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			 JEHOSHAPHAT-THE DOCTRINE 
			OF NONRESISTANCE 
			2 Chronicles 17-20 
			ASA was succeeded by his son Jehoshaphat, and his reign began 
			even more auspiciously than that of Asa. The new king had apparently 
			taken warning from the misfortunes of Asa’s closing years; and as he 
			was thirty-five years old when he came to the throne, he had been 
			trained before Asa fell under the Divine displeasure. He walked in 
			the first ways of his father David, before David was led away by 
			Satan to number Israel. Jehoshaphat’s heart was lifted up, not with 
			foolish pride, like Hezekiah’s, but "in the ways of Jehovah." He 
			sought the God of his father, and walked in God’s commandments, and 
			was not led astray by the evil example and influence of the kings of 
			Israel, neither did he seek the Baals. While Asa had been enfeebled 
			by illness and alienated from Jehovah, the high places and the 
			Asherim had sprung up again like a crop of evil weeds; but 
			Jehoshaphat once more removed them. According to the chronicler, 
			this removing of high places was a very labor of Sisyphus: the stone 
			was no sooner rolled up to the top of the hill than it rolled down 
			again. Jehoshaphat seems to have had an inkling of this; he felt 
			that the destruction of idolatrous sanctuaries and symbols was like 
			mowing down weeds and leaving the roots in the soil. Accordingly he 
			made an attempt to deal more radically with the evil: he would take 
			away the inclination as well as the opportunity for corrupt rites. A 
			commission of princes, priests, and Levites was sent throughout all 
			the cities of Judah to instruct the people in the law of Jehovah. 
			Vice will always find opportunities; it is little use to suppress 
			evil institutions unless the people are educated out of evil 
			propensities. If, for instance, every public-house in England were 
			closed tomorrow, and there were still millions of throats craving 
			for drink, drunkenness would still prevail, and a new administration 
			would promptly reopen gin-shops. 
			 
			Because the new king thus earnestly and consistently sought the God 
			of his fathers, Jehovah was with him, and established the kingdom in 
			his hand. Jehoshaphat received all the marks of Divine favorer 
			usually bestowed upon good kings. He waxed great exceedingly; he had 
			many fortresses, an immense army, and much wealth; he built castles 
			and cities of store; he had arsenals for the supply of war material 
			in the cities of Judah. And these cities, together with other 
			defensible positions and the border cities of Ephraim occupied by 
			Judah, were held by strong garrisons. While David had contented 
			himself with two hundred and eighty-eight thousand men from all 
			Israel, and Abijah had led forth four hundred thousand, and Asa five 
			hundred and eighty thousand, there waited on Jehoshaphat, in 
			addition to his numerous garrisons, eleven hundred and sixty 
			thousand men. Of these seven hundred and eighty thousand were men of 
			Judah in three divisions, and three hundred and eighty thousand were 
			Benjamites in two divisions. Probably the steady increase of the 
			armies of Abijah, Asa, and Jehoshaphat symbolizes a proportionate 
			increase of Divine favor. 
			 
			The chronicler records the names of the captains of the five 
			divisions. Two of them are singled out for special commendation: 
			Eliada the Benjamite is styled "a mighty man of valor," and of the 
			Jewish captain Amaziah the son of Zichri it is said that he offered 
			either himself or his possessions willingly to Jehovah, as David and 
			his princes had offered, for the building of the Temple. The devout 
			king had devout officers. 
			 
			He had also devoted subjects. All Judah brought him presents, so 
			that he had great riches and ample means to sustain his royal power 
			and splendor. Moreover, as in the case of Solomon and Asa, his piety 
			was rewarded with freedom from war: "The fear of Jehovah fell upon 
			all the kingdoms round about, so that they made no war against 
			Jehoshaphat." Some of his weaker neighbors were overawed by the 
			spectacle of his great power; the Philistines brought him presents 
			and tribute money, and the Arabians immense flocks of rams and 
			he-goats, seven thousand seven hundred of each. 
			 
			Great prosperity had the usual fatal effect upon Jehoshaphat’s 
			character. In the beginning of his reign he had strengthened himself 
			against Israel and had refused to walk in their ways; now power had 
			developed ambition, and he sought and obtained the honor of marrying 
			his son Jehoram to Athaliah the daughter of Ahab, the mighty and 
			magnificent king of Israel, possibly also the daughter of the 
			Phoenician princess Jezebel, the devotee of Baal. This family 
			connection of course implied political alliance. After a time 
			Jehoshaphat went down to visit his new ally, and was hospitably 
			received. {2Ch 18:1-3} 
			 
			Then follows the familiar story of Micaiah the son of Imlah, the 
			disastrous expedition of the two kings, and the death of Ahab, 
			almost exactly as in the book of Kings. There is one significant 
			alteration: both narratives tell us how the Syrian captains attacked 
			Jehoshaphat because they took him for the king of Israel and gave up 
			their pursuit when he cried out, and they discovered their mistake; 
			but the chronicler adds the explanation that Jehovah helped him and 
			God moved them to depart from him. And so the master of more than a 
			million soldiers was happy in being allowed to escape on account of 
			his insignificance, and returned in peace to Jerusalem. Oded and 
			Hanani had met his predecessors on their return from victory; now 
			Jehu the son of Hanani met Jehoshaphat when he came home defeated. 
			Like his father, the prophet was charged with a message of rebuke. 
			An alliance with the Northern Kingdom was scarcely less 
			reprehensible than one with Syria: "Shouldest thou help the wicked, 
			and love them that hate Jehovah? Jehovah is wroth with thee." Asa’s 
			previous reforms were not allowed to mitigate the severity of his 
			condemnation, but Jehovah was more merciful to Jehoshaphat. The 
			prophet makes mention of his piety and his destruction of idolatrous 
			symbols, and no further punishment is inflicted upon him. 
			 
