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THE SPEAKERS FOR GOD -
I. THE KING
Deu 17:14-20
IN approaching the main section of the legislation it will be
necessary, in accordance with the expository character of the series
to which this volume belongs, to abandon the consecutive character
of the comment. It would lead us too far into archaeology to discuss
the meaning and origin of all the legal provisions which follow.
Moreover nothing short of an extensive commentary would do them
justice, and for our purpose we must endeavor to group the
prescriptions of the code, and discuss them so. As it stands there
is no arrangement traceable. So utterly without order is it, that it
can hardly he thought that it is in the exact shape in which it left
its author’s hands. Transpositions and misplacements must, one
thinks, have taken place to some extent. We are thus left free to
make our own arrangements, and it would appear most fitting to
discuss the code under the five heads of National Life, Economic
Life, and three fundamental qualities of a healthy national
life-Purity, Justice, and the Treatment of the Poor. Every phase of
the laws which remain for discussion can easily be brought under
these heads, and this chapter will discuss the first of them, the
organization of the national life.
It is a striking instance of the accuracy of the national memory
that there is a clear and conscious testimony to the fact that for
long there was no king in Israel. Had the later historians been at
the mercy of a tradition so deeply influenced by later times as it
pleases some critics to suppose, it would seem inexplicable that
Moses should not have been represented as a king, and especially
that the conquest should not have been represented as a kings work.
Evidently there was a perfectly clear national consciousness of the
earlier circumstances of the nation, and it presents us with an
outline of the original constitution which is very simple and
credible. According to this the tribes whom Moses led were ruled in
the main by their own sheikhs or elders. Under these again were the
clans or fathers’ houses similarly governed; and lastly, there were
the families in the wider sense, made up of the individual
households and governed by their heads. So far as can be gathered,
Moses did not interfere with this fundamental organization at all.
He added to it only his own supremacy, as the mediator and means of
communication between Yahweh and His people. As such, his decision
was final in all matters too difficult for the sheikhs and judges.
But the fundamental point never lost sight of was that Yahweh alone
was their ruler, their legislator, their leader in war, and the doer
of justice among His people. From the very first moment of Israel’s
national existence therefore, from the moment that it passed the Red
Sea, Yahweh was acknowledged as King, and Moses was simply His
representative. That is the cardinal fact in this nation’s life, and
amid all the difficulties and changes of its later history that was
always held to. Even when kings were appointed, they were regarded
only as the viceroys of Yahweh. In this way the whole of the
national affairs received a religious color; and those who look at
them from a religious standpoint have a justification which would
have been less manifest under other circumstances.
It is, therefore, no delusion of later times which finds in
Israelite institutions a deep religious meaning. Nor is the
persistence with which the Scriptural historians regard only the
religious aspects of national life to be laid as a fault to their
charge. It is nothing to the purpose to say that the bulk of the
people had no thoughts of that kind, that the whole fabric of the
national institutions appeared to them in a different light. We have
no right to lower the meaning of things to the gross materialism of
the populace. One would almost think, to hear some Old Testament
critics speak, that in this most ideal realm of religion we can be
safe from illusion only when ideal points of view are abandoned,
that only in the commonest light of common day have we any security
that we are not deceiving ourselves. But most of these same men
would resent it bitterly if that standard were applied to the
history of the lands they themselves love. What Englishman would
think that Great Britain’s career and destiny were rightly estimated
if imperial sentiment and humanitarian aims were thrust aside in
favor of purely material considerations? Why then should it be
supposed that the views and opinions of the multitude are the only
safe criterion to be applied to the institutions of God’s ancient
people?
In truth, there is no reason why we should think so. The Divine
kingship made it impossible that the higher minds should be content
with the low aims of the opportunists of their day, whether these
were of the multitude or not. Even the entrance into Canaan, which
to the mass of the people was, in the first place, a mere
acquisition of territory and wealth, was idealized for the leaders
of the people by the thought that it was the land promised by Yahweh
to their fathers, the land in which they should live in communion
with Him. Generally, it may be said that the desire for communion
with God was the impelling and formative power in Israel. The
thoughts of even the dullest and most earthly were touched by that
ideal at times; and no leader, whether royal, or priestly, or
prophetic, ever really succeeded among this people who did not keep
that persistently in view as the true goal of his efforts. Moreover
this gave its depth of meaning to the whole movement of history in
Israel. Every triumph and defeat, every lapse and every reform had,
owing to this direction of the people’s efforts, as significance far
beyond itself. These were not merely incidents in the history of an
obscure people; they were the pulsations and movements of the
world’s advance to the full revelation of God. All that would have
been wholly national or tribal in the institutions and arrangements
of an ordinary people was in Israel lifted up into the religious
sphere; and the orders of men who spoke for the invisible King-the
earthly king, the priest, and the prophet-became naturally the
organs of the national life.
