselves of self-interest? The voice of God heard
always, the voice of God in the still hours of the night. That which makes the
difference between man and man lies in this: his relationship to God. And it
was because Samuel had found God in his life so early that God was in his life
all through, and wherever he stood it was God that he saw. How much may we not
be warped by personal interests, by the desire of some gain, by the
opportunities which so often in the hurly-burly of affairs come in temptations
before us! What need there is that we in such hours should be, as Samuel would
have the people, purged from our own offences, all our gods of covetousness and
idolatry put far away, and standing once more as a people hearing the voice of
God. (W. Boyd Carpenter, D. D.)
Verse 2
I am now old and grey-headed.
A good old age
A good old age has been cynically defined as “an age at which a
man is good for nothing;” but it is our own fault if we are good for nothing in
old age. The old can help the rising generation by sympathy and advice, and do
much to prevent them from rising in the wrong direction. (Quiver.)
Age in the service of God
The late Mr. George Muller, of Bristol, sent this testimony as a
message to Christian Endeavourers: “The joy of serving God increases with the
multiplying years. I have never had more delight in the work of the Master than
now, at the end of more than threescore years and ten. The richest blessings
will be discovered in the path of service.”
Beautiful old age
How beautiful it is to see a man, below whose feet time is
crumbling away, holding firmly by the Lord whom he has loved and served all his
days, and finding that the pillar of cloud, which guided him while he lived,
begins to glow in its heart of fire as the shadows fall, and is a pillar of
light to guide him when he comes to die. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
A peaceful retrospect
The only life that bears being looked back upon is a life of
Christian devotion and effort. It shows fairer when seen in the strange cross lights
that come when we stand on the boundary of two worlds--with “the white radiance
of eternity” beginning to master the vulgar oil lamps of earth--than when seen
by these alone. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Verses 3-5
Behold, here I am, witness against me.
Ad magistratum
A bold and just challenge of an old judge, made before all the
people, upon his resignal of the government into the hands of a new king. In
which words are observable both the matter and form of Samuel’s challenge. We
may observe concerning Samuel three things. First, his great forwardness in the
business, in putting himself upon the trial by his own voluntary offer, before
he was called thereunto by others. “Behold, here I am.” Secondly, his great
confidence, upon the conscience of his own integrity; in that he durst put
himself upon his trial before God and the world. “Witness against me before the
Lord, and before His Anointed.” Thirdly, his great equity, in offering to make
real satisfaction to the full, in case anything should be justly proved against
him in any of the premises, “Whose ox, or whose ass, etc., and I will restore
it you.”
I. Samuel on
self-testing voluntarily. We cannot marvel that Samuel should thus offer
himself to the trial, when no man urged him to it; since there may be rendered
so many congruous reasons for it. Especially being withal so conscious to
himself, of having dealt uprightly, that he knew all the world could not touch
him with any wilful violation of justice. He doth not therefore decline the
trial, but seek it. The righteous are bold as a lion. The merchant that knoweth
his wares to be faulty, is glad of the dark shop, and false light; whereas he
that will uphold them right and good, willeth his customers to view them in the
open sun. A corrupt magistrate or officer may sometimes set a face upon it, and
in a kind of bravery bid defiance to all the world; but it is then when he is
sure he hath power on his side to bear him out; when he is so backed with his
great friends that no man dare once open his lips against him for fear of being
shut. Even as a rank coward may take up the bucklers, and brave it like a stout
champion, when he is sure the coast is clear and nobody near to enter the lists
with him. And yet all this is but a mere flourish, a faint and feigned bravado;
his heart the while is as cold as lead, and he meaneth nothing less than what
he maketh show of. If the offer should be indeed accepted, and that his actions
were like to be brought upon the public stage, there to receive a due and
impartial hearing and doom; how would he then shrink and hold off trow ye? Be
just then, fathers and brethren, and ye may be bold: so long as you stand
right, you stand upon your own legs, and not at the mercy of others. But turn
aside once to defrauding, oppressing, or receiving rewards, and you make
yourselves slaves foreverse Possibly you may bear up, if the times favour you,
and by your greatness out-face your crimes for a while: but that is not a thing
to trust to. The wind and the tide may turn against you, when you little think
it: and when once you begin to go down the wind, every base and busy companion
will have one puff at you, to drive you the faster and farther down. Yet mistake
not, as if I did exact from magistrates an absolute immunity from those common
frailties and infirmities, whereunto the whole race of mankind is subject: the
imposition were unreasonable. I doubt not but Samuel, notwithstanding all this
great confidence in his own integrity, had yet among so many causes, as in so
many years space had gone through his hands, sundry times erred in judgment,
either in the substance or the sentence, or at least in some circumstances of
the proceedings. By misinformations, or misapprehensions, or by other passions
or prejudices, no doubt but he might be carried, and like enough sometimes was,
to shew either more lenity, or more rigour, than was in every respect
expedient. But this is the thing that made him stand so clear, both in his own
conscience and in the sight of God and the world, that he had not wittingly and
purposely perverted judgment, nor done wrong to any man with an evil or corrupt
intention.
II. Samuel’s
confidence. See we next, what the things are he doth with so much confidence
disclaim, as the matter of the challenge. It is in the general, injury or
wrong: the particular kinds whereof in the text specified, are fraud,
oppression, and bribery. Against all and every of these he expressly
protesteth. It is verily nothing so much as our covetousness that maketh us
unjust: which St. Paul affirmeth to be the root of all evil; but is most
manifestly the root of this evil of injustice. But men that are resolved of
their end (if this be their end, to make themselves great and rich howsoever)
are not much moved with arguments of this nature. The evidence of God’s Law,
and conscience of their own duty, work little upon them: gain is the thing they
look after; as for equity they little regard it. A man may seem to profit by
them, and to come up wonderfully for a time; but time and experience show, that
they moulder away again at the last, and crumble to nothing; and that for the
most part within the compass of an age. What gained Ahab by it, when he made
himself master of Naboth’s vineyard, but the hastening of his own destruction?
And what was Gehazi the better for the gifts be received from Naaman? which
brought an hereditary leprosy with them? And what was Achan the richer for the
golden wedge he had saved out of the spoils, and hidden in his tent, which
brought destruction upon him and all that appertained to him? It ought to be
the care of every private man, thus far to follow Samuel’s example that he keep
himself from doing any man wrong. But men that are in place of government, as
Samuel was, have yet a further charge lying upon them, over and besides the
former; and that is, to preserve others from wrong, and being wronged, to
relieve them to the utmost of their power. The more have they to answer for
that abuse any part of this so sacred an ordinance, for the abetting,
countenancing, or strengthening of any injurious act. They that have skill in
the laws, by giving dangerous counsel in the chamber or pleading smoothly at
the bar. They that attend about the courts, by keeping back just complaints, or
doing other casts of their office in favour of an evil person or cause; but
especially the magistrates themselves, by a perfunctory or partial hearing, by
pressing the laws with rigour, or qualifying them with some mitigation where
they ought not. Where others do wrong, if they know it, and can help it, their
very connivance maketh them accessories; and then the greatness and eminency of
their places enhanceth the crime yet further, and maketh them principals.
1. A very grievous thing it is to think of, but a thing merely
impossible to reckon up (how much less then to remedy and reform?) all the
several kinds of frauds and deceits that are used in the world. It is stark
nought, saith the buyer: It is perfect good, saith the seller: when many times
neither of both speaketh, either as he thinketh, or as the truth of the thing
is. Blessed is the man, then, in whose heart, and tongue, and hands, there is
found no deceit; that walketh uprightly, and worketh righteousness; and speaketh
the truth from his heart; that hath not stretched his wits to hurt his
neighbour; nor made advantage of any man’s unskilfulness, simplicity or
credulity, to gain from him wrongfully; that can stand upon it, as Samuel here
doth, and his heart not give his tongue the lie, that he hath defrauded no man.
2. The other kind of injury, here next mentioned, is oppression:
wherein a man maketh use of his power to the doing of wrong, as he did of his
wits in defrauding. Which is for the most part the fault of rich and great men;
because they have the greatest power so to do, and are not so easily resisted
in what they will have done. Yet is it indeed a very grievous sin, forbidden by
God himself in express terms (Leviticus 25:1-55). If thou sell ought
unto thy neighbour, or buyest ought of thy neighbour’s hand, ye shall not
oppress one another: and so going on, concludeth, Ye shall not therefore
oppress one another, but thou shalt fear thy God; implying that it is from want
of the fear of God that men oppress one another Solomon therefore saith, that
he that oppresseth the poor, reproacheth (or despiseth) his Maker (Proverbs 14:1-35). And, indeed, so he
doth, more ways than one. First, he despiseth his Maker’s commandment, who hath
(as you heard) peremptorily forbidden him to oppress. Secondly, he despiseth
his Maker’s creature: the poor man whom he so oppresseth being God’s
workmanship as well as himself. Thirdly, he despiseth his Maker’s example; who
looketh upon the distresses of the poor and oppressed, to provide for them, and
to relieve them. Fourthly, he despiseth his Master’s ordinance; in perverting
that power and wealth, which God lent him purposely to do good therewithal, and
turning it to a quite contrary use, to the hurt and damage of others. And he
that goeth on to reproach his Maker (without repentance) must needs do it to
his own confusion He that made him, can mar him when he pleaseth; and the
greatest oppressors shall be no more able to stand before him then, than their
poorer brethren are now able to stand out against them. But herein especially
may you behold the baseness of oppression; that the basest people, men of the
lowest rank and spirit, are evermore the most insolent, and consequently
(according to the proportion of their power) the most oppressive Solomon
compareth a poor man, when he hath the opportunity to oppress another poor man,
to a sweeping rain that leaveth no food (Proverbs 28:1-28). How roughly did that
servant in the parable deal with his fellow servant, when he took him by the
throat for a small debt, after his master had but newly remitted to him a sum
incomparably greater? The reason of the difference was the master dealt nobly,
and freely, and like himself, and had compassion; but the servant, being of a
low and narrow spirit, must insult. Conclude hence, all ye that are of generous
births or spirits, how unworthy that practice would be in you, wherein men of
the lowest minds and conditions can (in their proportion) not equal only, but
even exceed you. Which should make you, not only to hate oppression, because it
is wicked, but even to scorn it, because it is base, and to despise it.
3. There is yet a third behind, against which Samuel protesteth as a
branch of injustice also; which also concerned him more properly as a judge; to
wit, bribery. Bribery is properly a branch of oppression. For if the bribe be
exacted, or but expected yet so, as that there can be little hope of a
favourable, or but so much as a fair hearing without it; then is it a manifest
oppression in the receiver, because he maketh an advantage of that power,
wherewith he is entrusted for the administration of justice, to his own proper
benefit, which ought not to be, and is clearly an oppression. But if it proceed
rather from the voluntary offer of the giver, for the compassing of his own ends,
then is it an oppression in him; because thereby he getteth an advantage in the
favour of the court against his adversary, and to his prejudice. For, observe
it, the general oppressors are ever the greatest bribers, and freest of their
gifts to those that may bestead them in their suits. What is it to blind the
eyes? Or, how can bribes do it? Justice is not unfitly portrayed in the form of
a man with his right eye open, to look at the cause; and his left eye shut or
muffled, that he may not look at the person. Now a gift putteth all this out of
order, and setteth it the quite contrary way. It giveth the left eye liberty
but too much, to look asquint at the person; but putteth the right eye quite
out that it cannot discern the cause. Even as in the next foregoing chapter,
Nahash the Ammonite would have covenanted with the inhabitants of
Jabesh-Gilead, upon condition he might thrust out all their right eyes. “From
this property of hoodwinking and muffling up the eyes it is that a bribe is in
the Hebrew to cover, to dawn up, or to draw over with lime, plaster, or the
like.” Whereunto our English word, to cover, hath such near affinity in the
sound that (were it not apparently taken from the French couvrir, and that from
the Latin cooperire) it might with some probability be thought to owe its
original to the Hebrew. But however it be for the word, the thing is clear
enough: this copher doth so cover and plaster up the eyes, that they cannot see
to do their office aright, and as they ought.
III. Is Samuel’s
equity, in offering, in case anything should be truly charged against him in
any of the premises, to make the wronged parties restitution, (Whose ox have I
taken? etc. And I will restore it you.). Samuel was confident he had not
wittingly done any man wrong, either by fraud, oppression of bribery; whereby
he should be bound to make, or should need to offer restitution. A duty, in
case of injury, most necessary, both for quieting the conscience within and to
give satisfaction to the world; and for the more assurance of the truth and
sincerity of our repentance in the fight of God for the wrongs we have done.
Without which (at least in the desire and endeavour) there can be no true
repentance for the sin. There is an enforced restitution, whereof perhaps
Zophar speaketh in Job 20:1-29. (That which he laboured for,
he shall restore, and not swallow it down; according to his substance shall the
restitution be, and he shall not rejoice therein); and such as the law imposed
upon thefts, and other manifest wrongs; which although not much worth, is yet
better than none. But as Samuel’s offer here was voluntary: so it is the
voluntary restitution that best pleaseth God, pacifieth the conscience, and in
some measure satisfieth the world. Such was that of Zaccheus (Luke 19:1-48). It may be feared, if every
officer that hath to do in or about the Courts of Justice, should be tied to
that proportion, many one would have but a very small surplusage remaining,
whereout to bestow the one moiety to pious uses, as Zaccheus there did. There
is scarce any one point in the whole body of moral divinity, that soundeth so
harsh to the ear, or relisheth so harsh in the palate of a worldling, as that
of restitution doth. To such a man this is indeed a hard, very hard saying; yet
as hard as it seemeth to be, it is full of reason and equity. Whole volumes
have been written of this subject; and the casuists are large in their
discourses thereof. But for one thing itself in general, this much is clear
from the Judicial Law of God, given by Moses to the people of Israel; from the
letter whereof, though Christians be free (positive laws binding none but those
to whom they were given), yet the equity thereof still bindeth us as a branch
of the unchangeable Laws of Nature. That whosoever shall have wronged his
neighbour in anything committed to his custody, or in fellowship, or in
anything taken away by violence, or by fraud, or in detaining any found thing,
or the like, is bound to restore it; and that in integrum, to the utmost
farthing of what he hath taken, if he be able. Not so only, but beside the
principal, to offer some little overplus also by way of compensation for the
damage; if at least the wronged party have sustained any damage thereby, and
unless he shall be willing freely to remit it. The Lord give us all hearts to
do that which is equal and right, and in all our dealings with others, to have
evermore the fear of God before our eyes; knowing that of the Lord, the
righteous Judge, we shall in our souls receive at the last great assize
according to that we have done in our bodies here, whether it be good or evil.
(Bishop Sanderson.)
Lessons from the life of Samuel
I. The public
scenes of a noble life. A man’s life of outward relationships naturally divides
into three parts, but there are not fresh and interesting scenes in each part
of every man’s life. There were in Samuel’s. Take
1. Samuel’s relation to the social life of his childhood. Eli’s rule
was weak. It has been beautifully said that in this case the ivy supported the
feeble tottering wall--the child Samuel was the stay of aged Eli. Samuel was
the only one there who was in real harmony with God’s holy house. He was a
living witness in the world for God, even as a child.
2. Samuel’s relation to the social life of his manhood. Judges were
in part patriotic deliverers and in part civil rulers. In Samuel’s life there
is one great military scene, that with which the word “Ebenezer” is associated;
but his chief work was magistracy and moral influence. In his time the nation
was outgrowing the mode of government by temporary and uncertain judgeships;
the way was preparing for fixed and hereditary rulers. We may think of him as
saying with King Arthur--
“The old order changeth, yielding place to new,
And God fulfils Himself in many ways,
Lest one good custom should corrupt the world.”