			The chronicler’s addition to the account of the king’s escape from 
			the Syrian captains reminds us that God still watches over and 
			protects His children even when they are in the very act of sinning 
			against Him. Jehovah knew that Jehoshaphat’s sinful alliance with 
			Ahab did not imply complete revolt and apostasy. Hence doubtless the 
			comparative mildness of the prophet’s reproof. 
			 
			When Jehu’s father Hanani rebuked Asa, the king flew into a passion, 
			and cast the prophet into prison; Jehoshaphat received Jehu’s 
			reproof in a very different spirit: he repented himself, and found a 
			new zeal in his penitence. Learning from his own experience the 
			proneness of the human’ heart to go astray, he went out himself 
			amongst his people to bring them back to Jehovah; and just as Asa in 
			his apostasy oppressed his people, Jehoshaphat in his renewed 
			loyalty to Jehovah showed himself anxious for good government. He 
			provided judges in all the walled towns of Judah, with a court of 
			appeal at Jerusalem; he solemnly charged them to remember their 
			responsibility to Jehovah, to avoid bribery, and not to truckle to 
			the rich and powerful. Being themselves faithful to Jehovah, they 
			were to inculcate a like obedience and warn the people not to sin 
			against the God of their fathers. Jehoshaphat’s exhortation to his 
			new judges concludes with a sentence whose martial resonance 
			suggests trial by combat rather than the peaceful proceedings of a 
			law-court: "Deal courageously, and Jehovah defend the right!" 
			 
			The principle that good government must be a necessary consequence 
			of piety in the rulers has not been so uniformly observed in later 
			times as in the pages of Chronicles. The testimony of history on 
			this point is not altogether consistent. In spite of all the faults 
			of the orthodox and devout Greek emperors Theodosius the Great and 
			Marcian, their administration rendered important services to the 
			empire. Alfred the Great was a distinguished statesman and warrior 
			as well as zealous for true religion. St. Louis of France exercised 
			a wise control over Church and state. It is true that when a woman 
			reproached him in open court with being a king of friars, of 
			priests, and of clerks, and not a true king of France, he replied 
			with saintly meekness, "You say true! It has pleased the Lord to 
			make me king; it had been well if it had pleased Him to make some 
			one king who had better ruled the realm." But something must be 
			allowed for the modesty of the saint; apart from his unfortunate 
			crusades, it would have been difficult for France or even Europe to 
			have furnished a more beneficent sovereign. On the other hand, 
			Charlemagne’s successor, the Emperor Louis the Pious, and our own 
			kings Edward the Confessor and the saintly Henry VI, were alike 
			feeble and inefficient; the zeal of the Spanish kings and their 
			kinswoman Mary Tudor is chiefly remembered for its ghastly cruelty; 
			and in comparatively recent times the misgovernment of the States of 
			the Church was a byword throughout Europe. Many causes combined to 
			produce this mingled record. The one most clearly contrary to the 
			chronicler’s teaching was an immoral opinion that the Christian 
			should cease to be a citizen, and that the saint has no duties to 
			society. This view is often considered to be the special vice of 
			monasticism, but it reappears in one form or another in every 
			generation. The failure of the administration of Louis the Pious is 
			partly explained when we read that he was with difficulty prevented 
			from entering a monastery. In our own day there are those who think 
			that a newspaper should have no interest for a really earnest 
			Christian. According to their ideas, Jehoshaphat should have divided 
			his time between a private oratory in his palace and the public 
			services of the Temple, and have left his kingdom to the mercy of 
			unjust judges at home and heathen enemies abroad, or else have 
			abdicated in favor of some kinsman whose heart was not so perfect 
			with Jehovah. The chronicler had a clearer insight into Divine 
			methods, and this doctrine of his is not one that has been 
			superseded together with the Mosaic ritual. 
			 
			Possibly the martial tone of the sentence that concludes the account 
			of Jehoshaphat as the Jewish Justinian is due to the influence upon 
			the chronicler’s mind of die incident which he now describes. 
			 