The king’s position was entirely dependent upon Yahweh. He was to be
chosen by Yahweh, he was to act for Yahweh, and no king could
rightly fill his place in Israel who was not loyal to that
conception. It is in this sense that David was the man after God’s
own heart. He, in contrast to Saul and to many of the later kings,
accepted with entire loyalty, notwithstanding his great natural
powers, the position of viceroy for Yahweh. It is, therefore, an
essential truth which underlies the Scriptural judgment that the
kings who made themselves, or attempted to make themselves,
independent of Yahweh, were false to Israel and to their true
calling. And this is why Samuel, when the people demanded a king,
regarded the movement with stern disapproval, and why he received an
oracle denouncing the movement as a falling away from Yahweh. For,
in the first place, the motive for the people’s request, their
desire to be like other nations, was in itself a rejection of their
God. It repudiated, in part at least, the position of Israel as His
peculiar people, and implied that an earthly king would do more for
them than Yahweh had done; whereas if they had been faithful and
united enough in spirit they would have found victory easy. In the
second, the request in itself was a confession of unfitness for
their high national calling; it was a confession of failure under
the conditions which had been Divinely appointed for them. Not only
in the eyes of the Biblical historian therefore, but as a plain
matter of fact, the demand was an expression of dissatisfaction on
the people’s part with their invisible King. They needed something
less spiritual than Yahweh’s invisible presence and the prophetic
word to guide them. But since they had declared themselves thus
unfaithful, Yahweh had to deal with them at that level, and granted
their request as a concession to their unbelief and hardness of
heart.
That is the representation of the Books of Samuel; and the absence
of any similar law from the codes before Deuteronomy confirms the
view that the earthly kingship was not an essential part of the
polity of Israel, but a mere episode. Nowhere in legislation save
here in Deuteronomy is the king ever mentioned, and nowhere, not
even here, is any provision made for his maintenance. No civil taxes
are appointed by any law, while the most ample provision is made for
the presentation direct to Yahweh, as Lord paramount, of tithes and
first fruits.
The history and the law alike agree therefore in regarding the
kingship as somewhat of an excrescence upon the national polity; and
this law, where alone the king’s existence is recognized, confines
itself strictly to securing the theocratic character of the
constitution. He must be chosen by Yahweh; he must be a born
worshipper of Yahweh, not a foreigner; and he must rule in
accordance with the law given by Yahweh. Further, the ideal
Israelite king must be on his guard against the grossly voluptuous
luxury which Oriental sovereigns have never been able to resist,
either in ancient or modern times; and also against the lust for war
and conquest which was the ruling passion of Assyrian and Egyptian
kings. Evidently too the ideal king of Israel was, like Bedouin
sheikhs now, expected to be rich, able to maintain his state out of
his own revenues. The tribute paid by subject peoples, together with
the booty taken in war and the profits of trade, were his only
legitimate sources of income beyond his own wealth.
Every other exaction was more or less of an oppression. He had no
right to make any claims upon the land, for that was held direct of
Yahweh. Nor were there any regular taxes, so far as the Old
Testament informs us. The only approach to that would appear to be
that the presents with which his subjects voluntarily approached the
king were sometimes and by some rulers made permanent demands; at
least that would seem to be the meaning of the somewhat obscure
statement in 1Sa 17:25 that King Saul would reward the slayer of
Goliath by making "his father’s house free in Israel." Some kind of
regular exaction from which the victorious champion’s family should
be free must here be referred to; but it would not be safe, in the
absence of all other evidence, to suppose that regular taxes in the
modern sense are referred to. More probably something of the nature
of the "benevolences" which Edward IV introduced into England as a
source of revenue is; meant. If a popular and powerful king of
Israel was in want of money, he could always secure it by ordering
those able to afford handsome presents to appear yearly before him
with such gifts as a loyal subject should offer. For the convenience
of all parties an indication of how much would be expected might be
made, and then he would have what to all intents and purposes would
be a tax. Along with this he might also enforce the corvee; but such
things were always regarded as excesses of despotic power. That
Samuel in his mishpat hammelekh {1Sa 8:15} warns the people that the
king would demand of them a tithe of their cereal crops and of the
fruit of their vineyards and of their sheep, does not contradict
this reading of the passage in 1 Samuel 17. For though chapter 8
belongs to the later portion of 1 Samuel and may therefore represent
what the kings had actually claimed, yet it in no way endorses such
demands. On the contrary, it indicates that such exactions would
bring the people into slavery to the king by the phrase "And ye
shall be to him for slaves." All that is mentioned there,
consequently, is part of the evil the kingship would bring with it,
and cannot in any way be regarded as a legal provision for the
maintenance of royalty.
