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Chapter 59
The First King of Israel
[This chapter is based on 1 Samuel 8 to 12.]
THE government of Israel was administered in the name and by the
authority of God. The work of Moses, of the seventy elders, of the
rulers and judges, was simply to enforce the laws that God had given;
they had no authority to legislate for the nation. This was, and
continued to be, the condition of Israel's existence as a nation. From
age to age men inspired by God were sent to instruct the people and to
direct in the enforcement of the laws.
The Lord foresaw that Israel would desire a king, but He did not consent
to a change in the principles upon which the state was founded. The king
was to be the vicegerent of the Most High. God was to be recognized as
the Head of the nation, and His law was to be enforced as the supreme
law of the land.
When the Israelites first settled in Canaan they acknowledged the
principles of the theocracy, and the nation prospered under the rule of
Joshua. But increase of population and intercourse with other nations
brought a change. The people adopted many of the customs of their
heathen neighbors and thus sacrificed to a great degree their own
peculiar, holy character. Gradually they lost their reverence for God
and ceased to prize the honor of being His chosen people. Attracted by
the pomp and display of heathen monarchs, they tired of their own
simplicity. Jealousy and envy sprang up between the tribes. Internal
dissensions made them weak; they were continually exposed to the
invasion of their heathen foes, and the people were coming to believe
that in order to maintain their standing among the nations, the tribes
must be united under a strong central government. As they departed from
obedience to God's law, they desired to be freed from the rule of their
divine Sovereign; and thus the demand for a monarchy became widespread
throughout Israel.
Since the days of Joshua the government had never been conducted with so
great wisdom and success as under Samuel's administration. Divinely
invested with the threefold office of judge, prophet, and priest, he had
labored with untiring and disinterested zeal for the welfare of his
people, and the nation had prospered under his wise control. Order had
been restored, and godliness promoted, and the spirit of discontent was
checked for the time. But with advancing years the prophet was forced to
share with others the cares of government, and he appointed his two sons
to act as his assistants. While Samuel continued the duties of his
office at Ramah, the young men were stationed at Beersheba, to
administer justice among the people near the southern border of the
land.
It was with the full assent of the nation that Samuel had appointed his
sons to office, but they did not prove themselves worthy of their
father's choice. The Lord had, through Moses, given special directions
to His people that the rulers of Israel should judge righteously, deal
justly with the widow and the fatherless, and receive no bribes. But the
sons of Samuel "turned aside after lucre, and took bribes, and perverted
judgment." The sons of the prophet had not heeded the precepts which he
had sought to impress upon their minds. They had not copied the pure,
unselfish life of their father. The warning given to Eli had not exerted
the influence upon the mind of Samuel that it should have done. He had
been to some extent too indulgent with his sons, and the result was
apparent in their character and life.
The injustice of these judges caused much dissatisfaction, and a pretext
was thus furnished for urging the change that had long been secretly
desired. "All the elders of Israel gathered themselves together, and
came to Samuel unto Ramah, and said unto him, Behold, thou art old, and
thy sons walk not in thy ways: now make us a king to judge us like all
the nations." The cases of abuse among the people had not been referred
to Samuel. Had the evil course of his sons been known to him, he would
have removed them without delay; but this was not what the petitioners
desired. Samuel saw that their real motive was discontent and pride, and
that their demand was the result of a deliberate and determined purpose.
No complaint had been made against Samuel. All acknowledged the
integrity and wisdom of his administration; but the aged prophet looked
upon the request as a censure upon himself, and a direct effort to set
him aside. He did not, however, reveal his feelings; he uttered no
reproach, but carried the matter to the Lord in prayer and sought
counsel from Him alone.
And the Lord said unto Samuel: "Hearken unto the voice of the people in
all that they say unto thee: for they have not rejected thee, but they
have rejected Me, that I should not reign over them. According to all
the works which they have done since the day that I brought them up out
of Egypt even unto this day, wherewith they have forsaken Me, and served
other gods, so do they also unto thee." The prophet was reproved for
grieving at the conduct of the people toward himself as an individual.
