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			 ASA: DIVINE RETRIBUTION 
			2 Chronicles 14-16 
			ABIJAH, dying, as far as we can gather from Chronicles, in the 
			odor of sanctity, was succeeded by his son Asa. The chronicler’s 
			history of Asa is much fuller than that which is given in the book 
			of Kings. The older narrative is used as a framework into which 
			material from later sources is freely inserted. The beginning of the 
			new reign was singularly promising. Abijah had been a very David, he 
			had fought the battles of Jehovah, and had assured the security and 
			independence of Judah. Asa, like Solomon, entered into the peaceful 
			enjoyment of his predecessor’s exertions in the field. "In his days 
			the land was quiet ten years," as in the days when the judges had 
			delivered Israel, and he was able to exhort his people to prudent 
			effort by reminding them that Jehovah had given them rest on every 
			side. This interval of quiet was used for both religious reform and 
			military precautions. The high places and heathen idols and symbols 
			which had somehow survived Abijah’s zeal for the Mosaic ritual were 
			swept away, and Judah was commanded to seek Jehovah and observe the 
			Law; and he built fortresses with towers, and gates, and bars, and 
			raised a great army "that bare bucklers and spears,"-no mere hasty 
			levy of half-armed peasants with scythes and axes. The mighty array 
			surpassed even Abijah’s great muster of four hundred thousand from 
			Judah and Benjamin: there were five hundred and eighty thousand men, 
			three hundred thousand out of Judah that bare bucklers and spears 
			and two hundred and eighty thousand out of Benjamin that bare 
			shields and drew bows. The great muster of Benjamites under Asa is 
			in striking contrast to the meager tale of six hundred warriors that 
			formed the whole strength of Benjamin after its disastrous defeat in 
			the days of the judges; and the splendid equipment of this mighty 
			host shows the rapid progress of the nation from the desperate days 
			of Shamgar and Jael or even of Saul’s early reign, when "there was 
			neither shield nor spear seen among forty thousand in Israel." These 
			references of buildings, especially fortresses, to military stores 
			and the vast numbers of Jewish and Israelite armies, form a distinct 
			class amongst the additions made by the chronicler to the material 
			taken from the book of Kings. They are found in the narratives of 
			the reigns of David, Rehoboam, Jehoshaphat, Uzziah, Jotham, 
			Manasseh, in fact in the reigns of nearly all the good kings; 
			Manasseh’s building was done after he had turned from his evil ways. 
			{1 Chronicles 12, etc.; 2Ch 11:5 ff; 2Ch 17:12 ff; 2Ch 26:9 ff; 2Ch 
			27:4 ff; 2Ch 28:23-24 ; 2Ch 33:14} Hezekiah and Josiah were too much 
			occupied with sacred festivals on the one hand and hostile invaders 
			on the other to have much leisure for building, and it would not 
			have been in keeping with Solomon’s character as the prince of peace 
			to have laid stress on his arsenals and armies Otherwise the 
			chronicler, living at a time when the warlike resources of Judah 
			were of the slightest, was naturally interested in these 
			reminiscences of departed glory; and the Jewish provincials would 
			take a pride in relating these pieces of antiquarian information 
			about their native towns, much as the servants of old manor-houses 
			delight to point out the wing which was added by some famous 
			cavalier or by some Jacobite Squire. 
			 
			Asa’s warlike preparations were possibly intended, like those of the 
			Triple Alliance, to enable him to maintain peace; but if so, their 
			sequel did not illustrate the maxim, "Si vis pacem, para bellum." 
			The rumour of his vast armaments reached a powerful monarch: "Zerah 
			the Ethiopian." (2Ch 14:9-15) The vagueness of this description is 
			doubtless due to the remoteness of the chronicler from the times he 
			is describing. Zerah has sometimes been identified with Shishak’s 
			successor, Osorkon I, the second king of the twenty-second Egyptian 
			dynasty. Zerah felt that Asa’s great army was a standing menace to 
			the surrounding princes, and undertook the task of destroying this 
			new military power: "He came out against them." Numerous as Asa’s 
			forces were, they still left him dependent upon Jehovah, for the 
			enemy were even more numerous and better equipped. Zerah led to 
			battle an army of a million men, supported by three hundred war 
			chariots. With this enormous host he came to Mareshah, at the foot 
			of the Judaean highlands, in a direction southwest of Jerusalem. In 
			spite of the inferiority of his army, Ass came out to meet him; "and 
			they set the battle in array in the valley of Zephathah at Mareshah." 
			Like Abijah, Asa felt that, with his Divine ally, he need not be 
			afraid of the odds against him even when they could be counted by 
			hundreds of thousands. Trusting in Jehovah, he had taken the field 
			against the enemy; and now at the decisive moment he made a 
			confident appeal for help: "Jehovah, there is none beside Thee to 
			help between the mighty and him that hath no strength." Five hundred 
			and eighty thousand men seemed nothing compared to the host arrayed 
			against them, and outnumbering them in the proportion of nearly two 
			to one. "Help us, Jehovah our God; for we rely on Thee, and in Thy 
			name are we come against this multitude. Jehovah, Thou art our God; 
			let not man prevail against Thee." 
			 