3. Samuel’s relation to the social life of his older age. Then came
the demand for a hereditary sovereign. And this demand Samuel had to meet, and
the Divine response to it he was called to arrange. The position as viewed by
Samuel was this,--If Israel was to be a common nation, developing an ordinary
civilisation, it would be better for them to have a king, a court, a stated
army, and national alliances. But if Israel was to be a special nation, called
of God to the supremely high, honourable, unique work of conserving for the
world the foundation truths of the Divine revelation, they must be willing to
give up what men call civilisation, and keep the separateness and directness of
the Divine rule, the theocracy. Alas! they were weak in faith in those days.
They chose the lesser good. Samuel became the prophet of the new kingdom; and
prophets--or persons in direct relations with Jehovah--were specially needed
when the hereditary idea of kingship was destroying the prevailing idea of
immediacy of Divine rule.
II. The private
sources of the nobility of this life. We note in Samuel--
1. A pure and beautiful childhood. There have been cases in which men
of power have come up out of a wild and wayward childhood--Augustine, Loyola,
John Newton, etc. But these are exceptions The rule is, that the world’s great
benefactors grew out of a lovely, gracious, and godly childhood.
2. The spirit of self-abnegation.
3. Force of character. Illustrated in his later interviews with Saul;
in the severity of his carrying out the Jehovah-judgment on Agag; in the
influence he gained with the people; and in the scene at his death.
4. Power of prevailing prayer. He was preeminently an interceder.
5. Continuity of goodness--the usual feature marking the life of men
whose conversion is a growth rather than a sudden change. The quietly converted
usually have a patient, persistent influence for good, along with breadth of
view, and readiness to see truth and goodness in others. Samuel’s great power
lay in this direction. In Samuel’s case we have this supremely beautiful thing,
a whole life for God. (R. Tuck, B. A.)
Retrospsect of public life
There are two great aspects of human character--that which is
manifest to the all-seeing eye of God, and that which is seen by men,--both of
which are of great importance to every one. It is too common to attend chiefly
to the opinion of men, and many who obtain respect from their contemporaries
are devoid of the favour of God. But all those who live in the fear of the Most
High, seek to maintain a constant character among men. From such motives as
these some of the most notable personages of Holy Scripture, ere they laid down
their offices, or slept with their fathers, reviewed their whole public career
before the people, and challenged accusation if any wrong were manifest. Thus
Moses, in the last of his books, gives the retrospect which be spake to the
children of Israel, and in which we find this solemn appeal, “I call heaven and
earth to record this day against you, that I have set before you life and
death, blessing and cursing.” Thus also his illustrious successor. Joshua,
finished his public life, and left Israel under a solemn obligation to continue
in the way wherein he had led them. Thus also St. Paul, when he was about to
part with the Ephesian elders, recapitulated his self-denying labours, declared
that he was free from the blood of all men, charged them to keep the faith, and
received from their tears and affectionate embraces testimony to his zeal for
God and his love to them. He had spent his manhood in a struggle to reform the
Church and rekindle patriotism. He referred to his sons to show that he claimed
no hereditary right to rule, and no indulgence to their guilt. He would not
screen them. He was too much concerned for the glory of God and the good of
Israel, to permit any personal or relative matter to stand in the way of
righteous judgment. No Roman Brutus could feel more self-denial in his
patriotism than Samuel in that love for truth and justice which the fear of God
imparted to his character. He would not wish respect for him to hide the
scandal which his sons had caused. Eli had his family wrecked by neglect of
discipline. We are not told that Samuel sinned after the same manner, nor can
we suppose it. We have reason to hope that his sons improved under his
correction, for we find the next generation among the most godly of their day.
Haman, one of the chief singers, and himself the author of some psalms of very
deep spiritual experience, was the grandson of Samuel. Samuel was a most
notable example, and he was preserved throughout a long period of gross
corruption and religious backsliding. Obadiah was another, and the grace of God
flourished in his soul, and led to sacrifice for the Lord’s sake, though he
lived in Ahab’s godless household and near the wicked Jezebel. Joseph did so,
and he was enabled to be faithful amidst temptations to lust, in prison, and in
a place of dignity among an idolatrous people. It is good to make an early
choice. The course in which it leads you brings no regrets because of your
decision. If you would not be afraid of the scrutiny and condemnation of the
world, when about to leave it, you must begin and act upon the principle of
maintaining a good conscience, and of doing to others as ye would that they
should do to you. This was Samuel’s aim, and hence his spotless reputation. His
life is both an example and a rebuke.
1. It is an example. To stand forth and make so successful an appeal
must have presented to Saul an illustrious example of personal excellence, and
of public probity. He thus saw that it was possible to live in high places, and
be a righteous man; to administer the state, and retain integrity; to direct
the concerns of millions, and receive their spontaneous and unanimous
approval--truths which few governors have ever found. He saw that what had been
done by one man might be done again by another. Such a specimen of fidelity
could not fail to impress his mind. It taught him what the people would expect,
and what he should do. It had been well for Saul had he followed so beautiful
and righteous an example. Samuel was also an example to the whole people. If
there be anything which can recommend the religion of the Bible, surely a
consistent example of its living union with an active and public life ought to
do so. This we have in a most striking form before us in Samuel. It declares
that godliness never blunts, but sharpens the intellect; never destroys, but
regulates studies or business; never hinders, but promotes well-being; never
narrows, but expands benevolence. “Godliness is profitable unto all things, having
promise of the life that now is, and of that Which is to come.”
2. It is a rebuke. (R. Steel.)
Samuel’s consistency
Samuel knew that he might tell his grief to the God of all
comfort. Such acts of prayer are the soul’s noble confessions of weakness, self-distrust,
and self-surrender; but like the turning of the flower to the light, they are
its equally noble efforts after strength, fulness of life, and power. In
Samuel’s private, personal prayers there is one fact that is specially
noteworthy; and that is their consistence with his public life and duty. For it
does not always follow from a man having to pray in public and offer to God the
desires of others that he will as certainly, and fully, and reverently pray in
private, and turn to God with bin own need and trial. Every man is in danger of
professionalism, especially in sacred things; and one form of its occurrence is
in the possibility that the intercedings at the bedside of the sick, or in
public service, may lead to forgetfulness of private intercourse with God. They
are truly blessed souls who, the more frequently they are called to speak to
others for God and pray to God for their fellows, are able also to preserve
freshness and continuousness of personal life with God in prayer. Such a man
was Samuel. The same noble and consistent trust in God, and prayer to God,
marks the aged prophet, when, Saul having been chosen and anointed king, and
having beaten Nahash the Ammonite, the people assembled at Gilgal for the
renewal of the kingdom, as it was called. To Saul and the people renewing the
kingdom meant jubilation, shouting, and sword brandishing, as much as anything
else. To Samuel it meant the re-affirming of their sinfulness, the re-assertion
of God’s supremacy, and the solemn declaration that their new and jubilant king
was as much under the law and power of God as the meanest peasant that hung on
the skirts of the army. See how Samuel dealt with them.
1. First of all, though rejected by them, he challenged judgment on
his own life. And this was in order to show the unfitness, the unfairness of
the occasion that they had seized for rejecting the Lord his God. It was well
for the Jews in after times to be reminded that if, in Samuel’s time, there had
not been so much fighting and military pageantry as in David’s reign, nor so
much taxation and kingly show as in Solomon’s, nor so much devil worship as in
the ceaseless wars and ambition of subsequent kings, yet there had been
justice, and judgment, and knowledge, and some little approach to the fear of the
Lord. Such rulers and such governments have been rarities and curiosities ever
since. But Samuel went farther than challenging judgment on his public life. He
offered to restore if anyone had been wronged by him. Most of us are capable of
the sentiment of penitence, regret, shame for wrong doing; especially where
detected. Many of us say, I will do so no more; but the number fines off into a
very small one of those who live to restore to God or man the loss by wrong
done or right withheld. Deeper still may be put the probe into our hearts when
we think of Paul’s farewell to his friends: “I have coveted no man’s silver, or
gold, or apparel.” The men who occupy the space in history that Samuel and Paul
take up, and of whom such things can be said, are to be remembered more vividly
than they have been for such excellencies. Think of the few great honest men of
God that have had power over nations, especially those whose names are in this
Book; and remember that while none of us can expect to have much success and
admiration among men, yet all of us, even the lowliest and the simplest, may be
like Samuel and Paul; all of us may be approved of God; all of us may be honest
men of God. Think of the men who have occupied public stations with
unselfishness and uncovetousness, and honoured it chiefly by integrity and
holiness; and let the popular idols fall before your heavenly desire and
purpose to be like such men.
2. The next thing that Samuel did was to rehearse the historic
goodness of God to them. Though the illustrations of the same truth may not
have been so vividly traced in other histories, yet we need to learn and
remember that the principles which may be found in Samuel’s words are of
worldwide significance. There may not be chosen people now as Israel was then;
though, perhaps, if we knew the purposes of God, we might see as much of
calling and election among nations as in the olden time. History, as now slowly
working itself towards solemn changes among the nations, witnesses abundantly
to faith that, as with ancient Israel, so now, God gives no abiding to iniquity
among peoples and communities; but that His wrath abides on those who take
hands with the wicked, and identify their welfare with the vile of the earth.
3. When Samuel recounted God’s goodness to the Hebrews it involved
him in the reassertion of their wickedness. And this he accompanied with a
prayer to God, who in answer sent thunder in the midst of wheat harvest, and
terrified the sinful nation. Would that God would thunder now when nations do wrong
and rulers sin unchecked! It is not for lack of sin that the heavens are
silent; and the earth is blood-stained enough to bring more than thunderous
voices from heaven to stay the follies and miseries of reckless men. Perhaps
God’s people, it may be Christ’s Church, is not praying enough; that the eyes
of His covenanted ones are not towards Him for these things; that Christian
faith and longings are running in shallow selfish grooves, or round little
rings of merely local and personal desire, instead of believing and hoping in
Him as the God of all nations and families. With deeper necessities and wider
knowledge than ancient Israel, we, at least, might take the spirit of Isaiah’s
word, and say to one another in these days of fear and foreboding, “Ye that
make mention of the Lord, keep not silence, and give Him no rest till He
establish” the nations, and make all lands a praise in the earth.
4. Samuel’s answer to this is one of the tenderest things that ever
fell from the lips of man. He counselled them to serve the Lord, and promised
them his continued prayers. The almost womanlike tenderness of Samuel to the
erring people is seen in his answer to their call for his prayers: “God forbid
that I should sin against the Lord in ceasing, to pray for you: I will teach
you the good and right way.” If he could not judge them, he could pray for
them; if he could not rule, he could teach. Yet he did not say this to please
and soothe them. It would have been sin against the Lord to do otherwise. A
man’s Divine work, a prophet’s vocation, a Christian duty is not altered by the
rejection or the petition of men. He is the Lord’s servant; whether men will
bear or forbear, whether men approve or not, his duties and privileges are too
solemn for him to take them up or lay them down at the voice of man. Samuel
would still teach, though they forgot his word: he would still pray, for it was
God’s will. He did not give them up in shame and sadness: he prayed and taught
the more. Is not this altogether worthy in him? Is he not to be admired? But do
not the like duties press on us? Are there not times in all our lives when we
smart from undeserved injury, or fret over unwarranted neglect and despite? If
at such times we but silenced our self-conscious complaints, we might hear a voice
calling us to as august and noble an act as Samuel’s. (G. B. Ryley.)
Justice unborn
Israel never had a judge like Hannah’s son. Josephus says that
Samuel had an “inborn love of justice.” And so he had. Some men still both in
public and in private life have that same love of justice born in them. And
they are happy men, and all men are happy who have to do with them. Some other
men, again, most men indeed, have an inborn love of injustice that they have to
fight against all their days. The golden rule is written as if with nature’s
own finger, on some men’s hearts; while other men are never able all their days
to learn that rule. Samuel was still “The Seer” as he sat on the judgment seat;
but there was nothing enthusiastic, carried away, or impracticable about
Samuel. He was a clear-eyed, firm-handed, sure-footed, resolute-minded,
righteous man, with an inborn sense of truth end righteousness; and all his
opinions, and decisions, and sentences carried all men’s consent and conscience
with them. In ancient Rome they used to put on a white robe when they went out
to ask for the votes of the voters, and it was for this that they were called
“candidates” in the language of Rome; clean men, that is, in our language. But
it was only one famous name here and another famous name there that came out of
office as clean as they entered it. Look at Samuel laying down his office, and
putting on his snow-white mantle. (A. Whyte, D. D.)
Verses 6-25
And Samuel maid unto the people.
Samuel’s dealings with the people
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 (1 Samuel 12:6-12).
1. 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 could not be
disputed--their existence as a people and their settlement in Canaan were due
to the special mercy of the Lord. 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. “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!” 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. Now, what, was it that had recently occurred? They had had trouble
from the Ammonites. 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. 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.
2. Samuel is specially concerned to press on the people; and this he
does in the remaining verses (1 Samuel 12:13-25), that they were
to remember that their having a king in no serene and in no degree exempted
them from their moral and spiritual obligations to God. He would show them
there and then, under their very ayes, what agencies of destruction God held in
His hand, and how easily He could bring these to bear on them and on their
property. Oh, what folly it was to offer an affront to the great God, who had
such complete control over “fire and hail, anew 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.
3. 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. 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.
4. 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 again
it 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. “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 practise it greatly. 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 spirit 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. (W. G. Blaikie, D. D.)
Verses 6-25
And Samuel maid unto the people.
Samuel’s dealings with the people
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 (1 Samuel 12:6-12).
1. 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 could not be
disputed--their existence as a people and their settlement in Canaan were due
to the special mercy of the Lord. 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. “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!” 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. Now, what, was it that had recently occurred? They had had trouble
from the Ammonites. 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. 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.
2. Samuel is specially concerned to press on the people; and this he
does in the remaining verses (1 Samuel 12:13-25), that they were
to remember that their having a king in no serene and in no degree exempted
them from their moral and spiritual obligations to God. He would show them
there and then, under their very ayes, what agencies of destruction God held in
His hand, and how easily He could bring these to bear on them and on their
property. Oh, what folly it was to offer an affront to the great God, who had
such complete control over “fire and hail, anew 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.
3. 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. 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.
4. 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 again
it 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. “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 practise it greatly. 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 spirit 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. (W. G. Blaikie, D. D.)
Verse 8
Which brought forth your fathers out of Egypt.
God’s leading
A child might say to a geographer: “You talk about the earth being
round! Look on this great crag; look on that deep dell; look on yonder great
mountain, and the valley at its feet, and yet you talk about the earth being
round.” The geographer’s view is comprehensive; he does not look at the surface
of the world in mere detail; he does not deal with inches and feet and yards;
he sees a larger world than the child has had time to grasp. And so it is with
God’s wonderful dealings with us: there are great rocks and barren deserts,
deep, dank, dark pits and defiles, and glens and dells, rugged places that we
cannot smooth over at all, and yet when He comes to say to us at the end of the
journey, “Now, look back; there is the way that I have brought you,” we shall
be enabled to say, “Thou hast gone before us, and made our way straight.”
Verses 9-15
And when they forgot the Lord their God he sold them into the hand
of Sisera.
National judgments the consequence of national sins
Let us learn from this transaction the important lesson, that
national judgments are the certain consequences of national transgression! A
lesson, taught not merely in this particular passage of Jewish history, but
written in characters the most legible upon every period of their national
career--a truth, for the confirmation of which we need not search the annals of
other countries; we have merely to look back to the past experience of our own.