They had not manifested disrespect for him, but for the authority of
God, who had appointed the rulers of His people. Those who despise and
reject the faithful servant of God show contempt, not merely for the
man, but for the Master who sent him. It is God's words, His reproofs
and counsel, that are set at nought; it is His authority that is
rejected.
The days of Israel's greatest prosperity had been those in which they
acknowledged Jehovah as their King--when the laws and the government
which He had established were regarded as superior to those of all other
nations. Moses had declared to Israel concerning the commandments of the
Lord: "This is your wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the
nations, which shall hear all these statutes, and say, Surely this great
nation is a wise and understanding people." Deuteronomy 4:6. But by
departing from God's law the Hebrews had failed to become the people
that God desired to make them, and then all the evils which were the
result of their own sin and folly they charged upon the government of
God. So completely had they become blinded by sin.
The Lord had, through His prophets, foretold that Israel would be
governed by a king; but it does not follow that this form of government
was best for them or according to His will. He permitted the people to
follow their own choice, because they refused to be guided by His
counsel. Hosea declares that God gave them a king in His anger. Hosea
13:11. When men choose to have their own way, without seeking counsel
from God, or in opposition to His revealed will, He often grants their
desires, in order that, through the bitter experience that follows, they
may be led to realize their folly and to repent of their sin. Human
pride and wisdom will prove a dangerous guide. That which the heart
desires contrary to the will of God will in the end be found a curse
rather than a blessing.
God desired His people to look to Him alone as their Law-giver and their
Source of strength. Feeling their dependence upon God, they would be
constantly drawn nearer to Him. They would become elevated and ennobled,
fitted for the high destiny to which He had called them as His chosen
people. But when a man was placed upon the throne, it would tend to turn
the minds of the people from God. They would trust more to human
strength, and less to divine power, and the errors of their king would
lead them into sin and separate the nation from God.
Samuel was instructed to grant the request of the people, but to warn
them of the Lord's disapproval, and also make known what would be the
result of their course. "And Samuel told all the words of the Lord unto
the people that asked of him a king." He faithfully set before them the
burdens that would be laid upon them, and showed the contrast between
such a state of oppression and their present comparatively free and
prosperous condition. Their king would imitate the pomp and luxury of
other monarchs, to support which, grievous exactions upon their persons
and property would be necessary. The goodliest of their young men he
would require for his service. They would be made charioteers and
horsemen and runners before him. They must fill the ranks of his army,
and they would be required to till his fields, to reap his harvests, and
to manufacture implements of war for his service. The daughters of
Israel would be for confectioners and bakers for the royal household. To
support his kingly state he would seize upon the best of their lands,
bestowed upon the people by Jehovah Himself. The most valuable of their
servants also, and of their cattle, he would take, and "put them to his
work." Besides all this, the king would require a tenth of all their
income, the profits of their labor, or the products of the soil. "Ye
shall be his servants," concluded the prophet. "And ye shall cry out in
that day because of your king which ye shall have chosen you; and the
Lord will not hear you in that day." However burdensome its exactions
should be found, when once a monarchy was established, they could not
set it aside at pleasure.
But the people returned the answer, "Nay; but we will have a king over
us; that we also may be like all the nations; and that our king may
judge us, and go out before us, and fight our battles."
"Like all the nations." The Israelites did not realize that to be in
this respect unlike other nations was a special privilege and blessing.
God had separated the Israelites from every other people, to make them
His own peculiar treasure. But they, disregarding this high honor,
eagerly desired to imitate the example of the heathen! And still the
longing to conform to worldly practices and customs exists among the
professed people of God. As they depart from the Lord they become
ambitious for the gains and honors of the world. Christians are
constantly seeking to imitate the practices of those who worship the god
of this world. Many urge that by uniting with worldlings and conforming
to their customs they might exert a stronger influence over the ungodly.
But all who pursue this course thereby separate from the Source of their
strength. Becoming the friends of the world, they are the enemies of
God. For the sake of earthly distinction they sacrifice the unspeakable
honor to which God has called them, of showing forth the praises of Him
who hath called us out of darkness into His marvelous light. 1 Peter
2:9.
