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			 SATAN 
			"And again the anger of Jehovah was kindled against Israel, and 
			He moved David against them saying, Go, number Israel and Judah." 
			2Sa 24:1 
			 
			"And Satan stood up against Israel, and moved David to number 
			Israel."- 1Ch 21:1 
			 
			"Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted of God for God 
			cannot be tempted with evil, and He Himself tempteth no man: but 
			each man is tempted when he is drawn away by his own lust and 
			enticed."- Jam 1:13-14 
			 
			THE census of David is found both in the book of Samuel and in 
			Chronicles, in very much the same form; but the chronicler has made 
			a number of small but important alterations and additions. Taken 
			together, these changes involve a new interpretation of the history, 
			and bring out lessons that cannot so easily be deduced from the 
			narrative in the book of Samuel. Hence it is necessary to give a 
			separate exposition of the narrative in Chronicles. 
			 
			As before, we will first review the alterations made by the 
			chronicler and then expound the narrative in the form in which it 
			left his hand, or rather in the form in which it stands in the 
			Masoretic text. Any attempt to deal with the peculiarly complicated 
			problem of the textual criticism of Chronicles would be out of place 
			here. Probably there are no corruptions of the text that would 
			appreciably affect the general exposition of this chapter. 
			 
			At the very outset the chronicler substitutes Satan for Jehovah, and 
			thus changes the whole significance of the narrative. This point is 
			too important to be dealt with casually, and must be reserved for 
			special consideration later on. In 1Ch 21:2 there is a slight change 
			that marks the different points of the views of the Chronicler and 
			the author of the narrative in the book of Samuel. The latter had 
			written that Joab numbered the people from Dan to Beersheba, a 
			merely conventional phrase indicating the extent of the census. It 
			might possibly, however, have been taken to denote that the census 
			began in the north and was concluded in the south. To the 
			chronicler, whose interests all centered in Judah, such an 
			arrangement seemed absurd; and he carefully guarded against any 
			mistake by altering "Dan to Beersheba" into "Beersheba to Dan." In 
			1Ch 21:3 the substance of Joab’s words is not altered, but various 
			slight touches are added to bring out more clearly and forcibly what 
			is implied in the book of Samuel. Joab had spoken of the census as 
			being the king’s pleasure. It was scarcely appropriate to speak of 
			David "taking pleasure in" a suggestion of Satan. In Chronicles 
			Joab’s words are less forcible. "Why doth my lord require this 
			thing?" Again, in the book of Samuel Joab protests against the 
			census without assigning any reason. The context, it is true, 
			readily supplies one; but in Chronicles all is made clear by the 
			addition, "Why will he" (David) "be a cause of guilt unto Israel?" 
			Further on the chronicler’s special interest in Judah again betrays 
			itself. The book of Samuel described, with some detail, the progress 
			of the enumerators through Eastern and Northern Palestine by way of 
			Beersheba to Jerusalem. Chronicles having already made them start 
			from Beersheba, omits these details. 
			 
			In 1Ch 21:5 the numbers in Chronicles differ not only from those of 
			the older narrative, but also from the chronicler’s own statistics 
			in chapter 27. In this last account the men of war are divided into 
			twelve courses of twenty-four thousand each, making a total of two 
			hundred and eighty-eight thousand; in the book of Samuel Israel 
			numbers eight hundred thousand, and Judah five hundred thousand; but 
			in our passage Israel is increased to eleven hundred thousand, and 
			Judah is reduced to four hundred and seventy thousand. Possibly the 
			statistics in chapter 27 are not intended to include all the 
			fighting men, otherwise the figures cannot be harmonized. The 
			discrepancy between our passage and the book of Samuel is perhaps 
			partly explained by the following verse, which is an addition of the 
			chronicler. In the book of Samuel the census is completed, but our 
			additional verse states that Levi and Benjamin were not included in 
			the census. The chronicler understood that the five hundred thousand 
			assigned to Judah in the older narrative were the joint total of 
			Judah and Benjamin; he accordingly reduced the total by thirty 
			thousand, because, according to his view, Benjamin was omitted from 
			the census. The increase in the number of the Israelites is 
			unexpected. The chronicler does not usually overrate the northern 
			tribes. Later on Jeroboam, eighteen years after the disruption, 
			takes the field against Abijah with "eight hundred thousand chosen 
			men," a phrase that implies a still larger number of fighting men, 
			if all had been mustered. Obviously the rebel king would not be 
			expected to be able to bring into the field as large a force as the 
			entire strength of Israel in the most flourishing days of David. The 
			chronicler’s figures in these two passages are consistent, but the 
			comparison is not an adequate reason for the alteration in the 
			present chapter. Textual corruption is always a possibility in the 
			case of numbers, but on the whole this particular change does not 
			admit of a satisfactory explanation. 
			 
			In 1Ch 21:7 we have a very striking alteration. According to the 
			book of Samuel, David’s repentance was entirely spontaneous: 
			"David’s heart smote him after that he had numbered the people"; but 
			here God smites Israel, and then David’s conscience awakes. In 1Ch 
			21:12 the chronicler makes a slight addition, apparently to gratify 
			his literary taste. In the original narrative the third alternative 
			offered to David had been described simply as "the pestilence," but 
			in Chronicles the words "the sword of Jehovah" are added in 
			antithesis to "the sword of Thine enemies" in the previous verse. 
			 