			Jehoshaphat’s next experience was parallel to that of Asa with Zerah. 
			When his new reforms were completed, he was menaced with a 
			formidable invasion. His new enemies were almost as distant and 
			strange as the Ethiopians and Lubim who had followed Zerah. We hear 
			nothing about any king of Israel or Damascus, the usual leaders of 
			assaults upon Judah; we hear instead of a triple alliance against 
			Judah. Two of the allies are Moab and Ammon; but the Jewish kings 
			were not wont to regard these as irresistible foes, so that the 
			extreme dismay which takes possession of king and people must be due 
			to the third ally: the Meunim we have already met with in connection 
			with the exploits of the children of Simeon in the reign of 
			Hezekiah; they are also mentioned in the reign of Uzziah, and 
			nowhere else, unless indeed they are identical with the Maonites, 
			who are named with the Amalekites in Jdg 10:12. They are thus a 
			people peculiar to Chronicles, and appear from this narrative to 
			have inhabited Mount Seir, by which term "Meunim" is replaced as the 
			story proceeds. Since the chronicler wrote so long after the events 
			he describes, we cannot attribute to him any very exact knowledge of 
			political geography. Probably the term "Meunim" impressed his 
			contemporaries very much as it does a modern reader, and suggested 
			countless hordes of Bedouin plunderers; Josephus calls them a great 
			army of Arabians. This host of invaders came from Edom, and having 
			marched round the southern end of the Dead Sea, were now at Engedi, 
			on its western shore. The Moabites and Ammonites might have crossed 
			the Jordan by the fords near Jericho; but this route would not have 
			been convenient for their allies the Meunim, and would have brought 
			them into collision with the forces of the Northern Kingdom. 
			 
			On this occasion Jehoshaphat does not seek any foreign alliance. He 
			does not appeal to Syria, like Asa, nor does he ask Ahab’s successor 
			to repay in kind the assistance given to Ahab at Ramoth-gilead, 
			partly perhaps because there was no time, but chiefly because he had 
			learnt the truth which Hanani had sought to teach his father, and 
			which Hanani’s son had taught him. He does not even trust in his own 
			hundreds of thousands of soldiers, all of whom cannot have perished 
			at Ramoth-gilead; his confidence is placed solely and absolutely in 
			Jehovah. Jehoshaphat and his people made no military preparations; 
			subsequent events justified their apparent neglect: none were 
			necessary. Jehoshaphat sought Divine help instead, and proclaimed a 
			fast throughout Judah; and all Judah gathered themselves to 
			Jerusalem to ask help of Jehovah. This great national assembly met 
			"before the new court" of the Temple. The chronicler, who is 
			supremely interested in the Temple buildings, has told us nothing 
			about any new court, nor is it mentioned elsewhere; our author is 
			probably giving the title of a corresponding portion of the second 
			Temple: the place where the people assembled to meet Jehoshaphat 
			would be the great court built by Solomon. {2Ch 4:9} 
			 
			Here Jehoshaphat stood up as the spokesman of the nation, and prayed 
			to Jehovah on their behalf and on his own. He recalls the Divine 
			omnipotence; Jehovah is God of earth and heaven, God of Israel and 
			Ruler of the heathen, and therefore able to help even in this great 
			emergency:- 
			 
			"O Jehovah, God of our fathers, art Thou not God in heaven? Dost 
			Thou not rule all the kingdoms of the heathen? And in Thy hand is 
			power and might, so that none is able to withstand Thee." 
			 
			The land of Israel had been the special gift of Jehovah to His 
			people, in fulfillment of His ancient promise to Abraham:- 
			 
			"Didst not Thou, O our God, dispossess the inhabitants of this land 
			in favor of Thy people Israel, and gavest it to the seed of Abraham 
			Thy friend forever?" 
			 
			And now long possession had given Israel a prescriptive right to the 
			Land of Promise; and they had, so to speak, claimed their rights in 
			the most formal and solemn fashion by erecting a temple to the God 
			of Israel. Moreover, the prayer of Solomon at the dedication of the 
			Temple had been accepted by Jehovah as the basis of His covenant 
			with Israel, and Jehoshaphat quotes a clause from that prayer or 
			covenant which had expressly provided for such emergencies as the 
			present:- 
			 
			"And they" (Israel) "dwelt in the land, and built Thee therein a 
			sanctuary for Thy name, saying, If evil come upon us, the sword, 
			judgment, pestilence, or famine, we will stand before this house and 
			before Thee (for Thy name is in this house), and cry unto Thee in 
			our affliction; and Thou wilt hear and save." 
			 
			Moreover, the present invasion was not only an attempt to set aside 
			Jehovah’s disposition of Palestine and the long-established rights 
			of Israel: it was also gross ingratitude, a base return for the 
			ancient forbearance of Israel towards her present enemies:- 
			 
			"And now, behold, the children of Ammon and Moab and Mount Seir, 
			whom Thou wouldest not let Israel invade when they came out of the 
			land of Egypt, but they turned aside from them and destroyed them 
			not-behold how they reward us by coming to dispossess us of Thy 
			possession which Thou hast caused us to possess." 
			 
			For this nefarious purpose the enemies of Israel had come up in 
			overwhelming numbers, but Judah was confident in the justice of its 
			cause and the favor of Jehovah:- 
			 
			"O our God, wilt Thou not execute judgment against them? for we have 
			no might against this great company that cometh against us, neither 
			know we what to do, but our eyes are upon Thee." 
			 