			Jehovah justified the trust reposed in Him. He smote the Ethiopians, 
			and they fled towards the southwest in the direction of Egypt; and 
			Asa and his army pursued them as far as Gerar, with fearful 
			slaughter, so that of Zerah’s million followers not one remained 
			alive. Of course this statement is hyperbolical. The carnage was 
			enormous, and no living enemies remained in sight. Apparently Gerar 
			and the neighboring cities had aided Zerah in his advance and 
			attempted to shelter the fugitives from Mareshah. Paralyzed with 
			fear of Jehovah, whose avenging wrath had been so terribly 
			manifested, these cities fell an easy prey to the victorious Jews. 
			They smote and spoiled all the cities about Gerar, and reaped a rich 
			harvest "for there was much spoil in them." It seems that the nomad 
			tribes of the southern wilderness had also in some way identified 
			themselves with the invaders; Asa attacked them in their turn. "They 
			smote also the tents of cattle"; and as the wealth of these tribes 
			lay in their flocks and herds, "they carried away sheep in abundance 
			and camels, and returned to Jerusalem." 
			 
			This victory is closely parallel to that of Abijah over Jeroboam. In 
			both the numbers of the armies are reckoned by hundreds of 
			thousands; and the hostile host outnumbers the army of Judah in the 
			one case by exactly two to one, in the other by nearly that 
			proportion: in both the king of Judah trusts with calm assurance to 
			the assistance of Jehovah, and Jehovah smites the enemy; the Jews 
			then massacre the defeated army and spoil or capture the neighboring 
			cities. 
			 
			These victories over superior numbers may easily be paralleled or 
			surpassed by numerous striking examples from secular history. The 
			odds were greater at Agincourt, where at least sixty thousand French 
			were defeated by not more than twenty thousand Englishmen; at 
			Marathon the Greeks routed a Persian army ten times as numerous as 
			their own; in India English generals have defeated innumerable 
			hordes of native warriors, as when Wellesley- 
			 
			"Against the myriads of Assaye Clashed with his fiery few and won." 
			 
			For the most part victorious generals have been ready to acknowledge 
			the succoring arm of the God of battles. Shakespeare’s Henry V after 
			Agincourt speaks altogether in the spirit of Asa’s prayer:- 
			 
			"O God, Thy arm was here; And not to us, but to Thy arm alone, 
			Ascribe we all Take it, God, For it is only Thine." 
			 
			When the small craft that made up Elizabeth’s fleet defeated the 
			huge Spanish galleons and galleasses, and the storms of the northern 
			seas finished the work of destruction, the grateful piety of 
			Protestant England felt that its foes had been destroyed by the 
			breath of the Lord; "Afflavit Deus et dissipantur." 
			 
			The principle that underlies such feelings is quite independent of 
			the exact proportions of opposing armies. The victories of inferior 
			numbers in a righteous cause are the most striking, but not the most 
			significant, illustrations of the superiority of moral to material 
			force. In the wider movements of international politics we may find 
			even more characteristic instances. It is true of nations as well as 
			of individuals that- 
			 
			"The Lord killeth and maketh alive; He bringeth down to the grave 
			and bringeth up: The Lord maketh poor and maketh rich; He bringeth 
			low, He also lifteth up: He raiseth up the poor out of the dust, He 
			lifteth up the needy from the dunghill, To make them sit with 
			princes And inherit the throne of glory." 
			 
			Italy in the eighteenth century seemed as hopelessly divided as 
			Israel under the judges, and Greece as completely enslaved to the 
			"unspeakable Turk" as the Jews to Nebuchadnezzar; and yet, destitute 
			as they were of any material resources, these nations had at their 
			disposal great moral forces: the memory of ancient greatness and the 
			sentiment of nationality; and today Italy can count hundreds of 
			thousands like the chroniclers Jewish kings, and Greece builds her 
			fortresses by land and her ironclads to command the sea. The Lord 
			has fought for Israel. 
			 
			But the principle has a wider application. A little examination of 
			the more obscure and complicated movements of social life will show 
			moral forces everywhere overcoming and controlling the apparently 
			irresistible material forces opposed to them. The English and 
			American pioneers of the movements for the abolition of slavery had 
			to face what seemed an impenetrable phalanx of powerful interests 
			and influences; but probably any impartial student of history would 
			have foreseen the ultimate triumph of a handful of earnest men over 
			all the wealth and political power of the slave-owners. The moral 
			forces at the disposal of the abolitionists were obviously 
			irresistible. But the soldier in the midst of smoke and tumult may 
			still be anxious and despondent at the very moment when the 
			spectator sees clearly that the battle is won: and the most earnest 
			Christian workers sometimes falter when they realize the vast and 
			terrible forces that fight against them. At such times we are both 
			rebuked and encouraged by the simple faith of the chronicler in the 
			overruling power of God. 
			 
			It may be objected that if victory were to be secured by Divine 
			intervention, there was no need to muster five hundred and eighty 
			thousand men or indeed any army at all. If in any and every case God 
			disposes, what need is there for the devotion to His service of our 
			best strength, and energy, and culture, or of any human effort at 
			all? A wholesome spiritual instinct leads the chronicler to 
			emphasize the great preparations of Abijah and Asa. We have no right 
			to look for Divine co-operation till we have done our best; we are 
			not to sit with folded hands and expect a complete salvation to be 
			wrought for us, and then to continue as idle spectators of God’s 
			redemption of mankind we are to tax our resources to the utmost to 
			gather our hundreds of thousands of soldiers; we are to work out our 
			own salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God that worketh in 
			us both to will and to do of His good pleasure. 
			 