			1Ch 21:16, which describes David’s vision of the angel with the 
			drawn sword, is an expansion of the simple statement of the book of 
			Samuel that David saw the angel. In 1Ch 21:18 we are not merely told 
			that Gad spake to David, but that he spake by the command of the 
			angel of Jehovah. 1Ch 21:20, which tells us how Ornan saw the angel, 
			is an addition of the chronicler’s. All these changes lay stress 
			upon the intervention of the angel, and illustrate the interest 
			taken by Judaism in the ministry of angels. Zechariah, the prophet 
			of the Restoration, received his messages by the dispensation of 
			angels; and the title of the last canonical prophet, Malachi, 
			probably means "the Angel." The change from Araunah to Ornan is a 
			mere question of spelling. Possibly Ornan is a somewhat Hebraized 
			form of the older Jebusite name Araunah. 
			 
			In 1Ch 21:22 the reference to "a full price" and other changes in 
			the form of David’s Words are probably due to the influence of Gen 
			23:9. In 1Ch 21:23 the chronicler’s familiarity with the ritual of 
			sacrifice has led him to insert a reference to a meal offering, to 
			accompany the burnt offering. Later on the chronicler omits the 
			somewhat ambiguous words which seem to speak of Araunah as a king. 
			He would naturally avoid anything like a recognition of the royal 
			status of a Jebusite prince. 
			 
			In 1Ch 21:25 David pays much more dearly for Ornan’s threshing-floor 
			than in the book of Samuel. In the latter the price is fifty shekels 
			of silver, in the former six hundred shekels of gold. Most ingenious 
			attempts have been made to harmonize the two statements. It has been 
			suggested that fifty shekels of silver means silver to the value of 
			fifty shekels of gold and paid in gold, and that six hundred shekels 
			of gold means the value of six hundred shekels of silver paid in 
			gold. A more lucid but equally impossible explanation is that David 
			paid fifty shekels forevery tribe, six hundred in all. The real 
			reason for the change is that when the Temple became supremely 
			important to the Jews the small price of fifty shekels for the site 
			seemed derogatory to the dignity of the sanctuary; six hundred 
			shekels of gold was a more appropriate sum. Abraham had paid four 
			hundred shekels for a burying-place; and a site for the Temple, 
			where Jehovah had chosen to put His name, must surely have cost 
			more. The chronicler followed the tradition which had grown up under 
			the influence of this feeling. 
			 
			1Ch 21:27-30; 1Ch 22:1 are an addition. According to the Levitical 
			law, David was falling into grievous sin in sacrificing anywhere 
			except before the Mosaic altar of burnt offering. The chronicler 
			therefore states the special circumstances that palliated this 
			offence against the exclusive privileges of the one sanctuary of 
			Jehovah. He also reminds us that this threshing-floor became the 
			site of the altar of burnt offering for Solomon’s temple. Here he 
			probably follows an ancient and historical tradition; the prominence 
			given to the threshing-floor in the book of Samuel indicates the 
			special sanctity of the site. The Temple is the only sanctuary whose 
			site could be thus connected with the last days of David. When the 
			book of Samuel was written, the facts were too familiar to need any 
			explanation; every one knew that the Temple stood on the site of 
			Araunah’s threshing-floor. The chronicler, writing centuries later, 
			felt it necessary to make an explicit statement on the subject. 
			 