With deep sadness Samuel listened to the words of the people; but the
Lord said unto him, "Hearken unto their voice, and make them a king."
The prophet had done his duty. He had faithfully presented the warning,
and it had been rejected. With a heavy heart he dismissed the people,
and himself departed to prepare for the great change in the government.
Samuel's life of purity and unselfish devotion was a perpetual rebuke
both to self-serving priests and elders and to the proud, sensual
congregation of Israel. Although he assumed no pomp and made no display,
his labors bore the signet of Heaven. He was honored by the world's
Redeemer, under whose guidance he ruled the Hebrew nation. But the
people had become weary of his piety and devotion; they despised his
humble authority and rejected him for a man who should rule them as a
king.
In the character of Samuel we see reflected the likeness of Christ. It
was the purity of our Saviour's life that provoked the wrath of Satan.
That life was the light of the world, and revealed the hidden depravity
in the hearts of men. It was the holiness of Christ that stirred up
against Him the fiercest passions of falsehearted professors of
godliness. Christ came not with the wealth and honors of earth, yet the
works which He wrought showed Him to possess power greater than that of
any human prince. The Jews looked for the Messiah to break the
oppressor's yoke, yet they cherished the sins that had bound it upon
their necks. Had Christ cloaked their sins and applauded their piety,
they would have accepted Him as their king; but they would not bear His
fearless rebuke of their vices. The loveliness of a character in which
benevolence, purity, and holiness reigned supreme, which entertained no
hatred except for sin, they despised. Thus it has been in every age of
the world. The light from heaven brings condemnation on all who refuse
to walk in it. When rebuked by the example of those who hate sin,
hypocrites will become agents of Satan to harass and persecute the
faithful. "All that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer
persecution." 2 Timothy 3:12.
Though a monarchical form of government for Israel had been foretold in
prophecy, God had reserved to Himself the right to choose their king.
The Hebrews so far respected the authority of God as to leave the
selection entirely to Him. The choice fell upon Saul, a son of Kish, of
the tribe of Benjamin.
The personal qualities of the future monarch were such as to gratify
that pride of heart which prompted the desire for a king. "There was not
among the children of Israel a goodlier person than he." 1 Samuel 9:2.
Of noble and dignified bearing, in the prime of life, comely and tall,
he appeared like one born to command. Yet with these external
attractions, Saul was destitute of those higher qualities that
constitute true wisdom. He had not in youth learned to control his rash,
impetuous passions; he had never felt the renewing power of divine
grace.
Saul was the son of a powerful and wealthy chief, yet in accordance with
the simplicity of the times he was engaged with his father in the humble
duties of a husbandman. Some of his father's animals having strayed upon
the mountains, Saul went with a servant to seek for them. For three days
they searched in vain, when, as they were not far from Ramah, the home
of Samuel, the servant proposed that they should inquire of the prophet
concerning the missing property. "I have here at hand the fourth part of
a shekel of silver," he said: "that will I give to the man of God, to
tell us our way." This was in accordance with the custom of the times. A
person approaching a superior in rank or office made him a small
present, as an expression of respect.
As they drew near to the city they met some young maidens who had come
out to draw water, and inquired of them for the seer. In reply they were
told that a religious service was about to take place, that the prophet
had already arrived, there was to be an offering upon "the high place,"
and after that a sacrificial feast. A great change had taken place under
Samuel's administration. When the call of God first came to him the
services of the sanctuary were held in contempt. "Men abhorred the
offering of the Lord." 1 Samuel 2:17. But the worship of God was now
maintained throughout the land, and the people manifested an interest in
religious services. There being no ministration in the tabernacle,
sacrifices were for the time offered elsewhere; and the cities of the
priests and Levites, where the people resorted for instruction, were
chosen for this purpose. The highest points in these cities were usually
selected as the place of sacrifice, and hence were called "the high
places."