			This principle may be put in another way. Even to the hundreds of 
			thousands the Divine help is still necessary. The leaders of great 
			hosts are as dependent upon Divine help as Jonathan and his 
			armor-bearer fighting single-handed against a Philistine garrison, 
			or David arming himself with a sling and stone against Goliath of 
			Gath. The most competent Christian worker in the prime of his 
			spiritual strength needs grace as much as the untried youth making 
			his first venture in the Lord’s service. 
			 
			At this point we meet with another of the chronicler’s obvious 
			self-contradictions. At the beginning of the narrative of Asa’s 
			reign we are told that the king did away with the high places and 
			the symbols of idolatrous worship, and that, because Judah had thus 
			sought Jehovah, He gave them rest. The deliverance from Zerah is 
			another mark of Divine favor: And yet in the fifteenth chapter Asa, 
			in obedience to prophetic admonition, takes away the abominations 
			from his dominions, as if there had been no previous reformation, 
			but we are told that the high places were not taken out of Israel. 
			The context would naturally suggest that Israel here means Asa’s 
			kingdom, as the true Israel of God; but as the verse is borrowed 
			from the book of Kings, and "out of Israel" is an editorial addition 
			made by the chronicler, it is probably intended to harmonize the 
			borrowed verse with the chronicler’s previous statement that Asa did 
			away with the high places. If so, we must understand that Israel 
			means the Northern Kingdom, from which the high places had not been 
			removed, though Judah had been purged from these abominations. But 
			here, as often elsewhere, Chronicles taken alone affords no 
			explanation of its inconsistencies. 
			 
			Again, in Asa’s first reformation he commanded Judah to seek Jehovah 
			and to do the Law and the commandments; and accordingly Judah sought 
			tile Lord. Moreover, Abijah, about seventeen years before Asa’s 
			second reformation, made it his special boast that Judah had not 
			forsaken Jehovah, but had priests ministering unto Jehovah, "the 
			sons of Aaron and the Levites in their work." During Rehoboam’s 
			reign of seventeen years Jehovah was duly honored for the first 
			three years, and again after Shishak’s invasion in the fifth year of 
			Rehoboam. So that for the previous thirty or forty years the due 
			worship of Jehovah had only been interrupted by occasional lapses 
			into disobedience. But now the prophet Oded holds before this 
			faithful people the warning example of the "long seasons" when 
			Israel was without the true God, and without a teaching priest, and 
			without law. And yet previously Chronicles supplies an unbroken list 
			of high-priests from Aaron downwards. In response to Oded’s appeal, 
			the king and people set about the work of reformation as if they had 
			tolerated some such neglect of God, the priests, and the Law as the 
			prophet had described. 
			 
			Another minor discrepancy is found in the statement that "the heart 
			of Asa was perfect all his days"; this is reproduced verbatim from 
			the book of Kings. Immediately afterwards the chronicler relates the 
			evil doings of Asa in the closing years of his reign. 
			 
			Such contradictions render it impossible to give a complete and 
			continuous exposition of Chronicles that shall be at the same time 
			consistent. Nevertheless they are not without their value for the 
			Christian student. They afford evidence of the good faith of the 
			chronicler. His contradictions are clearly due to his use of 
			independent and discrepant sources, and not to any tampering with 
			the statements of his authorities. They are also an indication that 
			the chronicler attaches much more importance to spiritual 
			edification than to historical accuracy. When he seeks to set before 
			his contemporaries the higher nature and better life of the great 
			national heroes, and thus to provide them with an ideal of kingship, 
			he is scrupulously and painfully careful to remove everything that 
			would weaken the force of the lesson which he is trying to teach; 
			but he is comparatively indifferent to accuracy of historical 
			detail. When his authorities contradict each other as to the number 
			or the date of Asa’s reformations, or even the character of his 
			later years, he does not hesitate to place the two narratives side 
			by side and practically to draw lessons from both. The work of the 
			chronicler and its presence with the Pentateuch and the Synoptic 
			Gospels in the sacred canon imply an emphatic declaration of the 
			judgment of the Spirit and the Church that detailed historical 
			accuracy is not a necessary consequence of inspiration. In 
			expounding this second narrative of a reformation by Asa, we shall 
			make no attempt at complete harmony with the rest of Chronicles; any 
			inconsistency between the exposition here and elsewhere will simply 
			arise from a faithful adherence to our text. 
			 
			The occasion then of Asa’s second reformation was as follows: Asa 
			was returning in triumph from his great defeat of Zerah, bringing 
			with him substantial fruits of victory in the shape of abundant 
			spoil. Wealth and power had proved a snare to David and Rehoboam, 
			and had involved them in grievous sin. Asa might also have succumbed 
			to the temptations of prosperity; but, by a special Divine grace not 
			vouchsafed to his predecessors, he was guarded against danger by a 
			prophetic warning. At the very moment when Asa might have expected 
			to be greeted by the acclamations of the inhabitants of Jerusalem, 
			when the king would be elated with the sense of Divine favor, 
			military success, and popular applause, the prophet’s admonition 
			checked the undue exaltation which might have hurried Asa into 
			presumptuous sin. Asa and his people were not to presume upon their 
			privilege; its continuance was altogether dependent upon their 
			continued obedience: if they fell into sin the rewards of their 
			former loyalty would vanish like fairy gold. "Hear ye me, Asa, and 
			all Judah and Benjamin: Jehovah is with you while ye be with Him; 
			and if ye seek Him, He will be found of you; but if ye forsake Him, 
			He will forsake you." This lesson was enforced from the earlier 
			history of Israel. The following verses are virtually a summary of 
			the history of the judges:- 
			 
			"Now for long seasons Israel was without the true God, and without 
			teaching priest, and without law." 
			 