			Having thus attempted to understand how our narrative assumed its 
			present form, we will now tell the chronicler’s story of these 
			incidents. The long reign of David was drawing to a close. Hitherto 
			he had been blessed with uninterrupted prosperity and success. His 
			armies had been victorious over all the enemies of Israel, the 
			borders of the land of Jehovah had been extended, David himself was 
			lodged with princely splendor, and the services of the Ark were 
			conducted with imposing ritual by a numerous array of priests and 
			Levites. King and people alike were at the zenith of their glory. In 
			worldly prosperity and careful attention to religious observances 
			David and his people were not surpassed by Job himself. Apparently 
			their prosperity provoked the envious malice of an evil and 
			mysterious being, who appears only here in Chronicles: Satan, the 
			persecutor of Job. The trial to which he subjected the loyalty of 
			David was more subtle and suggestive than his assault upon Job. He 
			harassed Job as the wind dealt with the traveler in the fable, and 
			Job only wrapped the cloak of his faith closer about him; Satan 
			allowed David to remain in the full sunshine of prosperity, and 
			seduced him into sin by fostering his pride in being the powerful 
			and victorious prince of a mighty people. He suggested a census. 
			David’s pride would be gratified by obtaining accurate information 
			as to the myriads of his subjects. Such statistics would be useful 
			for the civil organization of Israel; the king would learn where and 
			how to recruit his army or to find an opportunity to impose 
			additional taxation. The temptation appealed alike to the king, the 
			soldier, and the statesman, and did not appeal in vain. David at 
			once instructed Joab and the princes to proceed with the 
			enumeration; Joab demurred and protested: the census would be a 
			cause of guilt unto Israel. But not even the great influence of the 
			commander-in-chief could turn the king from his purpose. His word 
			prevailed against Joab, wherefore Joab departed, and went throughout 
			all Israel, and came to Jerusalem. This brief general statement 
			indicates a long and laborious task, simplified and facilitated in 
			some measure by the primitive organization of society and by rough 
			and ready methods adopted to secure the very moderate degree of 
			accuracy with which an ancient Eastern sovereign would be contented. 
			When Xerxes wished to ascertain the number of the vast army with 
			which he set out to invade Greece, his officers packed ten thousand 
			men into as small a space as possible and built a wall round them; 
			then they turned them out, and packed the space again and again; and 
			so in time they ascertained how many tens of thousands of men there 
			were in the army. Joab’s methods would be different, but perhaps not 
			much more exact. He would probably learn from the "heads of fathers’ 
			houses" the number of fighting men in each family. Where the 
			hereditary chiefs of a district were indifferent, he might make some 
			rough estimate of his own. We may be sure that both Joab and the 
			local authorities would be careful to err on the safe side. The king 
			was anxious to learn that he possessed a large number of subjects. 
			Probably as the officers of Xerxes went on with their counting they 
			omitted to pack the measured area as closely as they did at first; 
			they might allow eight or nine thousand to pass for ten thousand. 
			Similarly David’s servants would, to say the least, be anxious not 
			to underestimate the number of his subjects. The work apparently 
			went on smoothly; nothing is said that indicates any popular 
			objection or resistance to the census; the process of enumeration 
			was not interrupted by any token of Divine displeasure against the 
			"cause of guilt unto Israel." Nevertheless Joab’s misgivings were 
			not set at rest; he did what he could to limit the range of the 
			census and to withdraw at least two of the tribes from the impending 
			outbreak of Divine wrath. The tribe of Levi would be exempt from 
			taxation and the obligation of military service; Joab could omit 
			them without rendering his statistics less useful for military and 
			financial purposes. In not including the Levites in the general 
			census of Israel, Joab was following the precedent set by the 
			numbering in the wilderness. Benjamin was probably omitted in order 
			to protect the Holy City, the chronicler following that form of the 
			ancient tradition which assigned Jerusalem to Benjamin. Later on, 
			{1Ch 27:23-24} however, the chronicler seems to imply that these two 
			tribes left to the last were not numbered because of the growing 
			dissatisfaction of Joab with his task: "Joab the son of Zeruiah 
			began to number, but finished not." But these different reasons for 
			the omission of Levi and Benjamin do not mutually exclude each 
			other. Another limitation is also stated in the later reference: 
			"David took not the number of them twenty years old and under, 
			because Jehovah had said that He would increase Israel like to the 
			stars of heaven." This statement and explanation seems a little 
			superfluous: the census was specially concerned with the fighting 
			men, and in the book of Numbers only those over twenty are numbered. 
			But we have seen elsewhere that the chronicler has no great 
			confidence in the intelligence of his readers, and feels bound to 
			state definitely matters that have only been implied and might be 
			overlooked. Here, therefore, he calls our attention to the fact that 
			the numbers previously given do not comprise the whole male 
			population, but only the adults. At last the census, so far as it 
			was carried out at all, was finished, and the results were presented 
			to the king. They are meager and bald compared to the volumes of 
			tables which form the report of a modern census. Only two divisions 
			of the country are recognized: "Judah" and "Israel," or the ten 
			tribes. The total is given for each: eleven hundred thousand for 
			Israel, four hundred and seventy thousand for Judah, in all fifteen 
			hundred and seventy thousand. Whatever details may have been given 
			to the king, he would be chiefly interested in the grand total. Its 
			figures would be the most striking symbol of the extent of his 
			authority and the glory of his kingdom. 
			 
			Perhaps during the months occupied in taking the census David had 
			forgotten the ineffectual protests of Joab, and was able to receive 
			his report without any presentiment of coming evil. Even if his mind 
			were not altogether at ease, all misgivings would for the time be 
			forgotten, He probably made or had made for him some rough 
			calculation as to the total of men, women, and children that would 
			correspond to the vast array of fighting men. His servants would not 
			reckon the entire population at less than nine or ten millions. His 
			heart would be uplifted with pride as he contemplated the statement 
			of the multitudes that were the subjects of his crown and prepared 
			to fight at his bidding. The numbers are moderate compared with the 
			vast populations and enormous armies of the great powers of modern 
			Europe; they were far surpassed by the Roman Empire and the teeming 
			populations of the valleys of the Nile, the Euphrates, and the 
			Tigris; but during the Middle Ages it was not often possible to find 
			in Western Europe so large a population under one government or so 
			numerous an army under one banner. The resources of Cyrus may not 
			have been greater when he started on his career of conquest; and 
			when Xerxes gathered into one motley horde the warriors of half the 
			known world, their total was only about double the number of David’s 
			robust and warlike Israelites. There was no enterprise that was 
			likely to present itself to his imagination that he might not have 
			undertaken with a reasonable probability of success. He must have 
			regretted that his days of warfare were past, and that the unwarlike 
			Solomon, occupied with more peaceful tasks, would allow this 
			magnificent instrument of possible conquests to rust unused. 
			 
			But the king was not long left in undisturbed enjoyment of his 
			greatness. In the very moment of his exaltation, some sense of the 
			Divine displeasure fell upon him. Mankind has learnt by a long and 
			sad experience to distrust its own happiness. The brightest hours 
			have come to possess a suggestion of possible catastrophe, and 
			classic story loved to tell of the unavailing efforts of fortunate 
			princes to avoid their inevitable downfall. Polycrates and Croesus, 
			however, had not tempted the Divine anger by ostentatious pride; 
			David’s power and glory had made him neglectful of the reverent 
			homage due to Jehovah, and he had sinned in spite of the express 
			warnings of his most trusted minister. 
			 
			When the revulsion of feeling came, it was complete. The king at 
			once humbled himself under the mighty hand of God, and made full 
			acknowledgment of his sin and folly: "I have sinned greatly in that 
			I have done this thing: but now put away, I beseech Thee, the 
			iniquity of Thy servant, for I have done very foolishly." 
			 