			Meanwhile the great assemblage stood in the attitude of supplication 
			before Jehovah, not a gathering of mighty men of valor praying for 
			blessing upon their strength and courage, but a mixed multitude, men 
			and women, children and infants, seeking sanctuary, as it were, at 
			the Temple, and casting themselves in their extremity upon the 
			protecting care of Jehovah. Possibly when the king finished his 
			prayer the assembly broke out into loud, wailing cries of dismay and 
			agonized entreaty; but the silence of the narrative rather suggests 
			that Jehoshaphat’s strong, calm faith communicated itself to the 
			people, and they waited quietly for Jehovah’s answer, for some token 
			or promise of deliverance. Instead of the confused cries of an 
			excited crowd, there was a hush of expectancy, such as sometimes 
			falls upon an assembly when a great statesman has risen to utter 
			words which will be big with the fate of empires. 
			 
			And the answer came, not by fire from heaven or any visible sign, 
			not by voice of thunder accompanied by angelic trumpets, nor by 
			angel or archangel, but by a familiar voice hitherto unsuspected of 
			any supernatural gifts, by a prophetic utterance whose only 
			credentials were given by the influence of the Spirit upon the 
			speaker and his audience. The chronicler relates with evident 
			satisfaction how, in the midst of that great congregation, the 
			Spirit of Jehovah came, not upon king, or priest, or acknowledged 
			prophet, but upon a subordinate minister of the Temple, a Levite and 
			member of the Temple choir like himself. He is careful to fix the 
			identity of this newly called prophet and to gratify the family 
			pride of existing Levitical families by giving the prophet’s 
			genealogy for several generations. He was Jahaziel the son of 
			Zechariah, the son of Benaiah, the son of Jeiel, the son of 
			Mattaniah, of the sons of Asaph. The very names were encouraging. 
			What more suitable names could be found for a messenger of Divine 
			mercy than Jahaziel-"God gives prophetic vision" - the son of 
			Zechariah-"Jehovah remembers?" 
			 
			Jahaziel’s message showed that Jehoshaphat’s prayer had been 
			accepted; Jehovah responded without reserve to the confidence 
			reposed in Him: He would vindicate His own authority by delivering 
			Judah; Jehoshaphat should have blessed proof of the immense 
			superiority of simple trust in Jehovah over an alliance with Ahab or 
			the king of Damascus. Twice the prophet exhorts the king and people 
			in the very words that Jehovah had used to encourage Joshua when the 
			death of Moses had thrown upon him all the heavy responsibilities of 
			leadership: "Fear not, nor be dismayed." They need no longer cling 
			like frightened suppliants to the sanctuary, but are to go forth at 
			once, the very next day, against the enemy. That they may lose no 
			time in looking for them, Jehovah announces the exact spot where the 
			enemy are to be found: "Behold, they are coming by the ascent of 
			Hazziz, and ye shall find them at the end of the ravine before the 
			wilderness of Jeruel." This topographical description was doubtless 
			perfectly intelligible to the chronicler’s contemporaries, but it is 
			no longer possible to fix exactly the locality of Hazziz or Jeruel. 
			The ascent of Hazziz has been identified with the Wady Husasa, which 
			leads up from the coast of the Dead Sea north of Engedi, in the 
			direction of Tekoa; but the identification is by no means certain. 
			 
			The general situation, however, is fairly clear: the allied invaders 
			would come up from the coast into the highlands of Judah by one of 
			the wadies leading inland; they were to be met by Jehoshaphat and 
			his people on one of the "wildernesses," or plateaus of 
			pasture-land, in the neighborhood of Tekoa. 
			 
			But the Jews went forth, not as an army, but in order to be the 
			passive spectators of a great manifestation of the power of Jehovah. 
			They had no concern with the numbers and prowess of their enemies; 
			Jehovah Hiresell would lay bare His mighty arm, and Judah should see 
			that no foreign ally, no millions of native warriors, were necessary 
			for their salvation: "Ye shall not need to fight in this battle; 
			take up your position, stand still and see the deliverance of 
			Jehovah with you, O Judah and Jerusalem." 
			 
			Thus had Moses addressed Israel on the eve of the passage of the Red 
			Sea. Jehoshaphat and his people owned and honored the Divine message 
			as if Jahaziel were another Moses; they prostrated themselves on the 
			ground before Jehovah. The sons of Asaph had already been privileged 
			to provide Jehovah with His prophet; these Asaphites represented the 
			Levitical clan of Gershom: but now the Kohathites, with their guild 
			of singers, the sons of Korah, "stood up to praise Jehovah, the God 
			of Israel, with as exceeding loud voice," as the Levites sang when 
			the foundations of the second Temple were laid, and when Ezra and 
			Nehemiah made the people enter into a new covenant with their God. 
			 