			Judges tells how again and again Israel fell away from Jehovah. "But 
			when in their distress they turned unto Jehovah, the God of Israel, 
			and sought Him, he was found of them." 
			 
			Oded’s address is very similar to another and somewhat fuller 
			summary of the history of the judges, contained in Samuel’s farewell 
			to the people, in which he reminded them how when they forgot 
			Jehovah, their God, He sold them into the hand of their enemies, and 
			when they cried unto Jehovah, He sent Zerubbabel, and Barak, and 
			Jephthah, and Samuel, and delivered them out of the hand of their 
			enemies on every side, and they dwelt in safety. Oded proceeds to 
			other characteristics of the period of the judges:  
			 
			"There was no peace to him that went out, nor to him that came in; 
			but great vexations were upon all the inhabitants of the lands. And 
			they were broken in pieces, nation against nation and city against 
			city, for God did vex them with all adversity." 
			 
			Deborah’s song records great vexations: the highways were 
			unoccupied, and the travelers walked through by-ways; the rulers 
			ceased in Israel; Gideon "threshed wheat by the winepress to hide it 
			from the Midianites." The breaking of nation against nation and city 
			against city will refer to the destruction of Succoth and Penuel by 
			Gideon, the sieges of Shechem and Thebez by Ahimelech, the massacre 
			of the Ephraimites by Jephthah, and the civil war between Benjamin 
			and the rest of Israel and the consequent destruction of 
			Jabesh-gilead. {Jdg 5:6-7; Jdg 6:2; Jdg 8:15-17; Jdg 9:1-7; Jdg 
			12:6} 
			 
			"But," said Oded, "be ye strong, and let not your hands be slack, 
			for your work shall be rewarded." Oded implies that abuses were 
			prevalent in Judah which might spread and corrupt the whole people, 
			so as to draw down upon them the wrath of God and plunge them into 
			all the miseries of the times of the judges. These abuses were 
			wide-spread, supported by powerful interests and numerous adherents. 
			The queen-mother, one of the most important personages in an Eastern 
			state, was herself devoted to heathen observances. Their suppression 
			needed courage, energy, and pertinacity; but if they were resolutely 
			grappled with, Jehovah would reward the efforts of His servants with 
			success, and Judah would enjoy prosperity. Accordingly Asa took 
			courage and put away the abominations out of Judah and Benjamin and 
			the cities he held in Ephraim. The abominations were the idols and 
			all the cruel and obscene accompaniments of heathen worship. {Cf. 
			1Ki 15:12} In the prophet’s exhortation to be strong, and not be 
			slack, and in the corresponding statement that Asa took courage, we 
			have a hint for all reformers. Neither Oded nor Asa underrated the 
			serious nature of the task before them. They counted the cost, and 
			with open eyes and full knowledge confronted the evil they meant to 
			eradicate. The full significance of the chronicler’s language is 
			only seen when we remember what preceded the prophet’s appeal to 
			Asa. The captain of half a million soldiers, the conqueror of a 
			million Ethiopians with three hundred chariots, has to take courage 
			before he can bring himself to put away the abominations out of his 
			own dominions. Military machinery is more readily created than 
			national righteousness; it is easier to slaughter one’s neighbors 
			than to let light into the dark places that are full of the 
			habitations of cruelty; and vigorous foreign policy is a poor 
			substitute for good administration. The principle has its 
			application to the individual. The beam in our own eye seems more 
			difficult to extract than the mote in our brother’s, and a man often 
			needs more moral courage to reform himself than to denounce other 
			people’s sins or urge them to accept salvation. Most ministers could 
			confirm from their own experience Portia’s saying, "I can easier 
			teach twenty what were good to be done than be one of the twenty to 
			follow mine own teaching." 
			 
			Asa’s reformation was constructive as well as destructive; the 
			toleration of "abominations" had diminished the zeal of the people 
			for Jehovah, and even the altar of Jehovah before the porch of the 
			Temple had suffered from neglect: it was now renewed, and Asa 
			assembled the people for a great festival. Under Rehoboam many pious 
			Israelites had left the Northern Kingdom to dwell where they could 
			freely worship at the Temple; under Asa there was a new migration, 
			"for they fell to him out of Israel in abundance when they saw that 
			Jehovah his God was with him." And so it came about that in the 
			great assembly which Asa gathered together at Jerusalem not only 
			Judah and Benjamin, but also Ephraim, Manasseh, and Simeon, were 
			represented. The chronicler has already told us that after the 
			return from the Captivity some of the children of Ephraim and 
			Manasseh dwelt at Jerusalem with the children of Judah and Benjamin, 
			{1Ch 9:3} and he is always careful to note any settlement of members 
			of the ten tribes in Judah or any acquisition of northern territory 
			by the kings of Judah. Such facts illustrated his doctrine that 
			Judah was the true spiritual Israel, the real or twelve-tribed 
			whole, of the chosen people. 
			 