			The narrative continues as in the book of Samuel. Repentance could 
			not avert punishment, and the punishment struck directly at David’s 
			pride of power and glory. The great population was to be decimated 
			either by famine, war, or pestilence. The king chose to suffer from 
			the pestilence, "the sword of Jehovah"; "Let me fall now into the 
			hand of Jehovah, for very great are His mercies: and let me not fall 
			into the hand of man. So Jehovah sent a pestilence upon Israel, and 
			there felt of Israel seventy thousand men." Not three days since 
			Joab handed in his report, and already a deduction of seventy 
			thousand would have to be made from its total; and still, the 
			pestilence was not checked, for "God sent an angel unto Jerusalem to 
			destroy it." If, as we have supposed, Joab had withheld Jerusalem 
			from the census, his pious caution was now rewarded: "Jehovah 
			repented Him of the evil, and said to the destroying angel, It is 
			enough; now stay thine hand." At the very last moment the crowning 
			catastrophe was averted. In the Divine counsels Jerusalem was 
			already delivered, but to human eyes its fate still trembled in the 
			balance: "And David lifted up his eyes, and saw the angel of Jehovah 
			stand between the earth and the heaven, having a drawn sword in his 
			hand stretched out over Jerusalem." So another great Israelite 
			soldier lifted up his eyes beside Jericho and beheld the captain of 
			the host of Jehovah standing over against him with his sword drawn 
			in his hand. {Jos 5:13} Then the sword was drawn to smite the 
			enemies of Israel, but now it was turned to smite Israel itself. 
			David and his elders fell upon their faces as Joshua had done before 
			them: "And David said unto God, Is it not I that commanded the 
			people to be numbered? even I it is that have sinned and done very 
			wickedly; but these sheep, what have they done? Let Thine hand, I 
			pray Thee, O Jehovah my God, be against me and against my father’s 
			house, but not against Thy people, that they should be plagued." 
			 
			The awful presence returned no answer to the guilty king, but 
			addressed itself to the prophet Gad, and commanded him to bid David 
			go up and build an altar to Jehovah in the threshing-floor of Ornan 
			the Jebusite. The command was a message of mercy. Jehovah permitted 
			David to build Him an altar; He was prepared to accept an offering 
			at his hands. The king’s prayers were heard, and Jerusalem was saved 
			from the pestilence. But still the angel stretched out his drawn 
			sword over Jerusalem; he waited till the reconciliation of Jehovah 
			with His people should have been duly ratified by solemn sacrifices. 
			At the bidding of the prophet, David went up to the threshing-floor 
			of Ornan the Jebusite. Sorrow and reassurance, hope and fear, 
			contended for the mastery. No sacrifice could call back to life the 
			seventy thousand victims whom the pestilence had already destroyed, 
			and yet the horror of its ravages was almost forgotten in relief at 
			the deliverance of Jerusalem from the calamity that had all but 
			overtaken it. Even now the uplifted sword might be only held back 
			for a time; Satan might yet bring about some heedless and sinful 
			act, and the respite might end not in pardon, but in the execution 
			of God’s purpose of vengeance. Saul had been condemned because he 
			sacrificed too soon; now perhaps delay would be fatal. Uzzah had 
			been smitten because he touched the Ark; till the sacrifice was 
			actually offered who could tell whether some thoughtless blunder 
			would not again provoke the wrath of Jehovah? Under ordinary 
			circumstances David would not have dared to sacrifice anywhere 
			except upon the altar of burnt offering before the tabernacle at 
			Gibeon; he would have used the ministry of priests and Levites. But 
			ritual is helpless in great emergencies. The angel of Jehovah with 
			the drawn sword seemed to bar the way to Gibeon, as once before he 
			had barred Balaam’s progress when he came to curse Israel. In his 
			supreme need David builds his own altar and offers his own 
			sacrifices; he receives the Divine answer without the intervention 
			this time of either priest or prophet. By God’s most merciful and 
			mysterious grace, David’s guilt and punishment, his repentance and 
			pardon, broke down all barriers between himself and God. 
			 
			But, as he went up to the threshing-floor, he was still troubled and 
			anxious. The burden was partly lifted from his heart, but he still 
			craved full assurance of pardon. The menacing attitude of the 
			destroying angel seemed to hold out little promise of mercy and 
			forgiveness, and yet the command to sacrifice would be cruel mockery 
			if Jehovah did not intend to be gracious to His people and His 
			anointed. 
			 
			At the threshing-floor Ornan and his four sons were threshing wheat, 
			apparently unmoved by the prospect of the threatened pestilence. In 
			Egypt the Israelites were protected from the plagues with which 
			their oppressors were punished. Possibly now the situation was 
			reversed, and the remnant of the Canaanites in Palestine were not 
			afflicted by the pestilence that fell upon Israel. But Ornan turned 
			back and saw the angel; he may not have known the grim mission with 
			which the Lord’s messenger had been entrusted, but the aspect of the 
			destroyer, his threatening attitude, and the lurid radiance of his 
			unsheathed and outstretched sword must have seemed unmistakable 
			tokens of coming calamity. Whatever might be threatened for the 
			future, the actual appearance of this supernatural visitant was 
			enough to unnerve the stoutest heart; and Ornan’s four sons hid 
			themselves. 
			 
			Before long, however, Ornan’s terrors were somewhat relieved by the 
			approach of less formidable visitors. The king and his followers had 
			ventured to show themselves openly, in spite of the destroying 
			angel: and they had ventured with impunity. Ornan went forth and 
			bowed himself to David with his face to the ground. In ancient days 
			the father of the faithful, oppressed by the burden of his 
			bereavement, went to the Hittites to purchase a burying-place for 
			his wife. Now the last of the Patriarchs, mourning for the 
			sufferings of his people, came by Divine command to the Jebusite to 
			purchase the ground on which to offer sacrifices, that the plague 
			might be stayed from the people. The form of bargaining was somewhat 
			similar in both cases. We are told that bargains are concluded in 
			much the same fashion today. Abraham had paid four hundred shekels 
			of silver for the field of Ephron in Machpelah, "with the cave which 
			was therein, and all the trees that were in the field." The price of 
			Ornan’s threshing-floor was m proportion to the dignity and wealth 
			of the royal purchaser and the sacred purpose for which it was 
			designed. The fortunate Jebusite received no less than six hundred 
			shekels of gold. 
			 