Yes, whatever be the instrument to which the Almighty may see fit to entrust
the execution of His vengeance; whether it be the sword, or the famine, or the
pestilence, or the far more terrible scourge of popular fury and civil discord;
whether He raise up a tyrant to oppress His people, and grievously afflict them
with a rod of iron; whatever may be the means employed to inflict the
chastisement, the occasion of that chastisement is sin. The same spirit is at work
among us,--the self-willed spirit of insubordination,--the spirit of opposition
to all constituted authority--of dissatisfaction with all long established
institutions. The same principles are broached among us; principles which, if
carried out to their legitimate conclusions, must lead inevitably to the same
miserable results. Now, as in those days, the “majesty of the people” is held
to be the only true source of power; the will of the multitude is substituted
for the authority of God! Surely, when we see these things come to pass, there
can be nothing very unreasonable in the fear that trouble may be hard at hand;
that the day of calamity may be nearer than we are willing to believe? Should
the Almighty “deal with us after our sins, and reward us according to our
iniquities,” (Psalms 103:10), the issue may be easily
foreseen. Did the transgression of our fathers draw down upon them the
calamities which we this day deplore, and are we better than they? No! in
nowise. Our privileges, indeed, are greater--our deliverances have been
greater--our responsibilities are greater--let us beware lest our condemnation,
also, be greater. (W. Brickwell.)
Unheeding warnings prepare for judgment
“Things to which,” says Manton, “we are used do not work upon us;
we are not much moved with them. Custom maketh men sleep quietly by the falls
of great waters, where much noise is; and some parts of the body grow callous,
brawny, dry, and dead, as the labourer’s hand, and the traveller’s heel, by
much use.” So doth the conscience gradually lose its force. At first, like a
cataract, its great roar astounds the soul, and effectually prevents its
slumbers of carnal security; but by-and-by its noise is scarcely heard, and men
are even lulled to sleep by its sound. Now this is to be dreaded exceedingly,
for it is the forerunner of doom. No more warnings are heard because sentence
has gone forth and the man’s destruction is sealed.
Verses 13-25
Now, therefore, behold the king whom ye have chosen.
Samuel’s farewell address
I. One could
hardly fail to note what is here taught respecting the condition of true
prosperity. Samuel plainly tells people that, in gaining their desire, they had
not made sure of blessing. It still remained that they must fear and serve the
Lord. Refusing to do this, His hand would be against them. In early times, when
man was in his childhood, it was needful that God should make Himself and His
will known chiefly through temporal blessings. To fidelity He promised present
benefit; against transgression he denounced present ills. Now, it is clear that
God does not deal with us in just this way. From the first He sought to lead a
sinning race out; into the knowledge and enjoyment of a larger life. He would
lead them on to see that there is a better than merely outward and earthly
good. Less and less, therefore, did be connect temporal prosperity with obedience.
Here, then, is the true good; in the smile of God, communion with Him, His
present keeping and guidance, and heirship to an inheritance spiritual and
eternal. This, with just such admixture of earthly honour and treasure as seems
to God best, is true prosperity. When God would greatly bless, it is in ways
like these. Does it need, now, to be greatly insisted that this is conditioned,
still and forever, on the fear of God and faithful keeping of His commands?
There are those who seem not to see it. Many, apparently, imagine that the
present and future smile and favour of God come alike to all; not in gracious
offer only, but in actual possession. They rather resent the suggestion that it
can make any essential difference. But this is practical atheism--call it by
whatever pleasing name we will. Then there is a class who seem to fancy that
the requirement of obedience as a condition of present and future good is done
away, for us at least, by the gospel promise of gratuitous pardon and free
grace. This, too, is a fatal mistake. The seemingly two ways, of Samuel and of
Christ, are not two, but one. Never was an Old Testament saint saved by the
merit of his works. He, too, came into God’s spiritual household by undeserving
favour. But he did not come bringing disobedience and self-will along with him.
He came to love, trust, serve, and obey. So does the returning soul now come.
And, coming with any other spirit, God cannot give him approving welcome. Now
and forever, here and hereafter, true blessing is conditioned upon our walking
in God’s way.
II. It will repay
us to note the light which this Scripture sheds upon the use of wonders and
signs. To confirm the words he had spoken, Samuel makes his appeal to God. He
asks a sign from heaven, and his request is granted: “The Lord sent thunder and
rain that day.” Robinson, in his Palestine, says: “In ordinary seasons,
from the cessation of the showers in spring until their commencement in October
and November, rain never falls and the sky is usually serene.” Jerome, whose
home was in that land, tells us, “I have never seen rain in Judea in the end of
June or in July.” The fulfilment of Samuel’s prediction was thus a wonder and a
sign. Now, supposing there is sufficient need of them, nothing is more natural
than expectation of such signs from heaven. But that wonders and signs may be
at any particular time probable there must be an adequate occasion for them.
The end to be accomplished must be worthy, and other and ordinary means
inadequate to it. It must be clear that the signs will do what the ordinary
means can not. There was such adequate occasion when the book of Revelation was
incomplete. It is not certain that there is now, at any time with us, a similar
need; and our Saviour, whose wonders were so many and so stupendous, declared
that, in response to idle curiosity or unbelieving demand, “no sign shall be
given.” Of such, “They have Moses and the prophets, the written gospel and the
Divine spirit; if they hear not them, neither would they be persuaded though One
rose from the dead.”
III. It is worth our
while to note briefly the hint we here have of the real estimate is which the
worldly man holds the ungodly. Upon the latter the former sometimes turns his
back with not a little seeming scorn. So, in a measure, Israel had done with
Samuel. They wanted a more stately rule. But now, no sooner is the sense of
their sin and of God’s ready resources of judgment brought home to them than
they are glad to get, as we say, under His wing.
IV. In this
scripture there are impressive reminders of the great and multiplied incentives
which wanderers have to return to God. Why does Samuel remind the people that
right relations with God are the condition of true prosperity, save that he may
persuade them to return to Him? And why does he make use of the startling sign
from heaven but to the same end? What an array of incentives! Surely, if we
fail to find God and the blessing He would bestow, the fault cannot be that of
Him who sets before us motives so numerous and so great.
V. There is an
important intimation running all through these words as to what it is which
makes one truly and savingly religious. Upon this point there would seem to be
among men a great and strange variety of opinions. Some seem to suppose that
religion mainly consists in knowing and holding the truth, or in soundness of
intellectual belief; others have thought that he is a sufficiently religious
person who reads his Bible, and says his prayers, and goes to his church, and
pays his share for its support; there are those who make chief account of warm
and ardent religious emotions, and think it enough to delight in psalms and
hymns and spiritual songs; just now there is a considerable class who would
have us understand that religion is summed up in what is termed a good life--in
practical reverence for honesty, charity, truth, neighbourly kindness, and
kindred virtues. But now the thought which underlies all of Samuel’s words is
different from anything here named, What he implies is that true, acceptable,
saving religion consists in a right personal relation to a personal God. This
does not mean that any one of the things enumerated is worthless, unimportant.
Each is an important help to it, or expression or fruit of it. But never are
they anywhere in the Scripture set forth as the very thing itself; as that
central reality whence all its deep blessedness flows, and in which its
reasonableness consists. He is a truly religious man who is in a right personal
relation to a personal God.
VI. This address,
as a whole, gives us a pleasing glimpse of the beauty and power of unselfish
piety. His own were the hands that anointed his successor. To those who have
cast him off he pledges his unceasing prayers and gives his cheerful help. In
all this there was rare magnanimity. Some good men have fallen greatly below
it. Have we not heard of Gospel ministers who, when rightly or wrongly
dismissed from their charge, have spoken harsh words and gone out with a
resentful spirit? and of Sunday school superintendents, chief singers, and
other helpers, who, because another has been put in their place or because
disparaging words have been spoken concerning them, have altogether withdrawn
from Christian work? This is simply because to step down and out from a place
of influence and honour, to see the crown of favour transferred to the head of
another, is never easy. To do it patiently takes great grace. Yet it is not
impossible. We have witnessed it in ministers and church officials, who have
proved just as constant and ardent in the ranks as at the head; in following as
when they led. The beauty of such a spirit never fails of recognition. Such men
are everywhere beloved. (Monday Club Sermon.)
Verse 14
Continue following the Lord your God.
Continuity in service
It has been said that one reason (perhaps the chief one) why the
late Emperor of Brazil was dethroned by his own subjects, was because he was a
man of peaceful pursuits and tastes, fond of literature, science and art, and
the society of learned men. Hence his government was too tame for his people.
There was not enough of the Napoleonic spirit about him, not enough glitter and
show, and martial array and warrior spirit, as if the chief end of a king was
to assume a fighting attitude, and challenge everybody to mortal combat. The
man, be he sovereign or subject, who labours in such peaceful pursuits as tend
to develop the intelligence and material resources of a country, is a far
greater benefactor of the race than all the despots who have ever cursed the
world with their combativeness. But people sometimes, in their mad frenzy and
folly, drive away their best advisers, or commit the blunder of selling their
friends and buying their enemies. The clamour for a king showed deep
ingratitude to Samuel, after all he had done for them, and all the evils he had
saved them from. But “Memory soon, of service done, deserteth the ingrate.”
They had a pretext, it is true, in the bad conduct of Samuel’s sons, and of
this they failed not to take advantage. But Samuel had not himself abdicated
the office of Judge, though his sons were associated with him as helpers. There
was also in their demand a spirit of rebellion against the order of governors
God Himself had set over them, and a spirit of inordinate ambition and pride in
desiring to be like the rest of the nations round about them. Having equipped
the vessel of the State, and arranged and settled the new form of government,
he assembled all the people at Gilgal, that he might give them some counsels,
cautions, and warnings as to the future. He reminds them of his own past career
amongst them from his childhood. This was a glorious testimony to the justice,
integrity, and humanity of the prophet’s rule. Happy the ruler, by whatever
name he may be called, king, emperor, or president, about whom such testimony
can be borne, and happy the people, if they only knew it, who are blest with
such rulers. King and people had now entered on a new career under the most
favourable auspices, and what they needed most was the spirit of
continuity--“Continue following the Lord your God.” That is a beautiful prayer,
in which we desire that all our works may be “begun, continued, and ended” in
God, that thus living, and walking, and working, we may glorify His holy name,
and finally by His mercy obtain everlasting life. It is not enough--though it
is something--to begin well. We must continue and advance, and “not be wearied
in well-doing.” Sometimes a year or a day is well begun, and people resolve to
“amend their lives,” and determine to turn over a new page in life’s book. Like
the Galatians, they “run well” for a while. Continuity, or perseverance in
human affairs is one great secret of success. Let the motto of the German soldier
be yours, inmer vorwarts (ever forward). The influence of birth,
fortune, and patronage sinks into insignificance, compared with enthusiasm,
diligence, and perseverance. Inducements to evil there will be in plenty. The
devil, the father of evil, will ply all his arts to succeed in our overthrow.
Let us always be ready and prepared for him. “For some days past,” said an
eminent servant of God, “I have been unusually harassed by temptations of
various kinds, and am often led to inquire, ‘Why am I thus?’” So it is still:
the Christian soldier is not only drilled and equipped, he is also placed in
the field, and his qualities tried. Man’s duty is simply to do as God tells
him, neither adding to nor diminishing the Divine rule. But, in our ignorance
and blindness, and presumption, we are for superseding or improving God’s plan.
It is not the high enterprise He desires, so much as the quiet, continuance in
well-doing. Many of us would rather choose to climb the mountain side than plod
along, steadily and wearily, miles of level road. Many would be willing, no
doubt, to serve Him if they only might do it in their own way. But the thing
God requires most of us all is to have no will but His. “If any man will come
after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me.” This is
but an expansion by the Saviour of the warning advice of Samuel. (J. Reid.)
Persistent following after the Lord
Let those tempted to depart from the Lord remember the answer of
Christian to Apollyon, when the latter sought to persuade him to turn back, and
forsake his Lord: “O thou destroying Apollyon, to speak truth, I like his
service, his wages, his servants, his government, his company, and country,
better than thine; and, therefore, leave off to persuade me further: I am his
servant, and I will follow him.”
Verse 17-18
I will call unto the Lord, and He will send thunder end rain.
The power of prayer
The evidence of history to the truth is most invaluable. It makes
an appeal to the judgment which can be readily appreciated and, next to
experience, is one of the most convincing demonstrations of the divinity of the
Scriptures. History may teach lessons of wisdom by its striking examples, but
personal experience is essential to the awakening of the soul. This was what
Samuel sought.
1. How near to God he seemed to live! He was always in Divine
communion, and possessed the ear of the Almighty Father. He prayed, and the
answer thundered through the air and deluged the ground. He spoke to men as the
vice-regent of God, and the people trembled in his presence. But his nearness
to God was not so close as is the privilege of the humblest believer in New
Testament times.
2. How powerful is prayer! This was Samuel’s greatness His intimacy
with God was fully used in prayer. It was his highest means of doing good. The
outer effort had the inner prayer. His labour among men was implemented by his
wrestling with God. Prayer was the secret of his strength and of his happiness.
Prayer is still powerful. It is receiving illustrations in our own day on a
scale of grandeur and extent not equalled in any age of the Church. People have
believed in the power of prayer, have felt its necessity and its efficacy.
Conversions have been more largely the result of prayer than of preaching. Thus
John Newton wrote in his journal: “About this time I began to know that there
is a God who hears and answers prayer.” Prayer is the strength of your soul,
for it takes hold of God. Samuel’s word to the people was with power. It was
not until this special witness from God awakened them that they confessed, “We
have added unto all our sins this evil, to ask us a king.” It, is striking how
long sin can remain upon a comparatively enlightened conscience without causing
fear. But when the guilt is felt, compunction is often more agonizing than that
which the sharp arrows of a first awakening produce.
3. They now sought Samuel’s intercession. They knew him to be a man
of prayer, and intensely concerned in their spiritual good. They therefore
sought his aid in their distress. It is true that many have wished the
intercession of the godly, without any personal desire to seek God:--as
Pharaoh, when be entreated Moses to pray on his behalf; and as Simon Magus,
when he asked St. Peter to plead that the evil threatened against him might not
come; and as those who, fearing death to be near, attach a saving value to the
prayers of the godly, whose counsels they had been despising. But though such
may not receive a benefit from prayers offered by proxy, the prayers of a
righteous man avail much in behalf of the awakened sinner. If you know the
power of prayer, you cannot, without guilt, cease to intercede on behalf of
your friends, acquaintances, and others. Is this intercession, a feature of
your personal religion? It is specially important that anxious souls should
seek the prayers of the people of God. God has pledged his word to receive the
returning sinner, the repenting prodigal, the trembling backslider. “The Lord
will not forsake His people for His great name’s sake; because it hath pleased
the Lord to make you His people.” Thus Samuel reasoned with the children of
Israel in their distress of soul. Thus did the faithful Samuel seek the
spiritual conviction of the people. It was by declaring the truth, and
abounding in prayer. Apart from the miraculous, this is the constant means of
blessing attached to the ministry still. (R. Steel.)
Thunder and rain at the prayer of Samuel
I. That this
incident was a miracle is evident. This instance is a parallel to that which
occurred in Egypt (Exodus 9:23). It is to be remarked that
Samuel spoke confidently as to the issue of his prayer, “The Lord shall send,”
etc.
2. Because the thunder and rain came at a season of the year in
which, in the natural course of things, they are never heard or seen in Canaan.