			Asa’s festival was held in the third month of his fifteenth year, 
			the month Sivan, corresponding roughly to our June. The Feast of 
			Weeks, at which first-fruits were offered, felt in this month; and 
			his festival was probably a special celebration of this feast. The 
			sacrifice of seven hundred oxen and seven thousand sheep out of the 
			spoil taken from the Ethiopians and their allies might be considered 
			a kind of first-fruits. The people pledged themselves most solemnly 
			to permanent obedience to Jehovah; this festival and its offerings 
			were to be first-fruits or earnest of future loyalty. "They entered 
			into a covenant to seek Jehovah, the God of their fathers, with all 
			their heart and with all their soul; they sware unto Jehovah with a 
			loud voice, and with shouting, and with trumpets, and with cornets." 
			The observance of this covenant was not to be left to the 
			uncertainties of individual loyalty; the community were to be on 
			their guard against offenders, Achans who might trouble Israel. 
			According to the stern law of the Pentateuch, {Exo 22:20, Deu 13:5, 
			Deu 13:9, Deu 13:15} "whosoever would not seek Jehovah, the God of 
			Israel, should be put to death, whether small or great, whether man 
			or woman." The seeking of Jehovah so far as it could be enforced by 
			penalties, must have consisted in external observances; and the 
			usual proof that a man did not seek Jehovah would be found in his 
			seeking other gods and taking part in heathen rites. Such apostasy 
			was not merely an ecclesiastical offense; it involved immorality and 
			a falling away from patriotism. The pious Jew could no more tolerate 
			heathenism than we could tolerate in England religions that 
			sanctioned polygamy or suttee. 
			 
			Having thus entered into covenant with Jehovah, "all Judah rejoiced 
			at their oath because they had sworn with all their heart, and 
			sought Him with their whole desire." At the beginning, no doubt, 
			they, like their king, "took courage"; they addressed themselves 
			with reluctance and apprehension to an unwelcome and hazardous 
			enterprise. They now rejoiced over the Divine grace that had 
			inspired their efforts and been manifested in their courage and 
			devotion, over the happy issue of their enterprise, and over the 
			universal enthusiasm for Jehovah; and He set the seal of his 
			approval upon their gladness, He was found of them, and Jehovah gave 
			them rest round about, so that there was no more war for twenty 
			years: unto the thirty-fifth year of Asa’s reign. It is an unsavory 
			task to put away abominations: many foul nests of unclean birds are 
			disturbed in the process; men would not choose to have this 
			particular cross laid upon them, but only those who take up their 
			cross and follow Christ can hope to enter into the joy of the Lord. 
			 
			The narrative of this second reformation is completed by the 
			addition of details borrowed from the book of Kings. The chronicler 
			next recounts how in the thirty-sixth year of Asa’s reign Baasha 
			began to fortify Ramah as an outpost against Judah but was forced to 
			abandon his undertaking by the intervention of the Syrian king. 
			Benhadad, whom Asa hired with his own treasures and those of the 
			Temple; whereupon Asa carried off Baasha’s stones and timber and 
			built Geba and Mizpah as Jewish outposts against Israel. With the 
			exception of the date and a few minor changes, the narrative so far 
			is taken verbatim from the book of Kings. The chronicler, like the 
			author of the priestly document of the Pentateuch, was anxious to 
			provide his readers with an exact and complete system of chronology; 
			he was the Ussher or Clinton of his generation. His date of the war 
			against Baasha is probably based upon an interpretation of the 
			source used for chapter 15; the first reformation secured a rest of 
			ten years, the second and more thorough reformation a rest exactly 
			twice as long as the first. In the interest of these chronological 
			references, the chronicler has sacrificed a statement twice repeated 
			in the book of Kings: that there was war between Asa and Baasha all 
			their days. As Baasha came to the throne in Asa’s third year, the 
			statement of the book of Kings would have seemed to contradict the 
			chronicler’s assertion that there was no war from the fifteenth to 
			the thirty-fifth year of Asa’s reign. {1Ki 15:16; 1Ki 15:32-33} 
			 
			After his victory over Zerah, Asa received a Divine message which 
			somewhat checked the exuberance of his triumph; a similar message 
			awaited him after his successful expedition to Ramah. By Oded 
			Jehovah had warned Asa, but now He commissioned Hanani the seer to 
			pronounce a sentence of condemnation. The ground of the sentence was 
			that Asa had not relied on Jehovah, but on the king of Syria. 
			 
			Here the chronicler echoes one of the keynotes of the great 
			prophets. Isaih had protested against the alliance which Ahaz 
			concluded with Assyria in order to obtain assistance again the 
			united onset of Rezin, king of Syria, and Pekah, king of Israel, and 
			had predicted that Jehovah would bring upon Ahaz, his people, and 
			his dynasty days that had not come since the disruption, even the 
			King of Assyria. {Isa 7:17} When this prediction was fulfilled, and 
			the thundercloud of Assyrian invasion darkened all the land of 
			Judah, the Jews, in their lack of faith, looked to Egypt for 
			deliverance; and again Isaiah denounced the foreign alliance: "Woe 
			to them that go down to Egypt for help but they look not unto the 
			Holy One of Israel, neither seek Jehovah; the strength of Pharaoh 
			shall be your shame, and the trust in the shadow of Egypt your 
			confusion." {Isa 31:1; Isa 30:3} So Jeremiah in his turn protested 
			against a revival of the Egyptian alliance: "Thou shalt be ashamed 
			of Egypt also, as thou wast ashamed of Assyria." {Jer 2:36} 
			 
			In their successive calamities the Jews could derive no comfort from 
			a study of previous history; the pretext upon which each of their 
			oppressors had intervened in the affairs of Palestine had been an 
			invitation from Judah. 
			 