			David built his altar, and offered up his sacrifices and prayers to 
			Jehovah. Then, in answer to David’s prayers, as later in answer to 
			Solomon’s, fire fell from heaven upon the altar of burnt offering, 
			and all this while the sword of Jehovah flamed across the heavens 
			above Jerusalem, and the destroying angel remained passive, but to 
			all appearances unappeased. But as the fire of God fell from heaven, 
			Jehovah gave yet another final and convincing token that He would no 
			longer execute judgment against His people. In spite of all that had 
			happened, to reassure them, the spectators must have been thrilled 
			with alarm when they saw that the angel of Jehovah no longer 
			remained stationary, and that his flaming sword was moving through 
			the heavens. Their renewed terror was only for a moment: "the angel 
			put up his sword again into the sheath thereof," and the people 
			breathed more freely when they saw the instrument of Jehovah’s wrath 
			vanish out of their sight. 
			 
			The use of Machpelah as a patriarchal burying-place led to the 
			establishment of a sanctuary at Hebron, which continued to be the 
			seat of a debased and degenerate worship even after the coming of 
			Christ. It is even now a Mohammedan holy place. But On the 
			threshing-floor of Ornan the Jebusite there was to arise a more 
			worthy memorial of the mercy and judgment of Jehovah. Without the 
			aid of priestly oracle or prophetic utterance, David was led by the 
			Spirit of the Lord to discern the significance of the command to 
			perform an irregular sacrifice in a hitherto unconsecrated place. 
			When the sword of the destroying angel interposed between David and 
			the Mosaic tabernacle and altar of Gibeon, the way was not merely 
			barred against the king and his court on one exceptional occasion. 
			The incidents of this crisis symbolized the cutting off forever of 
			the worship of Israel from its ancient shrine and the transference 
			of the Divinely appointed center of the worship of Jehovah to the 
			threshing-floor of Ornan the Jebusite, that is to say to Jerusalem, 
			the city of David and the capital of Judah. 
			 
			The lessons of this incident, so far as the chronicler has simply 
			borrowed from his authority, belong to the exposition of the book of 
			Samuel. The main features peculiar to Chronicles are the 
			introduction of the evil angel Satan, together with the greater 
			prominence given to the angel of Jehovah, and the express statement 
			that the scene of David’s sacrifice became the site of Solomon’s 
			altar of burnt offering. 
			 
			The stress laid upon angelic agency is characteristic of later 
			Jewish literature, and is especially marked in Zechariah and Daniel. 
			It was no doubt partly due to the influence of the Persian religion, 
			but it was also a development from the primitive faith of Israel, 
			and the development was favored by the course of Jewish history. The 
			Captivity and the Restoration, with the events that preceded and 
			accompanied these revolutions, enlarged the Jewish experience of 
			nature and man. The captives in Babylon and the fugitives in Egypt 
			saw that the world was larger than they had imagined. In Josiah’s 
			reign the Scythians from the far North swept over Western Asia, and 
			the Medes and Persians broke in upon Assyria and Chaldaea from the 
			remote East. The prophets claimed Scythians, Medes, and Persians as 
			the instruments of Jehovah. The Jewish appreciation of the majesty 
			of Jehovah, the Maker and Ruler of the world, increased as they 
			learnt more of the world He had made and ruled; but the invasion of 
			a remote and unknown people impressed them with the idea of infinite 
			dominion and unlimited resources, beyond all knowledge and 
			experience. The course of Israelite history between David and Ezra 
			involved as great a widening of man’s ideas of the universe as the 
			discovery of America or the establishment of Copernican astronomy. A 
			Scythian invasion was scarcely less portentous to the Jews than the 
			descent of an irresistible army from the planet Jupiter would be to 
			the civilized nations of the nineteenth century. The Jew began to 
			shrink from intimate and familiar fellowship with so mighty and 
			mysterious a Deity. He felt the need of a mediator, some less 
			exalted being, to stand between himself and God. For the ordinary 
			purposes of everyday life the Temple, with its ritual and 
			priesthood, provided a mediation; but for unforeseen contingencies 
			and exceptional crises the Jews welcomed the belief that a ministry 
			of angels provided a safe means of intercourse between himself and 
			the Almighty. Many men have come to feel today that the discoveries 
			of science have made the universe so infinite and marvelous that its 
			Maker and Governor is exalted beyond human approach. The infinite 
			spaces of the constellations seem to intervene between the earth and 
			the presence-chamber of God; its doors are guarded against prayer 
			and faith by inexorable laws; the awful Being, who dwells within, 
			has become "unmeasured in height, undistinguished into form." 
			Intellect and imagination alike fail to combine the manifold and 
			terrible attributes of the Author of nature into the picture of a 
			loving Father. It is no new experience, and the present century 
			faces the situation very much as did the chronicler’s 
			contemporaries. Some are happy enough to rest in the mediation of 
			ritual priests; others are content to recognize, as of old, powers 
			and forces, not now, however, personal messengers of Jehovah, but 
			the physical agencies of "that which makes for righteousness." 
			Christ came to supersede the Mosaic ritual and the ministry of 
			angels; He will come again to bring those who are far off into 
			renewed fellowship with His Father and theirs. 
			 