“Is it not wheat harvest today?” The time of harvest in this country is often a
time of much thunder and rain, but this is not the case in the land where this
miracle was wrought.
3. The effect of the storm upon the minds of those who witnessed it
was such as to make it evident; that they regarded it as a supernatural
manifestation.
II. The intention
of the miracle. It was sent as an attestation of the blamelessness of Samuel’s
administration as judge of Israel. It was at the same time a token of God’s
displeasure at Israel’s present wilfulness. Samuel’s expressions of displeasure
were thus shown to be a message to them from the God whose rule they had
treated so lightly. Lessons:--
1. Whenever a nation rejects God, such rejection will be followed by
signs of God’s displeasure.
2. The continuance of a nation’s greatness depends upon the relation
of individual members of it to the Living God. The beauty of the garden depends
upon each flower being placed in right relations to the light.
3. The servants of God sin against Him when they neglect to pray for
their fellow countrymen (verse 28).
We should pray for them--
1. Because they are our fellow creatures (1 Timothy 2:1).
2. Because, as a body politic, we have an interest in their right
relations to God (1 Corinthians 12:26).
3. Because national love ought to be an element in every Christian’s
character (Romans 10:1). (Outlines from Sermons
by a London minister.)
Prayer for favourable weather
I. That
unfavourable weather is sometimes sent by God in proof of his displeasure. On
the occasion before us it is distinctly stated to have been so; this happened
again and again in the history of Israel. The prophet Amos refers to this. (Amos 4:6; Amos 4:8). And we all call to mind the
terrible drought which happened to the kingdom of Israel during the reign of
the wicked Ahab, when for the space of “three years and six months it rained
not.” Now, before we begin to ask God to send us favourable weather, and to
revive our trade, would it not be well for us to ask ourselves whether we have
done anything as a nation justly to merit judgment at the hands of God? We are
accustomed to talk about our country as a “Christian country.” Is it really so?
If so, what are the evidences of its being so? Listen to what God says by His
prophet on this matter to ancient Israel. (Isaiah 1:11-16.) In other words, the
national religion that God demands is a religion founded on righteousness or
right doing. Judged by this test, surely there is abundant room for the inquiry
whether, as a nation, we have not deserved God’s judgments. For instance, look
at the social vices which are rife in our midst. Think next of the large amount
of commercial depravity which exists! What cheating and overreaching are
current in business transactions! Judged by the standard of righteousness, how
does the political life of the nation appear? What about the opium wars, in
which this country engaged with China a few years back? And yet, in face of all
these unrighteousnesses, we expect a God of righteousness--a God who has
revealed Himself as “of purer eyes than to behold iniquity”--to regard us with
favour, and to hear our prayers for national blessing.
II. That prayer for
favourable weather is a fit subject for prayer. “But,” asks some, “do you not
believe in the laws of nature as fixed, unalterable?” Most certainly we do;
but, at the same time, we hold that it is not unreasonable or unscientific to
pray for the modification of these laws. By the laws of nature we do not mean
mere blind, unintelligent forces ruling the universe, but forces or powers
which are under God’s control, forces, indeed, which are God’s modes or methods
of carrying on the government, of the natural world. Now we maintain that it is
perfectly reasonable, and in entire accordance with scientific facts, that
these laws should be capable of modification at the will of God, for to modify
a law is not to suspend or to abrogate a law. Take an illustration from the
matter before us--viz., the supply of rain. Rain falls through the law of
condensation. The vapour in the atmosphere is condensed, and falls in the form
of rain. Now, vegetation, trees and shrubs in particular, is favourable to the
condensation of vapour, and, consequently, to the production of rain. Cut down
the trees in a given tract of country, and the result will be a lessening of
the rainfall. The law by which the vapour is produced remains in force, and the
law of condensation remains in force, and yet the rainfall is diminished. Now,
this is just what has happened in the land to which the text refers. Our
argument, then, is this, if man has power to modify the weather, it is surely
not unscientific or unreasonable to deny this power to God. He from whom all
natural laws derive their power, and to whom they owe their allegiance, must be
capable of modifying them at His will, and if sufficient reason exist why we
should appeal to Him--if the temporal welfare of a whole people depend upon the
weather--it is fitting that we should lay the matter before Him in prayer. But
after all the main subject of our prayer should be that as a nation we should
learn righteousness. It is permissible for us to pray for a return of national
prosperity; but, above all, let us pray for the return of the nation, as more
than one of our statesmen has expressed it, “to sanity and the Ten
Commandments.” If, is manifest that if this is to be the case we must be
righteous as individuals. A righteous nation is composed of those who are
individually righteous. A nation cannot be righteous in the mass without being
righteous in its units. (William Spensley.)
Your wickedness is great,
which ye have done in the eight of the Lord, in asking a king.--
The Israelites asking a king
To stain the glory of all human pride, and to allow no flesh to
boast itself in the presence of its Maker, is the great moral of sacred story.
Man retains too much of his mould and faculties Divine, to overlook his own
vast superiority over the rest of creation; but he has lost so much that he
often overlooks God’s measureless superiority over him. Hence it arises that
the Almighty is so often left out of sight in the plans and purposes of His
creatures; or, at all events, that He is only so far recognised as the
acknowledgment may redound to the greater glory of self, and raise that shining
idol to a brighter pedestal than it occupied before. We immediately fancy He is
smiling on our unsanctified plans, and passing by, unavenged and uncured for, an
affront put upon His own laws. It is a striking illustration the folly of
putting our own constructions on the silence or non-interference of Almighty
God, which is presented in that portion of Jewish history which has been
brought before us. We find the holy seer warning the infatuated nation of the
consequences which should result to them from the curse of a granted prayer.
Presumption and infatuation, however, still swayed their counsels. Accordingly,
by an immediate revelation from heaven, the prophet is directed to fix upon a
young man, named Saul, as the anointed of God over His people; to whom, whilst
in search of His father’s asses, the prophet is instructed to make the offer of
the kingdom.
1. And here we may note a striking illustration of that peculiarity
in the arrangements of Providence by which a combination of seeming casualties
becomes subordinated to the purposes of the Almighty, and chance is made a
minister, to effectuate and perform His will For, observe, Saul had been
appointed, in the eternal decrees of Heaven, to take charge of the new kingdom;
and yet, for all this, lots are to be cast, to determine who the new king
should be. But in “casting the lot into the lap,” man has done all that he can
do; “the disposing thereof” rests “with the Lord;” and nothing can hinder, but
that this lot shall find out the right person. Human contingencies are Divine
certainties. All chance is only unseen design. God marshals accidents, as man
originates plans; save only, that the plans may fail of their intended aim,
whilst the accidents never can.
2. A ranted prayer is not always a sanctioned prayer; and it will be
time enough to rejoice in the blessing we have been seeking for when we find
that “the Lord addeth no sorrow with it.” “The prayer of the wicked” is often
turned “into sin;” and the prayer of the impatient is almost sure to be turned
into misfortune. God does exercise His authority over our lives, and He claims
to exercise it over our desires as well. He forbids all presumptuous wrestlings
with the course of His own Providence: all usurpations of His right to shape,
direct, and regulate all our plans of life. Why is everything to be “according
to our minds?” We would fain choose our own path. We would set up ourselves as
infallible judges of what may be best and happiest for us. We judge of the
fruit by its appearance, and not by its taste; we are satisfied with the
breadth of the way, and never think of the end of the way. We would have a
king, like the nations, to reign over us, and forget that “the Lord our God is
our king.” Learn, then, to tremble at your own success, whenever your impatient
anxiety for some temporal good has, as it were, turned the channels of Divine
Providence out of their usual course; when you have, so to speak, coerced the Almighty
into a concession which the whole aspect of His Providences indicated His
intention to keep back. If the door does not open of its own accord you must
not force it. The concession, sooner or later, must be fatal to you. In letting
you have your own way God has only laid down the sceptre to take up the sword;
He has loosened “the cords of love,” but it is to bind you with fetters of
iron. He has given you a king, to lead you to the battles; but He will no
longer “go forth with your armies,” or crown your endeavours with victory. When
we know that we have done, and are doing, that for which the arrow of God’s
pursuing judgments must be flying after us, it were better for our soul’s peace
that it should overtake us at once. The tardiness of its flight in time may be
only to gather its more deadly poisons for eternity. And bitter as it may be to
bear God’s temporal chastisements, it were better to feel them than not to feel
our own sin.
3. The instrument chosen of God for bearing His remonstrance to the Jewish
nation, was the same venerable prophet. “A word spoken in season, how good is
it!” How often do the arrows of the truth fall blunt and powerless upon the
soul, from their not being aimed at the right time! We commonly allow the fault
and the reproof to come too close together. We forget that a little interval
between them would allow the offender time to think; the offended time to cool;
and both, when the grace of God should so incline them, the opportunity and
time to pray. Had Samuel uttered his bold remonstrance to the Israelites, under
the first keen sense of the insult they had offered him, he would probably have
been answered with scorn; but having waited till they supposed he had forgotten
their unkindness, he beholds them now meekly outranking for an interest in his
prayers. Such of you as are parents particularly I would exhort you to imitate
Samuel’s example in this respect. The expected reproof, even in children, is
seldom a profitable reproof. Pride is on the alert; conscience has taken the
alarm; and the whole artillery of excuses and self-justifications are being
prepared for the encounter. But let the taste of sin have time to turn bitter
on the tongue; let the sense of the wrongfulness of your children’s fault be
heightened by the tenderness which, on your part, seems to have passed it
entirely by; nay, let the time for calling them to account be that when you are
showing them marks of continued kindness--and you will then find that pride
will have nothing to answer; the convicted heart will be ashamed of its
excuses; and wondering at this unexpected and undeserved forbearance, they will
say with the penitent Israelites before us--“We have sinned; we have forsaken
the Lord; pray for thy servants to the Lord thy God.”
4. How many souls have perished from the desire to be “like the rest
of the nations!” Things which men care little about for themselves, they yet
desire and discountenance, because they would not displease others. They cannot
pay the price of a holy singularity. “I cannot,” says one, “bid adieu to scenes
of vanity and folly, to the midnight revel and dramatic blasphemy, because I
should be unlike all the nations.” I cannot, in the multiplied occupations and
intercourses of life, make profession of godliness, without at the same time
bearing a witness against the nations; against their principles, which are
opposed to Christ. Conformity to the world, or friendship with the world, can
only be obtained at one price--enmity with God. What was Pilate’s motive for
staining his hands with the life-blood of the Son of God? He was “willing to
content the people.” Hear, then, the words of the Lord--the words of Samuel,
yea, the words of all the prophets, God hath ever sent to you. They are as
eloquent of mercy as the harvest thunder was eloquent of power. “Fear not. Ye
have done all this wickedness;” ye have made for yourselves a king--a king of
your wealth, a king of your pleasures, a king (it may be) of your griefs and
cares. But if ye will now turn aside from this folly, and serve the Lord with
all your heart, following no commands but His, desiring no smile but His,
depending on no righteousness but His, and no longer like the rest of the
nations, trusting to those vain things which can neither profit nor deliver,
rest assured that, as Samuel declared to the Israelites, “the Lord will not
forsake His people, for His great name’s sake.” Yes, the glory of that great
name is bound up with, and brightened and magnified by a thousand pardons The
Redeemer’s brow shall be illumined with a yet brighter radiance, and angels’
bosoms throb with a yet diviner joy at each sinner that repenteth. (Daniel
Moore, M. A.)
Verse 19
Pray for thy servants unto the Lord thy God.
Intercessory prayer
1. This Lesson contains Samuel’s official farewell to the
people--that is, as Judge. There is something touching in all farewells.
Retirement from long and distinguished service has ever a shade of melancholy;
it reminds us of the transitoriness of human life and human greatness.
2. There was one link with the old Judge which they were anxious to
retain. The king might rule them in times of peace, and go forth with them as
leader in times of war; he might be the representative of national unity and
the keystone of national greatness; but it was to Samuel they turned when they
wanted to be remembered before God. With one voice they besought him, “Pray for
thy servants,” etc.
I. The request.
“Pray for thy servants unto the Lord thy God, that we die not.”
1. It is the language of fear. The people were terrified with the
thunder and rain. God had shown His displeasure by this sign
2. It is the language of faith. Samuel’s power as an intercessor with
God was a recognised fact. It was not the discovery of a passing emotion.
3. It may not be presumptuous to inquire wherein his great strength
in this respect lieth. First, his vocation as a prophet brought him very near
to God. Secondly, the office without the life is not of much avail. Samuel
lived for God, and it appears that, according to the degree of sanctity to
which individuals attain, so is the efficacy of their intercessions.
II. The reasons for
this request. Their sense of sin in having asked for a king. They feared death,
lest a glittering flash of lightning--a symbol of Divine wrath--should at once
consume them.
1. What was their fault? Viewed in reference to Samuel, it was
ingratitude.
2. But, regarded in reference to God, the asking for a king was a
rejection of His direct rule. (1 Samuel 8:7).
3. Yet, what, looked at on the side of the spontaneous action of
God’s people, was a grave fault--“wickedness;” when viewed in relation to the
course of events, was a result of a variety of causes.
4. But God can bring good out of evil. The formation of a kingdom was
in His providence overruled to the ultimate fulfilment of His designs. Through
it looms the kingdom of Christ and Christ the King, and, with the realised unity
of the nation under a king, the carrying out of the Levitical Law as to one
sanctuary; and in the temple, which was a result of this change, and its
service and its Psalter, we have an image of the Catholic Church and her solemn
ritual to the end of time.
III. Lessons.
1. To quicken our belief in the efficacy of intercessory prayer.
2. To remember that Christ is our invisible King and the Head of His
Church; and that obedience to an outward rule must be accompanied by inward
obedience, for though the kingdom of God, that is, the Church, is visible, yet
it is also an inward kingdom of “righteousness, joy, and peace in the Holy
Ghost.” (The Thinker.)
Verses 20-22
And Samuel said unto the people, Fear not.
Danger or despondency
It is, I believe, no very unusual thing, however unwilling we may
be to avow it, for persons to give way to a kind of despair, when they are
called on to repent of their sins. They say to themselves, “It is too late now:
it is no use pretending to keep the commandments, after so many years of
transgression.” And what is very remarkable, men change all at once into this
method of excusing themselves, from one the very contrary to it, in which they
have spent all their lives. We know too well, most of us, by experience, how
common a thing it is to break God’s plain commandments, and yet to keep one’s
conscience tolerably quiet, with the hope of repenting one day or another. At
last we get ashamed and tired of dreaming of amendment, and promising it vainly
to ourselves; we know by experience what the end will be if we again resolve
and put off our resolutions: our consciences also have insensibly become
hardened, and have lost all horror of sin as it is in itself: and in this state
of mind it is no hard matter for the Evil Spirit to pervert our minds in a way
exactly opposite to the former. Hitherto we have gone on, quieting ourselves
every day with the notion that we might and would repent tomorrow; but now He
keeps whispering to our disordered spirits, “What if it should be too late for
you to repent at all?” Against such a snare as this it would seem that Samuel
is guarding the children of Israel. They were to beware of that sullen fear
which would make it impossible for them to repent; they were not to doubt that,
wicked as they had been, and irremediable as their wickedness might be in some
respects, still their best and only true wisdom lay in following the Lord for
the future with all their heart. The great wickedness which the Israelites had
done was this, that having been especially chosen and set apart by Almighty God
to be His own people, and having so gone on for many years, receiving from Him
peculiar and distinguishing favours, they were dissatisfied with their own
condition, and rather wished themselves, as said the Prophet Ezekiel, “like the
Heathen, the families of the countries,” if not directly to serve wood and
stone, yet to take liberties of one sort and another, very inconsistent with
the pure and holy character of a people redeemed and marked as they were to be
God’s own. This was their sin; most dangerous to themselves, and most
affronting to the Almighty: so that we need not wonder at the severity of
Samuel’s reproof, nor at the awful warning which God sent them from Heaven. It
was a voice from above, most mercifully sent, to warn them what would come of
it if they went on in the way which they had begun, and how much worse and more
ungodly the temper in which they were acting than they had themselves imagined.