At the gate of the city Saul was met by the prophet himself. God had
revealed to Samuel that at that time the chosen king of Israel would
present himself before him. As they now stood face to face, the Lord
said to Samuel, "Behold the man whom I spake to thee of! this same shall
reign over My people."
To the request of Saul, "Tell me, I pray thee, where the seer's house
is," Samuel replied, "I am the seer." Assuring him also that the lost
animals had been found, he urged him to tarry and attend the feast, at
the same time giving some intimation of the great destiny before him:
"On whom is all the desire of Israel? Is it not on thee, and on all thy
father's house?" The listener's heart thrilled at the prophet's words.
He could not but perceive something of their significance, for the
demand for a king had become a matter of absorbing interest to the whole
nation. Yet with modest self-depreciation Saul replied, "Am not I a
Benjamite, of the smallest of the tribes of Israel? and my family the
least of all the families of the tribe of Benjamin? wherefore then
speakest thou so to me?"
Samuel conducted the stranger to the place of assembly, where the
principal men of the town were gathered. Among them, at the prophet's
direction, the place of honor was given to Saul, and at the feast the
choicest portion was set before him. The services over, Samuel took his
guest to his own home, and there upon the housetop he communed with him,
setting forth the great principles on which the government of Israel had
been established, and thus seeking to prepare him, in some measure, for
his high station.
When Saul departed, early next morning, the prophet went forth with him.
Having passed through the town, he directed the servant to go forward.
Then he bade Saul stand still to receive a message sent him from God.
"Then Samuel took a vial of oil, and poured it upon his head, and kissed
him, and said, Is it not because Jehovah hath anointed thee to be
captain over His inheritance?" As evidence that this was done by divine
authority, he foretold the incidents that would occur on the homeward
journey and assured Saul that he would be qualified by the Spirit of God
for the station awaiting him. "The Spirit of Jehovah will come upon
thee," said the prophet, and thou "shalt be turned into another man. And
let it be, when these signs are come unto thee, that thou do as occasion
serve thee; for God is with thee."
As Saul went on his way, all came to pass as the prophet had said. Near
the border of Benjamin he was informed that the lost animals had been
found. In the plain of Tabor he met three men who were going to worship
God at Bethel. One of them carried three kids for sacrifice, another
three loaves of bread, and the third a bottle of wine, for the
sacrificial feast. They gave Saul the usual salutation and also
presented him with two of the three loaves of bread. At Gibeah, his own
city, a band of prophets returning from "the high place" were singing
the praise of God to the music of the pipe and the harp, the psaltery
and the tabret. As Saul approached them the Spirit of the Lord came upon
him also, and he joined in their song of praise, and prophesied with
them. He spoke with so great fluency and wisdom, and joined so earnestly
in the service, that those who had known him exclaimed in astonishment,
"What is this that is come unto the son of Kish? Is Saul also among the
prophets?"
As Saul united with the prophets in their worship, a great change was
wrought in him by the Holy Spirit. The light of divine purity and
holiness shone in upon the darkness of the natural heart. He saw himself
as he was before God. He saw the beauty of holiness. He was now called
to begin the warfare against sin and Satan, and he was made to feel that
in this conflict his strength must come wholly from God. The plan of
salvation, which had before seemed dim and uncertain, was opened to his
understanding. The Lord endowed him with courage and wisdom for his high
station. He revealed to him the Source of strength and grace, and
enlightened his understanding as to the divine claims and his own duty.
The anointing of Saul as king had not been made known to the nation. The
choice of God was to be publicly manifested by lot. For this purpose
Samuel convoked the people at Mizpeh. Prayer was offered for divine
guidance; then followed the solemn ceremony of casting the lot. In
silence the assembled multitude awaited the issue. The tribe, the
family, and the household were successively designated, and then Saul,
the son of Kish, was pointed out as the individual chosen. But Saul was
not in the assembly. Burdened with a sense of the great responsibility
about to fall upon him, he had secretly withdrawn. He was brought back
to the congregation, who observed with pride and satisfaction that he
was of kingly bearing and noble form, being "higher than any of the
people from his shoulders and upward." Even Samuel, when presenting him
to the assembly, exclaimed, "See ye him whom the Lord hath chosen, that
there is none like him among all the people?" And in response arose from
the vast throng one long, loud shout of joy, "God save the king!"