			Accordingly on the morrow the people rose early in the morning and 
			went out to the wilderness of Tekoa, ten or twelve miles south of 
			Jerusalem. In ancient times generals were wont to make a set speech 
			to their armies before they led them into battle, so Jehoshaphat 
			addresses his subjects as they pass out before him. He does not seek 
			to make them confident in their own strength and prowess; he does 
			not inflame their passions against Moab and Ammon, nor exhort them 
			to be brave and remind them that they fight this day for the ashes 
			of their fathers and the temple of their God. Such an address would 
			have been entirely out of place, because the Jews were not going to 
			fight at all. Jehoshaphat only bids them have faith in Jehovah and 
			His prophets. It is a curious anticipation of Pauline teaching. 
			Judah is to be "saved by faith" from Moab and Ammon, as the 
			Christian is delivered by faith from sin and its penalty. The 
			incident might almost seem to have been recorded in order to 
			illustrate the truth that St. Paul was to teach. It is strange that 
			there is no reference to this chapter in the epistles of St. Paul 
			and St. James, and that the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews 
			does not remind us how "by faith Jehoshaphat was delivered from Moab 
			and Ammon." There is no question of military order, no reference to 
			the five great divisions into which the armies of Judah and Benjamin 
			are divided in chapter 17. Here, as at Jericho, the captain of 
			Israel is chiefly concerned to provide musicians to lead his army. 
			When David was arranging for the musical services before the Ark, he 
			took counsel with his captains. In this unique military expedition 
			there is no mention of captains; they were not necessary, and if 
			they were present there was no opportunity for them to show their 
			skill and prowess in battle. In an even more democratic spirit 
			Jehoshaphat takes counsel with the people-that is, probably makes 
			some proposition, which is accepted with universal acclamation. 
			 
			The Levitical singers, dressed in the splendid robes in which they 
			officiated at the Temple, were appointed to go before the people, 
			and offer praises unto Jehovah, and sing the anthem, "Give thanks 
			unto Jehovah, for His mercy endureth forever." These words or their 
			equivalent are the opening words, and the second clause the refrain, 
			of the post-Exilic Psalms 106,107,118, and 136. As the chronicler 
			has already ascribed Psalms 106 to David, he possibly ascribes all 
			four to David, and intends us to understand that one or all of them 
			were sung by the Levites on this occasion. Later Judaism was in the 
			habit of denoting a book or section of a book by its opening words. 
			 
			And so Judah, a pilgrim caravan rather than an army, went on to its 
			Divinely appointed tryst with its enemies, and at its head the 
			Levitical choir sang the Temple hymns. It was not a campaign, but a 
			sacred function, on a much larger scale a procession such as may be 
			seen winding its way, with chants and incense, banners, images, and 
			crucifixes, through the streets of Catholic cities. 
			 
			Meanwhile Jehovah was preparing a spectacle to gladden the eyes of 
			His people and reward their implicit faith and exact obedience; He 
			was working for those who were waiting for Him. Though Judah was 
			still far from its enemies, yet like the trumpet at Jericho, the 
			strain of praise and thanksgiving was the signal for the Divine 
			intervention: "When they began to sing and praise, Jehovah set liars 
			in wait against the children of Ammon, Moab, and Mount Self." Who 
			were these liars in wait? They could not be men of Judah: they were 
			not to fight, but to be passive spectators of their own deliverance. 
			Did the allies set an ambush for Judah, and was it thus that they 
			were afterwards led to mistake their own people for enemies? Or does 
			the chronicler intend us to understand that these "liars in wait" 
			were spirits; that the allied invaders were tricked and bewildered 
			like the shipwrecked sailors in the Tempest; or that when they came 
			to the wilderness of Jeruel there fell upon them a spirit of mutual 
			distrust, jealousy, and hatred, that had, as it were, been waiting 
			for them there? But, from whatever cause, a quarrel broke out 
			amongst them; and they were smitten. When Ammonite, Moabite, and 
			Edomite met, there were many private and public feuds waiting their 
			opportunity; and such confederates were as ready to quarrel among 
			themselves as a group of Highland clans engaged in a Lowland foray. 
			 
			"Ammon and Moab stood up against the inhabitants of Mount Seir 
			utterly to slay and destroy them." But even Ammon and Moab soon 
			dissolved their alliance; and at last, partly maddened by panic, 
			partly intoxicated by a wild thirst for blood, a very Berserker 
			frenzy, all ties of friendship and kindred were forgotten, and every 
			man’s hand was against his brother. "When they had made an end of 
			the inhabitants of Self, every one helped to destroy another." 
			 
			While this tragedy was enacting, and the air was rent with the cruel 
			yells of that death struggle, Jehoshaphat and his people moved on in 
			tranquil pilgrimage to the cheerful sound of the songs of Zion. At 
			last they reached an eminence, perhaps the long, low summit of some 
			ridge overlooking the plateau of Jeruel. When they had gained this 
			watchtower of the wilderness, the ghastly scene burst upon their 
			gaze. Jehovah had kept His word: they had found their enemy. They 
			"looked upon the multitude," all those hordes of heathen tribes that 
			had filled them with terror and dismay. They were harmless enough 
			now: the Jews saw nothing but "dead bodies fallen to the earth"; and 
			in that Aceldama lay all the multitude of profane invaders who had 
			dared to violate the sanctity of the Promised Land: "There were none 
			that escaped." So had Israel looked back after crossing the Red Sea 
			and seen the corpses of the Egyptians washed up on the shore. {Exo 
			14:30} Set when the angel of Jehovah smote Sennacherib, - 
			 
			"Like the leaves of the forest when autumn hath blown,  
			That host on the morrow lay withered and strown." 
			 