Too often have we taken a perverse pleasure in slighting and undervaluing our
own privileges. Surely in this way we have most of us too much to answer for,
and our Lord might most justly and reasonably cast us off. But He has not done
so; therefore, in any case we must not cast ourselves away. We may not, we must
not, go in any kind of sin, under pretence of its being too late to cure
ourselves of that ill habit at least.
1. To be a little more particular. The cases in which people are most
apt to give themselves up are generally such as these following. First, when
after having gone on religiously and blamelessly for many years, perhaps
through the whole of youth and early manhood, the Devil prevails against any
man, and he gives way to temptation, slight or strong, and knowingly commits
any kind of deadly sin. The same Evil Spirit, who has so far had his own way
with him, will presently try to make him think the case desperate. Thus, at
first, through a feeling of despair, and afterwards through a sense of thorough
incurable bad habit, men knowingly throw away their only remaining chance of
repentance, and with it, of course, their only remaining chance of salvation.
One of the sins in which this sad and fatal process may be seen most distinctly
is the inordinate love of strong drink. And if it is so in drunkenness, much
more in those sins, which in man’s sentence as well as God’s bring an
irrecoverable stain on those who are guilty of them: such as unchastity,
falsehood, dishonesty. One might well imagine that the Prophet Jeremiah was
thinking on these two sorts of deadly sin--the unchaste and the deceitful--when
he wrote that most fearful of all sentences, “Can the Ethiopian change his
skin, or the leopard his spots? Then may ye do good who are accustomed to do
evil;” as much as to say, “With men this is impossible, but not with God: for
with God all things are possible.” On the other hand, it is well for all, even
the worst, to be sure there is hope so far, as that no one holy desire or good
purpose, no one prayer or sigh of sincere repentance through Faith in Christ
Jesus our Lord, can ever fall to the ground useless and vain. Hitherto I have
spoken of great and notorious sins; practices which naturally startle the
consciences of all men, such as unchastity, drunkenness, dishonesty: and I have
shown what danger we are in of becoming hardened in these by a kind of despair,
as if, having been long bad, we must of course go on and be worse.
2. A word must now be added on another way of going wrong, somewhat
in the same kind, that is, by mere lightness of temper and shallowness of
principle: when men, for instance, continue in the custom of profane swearing,
or of dissolute wanton talk, or of backbiting and slandering, or of lying in
common conversation. These persons are in one thing unlike the sinful Jewish
people as described in Samuel; they are far from acknowledging that in their
way of going on they are adding a great evil to their former sins: they look
upon their ill words, as I just now said, one by one, not as making up a sum of
mischief; they do not consider that such sinful habits are, as it were, a
smothered, inward fire, gradually consuming the whole body.
3. There is another class who are especially apt to encourage themselves
in sinning again by the very remembrance which ought most to daunt and humble
them;--the remembrance that they have sinned much and often before:--I mean
those who sin mostly in the way of omission; the habitual scorner of the Church
and Sacraments of God. They say to themselves and sometimes to others, “It, is
so very hard to recollect what for so many years we have allowed to slip out of
our minds;” and they fancy to themselves in some indistinct way that a little
act of kindness or of devotion will go further, and tell for more, in their
case, than in the case of one to whom such acts are familiar; making the great
unpleasantness of the duty, which is an effect of their own sinful neglect, an
excuse for their imperfect performance of it. Now the example of the Israelites
and the Prophet in the text shows how all these and other like cases are to be
treated. They must be spoken to very plainly, as Samuel spoke to those Jews:
though full of all kindness towards them, he neither spared them at first, in
reproving them plainly for their apostasy. “It is true,” he said, “you have
indeed done all this great wickedness; I cannot, I must not flatter you; your
case is very bad; you have need to humble yourselves deeply before your God;
but this one thing you must do; you must turn your attention earnestly from the
Past to the Future; you must live in fear and trembling and watchfulness, that
you add no more to your sad and heavy account: ‘Ye have done all this great
wickedness, yet turn not aside from following the Lord, but serve the Lord with
all your heart.’” This one sentence of the grave and mild Prophet may convey to
us the meaning of the whole Scripture of God. Your past sins, He tells you, are
at least as bad as you imagine them: but they are done, and you cannot undo
them; very likely you may forever have to bear the mark and stain of them; yet
despair not; the worst consequence may yet, by God’s mercy, be averted; only
lay hold in earnest of that Cross by which hitherto you have held so slightly: fear
always, but not with such slavish, ungodly fear, as shall hinder you from doing
your very best; preserve a holy obstinacy in following Christ for the future. (Plain
sermons by contributors to the ”Tracts for the Times. ”)
Verse 21
Turn ye not aside.
Points of departure
Samuel assumes that the true path was clear before Israel; it knew
its calling and destiny. To love God alone and to serve Him was the simple
royal pathway. And Samuel here reminds the people that the imminent danger was
not that they would execute a right-about and go back to Egypt, but that they
should turn aside. So the grand path of life is clearly discovered to us. And
our great danger is not that we should suddenly wheel about, but that we should
deflect little by little. Let us note these points of departure from a higher
to a lower life--from faith to unbelief, spirituality to worldliness, purity to
laxity and immorality.
I. These points of
departure are numerous. Men begin to live afresh, to live a better and still
better life, prompted by most diverse occasions. On the other side, from all
kinds of happenings men begin to gravitate. Beginning school awakes in one
child a higher sense, whilst for another it is the loss of innocence and the
beginning of evil, proving, as Michelet writes, that the real fall is the day
when a boy leaves him me, her. Leaving school initiates one youth into a more
serious, manly life, whilst another takes advantage of the change to relax
discipline and begins to play a baser part. A change of residence or situation
leads one to greater devotion and circumspection, whilst another from that time
forward is distinctly poorer in character, the change destroying old habits of
good. Marriage proves a truly golden day in the life of some--the beginning of
higher thought, love, and purpose; for others the same event is altogether
disastrous to their moral and religious life. After Methuselah was born, Enoch
his father walked with God. Events are always happening which are occasions of
the rising or falling of souls, and herein lies the real seriousness of life.
The danger comes from opposite directions. “Thou shalt not go aside . . . to
the right hand, or to the left.” Directly opposite phases of experience and
circumstance prove equally fatal.
II. These points of
departure are slight. We do not go off at an acute angle, or down a steep
incline, leading right away from the Christian course; we simply get a little
wrong, and this may end with ruin. The first departure from God is of really
tremendous significance, and yet it may appear absolutely trifling. The descent
into error is rarely violent. We speak of men falling into error, but more
commonly they slide into it. There are half-way houses to superstition. There
is a literature which deftly saps solemn convictions, and which, like the thief
in the night, despoils men of a faith infinitely more precious than gold. The
“down grade” in belief is a masterpiece of engineering, and many who follow it
are all the time unconscious of any declination. The lapse into worldliness is
usually a process of fine shadings off. The “little rift” in the lute slowly
widening stills the music; but that rift is never more subtle and slow than it
is in the lute which makes musical the hearts and lives of righteous men. The
descent into wickedness is equally gentle. The beginning of sin is always
obscure. Insidious are the beginnings of evil. The agents of darkness, as our
poet says,
Win us with honest trifles, to betray us
In deepest consequence.
The slow and subtle way in which practical iniquity takes shape is
one of the tragedies of life. M. Joly has recorded the experience of the police
concerning the thefts that take place at the great Parisian shops. “This is the
beginning. From a gallery one sees a woman--rich or well-to-do--who buys a
certain number of objects and pays for them, but without asking permission she
takes some little, almost insignificant, object--a little ribbon to fasten a
parcel, more commodious paper bag. No one will say she is stealing; no one will
think of speaking to her or disturbing her. But she is observed, and even
watched; for one expects to see her again some time after taking, as she walks
along, say, a flower worth twenty-five centimes. A little later she will
appropriate an article of greater value, and henceforth she will take for the
pleasure of taking.” Amid the glaciers of the Alps an explosion is sometimes
heard announcing the birth of a crevasse. At first the young fissure is almost
too slight to be seen, and at no place is it wide enough to admit a knife
blade. But the almost imperceptible fracture eventually becomes a gaping,
impassable chasm. So it is when we break with good; the great gulf fixed
between the lost and paradise began in a flaw hardly to be discerned.
III. These points of
departure are specious. It seems in the hour of temptation as if we should
secure a great advantage by departing from a strict, literal fidelity to the
path of duty. When Israel first dabbled with idolatry, they had no thought of
renouncing God. They imagined that certain advantages were to be gained by
intercourse with idolatrous nations, and that such advantages might be secured
without losing in any measure the blessing of Jehovah. They became worse than
the heathen. Very specious still are many of the things which draw us from God.
The point of departure to worldliness is often similarly specious. Care for his
family--this is the reason why Demos abates his religious enthusiasm and
applies himself to business. James Hinton said, “Wishing to tempt an
Englishman, the devil generally appears in the shape of the man’s wife and
family.” And how plausible he is in this shape! How much is to be said for
prudence and diligence! Oh, very rational, promising, enticing seem those
openings which lead to a lower life! This is what Shakespeare meant when he
wrote:
But
’tis strange:
And
oftentimes, to win us to our harm,
The
instruments of darkness tell us truths.
“At Bypath meadow Christian said to Hopeful, ‘If this meadow lieth
along by our wayside, let’s go over into it.’ Then he went to the stile to see,
and behold a path lay along by the way on the other side of the fence. ‘Here is
the easiest going,’ said he; ‘let us go over.’” Many paths on the other side of
the fence seem to run parallel with Christian principle and doctrine, and yet
they lead to death. The fence may be very narrow. Andrew Bonar writes: “Often I
have wondered that I did not feel the temptations of Satan more frequently and
plainly. But now I discover his plan. In short, he succeeds in reversing in my
case, ‘Seek first the kingdom of God.’”
IV. These points of
departure are always serious. Even if they do not lead us altogether astray or
far astray, turnings aside are great evils. A tree grows so grandly because
without vagary it develops itself according to its nature; the flower is so
glorious because it concentrates itself on bud and blossom; the bee is so rich
in honey because it follows the shortest line: and if we are to attain wealth
and glory of character we must avoid lapses, eccentricities, obliquities, waste
of time and power by diversions and repentances. These branchings off from the
King’s highway may lead to utter ruin. All wanderings of heart or life begin in
a lack of faith either in the prize or in the path. Let us keep alive, then, an
ardent faith in the grand prize of life. Life is not like a suddenly twisted
kaleidoscope which at every turn discloses startling scenery, events, and
experiences; still there will not be a day without its stepping stones to
higher things, and there will be critical, privileged days, bringing memorable
chances and inspiration. (W. L. Watkinson.)
Backsliding arrested
I. The first point
of instruction addressed to such is, that they should not proceed another step
in their backsliding.
II. The second
point of instruction which the prophet addressed to these trembling backsliders
was, that they should have a filial confidence in God, in order that they might
not depart from Him. “Fear not, ye have done all this wickedness; yet turn not
aside from following the Lord with all your heart.”
III. This leads us
to the third point of instruction addressed by the Prophet to the people,
namely, the ground upon which their confidence was to rest. “Turn ye not aside;
for then should ye go after vain things, which cannot profit nor deliver, for
they are vain. For the Lord will not forsake his people.”
IV. The reason why
the Lord thus delights to be gracious. “For the Lord will not forsake his people,
for His great name’s sake: because it has pleased the Lord to make you his
people.” (B. Noel.)
The folly of turning aside from the Lord
The text is a defiance held out to men in their attempts to mend
their condition by departing from the Lord. In which there is,
1. A case supposed, which is, That they should turn aside from the
Lord; and having done so, they have the wide world to choose upon, let them
take to the right hand, or to the left, choose the best they can pitch on, some
or all, that what is wanting in one, may be made up in another. This is the
utmost extent to which it can be carried. There is,
2. The determination in this case, which is expressed in the text
with all confidence. Ye shall not, ye cannot for your hearts, turn aside, but
after vain things; I defy you to find out a substantial good for yourselves in
the whole creation, separate from God. Doctrine, That no man shall mend his
condition, but will ruin it, by turning aside from the Lord, let him turn to
what hand soever he will. For illustrating this doctrine, I shall--
I. To offer some
things for explaining the point. Here I observe,
1. That no man, by turning aside from the Lord, shall mend his
condition, but ruin it, in point of rest to his heart, and satisfaction to the
desires of it (Isaiah 57:19-20).
2. That no man, by turning aside from the Lord, shall mend his
condition, but ruin it, in point of comfort and ease to his conscience.
3. That no man, by turning aside from the Lord, shall mend his
condition, but ruin it, in point of his interest and advantage (Jeremiah 2:13).
4. That no man, by turning aside from the Lord, will better his
condition, but ruin it, in point of security from evil (Proverbs 28:18), “Whoso walketh
uprightly, shall be saved; but he that is perverse in his ways, shall fall at
once.”
II. To evince the
truth of this weighty point. That no man shall mend his condition, but will
ruin it, by turning aside from the Lord, let him turn to what hand soever he
will.
1. We are to evince the truth of this weighty point, by considering
to what a person turns aside when he turns from God. It is but vanity, which
cannot proof or deliverse There are but two things to which a person can turn
aside, though the particulars are numberless. The character agrees either,
2. To the creature, to which, when men are turning aside from God,
they turn to seek happiness. This comprehends all created comforts whatsoeverse
Of them we have two things to say. They are all uncertain, a person can never
get a sure hold of them: (Proverbs 23:5), “Wilt thou set thine eyes
upon that which is not? for riches certainly make themselves wings, they flee
away as an eagle towards heaven.” They are utterly insufficient. It is not in
them to answer the cravings of the human heart, of an immortal soul (Isaiah 55:2). There is no suitableness in
them to the soul They have no Divine appointment for that end.
2. For evincing the truth of this weighty point, consider what a
person turns aside from, when turning aside from God He turns from an upmaking
portion; (Psalms 73:25), “Whom have I in heaven but
thee? and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee.” Cleave to the
Lord, turn not aside from him: for,
3. The truth of this weighty point in the text will farther appear,
by inspecting the pretended gain which is acquired by turning aside from the
Lord. It may all be summed up in these two particulars.
III. To make some
improvement of this subject, in an use of information.
1. You who have never yet turned to the Lord, but have been going
aside from him all your days, know, that ye are yet in a ruinous condition;
there is nothing you can call yours, but what is vanity, and cannot, profit or
deliver.
2. Backsliders, be all of you convinced of the foolish choice ye have
made, repent, and turn again unto the Lord. What have you gained by your
departure from him?
3. Ye who have got near God in this ordinance, ye may see that it is
your duty and interest, by a holy tender walk, a living by faith, to hold where
you are.
4. Disappointed communicants may hence be satisfied, that if you love
your own souls, it is not for your profit to go aside to another door, to get
your loss at the door of God’s house made up another way. Be peremptory in your
resolutions that you will wait upon the Lord, and not give over, how long
soever ye be without sensible success (Genesis 32:26).