Samuel then set before the people "the manner of the kingdom," stating
the principles upon which the monarchial government was based, and by
which it should be controlled. The king was not to be an absolute
monarch, but was to hold his power in subjection to the will of the Most
High. This address was recorded in a book, wherein were set forth the
prerogatives of the prince and the rights and privileges of the people.
Though the nation had despised Samuel's warning, the faithful prophet,
while forced to yield to their desires, still endeavored, as far as
possible, to guard their liberties.
While the people in general were ready to acknowledge Saul as their
king, there was a large party in opposition. For a monarch to be chosen
from Benjamin, the smallest of the tribes of Israel--and that to the
neglect of both Judah and Ephraim, the largest and most powerful--was a
slight which they could not brook. They refused to profess allegiance to
Saul or to bring him the customary presents. Those who had been most
urgent in their demand for a king were the very ones that refused to
accept with gratitude the man of God's appointment. The members of each
faction had their favorite, whom they wished to see placed on the
throne, and several among the leaders had desired the honor for
themselves. Envy and jealousy burned in the hearts of many. The efforts
of pride and ambition had resulted in disappointment and discontent.
In this condition of affairs Saul did not see fit to assume the royal
dignity. Leaving Samuel to administer the government as formerly, he
returned to Gibeah. He was honorably escorted thither by a company, who,
seeing the divine choice in his selection, were determined to sustain
him. But he made no attempt to maintain by force his right to the
throne. In his home among the uplands of Benjamin he quietly occupied
himself in the duties of a husbandman, leaving the establishment of his
authority entirely to God.
Soon after Saul's appointment the Ammonites, under their king, Nahash,
invaded the territory of the tribes east of Jordan and threatened the
city of Jabesh-gilead. The inhabitants tried to secure terms of peace by
offering to become tributary to the Ammonites. To this the cruel king
would not consent but on condition that he might put out the right eye
of every one of them, thus making them abiding witnesses to his power.
The people of the besieged city begged a respite of seven days. To this
the Ammonites consented, thinking thus to heighten the honor of their
expected triumph. Messengers were at once dispatched from Jabesh, to
seek help from the tribes west of Jordan. They carried the tidings to
Gibeah, creating widespread terror. Saul, returning at night from
following the oxen in the field, heard the loud wail that told of some
great calamity. He said, "What aileth the people that they weep?" When
the shameful story was repeated, all his dormant powers were roused.
"The Spirit of God came upon Saul. . . . And he took a yoke of oxen, and
hewed them in pieces, and sent them throughout all the coasts of Israel
by the hands of messengers, saying, Whosoever cometh nor forth after
Saul and after Samuel, so shall it be done unto his oxen."
Three hundred and thirty thousand men gathered on the plain of Bezek,
under the command of Saul. Messengers were immediately sent to the
besieged city with the assurance that they might expect help on the
morrow, the very day on which they were to submit to the Ammonites. By a
rapid night march Saul and his army crossed the Jordan and arrived
before Jabesh in "the morning watch." Like Gideon, dividing his force
into three companies, he fell upon the Ammonite camp at that early hour,
when, not suspecting danger, they were least secure. In the panic that
followed they were routed with great slaughter. And "they which remained
were scattered, so that two of them were not left together."
The promptness and bravery of Saul, as well as the generalship shown in
the successful conduct of so large a force, were qualities which the
people of Israel had desired in a monarch, that they might be able to
cope with other nations. They now greeted him as their king, attributing
the honor of the victory to human agencies and forgetting that without
God's special blessing all their efforts would have been in vain. In
their enthusiasm some proposed to put to death those who had at first
refused to acknowledge the authority of Saul. But the king interfered,
saying, "There shall not a man be put to death this day: for today the
Lord hath wrought salvation in Israel." Here Saul gave evidence of the
change that had taken place in his character. Instead of taking honor to
himself, he gave the glory to God. Instead of showing a desire for
revenge, he manifested a spirit of compassion and forgiveness. This is
unmistakable evidence that the grace of God dwells in the heart.