			There is no touch of pity for the wretched victims of their own 
			sins. Greeks of every city and tribe could feel the pathos of the 
			tragic end of the Athenian expedition against Syracuse; but the Jews 
			had no ruth for the kindred tribes that dwelt along their frontier, 
			and the age of the chronicler had not yet learnt that Jehovah had 
			either tenderness or compassion for the enemies of Israel. 
			 
			The spectators of this carnage-we cannot call them victors-did not 
			neglect to profit to the utmost by their great opportunity. They 
			spent three days in stripping the dead bodies; and as Orientals 
			delight in jewelled weapons and costly garments, and their chiefs 
			take the field with barbaric ostentation of wealth, the spoil was 
			both valuable and abundant: "riches, and raiment, and precious 
			jewels more than they could carry away." 
			 
			In collecting the spoil, the Jews had become dispersed through all 
			the wide area over which the fighting between the confederates must 
			have extended; but on the fourth day they gathered together again in 
			a neighboring valley and gave solemn thanks for their deliverance: 
			"There they blessed Jehovah; therefore the name of that place was 
			called the valley of Berachah unto this day." West of Tekoa. not too 
			far from the scene of carnage, a ruin and a wady still bear the name 
			"Bereikut"; and doubtless in the chronicler’s time the valley was 
			called Berachah, and local tradition furnished our author with this 
			explanation of the origin of the name. 
			 
			When the spoil was all collected, they returned to Jerusalem as they 
			came, in solemn procession, headed, no doubt, by the Levites, with 
			psalteries, and harps, and trumpets. They came back to the scene of 
			their anxious supplications: to the house of Jehovah. But yesterday, 
			as it were, they had assembled before Jehovah, terror-stricken at 
			the report of an irresistible host of invaders; and today their 
			enemies were utterly destroyed. They had experienced a deliverance 
			that might rank with the Exodus; and as at that former deliverance 
			they had spoiled the Egyptians, so now they had returned laden with 
			the plunder of Moab, Ammon, and Edom. And all their neighbors were 
			smitten with fear when they heard of the awful ruin which Jehovah 
			had brought upon these enemies of Israel. No one would dare to 
			invade a country where Jehovah laid a ghostly ambush of liars in 
			wait for the enemies of His people. The realm of Jehoshaphat was 
			quiet, not because he was protected by powerful allies or by the 
			swords of his numerous and valiant soldiers, but because Judah had 
			become another Eden, and cherubim with flaming swords guarded the 
			frontier on every hand, and "his God gave him rest round about." 
			 
			Then follow the regular summary and conclusion of the history of the 
			reign taken from the book of Kings, with the usual alterations in 
			the reference to further sources of information. We are told here, 
			in direct contradiction to 1Ch 17:6 and to the whole tenor of the 
			previous chapters, that the high places were not taken away, another 
			illustration of the slight importance the chronicler attached to 
			accuracy in details. He either overlooks the contradiction between 
			passages borrowed from different sources, or else does not think it 
			worth while to harmonize his inconsistent materials. 
			 
			But after the narrative of the reign is thus formally closed the 
			chronicler inserts a postscript, perhaps by a kind of after-thought. 
			The book of Kings narrates {1Ki 22:48-49} how Jehoshaphat made ships 
			to go to Ophir for gold, but they were broken at Ezion-geber; then 
			Ahaziah the son of Ahab proposed to enter into partnership with 
			Jehoshaphat, and the latter rejected his proposal. As we have seen, 
			the chronicler’s theory of retribution required some reason why so 
			pious a king experienced misfortune. What sin had Jehoshaphat 
			committed to deserve to have his ships broken? The chronicler has a 
			new version of the story, which provides an answer to this question. 
			Jehoshaphat did not build any ships by himself; his unfortunate navy 
			was constructed in partnership with Ahaziah; and accordingly the 
			prophet Eliezer rebuked him for allying himself a second time with a 
			wicked king of Israel, and announced the coming wreck of the ships. 
			And so it came about that the ships were broken, and the shadow of 
			Divine displeasure rested on the last days of Jehoshaphat. 
			 
			We have next to notice the chronicler’s most important omissions. 
			The book of Kings narrates another alliance of Jehoshaphat with 
			Jehoram, king of Israel, like his alliances with Ahab and Ahaziah. 
			The narrative of this incident closely resembles that of the earlier 
			joint expedition to Ramoth-Gilead. As then Jehoshaphat marched out 
			with Ahab, so now he accompanies Ahab’s son Jehoram, taking with him 
			his subject ally the king of Edom. Here also a prophet appears upon 
			the scene; but on this occasion Elisha addresses no rebuke to 
			Jehoshaphat for his alliance with Israel, but treats him with marked 
			respect: and the allied army wins a great victory. If this narrative 
			had been included in Chronicles, the reign of Jehoshaphat would not 
			have afforded an altogether satisfactory illustration of the main 
			lesson which the chronicler intended it to teach. 
			 