5. Ye carnal ones, who are weary of waiting about the Lord’s hand,
and are longing to be back to the world as your element, saying in your heart,
“When will the Sabbath be over?” Ye may see the propriety of checking these
carnal notions: stir up yourselves to seek the Lord. (T. Boston, D. D.)
How steadfastness is secured
Loose things on the deck of a ship will be blown or washed
overboard when the storm comes. There is only one way to keep them firm, and
that is to lash them to something that is fixed. It is not the bit of rope that
gives them security, but it is the stable thing to which they are lashed. Lash
yourselves to Christ by faith, and whatever storm or tempest comes you will be
safe, and stand firm and immovable. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Verse 22
For the Lord will not forsake His people.
God never forsakes His people
I. Let us consider
how God has made our nation His peculiar people.
1. It hath pleased the Lord to separate us in a peculiar manner from
other nations.
2. It hath pleased the Lord to make us the objects of His peculiar
care and protection. Thus He distinguished His ancient chosen people.
3. The Lord has been pleased to form us for His peculiar service, by
making us, from the beginning, a religious people.
II. To show what
ground we have to hope that God will not forsake us. It appears from the
preceding observations, that He has done a good deal to form us for Himself.
Can we suppose that He would spend so much time and employ so many means to
make us His peculiar people, without some wise and weighty reasons.
1. God will not forsake us because He loved and respected our
fathers. As the effectual, fervent prayers of such righteous men must have been
pleasing to God, so they give us ground to hope that He will long remember our
land, and not forsake the children of those whom He delighted to love.
2. We are encouraged to hope that God will not forsake us, because He
loves the pious posterity of our pious ancestors. God often spared the whole
Jewish nation for the sake of those pious individuals who remained heartily
attached to His cause and His interest. And as long as a succession of these
godly men shall remain, we have reason to hope that the Lord will spare us from
national ruin.
3. We may confidently hope not to be forsaken by God, because He may
still answer very important purposes, by preserving and treating us as His
peculiar people. One end may be, to make it appear to the world that He is able
to protect a nation whom He has set apart for Himself, against their most,
powerful and subtile enemies.
III. Let me now
apply this leading sentiment agreeably to the design of the day, and the present
state of our religion and government.
1. If God will continue to own us as His peculiar people, then we may
confide in His wisdom and goodness, to defeat the designs of those, who attempt
to destroy our national peace and prosperity.
2. If God will not forsake us, then He will enlarge us, and make us
an exceedingly great and flourishing nation.
3. If God will not forsake us, but own us as His peculiar people,
then it is to be expected that He will take effectual care to maintain the
cause of religion among us. This will be necessary to promote our prosperity,
and to prepare us to answer His chief design in making us His peculiar people.
The cause of religion is now in a languishing state. Notwithstanding,
therefore, the present triumph of vice and infidelity, we may confidently hope
that our churches will live, increase, and flourish, till the end of time. This
God will do for us, for His great name’s sake.
4. If God intends to own and build us up as His favourite people,
then He has much for us to do, in carrying into execution His gracious designs.
This is probably the last peculiar people which He means to form, and the last
great empire which He means to erect, before the kingdoms of this world are
absorbed in the kingdom of Christ. God is now loudly proclaiming that we have
much to do to maintain His cause, and promote His designs, in opposition to His
and our enemies.
5. This subject teaches us how we ought to feel and to act in our
present situation. Our feelings and conduct ought to be in conformity with the
past and present dispensations of Divine providence towards us. (N. Emmons,
D. D.)
God’s protective presence
We can be sure of this, that God will be with us in all the days
that He before us. What may be round the next headland we know not; but this we
know, that the same sunshine will make a broadening path across the waters
right to where we rock on the unknown sea, and the same unmoving mighty star
will burn for our guidance. So we may let the waves and currents roll as they
list; or rather, as He lists, and be little concerned about the incidents or
the companions of our voyage since He is with us. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Verse 23
God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in ceasing to pray
for you.
Samuel: An example of intercession
It is a very great privilege to be permitted to pray for our
fellow men Such prayers are often of unspeakable value to those for whom they
are offered. Intercessory prayer is a benefit to the man who exercises it, and
is often a better channel of comfort than any other means of grace. The Lord
turned again the captivity of Job when he prayed for his friends. I would have
you stirred up to diligent supplication by the example of Samuel, who is worthy
to be placed in the very forefront of intercessors.
I. Let us dwell
upon his habit of intercession, for it was most manifest in Samuel. We gather
this from the text. He says, “God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in
ceasing to pray for you.” It is clear, therefore, that he had been in the
continual habit and practice of praying for Israel as to the success of
Samuel’s prayers, read his life, and you will find that he wrought great
deliverances for the people. In the seventh chapter of this book we find that
the Philistines grievously oppressed Israel, and Samuel bravely called the
people together, to consider their condition, and bade them turn from idolatry,
and worship the only true God, and promised them his prayers as a boon which
they greatly valued. These are his words: “Gather all Israel to Mizpeh, and I
will pray for you unto the Lord.” Samuel’s prayers were so prevalent that the
very elements were controlled by him.
II. Notice in
Samuel’s case his provocation to cease from intercession, which provocation he
patiently endured.
1. The first provocation was the slight which they put upon himself.
2. Beyond the provocation which came from their slight upon himself
he felt wounded by their utter rejection of his solemn protest.
III. Notice Samuel
in his persevering intercession. Though the people thus provoked him he did not
cease from prayer for them. When the prophet knew that Saul was hopelessly
rejected he did not cease to pray for the nation, but went down to Bethlehem
and anointed David, and when David was pursued by the malice of Saul we find
him harbouring David at Ramah, and exhibiting the power of prayer in his own
house and in the holy place. I pray you, therefore, still persevere in
supplication, and be supported in your perseverance by the knowledge that it
would be a sin to cease to pray for those who have been the subjects of your
petitions. Samuel confesses that it would have been sinful on his part to
abstain from intercession. How so? Why, if he ceased to pray for the people, he
would be neglecting his office, for God had made him a prophet to the nation,
and he must intercede for them or neglect his duty. It would have been a
neglect of the Divine glory; for whatever the people might be, God’s name was
wrapped up in them, and if they did not prosper the Lord would not be glorified
in the eyes of the heathen. He could not give up praying for them, for their
cause was the cause of God. It would have been a cruelty to souls if he who
possessed such a power in prayer had restrained it.
IV. Samuel showed
his sincerity in intercession by corresponding action, for he says in the words
of the text, “God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in ceasing to pray
for you; but I will teach you the good and the right way.” So far from leaving
off praying, he would be doubly diligent to teach them; and he did so. After
praying for your friends, do try as well as you can to answer your own prayer
by using the means which God ordinarily blesses. Some persons make idle prayers,
for they use no effort for obtaining their requests. If a husbandman asks for a
harvest, he also ploughs and sows, for else his supplications would be
hypocritical. If we wish to see our neighbours converted, we shall labour for
it in all ways. A man who wishes to shoot birds will, after a while, become
expert in the sport, because he will give his mind to it: he will after a
little practice become a noted marksman and know all about guns and dogs. A man
who wants to catch salmon has his heart set upon his angling, and becomes
absorbed in the pursuit. He soon learns how to use his rod and how to manage
his fish. So he who longs to win souls, and puts his heart into it, finds out
the knack of it by some means, and the Lord gives him success. There is a power
in your gifts; there is a power in your speech; use these powers. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
Intercessory prayer
I. Its efficacy
generally acknowledged. They felt that his words, if weak on earth, were mighty
in heaven. Now this feeling implies their belief in the efficacy of
intercessory prayer, and I make three remarks concerning this belief.
1. It is very common. There is nothing peculiar in the belief that
one man on earth may have power in heaven to help his fellow men. In truth, it
is so common that I am almost disposed to regard it as one of the intuitive
faiths of humanity. Priesthoods are everywhere, and this faith is the
foundation of all priesthoods.
2. Divinely warranted. In truth, if it be an inborn faith, it must be
Divinely warranted; for Heaven evermore encourages all that is truly natural.
We find the Divine warrant in the numerous exhortations addressed to us in the
Word of God to pray for our fellow men.
3. Sadly abused. It is abused by those who trust to it irrespective
of their own efforts
II. Its neglect
deprecated as a sin:--“God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in ceasing
to pray for you.” It is the ordinance of God that man should assist his fellow
man, not merely by bringing his best influences to bear upon his mind, but by
offering up his best desires to heaven on his behalf. This being the law, to
neglect it is a sin.
1. It serves to impress society with the solemnity of man’s
existence. Surely, here in a world where the millions are grubbing in what is
material and drudging with their hands, it is something to elevate us into
stately seriousness to feel that there are men like Samuel endowed with powers
to touch the heart of God, and so move the springs of history.
2. It serves to unite men together in spiritual interest. Mutual intercessory
prayers are, of all influences, the most socially uniting.
3. It serves to nurture the deepest philanthropy. True intercession
is philanthropy exercising itself in the very presence of God. Where can it get
a higher inspiration or a stronger impulse? (Homilist.)
Ceasing to pray for others is a sin against the Lord
The sentiments of the text are, that prayer for others is a duty,
and the neglect of it is a sin. We will therefore inquire--
I. Who are the
individuals for whom we should pray?
1. For our families.
2. For the Church of God.
3. For our country.
4. For the world.
What an awful state is the world in, notwithstanding all the
attempts which are made to mend it!
II. State the
arguments for the adoption of such practice.
1. We are related to each other, and therefore we should pray for one
another.
2. We are dependent on each other’s exertions for a subsistence. Some
talk of being independent, but this is absurd. “The king himself is served by
the field” (Ecclesiastes 5:9).
3. The practice of praying for others will serve to keep alive in our
hearts the most benevolent feelings towards them.
4. This practice may promote their salvation.
III. We may omit to
pray for others. The text is sufficiently indicative of this.
1. We may omit to pray for others through unconcern about our own
salvation.
2. We may do it through unbelief in reference to the efficacy of
prayer.
3. We may do it through prejudice.
IV. That our
ceasing to pray for others is a sin against the Lord.
1. It is a sin against the precepts of the Lord (1 Timothy 2:1-2).
2. Against the spirit of the Lord. The Holy Ghost works in our hearts
feelings of benevolence and love, which give birth to prayer.
3. Against the example of the Lord.
Learn--
1. What straits people are brought into by their sinful conduct.
2. None can help us in our distress but God.
3. People in affliction are glad to have the prayers of those whom
they have treated with insult before.
4. Good men pray for those who have despitefully used them. (Sketches
of four hundred sermons.)
The sin of prayerlessness
The sainted Robert Murray M’Cheyne wrote to his church at Dundee,
during his last illness: “You have hindered God’s work by your want of prayer.
When God gives grace to souls, it is in answer to the prayers of His children .
. . When God puts it into the hearts of His children to pray, it is certain
that He is going to pour down His spirit in abundance . . . The salvation of
those around you depends upon your asking . . . I often think it strange that
ever we should be in heaven, and so many in hell through our soul-destroying
carelessness . . . Plead and wrestle with God, showing Him that the cause is
His own, and that it is all for His own glory to arise and have mercy upon
Zion.”
But I will teach you the
good and the right way.
Duties of ministers and people. The Chartists’ visit to the Parish
Church
I. First, then,
let us consider the duties inculcated; and they are two fold.
1. With respect to the ministers of God. Samuel, the prophet of the
Lord, considering the state of the people, exclaimed, “God forbid that I should
sin against the Lord in ceasing to pray for you: but I will teach you the good
and the right way.” To a similar effect the apostle declared, “We will give
ourselves continually to prayer and to the ministry of the Word.” These are the
peculiar duties of the ministers of God,--prayer, and the ministry of the Word.
Sweet is the work to those who know it, delightful is the duty of intercessory
prayer. Of all those men of God whose histories are recorded in Holy Scripture,
there is not one who did not delight in this duty.
2. The ministry of the Word: “I will teach you the good and the right
way” So said the inspired prophet Samuel; so said a long line of faithful men
of God, many of whom sealed their testimony with their blood; so said the
apostles of Jesus Christ; and so say the ministers of God to this day. And is
there presumption or affectation in saying, “We will teach you the good and the
right way?” It would indeed be presumption if we conceived that we had chalked
out that way for ourselves, or if it were the notions of man we had to teach
you; but we know the good and the right way, and are able to testify to you
that which we have seen, and that which we have believed. Revelation has taught
us, and we know there is but one way, one good way, one true way; and that all
other ways lead to the chambers of darkness and despair. And if these are our
duties, what are yours? Mark the exhortation of the prophet in the text, “Only
fear the Lord, and serve Him in truth with all your heart.” This brief sentence
contains the whole duty of man! “Only fear the Lord,” said he to the tumultuous
people; we stop to inculcate no other principle; if we gain your heart, we gain
the whole man; we know all must follow; we know that the man who fears God has
the grand principle of moral duty in him. If he wants the fear of God, he wants
everything! he wants the cement of social society, that which binds man to man,
which gives peace and comfort him, and gilds the grave itself with hope. This
is the standing or falling principle, “Only fear the Lord;” then your
conscience shall be enlightened by the Spirit of God, your heart shall bend to
the will of God. The noble testimony of Joseph’s steward, to the trembling
brethren is our guarantee, “I fear God!” Such a man will be a lover of justice,
a lover of truth, and of everything that is honourable and of good report;
whereas all others are as garnished sepulchres--they have sweet words in their
mouths, but war in their hearts. Here is our security and our comfort; “only
fear God.” The other expressions in the text are but expletives of this duty:
“Only fear the Lord, and serve Him.” If a man fears God, he will be the servant
of God, and he will serve Him in prayer and praise; he will serve Him with the
best member that he has, with his body, soul, and spirit, consecrating all he
has to His glory, not with hypocrisy, but “in truth.”
II. Let us then
consider the inspiring motive which is implied in the text, for the cheerful
discharge of these duties. Ofttimes the strongest appeal to the feelings and
the affection is contained in one short sentence, or a suggestion conveyed by a
single word; thus in the text: “Consider how great things the Lord hath done
for you!” Now, let me transfer this appeal to you; let me apply it to your
hearts and consciences as a motive; and I know of no stronger; if this fail,
the treasury of God Himself is exhausted! He asks you to love Him, to fear and
serve Him; and He does not place before you the terrors of hell, nor the
fearful things of judgment to come, nor a world in flames; nor does He upbraid
you by the stings of a guilty conscience; but He appeals to your love and
affection! and He says, “Consider how great things the Lord hath done for you!”
Hard must be that man’s heart, ungrateful his bosom, who can look back over a
whole life and not see one trace of the goodness of God, who can discern no
token of Divine love, no sweet things mingled with his bitterness, nothing to
allay his afflictions. Think of the spiritual mercies also which you have
received at his hands. There are very few who are altogether unconscious of
God’s mercies to them in this respect. But the argument of Samuel on this
occasion was a national argument: his exhortation was a national exhortation;
and, therefore, I shall avail myself of it, and consider the words of the text
in this point of view applicable to us all as a nation. “Consider, I pray you,
how great things the Lord hath done for you.” And is it, possible that anyone
can be so ignorant or so wilfully blind as to deny that there has been a
special providence over Great Britain, and that special mercies have been
poured down on her? Has not our little island been floating on a see of mercy?
(F. Clogs, M. A.)
Verse 24
Only fear the Lord and serve Him in truth with all your heart.
The religious capability of man
I. That man can
reverence God. “Only fear the Lord” Reverence implies:--
1. A sense of Divine greatness. For none can reverence the
contemptible or the small
2. A sense of Divine excellance. For none can reverence the morally
unworthy.