			On the other hand, the recognition of Satan, the evil angel, marks 
			an equally great change from the theology of the book of Samuel. The 
			primitive Israelite religion had not yet reached the stage at which 
			the origin and existence of moral evil became an urgent problem of 
			religious thought; men had not yet realized the logical consequences 
			of the doctrine of Divine unity and omnipotence. Not only was 
			material evil traced to Jehovah as the expression of His just wrath 
			against sin, but "morally pernicious acts were quite frankly 
			ascribed to the direct agency of God." God hardens the heart of 
			Pharaoh and the Canaanites; Saul is instigated by an evil spirit 
			from Jehovah to make an attempt upon the life of David; Jehovah 
			moves David to number Israel; He sends forth a lying spirit that 
			Ahab’s prophets may prophesy falsely and entice him to his ruin. 
			{Exo 4:21, 1Sa 19:9-10, 2Sa 24:1, 1Ki 22:20-23} The Divine origin of 
			moral evil implied in these passages is definitely stated in the 
			book of Proverbs: "Jehovah hath made everything for its own end, yea 
			even the wicked for the day of evil"; in Lamentations, "Out of the 
			mouth of the Most High cometh there not evil and good?" and in the 
			book of Isaiah, "I form the light, and create darkness; I make 
			peace, and create evil; I am Jehovah, that doeth all these things." 
			{Pro 16:4, Lam 3:38, Isa 45:7} 
			 
			The ultra-Calvinism, so to speak, of earlier Israelite religion was 
			only possible so long as its full significance was not understood. 
			An emphatic assertion of the absolute sovereignty, of the one God 
			was necessary as a protest against polytheism, and later on against 
			dualism as well. For practical purposes men’s faith needed to be 
			protected by the assurance that God worked out His purposes in and 
			through human wickedness. The earlier attitude of the Old Testament 
			towards moral evil had a distinct practical and theological value. 
			 
			But the conscience of Israel could not always rest in this view of 
			the origin of evil. As the standard of morality was raised, and its 
			obligations were more fully insisted on, as men shrank from causing 
			evil themselves and from the use of deceit and violence, they 
			hesitated more and more to ascribe to Jehovah what they sought to 
			avoid themselves. And yet no easy way of escape presented itself. 
			The facts remained; the temptation to do evil was part of the 
			punishment of the sinner and of the discipline of the saint. It was 
			impossible to deny that sin had its place in God’s government of the 
			world; and in view of men’s growing reverence and moral 
			sensitiveness, it was becoming almost equally impossible to admit 
			without qualification or explanation that God was Himself the Author 
			of evil. Jewish thought found itself face to face with the dilemma 
			against which the human intellect vainly beats its wings, like a 
			bird against the bars of its cage. 
			 
			However, even in the older literature there were suggestions, not 
			indeed of a solution of the problem, but of a less objectionable way 
			of stating facts. In Eden the temptation to evil comes from the 
			serpent; and, as the story is told, the serpent is quite independent 
			of God; and the question of any Divine authority or permission for 
			its action is not in any way dealt with. It is true that the serpent 
			was one of the beasts of the field which the Lord God had made, but 
			the narrator probably did not consider the question of any Divine 
			responsibility for its wickedness. Again, when Ahab is enticed to 
			his ruin, Jehovah does not act directly, but through the twofold 
			agency first of the lying spirit and then of the deluded prophets. 
			This tendency to dissociate God from any direct agency of evil is 
			further illustrated in Job and Zechariah. When Job is to be tried 
			and tempted, the actual agent is the malevolent Satan; and the same 
			evil spirit stands forth to accuse the high-priest Joshua {Zec 3:1} 
			as the representative of Israel. The development of the idea of 
			angelic agency afforded new resources for the reverent exposition of 
			the facts connected with the origin and existence of moral evil. If 
			a sense of Divine majesty led to a recognition of the angel of 
			Jehovah as the Mediator of revelation, the reverence for Divine 
			holiness imperatively demanded that the immediate causation of evil 
			should also be associated with angelic agency. This agent of evil 
			receives the name of Satan, the adversary of man, the advocatus 
			diaboli who seeks to discredit man before God, the impeacher of 
			Job’s loyalty and of Joshua’s purity. Yet Jehovah does not resign 
			any of His omnipotence. In Job Satan cannot act without God’s 
			permission; he is strictly limited by Divine control: all that he 
			does only illustrates Divine wisdom and effects the Divine purpose. 
			In Zechariah there is no refutation of the charge brought by Satan; 
			its truth is virtually admitted: nevertheless Satan is rebuked for 
			his attempt to hinder God’s gracious purposes towards His people. 
			Thus later Jewish thought left the ultimate Divine sovereignty 
			untouched, but attributed the actual and direct causation of moral 
			evil to malign spiritual agency. 
			 
			Trained in this school, the chronicler must have read with something 
			of a shock that Jehovah moved David to commit the sin of numbering 
			Israel He was familiar with the idea that in such matters Jehovah 
			used or permitted the activity of Satan. Accordingly he carefully 
			avoids reproducing any words from the book of Samuel that imply a 
			direct Divine temptation of David, and ascribes it to the well-known 
			and crafty animosity of Satan against Israel. In so doing, he has 
			gone somewhat further than his predecessors: he is not careful to 
			emphasize any Divine permission given to Satan or Divine control 
			exercised over him. The subsequent narrative implies an overruling 
			for good, and the chronicler may have expected his readers to 
			understand that Satan here stood in the same relation to God as in 
			Job and Zechariah; but the abrupt and isolated introduction of Satan 
			to bring about the fall of David invests the archenemy with a new 
			and more independent dignity. 
			 