			In their trouble they had sought a remedy worse than the disease; 
			the consequences of this political quackery had always demanded 
			still more desperate and fatal medicines. Freedom from the border 
			raids of the Ephraimites was secured at the price of the ruthless 
			devastations of Hazael; deliverance from Rezin only led to the 
			wholesale massacres and spoliation of Sennacherib. Foreign alliance 
			was an opiate that had to be taken in continually increasing doses, 
			till at last it caused the death of the patient. 
			 
			Nevertheless these are not the lessons which the seer seeks to 
			impress upon Asa. Hanani takes a loftier tone. He does not tell him 
			that his unholy alliance with Benhadad was the first of a chain of 
			circumstances that would end in the ruin of Judah. Few generations 
			are greatly disturbed by the prospect of the ruin of their country 
			in the distant future: "After us the Deluge." Even the pious king 
			Hezekiah, when told of the coming captivity of Judah, found much 
			comfort in the thought that there should be peace and truth in his 
			days. After the manner of the prophets, Hanani’s message is 
			concerned with his own times. To his large faith the alliance with 
			Syria presented itself chiefly as the loss of a great opportunity. 
			Asa had deprived himself of the privilege of fighting with Syria, 
			whereby Jehovah would have found fresh occasion to manifest His 
			infinite power and His gracious favor towards Judah. Had there been 
			no alliance with Judah, the restless and warlike king of Syria might 
			have joined Baasha to attack Asa; another million of the heathen and 
			other hundreds of their chariots would have been destroyed by the 
			resistless might of the Lord of Hosts. And yet, in spite of the 
			great object-lesson he had received in the defeat of Zerah, Asa had 
			not thought of Jehovah as his Ally. He had forgotten the 
			all-observing, all-controlling providence of Jehovah, and had 
			thought it necessary to supplement the Divine protection by hiring a 
			heathen king with the treasures of the Temple; and yet "the eyes of 
			Jehovah run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to show Himself 
			strong in behalf of them whose heart is perfect toward Him." With 
			this thought, that the eyes of Jehovah run to and fro throughout the 
			earth, Zechariah {Zec 4:10} comforted the Jews in the dark days 
			between the Return and the rebuilding of the Temple. Possibly during 
			Asa’s twenty years of tranquility his faith had become enfeebled for 
			want of any severe discipline. It is only with a certain reserve 
			that we can venture to pray that the Lord will "take from our lives 
			the strain and stress." The discipline of helplessness and 
			dependence preserves the consciousness of God’s loving providence. 
			The resources of Divine grace are not altogether intended for our 
			personal comfort; we are to tax them to the utmost, in the assurance 
			that God will honor all our drafts upon His treasury. The great 
			opportunities of twenty years of peace and prosperity were not given 
			to Asa to lay up funds with which to bribe a heathen king, and then, 
			with this reinforcement of his accumulated resources, to accomplish 
			the mighty enterprise of stealing Baasha’s stones and timber and 
			building the walls of a couple of frontier fortresses. With such a 
			history and such opportunities behind him, Asa should have felt 
			himself competent, with Jehovah’s help, to deal with both Baasha and 
			Benhadad, and should have had courage to confront them both. 
			 
			Sin like Asa’s has been the supreme apostasy of the Church in all 
			her branches and through all her generations: Christ has been 
			denied, not by lack of devotion, but by want of faith. Champions of 
			the truth, reformers and guardians of the Temple, like Asa, have 
			been eager to attach to their holy cause the cruel prejudices of 
			ignorance and folly, the greed and vindictiveness of selfish men. 
			They have feared lest these potent forces should be arrayed amongst 
			the enemies of the Church and her Master. Sects and parties have 
			eagerly contested the privilege of counseling a profligate prince 
			how he should satisfy his thirst for blood and exercise his wanton 
			and brutal insolence; the Church has countenanced almost every 
			iniquity and striven to quench by persecution every new revelation 
			of the Spirit, in order to conciliate vested interests and 
			established authorities. It has even been suggested that national 
			Churches and great national vices were so intimately allied that 
			their supporters were content that they should stand or fall 
			together. On the other hand, the advocates of reform have not been 
			slow to appeal to popular jealousy and to aggravate the bitterness 
			of social feuds. To Hanani the seer had come the vision of a larger 
			and purer faith, that would rejoice to see the cause of Satan 
			supported by all the evil passions and selfish interests that are 
			his natural allies. He was assured that the greater the host of 
			Satan, the more signal and complete would be Jehovah’s triumph. If 
			we had his faith, we should not be anxious to bribe Satan to cast 
			out Satan, but should come to understand that the full muster of 
			hell assailing us in front is less dangerous than a few companies of 
			diabolic mercenaries in our own array. In the former case the 
			overthrow of the powers of darkness is more certain and more 
			complete. 
			 