II. That man can
serve God. “Serve Him in truth with all your heart.” There is a sense in which
all things serve God.
1. Some serve Him without their will. All the masses of matter,
organised and inorganised, serve Him.
2. Some serve Him with their will. All rational existences do this,
and moving thus they serve Him.
3. Some serve Him against their will. All fiends human and angelic do
this
III. That man can
consider God. “Consider how great things He hath done for you.” Man can reflect
on God, both on what He is in Himself and on what He does. What other creatures
on this earth can do this? The eagle that pierces the clouds with a power of
vision keener, and a range wider than ours, returns from its lofty flight to
its lonely eyrie without one thought of God, (Homilist.)
Filial fear of God
Our feeling must be the reverence of a son, not the abject terror
of a slave. For surely if this terror were merely that servile dread which
represents God as an implacable inexorable Being, the soul under such an
impression would sit down inactive, overwhelmed with a horrible despair, and
never engage in a fruitless attempt to appease a Power whom no prayers could
interest, no repentance reconcile.
1. It is clear that the fear of an awakened sinner who sues
successfully for pardon differs vastly from that servile dread which would flee
from God as an unfriendly Being delighting in the misery of His creatures. I
know also that it differs greatly from that composed reverence with which the
soul in a condition of confirmed pardon and reconciliation looks upon God. It
is--if we may use the expression--an initial fear of God, it is the beginning
of wisdom, it is the broken and contrite heart, looking with self-abasement yet
with humble trust upon its omniscient Judge; and in proportion as we teal
ourselves reconciled to Him in the face of Jesus Christ, the feeling will
gradually ripen into that filial reverence accompanied by love which is the
proper attitude of the justified soul towards its Maker. It is only, as I
conceive, upon the principles which I have enunciated that you can reconcile
passages of God’s Word which would otherwise appear contradictory. St. John
tells us that perfect love casteth out fear, and that he who feareth is not
made perfect in love, while other passages, such as our text and many like it,
represent the Fear of God--coupled with obedience--as the whole duty of man;
but all becomes plain when we understand the term as commencing with the
initial fear which attends the imperfect conversion of the sinner, and leading
on to that filial reverence which is the strength and ornament of the soul as
that conversion progresses to its perfection.
2. I must go on to show the connection of the former clause of my
text with the latter. How are we to bridge over the interval, as it were,
between fearing God and serving Him in truth with all our heart? I presume in
this way. We can imagine no motives for obedience either to an earthly or a
heavenly father except either the value and certainty of the rewards proposed,
coupled with a conviction of the ability and willingness of our father to
confer them, or the apprehension of just and severe punishment for
disobedience. Now, neither of these, exclusive of the other, is the true
principle of our obedience to God. For if our obedience of the Divine law were
founded merely on our belief of God’s desire for our happiness then as soon as
the rough wind of calamity swept over us, we should cease to regard Him as the
God whom we had hitherto worshipped. On the other hand, if our service arose
from our dread of the vengeance of God and nothing more, it would be deficient
in that entire trust in His goodness, and free choice of His service which
alone can make us acceptable in His sight. He is at once the Governor of the
World, and “Our Father which is in heaven.” Therefore, ere we can “serve God in
truth with all our heart” our bosoms must be transfused with that fear of God
which is made perfect in love. For if you regard it attentively you will
observe that this principle of reverential love is most marvellously adapted to
every state and condition in life, and to the due discharge of our duty at all
times and under all circumstances. In a word, the fear of God rightly
understood and rightly acted upon will give warmth to our zeal, spirit to our
devotion, animation to our faith, life be our hope, and extension to our
charity. It will deter us from sin; it will cheer and encourage us in the path
of duty--that path which leads us unto everlasting life. I have thus given what
may be regarded as a Christian interpretation of the fear of God, end shown you
how it is the germ which blossoms unto the perfect love and service of our
heavenly Father--a service which is both real and engages the affections of the
whole heart.
3. God’s claim to this Fear which I have described That claim is
founded on every one of the Divine imperfections. Can we think of His
omniscience and omnipresence and justice without casting our meditations
forward to that great day when we must all appear before His impartial
tribunal? Goodness, holiness, mercy when exhibited by our fellow men win our
hearts and charm us into admiration, but how puny are even their highest
development on earth compared with the display of them in the character of God!
The crowning proof of God’s mercy we have reserved to the last--I mean His
wondrous love and pity as displayed in the Redemption of the World by the death
and passion of Christ. In Creation and Providence there is never conveyed to
the mind any impression of effort or sacrifice on the part of the Supreme
Being. The beauty and bounty which, through the long cycle of the ages. God has
been scattering over this earth, have not detracted from His boundless wealth.
But of Jesus, His well-beloved Son, He possessed no equivalent, no counterpart.
Of this Possession only Himself could be the Parallel. And yet He Who alone
knew its worth yielded it up for us. Behold, then, the power and mercy of
Jehovah! Beware how you affront His Majesty by want of reverence, or dishonour
His goodness by servile dread. It may not be our lot while upon earth to
realise the Majesty and Beauty of His attributes. But a day will surely come,
which the rapid years are hurrying on, when we shall behold Him no longer armed
as our Judge, but displaying Himself as reconciled to us and at one with us
through Christ. (J. Hunt, M. A.)
The simplicity of life
The great scientist is he who discovers some wide-reaching law of
nature which explains a thousand facts otherwise disconnected and inexplicable;
the great historian is he who seizes some deep social law which determines the
development of nations through long periods. Men of lesser genius seek to
understand things superficially, and to correct them one by one, but the masters
get to the root principle, the dominant law, the prevailing tendency. Now, in
our text Samuel has got to the deep and final law of human life--“Only fear the
Lord.” Strange, complicated, contradictory, baffling as life seems, there is
one simple principle, one sovereign passion, one master truth, that will solve
for us every problem, subdue every opposition, and guide us safely through
every difficulty.
I. Let us consider
the text in relation to national life. The kingdom of Israel was at this time in
the throes of a great political change. They stood on the threshold of a new
epoch. They were alarmed at the change they had made in their form of
government; they were ashamed of the unbelief which had prompted the change;
they were full of misgiving as to the consequences of this great political
revolution Then Samuel speaks: Ye have done all this wickedness, yet turn not
aside from following the Lord, and all shall still be right. Did not our Lord
teach us most clearly the selfsame truth, that everything in human life depends
upon the religious idea--that the knowledge and service of God constitute the
one grand question which decides all other questions? There can be no doubt but
that we live on the eve of vast changes alike in Church and State. And not only
do these signs of the times, with fear of change, perplex monarchs, but they
trouble many besides. Listen to your great prophet Carlyle, to your great
critic Ruskin, to your great poet Tennyson. These and many more are full of
misgiving as they ponder the signs of the times. Is not our text to us a very
precious direction and encouragement? In all this confusion and conflict true
religious faith and feeling shall preserve us, and bring us through in safety.
It will prove our sheet anchor in the storm, our guiding star in the hour of
darkness, our spring of strength and hope always. Everything depends upon the
religious faith and life of our nation. Let this be true and deep, and all
shall be well. But it must be true and deep. “In truth with all your heart.” A
national profession of Christianity will not says us, a barren orthodoxy will
not save us, but if the heart of the nation be sound God will not desert us.
“For consider how great things He hath done for you.” We have had perils
before, and they were averted. The religious sentiment revived in the Puritan
saved us from the terrible despotism which the Stuarts sought to fasten upon
up. The religious sentiment revived in Wesley and Whitefield saved us from
atheism and its horrors when Voltaire with a light heart led the French nation
into a sea of blood. The religious question comes before all others, it is the
deepest question of all, it decides all others. Let us be full of faith and
spirituality; let us honour God and the higher law; let us be true to prayer,
to worship, to God’s Holy Word; let us do our duty in the fear of God; and God
will untie our knots, solve our problems, protect our liberties end glory, and
lead us into a larger and richer inheritance.
II. Let us consider
the text in relation to personal life. To the individual life often appears
chaotic, confusing, and we are sometimes tempted to give it up in despair. In
all perplexities touching belief the best philosophy is the philosophy of the
text. Proceed in practical life to perform the duty that presents itself in the
fear of God, live from day to day keeping close to conscience, and the Spirit
shall teach you the true thing and the right way. When Frederic Douglass was a
slave, escaping from the Southern States, it was strictly necessary for him to
travel by night, and his grand guide was the North Star. He knew nothing of the
country through which be was passing, it was all silence and darkness and
mystery, but keeping his eye on the Star of the North, it guided him to
liberty. So you may mentally be traversing a land of mystery, a land of
darkness and of the shadow of death, but you have a precious beacon. “Only fear
the Lord, and serve Him in truth,” follow that star, and the Dayspring shall
arise upon you. Does anyone object that such mottoes as these are vague
generalities, out of which we can get little good? “Only fear the Lord.” “Only
let your manner of life be worthy of the Gospel.” Does anyone cavil at these
sayings as if they were not definite and illuminative? When someone objected
that the clauses in the American Declaration of Independence, such as, “All men
are equal,” and so forth, were but “glittering generalities,” Emerson replied
that they had proved “blazing ubiquities,” they had poured the light of
salvation on the nation’s path at great moments. So with these sayings, they
have a very definite and immense significance, they are blazing ubiquities, and
they will throw a precious light on all the questions and interests and duties
of life, as the pillar of fire lit up every stick and stone of the wilderness.
In hours of deepest darkness and confusion be loyal to the text--only that, and
nothing more. I remember once hearing a devout engine driver relate his
religious experience. He said, “The other night when I was on duty there was a
dense fog; we could not see a yard before us, but I knew that the permanent way
was under us, and every now and then we caught a glimpse of some signal or
other, and in time came safely to the journey’s end; so,” he said, “I know if I
am true to the great commandments and promises God will guide and bring me
through” (W. L. Watkinson.)
Samuel’s address to Israel
I. The duties
urged. “Fear the Lord, and serve Him,” etc.
1. To fear the Lord. This is an indispensable part of true godliness.
Setting Him ever before us. (Job 28:28; Psalms 19:9; Proverbs 23:17; Revelation 14:7.)
2. To serve God. In the way that He appoints. With the voluntary
devotedness of the heart and life, With constancy and perseverance.
3. It must be in truth with all our hearts. Notice:--
II. The powerful
motive supplied. “For consider what great things the Lord hath done for you.”
This is seen:
1. In the temporal provisions of His bounty.
2. In providential interpositions.
3. In the exercises of His mercy.
4. In the supplies of His grace.
5. In the promises of glory.
Learn:--
1. The practical nature of true religion. It includes both the fear
and service of God.
2. How great are our obligations thus to fear and serve God.
3. Abused mercies will bring a fearful weight of judgment upon us (J.
Burns.)
Gratitude a motive for Divine service
To all such seers as Samuel, all history has a moral; indeed, all
history is an argument. Thus he deals with the history of Israel, as an
argument for their serving God. We notice here:--
I. The service
characterised. It is to be marked:
1. By reality. “Serve Him in truth.” This distinguishes it from all
mere external service, as well as from all hypocrisy. “Be real,” is the
foundation stone as well as the top stone. It is to be marked:
2. By heartiness. “With all your heart.” There is to be vitality as
well as sincerity, enthusiasm as well as thoroughness.
II. The motive
enforced. There are two other motives for serving God besides this one.
1. The supreme one is adoration of God. Were there no rewards or
punishments, no heaven or hell, He commands our service by what He is The
Infinite Beauty claims our homage, the Infinite Righteousness our obedience.
2. Another and proper, though inferior, motive is regard to reward.
Christ uses it in many of His parables. Moses had “respect to the recompense,”
etc. Jesus, “for the joy that was set before Him,” etc.
3. But the motive pleaded here is gratitude for what God has done.
“Great things.” These are words which Moses and David as well as Samuel use in
speaking of God’s dealings. We may note the parallel between God’s dealings
with the Jews and His dealings with us--Redemption, Protection, Discipline. But
the parallel fails; He has given us Christ; the demand on our gratitude is
transcendent, the claim for our service unparalleled. (U. R. Thomas.)
Consider how great things
He hath done for you.
Thanksgiving Sermon, 1817
In applying these words to ourselves let us:
I. Briefly review
some of those great things which God hath done for us. These are recorded in
the annals of our country, in almost every page of which we meet with instances
of Divine interposition and guardianship, which must compel him who loves his
country or his God, to lift up his grateful and adoring heart to Him who ruleth
over all. Still there is preserved that form of government in which we so
deservedly rejoice. Still there is preserved unto us the inestimable privilege
of worshipping God according, to the dictates of our own consciences. It is
another mercy which peculiarly calls for our praise that the triumphs of the
Gospel during the last year have in our country been extensive. In passing from
our country in general, to the city which we inhabit, we still see that God
hath done great things for us. To whom have we been indebted for the almost
unprecedented healthfulness of our city, but to that God who sends sickness or
preserves life at His pleasure? What great things has God done for us as
individuals? Here your own meditations must supply what we can only intimate.
But I forbear: Thy mercies, Lord, are innumerable; and to reckon them up in
order before Thee is as difficult as to count the stars in the heavens, or the
sand which is on the seashore.
II. Shall our
hearts be unaffected by this kindness of our God? Ingratitude, with respect to
men, is ever considered by you as the evidence of a most abandoned character,
as the unfailing mark of a total dereliction of every noble emotion; and yet
how many of us, occupied by the cares of the world, engaged in the pursuit of a
thousand frivolous objects, never feelingly remember the goodness of the Lord.
The exercise of gratitude for the Divine mercies is certainly the most elevated
of all the occupations of the believer; for it leads us, thus to speak, even to
heaven, and attaches us immediately to God; it places in our heart the greatest
object that can engage it, in our mouth the greatest name which can fill it; it
unites us to God in a manner the most tender and disinterested by emotions of
love, by emotions which have for their end the glory even of God. But how shall
this gratitude be expressed? Is it sufficient for us coldly to bless God with
our lips; unconcernedly to enter into His holy temple, and unite with His
people in declaring our thankfulness? No, this alone will not satisfy Him who
searcheth the heart; who trifles not with us, and will not permit us to trifle
with Him. We must “fear the Lord, and serve Him in truth, with all our heart.”
This filial fear must necessarily impel us to “serve the Lord in truth, with
all our heart.” It will not rest satisfied with the most splendid outward
performances: since “God is a Spirit,” the believer will pay his thanks “in
spirit and in truth.” If these be the sentiments of his soul, if this be the
conduct of his life, his tongue cannot be silent. Gratitude, which loosed the
tongue of Zechariah at the birth of John the Baptist, will loose his also, and
cause him to glorify God with a loud voice.
III. Such a mode of
expressing our gratitude by devoting our lives to the service of God is right
and good. It is the right way enjoined upon us by the nature of things; as well
as by the authority of God.
1. It is a way which is profitable, and will secure for us new
favours God wastes not His blessings: the streams of His goodness will not
always flow upon a barren and unfertile soil: He will at last turn them to
those places that will be rendered by them luxuriant and productive.
2. This way is pleasant and good. Yes, act thus, and every situation
in life will be to you full of blessedness. Prosperity will not be to you as to
the ungrateful, a snare for your virtue; it will never for you be turned into a
curse; you will preserve in the midst of your enjoyments a heart humble,
docile, detached from the vanities of the world. (H. Kollock, D. D.)