			This main lesson was that the chosen people should not look for 
			protection against their enemies either to foreign alliances or to 
			their own military strength, but solely to the grace and omnipotence 
			of Jehovah. One negative aspect of this principle has been enforced 
			by the condemnation of Asa’s alliance with Syria and Jehoshaphat’s 
			with Ahab and Ahaziah. Later on the uselessness of an army apart 
			from Jehovah is shown in the defeat of "the great host" of Joash by 
			"a small company" of Syrians. The positive aspect has been partially 
			illustrated by the signal victories of Abijah and Asa against 
			overwhelming odds and without the help of any foreign allies. But 
			these were partial and unsatisfactory illustrations: Jehovah 
			vouchsafed to share the glory of these victories with great armies 
			that were numbered by the hundred thousand. And, after all, the odds 
			were not so very overwhelming. Scores of parallels may be found in 
			which the odds were much greater. In the case of vast Oriental hosts 
			a superiority of two to one might easily be counterbalanced by 
			discipline and valor in the smaller army. 
			 
			The peculiar value to the chronicler of the deliverance from Moab, 
			Ammon, and the Meunim lay in the fact that no human arm divided the 
			glory with Jehovah. It was shown conclusively not merely that Judah 
			could safely be contented with an army smaller than those of its 
			neighbors, but that Judah would be equally safe with no army at all. 
			We feel that this lesson is taught with added force when we remember 
			that Jehoshaphat had a larger army than is ascribed to any Israelite 
			or Jewish king after David. Yet he places no confidence in his 
			eleven hundred and sixty thousand warriors, and he is not allowed to 
			make any use of them. In the case of a king with small military 
			resources, to trust in Jehovah might be merely making a virtue of 
			necessity; but if Jehoshaphat, with his immense army, felt that his 
			only real help was in his God, the example furnished an a fortiori 
			argument which would conclusively show that it was always the duty 
			and privilege of the Jews to say with the Psalmist, "Some trust in 
			chariots, and some in horses; but we will remember the name of 
			Jehovah our God." {Psa 20:7} The ancient literature of Israel 
			furnished illustrations of the principle: at the Red Sea the 
			Israelites had been delivered without any exercise of their own 
			warlike prowess; at Jericho, as at Jeruel, the enemy had been 
			completely overthrown by Jehovah before His people rushed upon the 
			spoil; and the same direct Divine intervention saved Jerusalem from 
			Sennacherib. But the later history of the Jew’s had been a series of 
			illustrations of enforced dependence upon Jehovah. A little 
			semi-ecclesiastical community inhabiting a small province that 
			passed from one great power to another like a counter in the game of 
			international politics had no choice but to trust in Jehovah, if it 
			were in any way to maintain its self-respect. For this community of 
			the second Temple to have had confidence in its sword and bow would 
			have seemed equally absurd to the Jews and to their Persian and 
			Greek masters. 
			 
			When they were thus helpless, Jehovah wrought for Israel, as He had 
			destroyed the enemies of Jehoshaphat in the wilderness of Jeruel. 
			The Jews stood still and saw the working out of their deliverance; 
			great empires wrestled together like Moab, Ammon, and Edom, in the 
			agony of the death struggle: and over all the tumult of battle 
			Israel heard the voice of Jehovah, "The battle is not yours, but 
			God’s; set yourselves, stand ye still, and see the deliverance of 
			Jehovah with you, O Judah and Jerusalem." Before their eyes there 
			passed the scenes of that great drama which for a time gave Western 
			Asia Aryan instead of Semitic masters. For them the whole action had 
			but one meaning: without calling Israel into the field, Jehovah was 
			devoting to destruction the enemies of His people and opening up a 
			way for His redeemed to return, like Jehoshaphat’s procession, to 
			the Holy City and the Temple. The long series of wars became a wager 
			of battle, in which Israel, herself a passive spectator, appeared by 
			her Divine Champion; and the assured issue was her triumphant 
			vindication and restoration to her ancient throne in Zion. 
			 
			After the Restoration God’s protecting providence asked no armed 
			assistance from Judah. The mandates of a distant court authorized 
			the rebuilding of the Temple and the fortifying of the city. The 
			Jews solaced their national pride and found consolation for their 
			weakness and subjection in the thought that their ostensible masters 
			were in reality only the instruments which Jehovah used to provide 
			for the security and prosperity of His children. 
			 
			We have already noticed that this philosophy of history is not 
			peculiar to Israel. Every nation has a similar system, and regards 
			its own interests as the supreme care of Providence. We have seen, 
			too, that moral influences have controlled and checkmated material 
			forces; God has fought against the biggest battalions. Similarly, 
			the Jews are not the only people for whom deliverances have been 
			worked out almost without any co-operation on their own part. It was 
			not a Negro revolt, for instance, that set free the slaves of our 
			colonies or of the Southern States. Italy regained her Eternal City 
			as an incidental effect of a great war in which she herself took no 
			part. Important political movements and great struggles involve 
			consequences equally unforeseen and unintended by the chief actors 
			in these dramas, consequences which would seem to them insignificant 
			compared with more obvious results. Some obscure nation almost ready 
			to perish is given a respite, a breathing space, in which it gathers 
			strength; instead of losing its separate existence, it endures till 
			time and opportunity make it one of the ruling influences in the 
			world’s history: some Geneva or Wittenberg becomes, just at the 
			right time, a secure refuge and vantage-ground for one of the Lord’s 
			prophets. Our understanding of what God is doing in our time and our 
			hopes for what He may yet do will indeed be small, if we think that 
			God can do nothing for our cause unless our banner flies in the 
			forefront of the battle, and the war-cry is "The sword of Gideon!" 
			as well as "The sword of Jehovah!" There will be many battles fought 
			in which we shall strike no blow and yet be privileged to divide the 
			spoil. We sometimes "stand still and see the salvation of Jehovah." 
			 