			The evil consequences of Asa’s policy were not confined to the loss 
			of a great opportunity, nor were his treasures the only price he was 
			to pay for fortifying Geba and Mizpah with Baasha’s building 
			materials. Hanani declared to him that from henceforth he should 
			have wars. This purchased alliance was only the beginning, and not 
			the end, of troubles. Instead of the complete and decisive victory 
			which had disposed of the Ethiopians once for all, Asa and his 
			people were harassed and exhausted by continual warfare. The 
			Christian life would have more decisive victories, and would be less 
			of a perpetual and wearing struggle, if we had faith to refrain from 
			the use of doubtful means for high ends. 
			 
			Oded’s message of warning had been accepted and obeyed, but Asa was 
			now no longer docile to Divine discipline. David and Hezekiah 
			submitted themselves to the censure of Gad and Isaiah; but Asa was 
			wroth with Hanani and put him in prison, because the prophet had 
			ventured to rebuke him. His sin against God corrupted even his civil 
			administration; and the ally of a heathen king, the persecutor of 
			God’s prophet, also oppressed the people. Three years after the 
			repulse of Baasha a new punishment fell upon Asa: his feet became 
			grievously diseased. Still he did not humble himself, but was guilty 
			of further sin he sought not Jehovah, but the physicians. It is 
			probable that to seek Jehovah concerning disease was not merely a 
			matter of worship. Reuss has suggested that the legitimate practice 
			of medicine belonged to the schools of the prophets; but it seems 
			quite as likely that in Judah, as in Egypt, any existing knowledge 
			of the art of healing was to be found among the priests. Conversely, 
			physicians who were neither priests nor prophets of Jehovah were 
			almost certain to be ministers of idolatrous worship and magicians. 
			They failed apparently to relieve their patient: Asa lingered in 
			pain and weakness for two years, and then died. Probably the 
			sufferings of his latter days had protected his people from further 
			oppression, and had at once appealed to their sympathy and removed 
			any cause for resentment. When be died, they only remembered his 
			virtues and achievements; and buried him with royal magnificence, 
			with sweet odors and divers kinds of spices; and made a very great 
			burning for him, probably of aromatic woods. 
			 
			In discussing the chronicler’s picture of the good kings, we have 
			noticed that, while Chronicles and the book of Kings agree in 
			mentioning the misfortunes which as a rule darkened their closing 
			years, Chronicles in each case records some lapse into sin as 
			preceding these misfortunes. From the theological standpoint of the 
			chronicler’s school, these invidious records of the sins of good 
			kings were necessary in order to account for their misfortunes. The 
			devout student of the book of Kings read with surprise that of the 
			pious kings who had been devoted to Jehovah and His temple, whose 
			acceptance by Him had been shown by the victories vouchsafed to 
			them, one had died of a painful disease in his feet, another in a 
			lazar-house, two had been assassinated, and one slain in battle. Why 
			had faith and devotion been so ill rewarded? Was it not vain to 
			serve God? What profit was there in keeping His ordinances? The 
			chronicler felt himself fortunate in discovering amongst his later 
			authorities additional information which explained these mysteries 
			and justified the ways of God to man. Even the good kings had not 
			been without reproach, and their misfortunes had been the righteous 
			judgment on their sins. 
			 
			The principle which guided the chronicler in this selection of 
			material was that sin was always punished by complete, immediate, 
			and manifest retribution in this life, and that conversely all 
			misfortune was the punishment of sin. There is a simplicity and 
			apparent justice about this theory that has always made it the 
			leading doctrine of a certain stage of moral development. It was 
			probably the popular religious teaching in Israel from early days 
			till the time when our Lord found it necessary to protest against 
			the idea that the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with 
			their sacrifices were sinners above all Galileans because they had 
			suffered these things, or that the eighteen upon whom the tower in 
			Siloam fell, and killed them were offenders above all the 
			inhabitants of Jerusalem. This doctrine of retribution was current 
			among the Greeks. When terrible calamities fell upon men their 
			neighbors supposed these to be the punishment of specially heinous 
			crimes. When the Spartan king Cleomenes committed suicide, the 
			public mind in Greece at once inquired of what particular sin he had 
			thus paid the penalty. The horrible circumstances of his death were 
			attributed to the wrath of some offended deity, and the cause of the 
			offence was sought for in one of his many acts of sacrilege, 
			possibly he was thus punished because he had bribed the priestess of 
			the Delphic oracle. The Athenians, however, believed that his 
			sacrilege had consisted in cutting down trees in their sacred grove 
			at Eleusis; but the Argives preferred to hold that he came to an 
			untimely end because he had set fire to a grove sacred to their 
			eponymous hero Argos. Similarly, when in the course of the 
			Peloponnesian war the Aeginetans were expelled from their island, 
			this calamity was regarded as a punishment inflicted upon them 
			because fifty years before they had dragged away and put to death a 
			suppliant who had caught hold of the handle of the door of the 
			temple of Demeter Theomophorus. On the other hand, the wonderful way 
			in which on four or five occasions the ravages of pestilence 
			delivered Dionysius of Syracuse from his Carthaginian enemies was 
			attributed by his admiring friends to the favor of the gods. 
			 