			The progress of the Jews in moral and spiritual life had given them 
			a keener appreciation both of good and evil, and of the contrast and 
			opposition between them. Over against the pictures of the good 
			kings, and of the angel of the Lord, the generation of the 
			chronicler set the complementary pictures of the wicked kings and 
			the evil angel. They had a higher ideal to strive after, a clearer 
			vision of the kingdom of God; they also saw more vividly the depths 
			of Satan and recoiled with horror from the abyss revealed to them. 
			 
			Our text affords a striking illustration of the tendency to 
			emphasize the recognition of Satan as the instrument of evil and to 
			ignore the question of the relation of God to the origin of evil. 
			Possibly no more practical attitude can be assumed towards this 
			difficult question. The absolute relation of evil to the Divine 
			sovereignty is one of the problems of the ultimate nature of God and 
			man. Its discussion may throw many sidelights upon other subjects, 
			and will always serve the edifying and necessary purpose of teaching 
			men the limitations of their intellectual powers. Otherwise 
			theologians have found such controversies barren, and the average 
			Christian has not been able to derive from them any suitable 
			nourishment for his spiritual life. Higher intelligences than our 
			own, we have been told, - 
			 
			" reasoned high  
			Of providence, foreknowledge, will, and fate,  
			Fixed fate, free-will, foreknowledge absolute,  
			And found no end, in wandering mazes lost." 
			 
			On the other hand, it is supremely important that the believer 
			should clearly understand the reality of temptation as an evil 
			spiritual force opposed to Divine grace. Sometimes this power of 
			Satan will show itself as "the alien law in his members, warring 
			against the law of his mind and bringing him into captivity under 
			the law of sin, which is in his members." He will be conscious that 
			"he is drawn away by his own lust and enticed." But sometimes 
			temptation will rather come from the outside. A man will find his 
			"adversary" in circumstances, in evil companions, in "the sight of 
			means to do ill deeds"; the serpent whispers in his ear, and Satan 
			moves him to wrong-doing. Let him not imagine for a moment that he 
			is delivered over to the powers of evil; let him realize clearly 
			that with every temptation God provides a way of escape. Every man 
			knows in his own conscience that speculative difficulties can 
			neither destroy the sanctity of moral obligation nor hinder the 
			operation of the grace of God. 
			 
			Indeed, the chronicler is at one with the books of Job and Zechariah 
			in showing us the malice of Satan overruled for man’s good and God’s 
			glory. In Job the affliction of the Patriarch only serves to bring 
			out his faith and devotion, and is eventually rewarded by renewed 
			and increased prosperity; in Zechariah the protest of Satan against 
			God’s gracious purposes for Israel is made the occasion of a 
			singular display of God’s favor towards His people and their priest. 
			In Chronicles the malicious intervention of Satan leads up to the 
			building of the Temple. 
			 
			Long ago Jehovah had promised to choose a place in Israel wherein to 
			set His name; but, as the chronicler read in the history of his 
			nation, the Israelites dwelt for centuries in Palestine, and Jehovah 
			made no sign: the ark of God still dwelt in curtains. Those who 
			still looked for fulfillment of this ancient promise must often have 
			wondered by what prophetic utterance or vision Jehovah would make 
			known His choice. Bethel had been consecrated by the vision of 
			Jacob, when he was a solitary fugitive from Esau, paying the penalty 
			of his selfish craft; but the lessons of past history are not often 
			applied practically, and probably, no one ever expected that 
			Jehovah’s choice of the site for His one temple would be made known 
			to His chosen king, the first true Messiah of Israel, in a moment of 
			even deeper humiliation than Jacob’s, or that the Divine 
			announcement would be the climax of a series of events initiated by 
			the successful machinations of Satan. 
			 
			Yet herein lies one of the main lessons of the incident. Satan’s 
			machinations are not really successful; he often attains his 
			immediate object, but is always defeated in the end. He estranges 
			David from Jehovah for a moment, but eventually Jehovah and His 
			people are drawn into closer union, and their reconciliation is 
			sealed by the long-expected choice of a site for the Temple. Jehovah 
			is like a great general, who will sometimes allow the enemy to 
			obtain a temporary advantage, in order to overwhelm him in some 
			crushing defeat. The eternal purpose of God moves onward, unresting 
			and un-hasting; its quiet and irresistible persistence finds special 
			opportunity in the hindrances that seem sometimes to check its 
			progress. In David’s case a few months showed the whole process 
			complete: the malice of the Enemy; the sin and punishment of his 
			unhappy victim; the Divine relenting and its solemn symbol in the 
			newly consecrated altar. But with the Lord one day is as a thousand 
			years, and a thousand years as one day; and this brief episode in 
			the history of a small people is a symbol alike of the eternal 
			dealings of God in His government of the universe and of His 
			personal care for the individual soul. How short-lived has been the 
			victory of sin in many souls! Sin is triumphant; the tempter seems 
			to have it all his own way, but his first successes only lead to his 
			final rout; the devil is cast out by the Divine exorcism of 
			chastisement and forgiveness; and he learns that his efforts have 
			been made to subserve the training in the Christian warfare of such 
			warriors as Augustine and John Bunyan. Or, to take a case more 
			parallel to that of David, Satan catches the saint unawares, and 
			entraps him into sin; and, behold, while the evil one is in the 
			first flush of triumph, his victim is back again at the throne of 
			grace in an agony of contrition, and before long the repentant 
			sinner is bowed down into a new humility at the undeserved 
			graciousness of the Divine pardon: the chains of love are riveted 
			with a fuller constraint about his soul, and he is tenfold more the 
			child of God than before. 
			 