Samuel now proposed that a national assembly should be convoked at
Gilgal, that the kingdom might there be publicly confirmed to Saul. It
was done; "and there they sacrificed sacrifices of peace offerings
before the Lord; and there Saul and all the men of Israel rejoiced
greatly."
Gilgal had been the place of Israel's first encampment in the Promised
Land. It was here that Joshua, by divine direction, set up the pillar of
twelve stones to commemorate the miraculous passage of the Jordan. Here
circumcision had been renewed. Here they had kept the first Passover
after the sin at Kadesh and the desert sojourn. Here the manna ceased.
Here the Captain of the Lord's host had revealed Himself as chief in
command of the armies of Israel. From this place they marched to the
overthrow of Jericho and the conquest of Ai. Here Achan met the penalty
of his sin, and here was made that treaty with the Gibeonites which
punished Israel's neglect to ask counsel of God. Upon this plain, linked
with so many thrilling associations, stood Samuel and Saul; and when the
shouts of welcome to the king had died away, the aged prophet gave his
parting words as ruler of the nation.
"Behold," he said, "I have hearkened unto your voice in all that ye said
unto me, and have made a king over you. And now, behold, the king
walketh before you: and I am old and gray- headed; . . . and I have
walked before you from my childhood unto this day. 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."
With one voice the people answered, "Thou hast not defrauded us, nor
oppressed us, neither hast thou taken ought of any man's hand."
Samuel was not seeking merely to justify his own course. He had
previously set forth the principles that should govern both the king and
the people, and he desired to add to his words the weight of his own
example. From childhood he had been connected with the work of God, and
during his long life one object had been ever before him--the glory of
God and the highest good of Israel.
Before there could be any hope of prosperity for Israel they must be led
to repentance before God. In consequence of sin they had lost their
faith in God and their discernment of His power and wisdom to rule the
nation--lost their confidence in His ability to vindicate His cause.
Before they could find true peace they must be led to see and confess
the very sin of which they had been guilty. They had declared the object
of the demand for a king to be, "That our king may judge us, and go out
before us, and fight our battles." Samuel recounted the history of
Israel, from the day when God brought them from Egypt. Jehovah, the King
of kings, had gone out before them and had fought their battles. Often
their sins had sold them into the power of their enemies, but no sooner
did they turn from their evil ways than God's mercy raised up a
deliverer. The Lord sent Gideon and Barak, and "Jephthah, and Samuel,
and delivered you out of the hand of your enemies on every side, and ye
dwelt safe." Yet when threatened with danger they had declared, "A king
shall reign over us," when, said the prophet, "Jehovah your God was your
King."
"Now therefore," continued Samuel, "stand and see this great thing,
which the Lord will do before your eyes. Is it not wheat harvest today?
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. So Samuel called unto
the Lord; and the Lord sent thunder and rain that day." At the time of
wheat harvest, in May and June, no rain fell in the East. The sky was
cloudless, and the air serene and mild. So violent a storm at this
season filled all hearts with fear. In humiliation the people now
confessed their sin--the very sin of which they had been guilty: "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."
Samuel did not leave the people in a state of discouragement, for this
would have prevented all effort for a better life. Satan would lead them
to look upon God as severe and unforgiving, and they would thus be
exposed to manifold temptations. God is merciful and forgiving, ever
desiring to show favor to His people when they will obey His voice.
"Fear not," was the message of God by His servant: "ye have done all
this wickedness: yet turn not aside from following the Lord, but serve
the Lord with all your heart; and 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."
Samuel said nothing of the slight which had been put upon himself; he
uttered no reproach for the ingratitude with which Israel had repaid his
lifelong devotion; but he assured them of his unceasing interest for
them: "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: only fear the
Lord, and serve Him in truth with all your heart: for consider how great
things He hath done for you. But if ye shall still do wickedly, ye shall
be consumed, both ye and your king."
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