			Like many other simple and logical doctrines, this Jewish theory of 
			retribution came into collision with obvious facts, and seemed to 
			set the law of God at variance with the enlightened conscience. 
			"Beneath the simplest forms of truth the subtlest error lurks." The 
			prosperity of the wicked and the sufferings of the righteous were a 
			standing religious difficulty to the devout Israelite. The popular 
			doctrine held its ground tenaciously, supported not only by ancient 
			prescription, but also by the most influential classes in society. 
			All who were young, robust, wealthy, powerful, or successful were 
			interested in maintaining a doctrine that made health, riches, rank, 
			and success the outward and visible signs of righteousness. 
			Accordingly the simplicity of the original doctrine was hedged about 
			with an ingenious and elaborate apologetic. The prosperity of the 
			wicked was held to be only for a season; before he died the judgment 
			of God would overtake him. It was a mistake to speak of the 
			sufferings of the righteous: these very sufferings showed that his 
			righteousness was only apparent, and that in secret he had been 
			guilty of grievous sin. 
			 
			Of all the cruelty inflicted in the name of orthodoxy there is 
			little that can surpass the refined torture due to this Jewish 
			apologetic. Its cynical teaching met the sufferer in the anguish of 
			bereavement, in the pain and depression of disease, when he was 
			crushed by sudden and ruinous losses or publicly disgraced by the 
			unjust sentence of a venal law-court. Instead of receiving sympathy 
			and help, he found himself looked upon as a moral outcast and pariah 
			on account of his misfortunes; when he most needed Divine grace, he 
			was bidden to regard himself as a special object of the wrath of 
			Jehovah. If his orthodoxy survived his calamities, he would review 
			his past life with morbid retrospection, and persuade himself that 
			he had indeed been guilty above all other sinners. 
			 
			The book of Job is an inspired protest against the current theory of 
			retribution, and the full discussion of the question belongs to the 
			exposition of that book. But the narrative of Chronicles, like much 
			Church history in all ages, is largely controlled by the 
			controversial interests of the school from which it emanated. In the 
			hands of the chronicler the story of the kings of Judah is told in 
			such a way that it becomes a polemic against the book of. Job. The 
			tragic and disgraceful death of good kings presented a crucial 
			difficulty to the chronicler’s theology. A good man’s other 
			misfortunes might be compensated for by prosperity in his latter 
			days; but in a theory of retribution which required a complete 
			satisfaction of justice in this life there could be no compensation 
			for a dishonorable death. Hence the chronicler’s anxiety to record 
			any lapses of good kings in their latter days. 
			 
			The criticism, and correction of this doctrine belong, as we have 
			said, to the exposition of the book of Job. Here we are rather 
			concerned to discover the permanent truth of which the theory is at 
			once an imperfect and exaggerated expression. To begin with, there 
			are sins which bring upon the transgressor a swift, obvious, and 
			dramatic punishment. Human law deals thus with some sins; the laws 
			of health visit others with a similar severity; at times the Divine 
			judgment strikes down men and nations before an awestricken world. 
			Amongst such judgments we might reckon the punishments of royal sins 
			so frequent in the pages of Chronicles. God’s judgments are not 
			usually so immediate and manifest, but these striking instances 
			illustrate and enforce the certain consequences of sin. We are 
			dealing now with cases in which God was set at naught; and, apart 
			from Divine grace, the votaries of sin are bound to become its 
			slaves and victims. Ruskin has said, "Medicine often fails of its 
			effect, but poison never; and while, in summing the observation of 
			past life not un-watchfully spent, I can truly say that I bare a 
			thousand times seen Patience disappointed of her hope and Wisdom of 
			her aim, I have never yet seen folly fruitless of mischief, nor vice 
			conclude but in calamity." Now that we have been brought into a 
			fuller light and delivered from the practical dangers of the ancient 
			Israelite doctrine, we can afford to forget the less satisfactory 
			aspects of the chronicler’s teaching, and we must feel grateful to 
			him for enforcing the salutary and necessary lesson that sin brings 
			inevitable punishment, and that therefore, whatever present 
			appearances may suggest, "the world was certainly not framed for the 
			lasting convenience of hypocrites, libertines, and oppressors." 
			 
			Indeed, the consequences of sin are regular and exact; and the 
			judgments upon the kings of Judah in Chronicles accurately symbolize 
			the operations of Divine discipline. But Rain, and ruin, and 
			disgrace are only secondary elements in God’s judgments; and most 
			often they are not judgments at all. They have their uses as 
			chastisements; but if we dwell upon them with too emphatic an 
			insistence, men suppose that pain is a worse evil than sin, and that 
			sin is only to be avoided because it causes suffering to the sinner. 
			The really serious consequence of evil acts is the formation and 
			confirmation of evil character. Herbert Spencer says in his "First 
			Principles" "that motion once set up along any line becomes itself a 
			cause of subsequent motion along that line." This is absolutely true 
			in moral and spiritual dynamics: every wrong thought, feeling, word, 
			or act, every failure to think, feel, speak, or act rightly, at once 
			alters a man’s character for the worse. Henceforth he will find it 
			easier to sin and more difficult to do right; he has twisted another 
			strand into the cord of habit: and though each may be as fine as the 
			threads of a spider’s web, in time there will be cords strong enough 
			to have bound Samson before Delilah shaved off his seven locks. This 
			is the true punishment of sin: to lose the fine instincts, the 
			generous impulses, and the nobler ambitions of manhood, and become 
			every day more of a beast and a devil. 
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