			And in the larger life of the Church and the world Satan’s triumphs 
			are still the heralds of his utter defeat. He prompted the Jews to 
			slay Stephen; and the Church were scattered abroad, and went about 
			preaching the word; and the young man at whose feet the witnesses 
			laid down their garments became the Apostle of the Gentiles. He 
			tricked the reluctant Diocletian into ordering the greatest of the 
			persecutions, and in a few years Christianity was an established 
			religion in the empire. In more secular matters the apparent triumph 
			of an evil principle is usually the signal for its downfall. 
			 
			In America the slave-holders of the Southern States rode roughshod 
			over the Northerners for more than a generation, and then came the 
			Civil War. 
			 
			These are not isolated instances, and they serve to warn us against 
			undue depression and despondency when for a season God seems to 
			refrain from any intervention with some of the evils of the world. 
			We are apt to ask in our impatience, - 
			 
			"Is there not wrong too bitter for atoning?  
			What are these desperate and hideous years?  
			Hast Thou not heard Thy whole creation groaning  
			Sighs of the bondsman, and a woman’s tears?" 
			 
			The works of Satan are as earthly as they are devilish; they belong 
			to the world, which passeth away, with the lust thereof: but the 
			gracious providence of God has all infinity and all eternity to work 
			in. Where today we can see nothing but the destroying angel with his 
			flaming sword, future generations shall behold the temple of the 
			Lord. 
			 
			David’s sin, and penitence, and pardon were no inappropriate 
			preludes to this consecration of Mount Moriah. The Temple was not 
			built for the use of blameless saints, but the worship of ordinary 
			men and women. Israel through countless generations was to bring the 
			burden of its sins to the altar of Jehovah. The sacred splendor of 
			Solomon’s dedication festival duly represented the national dignity 
			of Israel and the majesty of the God of Jacob; but the 
			self-abandonment of David’s repentance, the deliverance of Jerusalem 
			from impending pestilence, the Divine pardon of presumptuous sin, 
			constituted a still more solemn inauguration of the place where 
			Jehovah had chosen to set His name. The sinner, seeking the 
			assurance of pardon in atoning sacrifice, would remember how David 
			had then received pardon for, his sin, and how the acceptance of his 
			offering had been the signal for the disappearance of the destroying 
			angel. So in the Middle Ages penitents founded churches to expiate 
			their sins. Such sanctuaries would symbolize to sinners in 
			after-times the possibility of forgiveness; they were monuments of 
			God’s mercy as well as of the founders’ penitence. Today churches, 
			both in fabric and fellowship, have been made sacred for individual 
			worshippers because in them the Spirit of God has moved them to 
			repentance and bestowed upon them the assurance of pardon. Moreover, 
			this solemn experience consecrates for God His most acceptable 
			temples in the souls of those that love Him. 
			 
			One other lesson is suggested by the happy issues of Satan’s malign 
			interference in the history of Israel as understood by the 
			chronicler. The inauguration of the new altar was a direct breach of 
			the Levitical law, and involved the superseding of the altar and 
			tabernacle that had hitherto been the only legitimate sanctuary for 
			the worship of Jehovah. Thus the new order had its origin in the 
			violation of existing ordinances and the neglect of an ancient 
			sanctuary. Its early history constituted a declaration of the 
			transient character of sanctuaries and systems of ritual. God would 
			not eternally limit Himself to any building, or His grace to the 
			observance of any forms of external ritual. Long before the 
			chronicler’s time Jeremiah had proclaimed this lesson in the ears of 
			Judah: "Go ye now unto My place which was in Shiloh, where I caused 
			My name to dwell at the first, and see what I did to it for the 
			wickedness of My people Israel I will do unto the house which is 
			called by My name, wherein ye trust, and unto the place which I gave 
			to you and your fathers, as I have done to Shiloh I wilt make this 
			house like Shiloh, and will make this city a curse to all the 
			nations of the earth." {Jer 7:12-14} In the Tabernacle all things 
			were made according to the pattern that was showed to Moses in the 
			mount; for the Temple David was made to understand the pattern of 
			all things "in writing from the hand of Jehovah." {1Ch 28:19} If the 
			Tabernacle could be set aside for the Temple, the Temple might in 
			its turn give place to the universal Church. If God allowed David in 
			his great need to ignore the one legitimate altar of the Tabernacle 
			and to sacrifice without its officials, the faithful Israelite might 
			be encouraged to believe that in extreme emergency Jehovah would 
			accept his offering without regard to place or priest. 
			 
			The principles here involved are of very wide application. Every 
			ecclesiastical system was at first a new departure. Even if its 
			highest claims be admitted, they simply assert that within historic 
			times God set aside some other system previously enjoying the 
			sanction of His authority, and substituted for it a more excellent 
			way. The Temple succeeded the Tabernacle; the synagogue appropriated 
			in a sense part of the authority of the Temple; the Church 
			superseded both synagogue and Temple. God’s action in authorizing 
			each new departure warrants the expectation that He may yet sanction 
			new ecclesiastical systems; the authority which is sufficient to 
			establish is also adequate to supersede. When the Anglican Church 
			broke away from the unity of Western Christendom by denying the 
			supremacy of the Pope and refusing to recognize the orders of other 
			Protestant Churches, she set an example of dissidence that was 
			naturally followed by the Presbyterians and Independents. The revolt 
			of the Reformers against the theology of their day in a measure 
			justifies those who have repudiated the dogmatic systems of the 
			Reformed Churches. In these and in other ways to claim freedom from 
			authority, even in order to set up a new authority of one’s own, 
			involves in principle at least the concession to others of a similar 
			liberty of revolt against one’s self. 
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