Benefits of remembrance
God gives us remembrance in order that we may make great and
blessed use of it. Often in our hearts may shine an afterglow of uncoruscating
light from a sun that has set, more lustrous, more calm, more mellow, than when
its hot fervours were falling on our heads--a pensive, clear, and still Indian
summer of memory after the sultry autumn has gone. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
National mercies
These words conclude the sum of the whole chapter, wherein Samuel
had made a long narration of God’s dealing with His people, and theirs with
Him. In the words are:
1. An exhortation to fear and serve the Lord.
2. The reasons of it. Consider how great things he hath done for you.
But if ye do wickedly ye shall perish both you and your King. This duty meets
us everywhere in Scripture, and therefore I will stand no longer in explaining
it, but come to the reasons that enforce it.
I. The first is to
consider how great things they had seen God doing for them, and therein see
what a tie and bond the Lord hath upon them to obey Him. Consider what
spiritual mercies He hath vouchsafed you, when of old ye were no people, but an
Amorite was your father, an Hittite your mother. If you cast your eyes back to
temporal favours, consider how He went clown with your fathers into Egypt, and
what wonders he wrought for them in that land. If you cast your eye upon
present things, consider how you have rebelled and cast the government of
Jehovah from off your necks; and yet He forbeareth you, not plaguing you
according to your demerits, but hath condescended to yield you a king.
1. Israel must consider the works of God in the greatness of them,
their multitude, variety, freeness, and sweetness; in their own unworthiness of
them, and their misery without them. All these will make them swell in our eyes
to a wonderful magnitude. And that many cords bind faster then one, unto love
and duty: And in many great mercies such a flame of affection shineth out upon
the Church as much water cannot quench; and this sense of God’s love enlargeth
our affections with zeal and fervency, to love Him again.
2. Israel must consider who hath wrought these great works; and that
is the Lord. Consider what the Lord hath done for us. Israel shall sat an
higher price on the mercies, because they are the Lord’s; as you know it
doubles the favour, to be from a friend, a father, or a dear hand. The gift is
but the shell; the grace of the giver the kernel. All waters issue from the sea
by secret channels, but run openly back again to it. So all the streams of
mercy must, in the right use of them, return to the boundless sea whence they
first flow unto us.
3. Israel must consider for whom God hath dons all these great works,
namely for Israel. The greatest works of His mercy are but His love tokens to
Israel, In all which not the greatest mercy itself, but the application of it
to ourselves, whets up and sets an edge upon thankfulness. And thus in this
place it serves Samuel’s purpose to bring home the mercies close to Israel.
4. Israel must consider for what the Lord hath wrought all these
great things for them: And this, three ways.
II. And now, having
done with Israel, let us see what great things God hath done for us, and
whether they be not as worthy our consideration. What? As great things for us?
We never were in Egypt, nor in the bottom of the sea, nor in the wilderness fed
with manna, etc.
1. Let me a little untie a bundle of spiritual mercies wrapt up
together. And was the covenant of grace more peculiar, more sure, half so clear
to Israel, as to us? What oracles had they, which we want? Had they the law
written, and have not we? And to the prophets, the whole Gospel added, the
evangelists, Apostles, pastors, and teachers? Had they the true worship of God
in shadows, and have not we in substances? Had they the promises in hope, and
have not we them in mind? Had they Moses, faithful as a servant in the house,
leading them through the wilderness, and Joshua to save them, and lead them
into Canaan? And have not we one faithful in the house as the Son, and our
great Joshua, a great Saviour, to lead us into the celestial Canaan? Had they
the Lord nearer unto them than any nation, walking among them in the Ark, in
the pillar of the cloud and fire, and the like? And is our God farther from us?
Nay, is He not nearer unto us, even our Immanuel. Had they plenty of manna,
purity of worship, and extraordinary protection, and are we inferior to them,
or any age before us, in the liberties of the Gospel, and happy days of grace?
2. Next, are we behind them in temporals? Hath not God brought our
vine out of Egypt, where it grew not well, with signs and wonders, and a strong
hand, when we were in Egyptian darkness and the Babylonish captivity. How did
His strong arm pull us out of popery, and make the happy restoring of the
Gospel the new and glorious birthday of our country? Did the Lord give them a
good land, flowing with milk and honey? And hath He not seated us in a land far
exceeding that in commodity, as in quantity, four times as big, every way as
fruitful. As he gave them saviours and deliverers, so have we had our Moseses,
our Joshuas, our Kings in a settled government, who led us forward in the
Gospel, where the former left us. As the Lord gave Israel extraordinary
victories and deliverances, which struck dread into all the nations about them,
so hath He done for us, who have been made the head of nations, and not the
tail, honoured and feared abroad, as well as happy at home. The conclusion of
all is in verse 14. Now therefore fear the Lord, and serve Him in uprightness.
The sins of kingdoms are the destroyers of kings and kingdoms. Sin makes havoc
of all, confounds all, and brings derision to all estates; makes the tail the
head, changes the fine gold, and makes it dim like to earthen pitchers. It
gives up the strong staff and beautiful rod to be broken (Jeremiah 48:17). (T. Taylor, D. D.)
Verse 25
But if ye shall do wickedly, ye shall be consumed, both ye and
your king.
Sin ruins a kingdom
Such was the language of Samuel to the Jews. He requires of them
nothing superstitious; nothing merely ceremonious; nothing only external and temporary--but
the exercise of piety flowing from the feet of God, End accompanied with
sincerity and fervour in serving Him. This is all. “Only fear the Lord, and
serve Him in truth with all your heart.” This He enforces by two motives; the
one drawn from gratitude, and the other from interest. Already I hope you have
dropped Judea, and fixed your attention on your own country. The words could
never have been more applicable to the Jews than they are to us. Has He not
done great things for us? It is not foolish partiality, but truth that compels
us to say, “The lines are fallen to us in pleasant places; yea, we have a
goodly heritage.” And to secure all these civil and religious advantages--how
often has He made our cause His own! How seasonably and signally has He
interposed to save us from the designs of our enemies! When brought low He has
helped us. Can we be insensible to all this? If there were any ingenuousness in
us, this motive alone would be sufficient. But fear has its use--and it is
necessary to tell you not only that you are bound by gratitude, but interest.
“If ye shall still do wickedly, ye shall be destroyed, both you and your king.”
This is dreadful--Think of a king you love, as well as honour, and “whose life
is a lesson to the land he sways”--driven from his throne. Think of liberty
exchanged for slavery. Think of property rapaciously plundered, or devoured by
tyrannical exaction. Think of your private dwellings affording those who are
dearer to you than yourselves no security from brutal passions. Think of the
temples of God burnt up, or converted to other purposes.
1. If there be a moral governor of the universe, sin must provoke
Him. For who could adore a Being who professed to govern the world, and
suffered the wicked to go on with impunity?
2. If sin provoke God He is able to punish it. All the elements are
His. Every creature obeys His nod, from an archangel to a worm. Is anything too
hard for the Lord--when He would either show mercy or execute wrath?
3. Bodies of men are punishable in this world only. In eternity there
are no families, churches, nations. If, therefore, a country is to be
destroyed, it is tried and condemned and executed here.
4. There is a tendency in the very nature of sin to injure and ruin a
country. It destroys subordination. It relaxes the ties which bind mankind
together, and makes them selfish and mean. Social welfare cannot survive the
death of morals and virtue.
5. God’s dealings with guilty nations are confirmed by His word, and
indeed by all history. Finally, to enable us to draw the conclusion, He
often--he always--gives previous intimation of His displeasure--so that, were
not men blind and deaf, they must see and bear His coming. When you see the
body wasting away by disease, and every complaint growing more inveterate, you
suspect that death will be the consequence--it is already begun. “When the fig
tree, and all the trees, put forth leaves, you know that summer is nigh.” And
how is it that we do not perceive that God is angry with us--that He is
contending with us? But, you ask--Have we any cause to fear this? I answer,
just in proportion to the degree of our sin. Now there are two ways by which we
may judge of our national guilt. The first is to enumerate the sins which reign
predominant among us. The other method is to lay down Criterions, by which we
may estimate the prevalency and the aggravations of sin in a country. And what
test has ever been devised that is not alarming when applied to ourselves?
There is one thing of which we hear very much, and many seem to consider it as
a counterpoise to all our fears, that there are so many good people among us.
Blessed be God, this is true, and they certainly afford us encouragement. Ten
righteous men would have saved Sodom. Let us remember that it is a hopeful circumstance--but
that it does not absolutely insure the salvation of a country. Let us recollect
that there was a time when God used the following language to Jeremiah and
Ezekiel concerning the Jews: “Therefore pray not thou for this people, neither
lift up cry nor prayer for them, neither make intercession to Me: for I will
not hear thee. Then said the Lord unto Me, Pray not for this people for their
good. Though Moses and Samuel stood before Me, yet My mind could not be toward
this people: Cast them out of My sight, and let them go forth.” What learn we
from all this? That there are cases in the history of nations when the Divine
forbearance is exhausted, and when the cries of the righteous will avail no
more than those of the wicked. Let us prize those institutions which are
favourable to the morality and sanctification of mankind. Especially let us
value the Gospel. And, oh! remember, if your country should be saved, and you
as an individual continue impenitent--you--you will be certainly destroyed! And
what is any national calamity to “everlasting destruction from the presence of
the Lord, and the glory of His power!” (William Jay.)
Sin the ruin of nations
The influence which continuance in sin hath upon a kingdom’s ruin.
But here a material question may be asked, whether this connection between
their doing wickedly and being consumed were not by virtue of that political
covenant between God and the people of Israel, which was peculiar to
themselves; and how far it may be just and reasonable to argue concerning the
case of other nations, with whom God hath entered into no such covenant, as He
did with them? To make this clear, and to bring it nearer to our own case, I
shall proceed in this method.
1. To show that God doth exercise a particular Providence with
respect to the state End condition of kingdoms and nations.
2. That according to the usual method of Providence their condition
is better or worse as the people are.
3. That there are some circumstances of sinning which do very much
portend and hasten a people’s ruin.
I. That God doth
exercise a particular providence with a respect to the state and condition of
nations, i.e., as they are united into several and distinct bodies,
which are capable as such of being happy or miserable. For since mankind’s entering
into society is both necessary and advantageous to them, and God doth not
barely permit and approve, but dispose and incline men to it, and hath given
them laws to govern themselves by, with respect to society, it is but
reasonable to suppose that God should call men to an account in that capacity.
Either, therefore, those societies as such shall go wholly unpunished, or they
must suffer according to them in this world, and therefore here the case is
very different, from that of particular persons. We say, and with a great deal
of reason, that it is no disparagement to the justice of God’s Providence for
good men to suffer, or for wicked men to escape punishment in this life,
because the great day of recompense is to come, wherein there will be a Revelation
of the righteous judgment of God. But that will not hold as to nations, who
shall not suffer in communities then as they have sinned here; and therefore it
is more reasonable to suppose the rewards and punishments of such shall be in
this life according to the measure and proportion of their sins. And of this we
have sufficient evidence in Scripture upon these accounts.
1. Because it charges guilt upon nations as well as upon particular
persons.
2. Because the Scripture tells us of a certain measure to which the
sins of a nation do rise before they are ripe for punishment. This was the
reason given why Abraham’s children must stay to the fourth generation before
they come to the possession of the promised land, for the iniquity of the
Ammorites is not vet full.
3. Because it attributes the great revolutions of government to a
particular Providence of God, God is the Judge, or the supreme Arbitrator of
the affairs of the world, He pulleth down one and setteth up another. Which
holds with respect to nations as well as particular persons. When a nation is
near some dreadful calamity, as a just punishment of its sins, God takes away
the wisdom of the wise and the understanding of the prudent, and the resolution
of the men of courage, that they all stand amazed and confounded, not knowing
how to give or take advice; but they are full of fears, and rather apt to
quarrel with one another than to consult the general good. This was just the
state of Egypt when God did purpose to execute His justice upon it.
The Princes of Zoan are fools, the counsel of the wise counsellors
of Pharaoh is become brutish; they have also seduced Egypt, even they that are
the stay of the tribes thereof. The Lord hath mingled a perverse spirit in the
midst thereof, and they have caused Egypt to err in every work thereof, as a
reeling man staggereth in his vomit, i.e., they know not what to fix
upon, all their counsels being so uncertain, and the best taking no effect. But
on the other side, when God raises up a nation to be a scourge to other
nations, He inspires them with a new spirit and courage, unites their counsels.
Look over all the mighty revolutions which have happened in the kingdoms and
empires of the world, and the more ye search and consider and compare things
together the greater truth you will find in this observation. When God designed
to punish the Eastern nations for their transgressions, then the Babylonian
monarchy rose so fast and spread so far that nothing was able to stand before
it. And when the sins of Babylon called for vengeance, God raised up Cyrus, and
called him by his name, long before he was born, and brought the fierce nations
of the East to submit themselves to him.
4. Because the Scripture still leaves hopes of mercy to a people
where they have a heart to repent. And where repentance hath intervened between
the threatening and execution of judgment God hath showed wonderful kindness
either in stopping, removing, or deferring the severity of judgments.
II. The second
particular is that according to the usual method of providence the state or
condition of a people is better or worse according to the general nature of
their actions. If they be good and virtuous, careful to please God, diligent
observers of God’s Laws and their own, and dealing with other nations according
to the laws of nations, they will live in a much more flourishing and happy
condition than a nation can do where atheism, profaneness, and all sorts of
wickedness abound, which I shall prove two ways.
1. Absolutely, and that will appear
2. Comparatively, if we do compare several nations together, we shall
find those to flourish most and to be the most happy where men do most fear God
and work righteousness. This may seem a paradox at first hearing to those who
consider by what ways of fraud and violence, of injustice and cruelty, of
rapine and oppression, the great and mighty empires of the world have been
raised and maintained. Yet, notwithstanding this plausible objection, the truth
of my assertion will appear, if we understand it as we ought to do with these
following cautions.
III. That there are
some circumstances in the sins of a nation which do very much portend and
hasten its ruin.
1. When they are committed after more than ordinary mercies received,
such as in reason ought to keep men most from the commission of them, as
greater knowledge of the will of God that other people enjoy, more frequent
warnings of their danger than others have had, many and great deliverances
which God hath vouchsafed.
2. When they are committed with more than ordinary contempt of God
and religion.
3. When there is an universal degeneracy of all ranks and conditions
of men. Thus I have considered the influence which doing wickedly hath upon the
ruin of a nation, it remains now that I make application of this to our own
case. We have been a people that have received wonderful mercies and many final
deliverances from God’s hand. He hath placed us in a rich and fruitful land,
and hath furnished us with so great plenty, that even that hath been thought
our burden; hath blessed us with such an increase of trade that our merchants
far exceed those of Tyre both in riches and number. Our ships of trade are like
a valley of cedars when they lie at home, and when they are abroad they compass
the earth, and make the fiches of the East and West Indies to meet in our
streets. As to our civil constitution, if we consider the admirable temper of
our government, the justice and wisdom of our laws, and the greatness of our
liberties, we have no reason to envy the condition of any people upon earth.
Thus far all things tend still to make us a happy nation if we did know and
value our own happiness. But that which above all other things should make us so
hath been the great occasion of our trouble, and is still of our fears, and
that is religion. And yet in this respect we have advantages above any other
nation in the Christian world, having a Church reformed with so much wisdom and
moderation as to avoid the dangerous extremes on both sides. But before I
conclude the text suggests to us three things, very pertinent to the duty of
this day, which I shall briefly recommend to your consideration.
1. Matter of humiliation for our sins, as they have an influence upon
the nation’s suffering.
2. Matter of advice, only fear the Lord, and serve Him in truth, and
with all your heart.
3. Matter of encouragement, for consider what great things He
hath done for you. (Edward Stillingfleet.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》