			The chronicler has found disciples in these latter days of a 
			kindlier spirit and more catholic sympathies. He and they have 
			reached their common doctrines by different paths, but the 
			chronicler teaches non-resistance as clearly as the Society of 
			Friends. "When you have fully yielded yourself to the Divine 
			teaching," he says, "you will neither fight yourself nor ask others 
			to fight for you; you will simply stand still and watch a Divine 
			providence protecting you and destroying your enemies." The Friends 
			could almost echo this teaching, not perhaps laying quite so much 
			stress on the destruction of the enemy, though among the visions of 
			the earlier Friends there were many that revealed the coming 
			judgments of the Lord; and the modern enthusiast is still apt to 
			consider that his enemies are the Lord’s enemies and to call the 
			gratification of his own revengeful spirit a vindication of the 
			honor of the Lord and a satisfaction of outraged justice. 
			 
			If the chronicler had lived today, the history of the Society of 
			Friends might have furnished him with illustrations almost as apt as 
			the destruction of the allied invaders of Judah. He would have 
			rejoiced to tell us how a people that repudiated any resort to 
			violence succeeded in conciliating savage tribes and founding the 
			flourishing colony of Pennsylvania, and would have seen the hand of 
			the Lord in the wealth and honor that have been accorded to a once 
			despised and persecuted sect. 
			 
			We should be passing to matters that were still beyond the 
			chronicler’s horizon, if we were to connect his teaching with our 
			Lord’s injunction, "Whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, 
			turn to him the other also." Such a sentiment scarcely harmonizes 
			with the three days’ stripping of dead bodies in the wilderness of 
			Jeruel. But though the chronicler’s motives for non-resistance were 
			not touched and softened with the Divine gentleness of Jesus of 
			Nazareth, and his object was not to persuade his hearers to patient 
			endurance of wrong, yet he had conceived the possibility of a mighty 
			faith that could put its fortunes unreservedly into the hands of God 
			and trust Him with the issues. If we are ever to be worthy citizens 
			of the kingdom of our Lord, it can only be by the sustaining power 
			and inspiring influence of a like faith. 
			 
			When we come to ask how far the people for whom he wrote responded 
			to his teaching and carried it into practical life, we are met with 
			one of the many instances of the grim irony of history. Probably the 
			chronicler’s glowing vision of peaceful security, guarded on every 
			hand by legions of angels, was partly inspired by the comparative 
			prosperity of the time at which he wrote. Other considerations 
			combine with this to suggest that the composition of his work 
			beguiled the happy leisure of one of the brighter intervals between 
			Ezra and the Maccabees. 
			 
			Circumstances were soon to test the readiness of the Jews, in times 
			of national danger, to observe the attitude of passive spectators 
			and wait for a Divine deliverance. It was not altogether in this 
			spirit that the priests met the savage persecutions of Antiochus. 
			They made no lame attempts to exorcise this evil spirit with hymns, 
			and psalteries, and harps, and trumpets; but the priest Mattathias 
			and his sons slew the king’s commissioner and raised the standard of 
			armed revolt. We do indeed find indications of something like 
			obedience to the chronicler’s principles. A body of the revolted 
			Jews were attacked on the Sabbath Day; they made no attempt to 
			defend themselves: "When they gave them battle with all speed, they 
			answered them not, neither cast they a stone at them, nor stopped 
			the places where they lay hid and their enemies rose up against them 
			on the sabbath, and slew them, with their wives, and their children, 
			and their cattle, to the number of a thousand people." No Divine 
			intervention rewarded this devoted faith, nor apparently did the 
			Jews expect it, for they had said, "Let us die all in our innocency; 
			heaven and earth shall testify for us that ye put us to death 
			wrongfully." This is, after all, a higher note than that of 
			Chronicles: obedience may not bring invariable reward; nevertheless 
			the faithful will not swerve from their loyalty. But the priestly 
			leaders of the people looked with no favorable eye upon this 
			offering up of human hecatombs in honor of the sanctity of the 
			Sabbath. They were not prepared to die passively; and, as 
			representatives of Jehovah and of the nation for the time being, 
			they decreed that henceforth they would fight against those who 
			attacked them, even on the Sabbath Day. Warfare on these more 
			secular principles was crowned with that visible success which the 
			chronicler regarded as the manifest sign of Divine approval; and a 
			dynasty of royal priests filled the throne and led the armies of 
			Israel, and assured and strengthened their authority by intrigues 
			and alliances with every heathen sovereign within their reach. 
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