It is not probable, therefore, that in these prescriptions the
author of Deuteronomy is repeating a more ancient law. No such law
has come down to us. Dillmann supposes the provision that the king
should always be an Israelite to be ancient; and indeed at first
sight it is difficult to see why such a provision should be
introduced for the first time in the last days of the Southern
Kingdom, where the kingship had so long been confined, not only to
Israelites, but to the Davidic line. But Jer 30:21 -"Their potentate
shall be of themselves, and their governor shall proceed from the
midst of them"-shows that, whatever the cause might be, there was in
the first years of the sixth century a longing for a native king
similar to that here expressed. In any case, as the obvious
intention here is to make entire submission to Yahweh the condition
of any legitimate kingship, it was only consistent to require
expressly that the king should be one of Yahweh’s people. That
motive would be quite sufficient to account for raising what had
been the invariable practice into a formulated law; and no other of
the prescriptions need have been ancient. On the other hand, the
curious phrase "Only he shall not multiply horses to himself, nor
cause the people to return to Egypt to the end that he should
multiply horses; forasmuch as Yahweh hath said unto you, Ye shall
henceforth return no more that way," can hardly belong to the Mosaic
time. There was no doubt then much danger that the people should
wish to return to Egypt; but that a king should cause them to return
for horses, is too much of a subordinate detail to have been portion
of a Mosaic prophecy. If, as is most probable, the phrase condemns
the sending of Israelites into Egypt to buy horses and chariots, it
can have been written only after Solomon’s days. Before that time
Israel, as an almost exclusively mountain people, regarded horses
and chariots with dislike, and usually destroyed them when they fell
into their hands. With the extension of their power over the plains
and the growth of a lust for conquest, they sought after chariots
eagerly. To procure them they entered into alliances with Egypt
which the prophets denounced, and which brought to the nation
nothing but evil. It was natural, therefore, that the Deuteronomist
should specially mention this detail, and should support it by
reference to a Divine promise, which does not appear in our Bible,
but which probably was found in either the Yahwistic or the
Elohistic narrative.
But whether the whole is Deuteronomic or not, there can be no
question that the command that the king shall have "a copy of this
law" prepared for him and shall read constantly therein is so; and
perhaps of all the prescriptions this is the most important. In
purely Eastern states there is no legislature at all, and the
greater part of the criminal jurisdiction especially is carried on
without any reference to fixed law save in cases affecting religion.
This was the case in the Mahratta states in India so long as they
were independent. The ruler and the officers he appointed
administered justice, solely according to custom and their own
notions of rectitude, "without advertence to any law except the
popular notions of customary law." Now in Israel the state of things
was entirely similar, save in so far as the fundamental principles
of Yahwistic religion had been formulated. In all other respects
customary law ruled everything. But it was the religious influence
that gave its highest and best developments to the life of Israel.
It was this, too, which brought to such early maturity in Israel the
principles of justice, mercy, and freedom. Elsewhere these were of
exceedingly slow growth. In Israel, the influence of the lofty
religious ideas implanted in the nation by Moses did for them what
the influence of the higher political and social ideas of the
governing Englishmen are said to do, under favorable circumstances,
for the Indian peoples. Without disturbing the general harmony which
must subsist between all parts of the organism of the State if the
nation’s life is to be healthy, and without putting it out of
relation with its surroundings, that influence has been, and is
still, moving the more backward Indian societies along the natural
paths of human progress at a greatly accelerated speed. In a similar
way the Israelite people was moved by the Mosaic influence, in its
aspirations at least, with an elsewhere unexampled speed and
certainty, towards an ideal of national life which no nation since
has even endeavored to realize. But whenever the kings threw off the
yoke of Yahweh and plunged into idolatry, then the evils of despotic
Oriental rule made their appearance unchecked. These evils have been
enumerated in the following words by one well acquainted with
Oriental states: "Cruelty, superstition, callous indifference to the
security of the weaker and poorer classes, avarice, corruption,
disorder in all public affairs, and open brigandage." With the
exception perhaps of the last, these are precisely the sins which
the prophets are continually denouncing. Long before Hezekiah they
were rampant, especially in the Northern Kingdom, and in the evil
days between Hezekiah and Josiah, when we suppose Deuteronomy to
have been written, they were indulged in without shame or
compunction.
The result was that an inarticulate cry, like that we hear today
from Persia in the articulate form of newspaper articles, must have
filled the hearts of all righteous men and the multitude of the
oppressed. What it would be we may learn from the following extract
from a letter written from Persia to the Kamin, i.e., "Law," a
Persian newspaper published in London, and translated by Arminius
Vambery in the Deutsche Rundschau for October, 1893: "Oh, brothers,
behold how deeply we have sunk into the sea of ignominy and shame.
Tyranny, famine, disease, poverty, calamity, decay of character, and
all the misery in the world has overflowed our country. The cause of
all this misfortune lies in this, that we have no laws; only in
this, that our conscienceless and foolish great ones have willfully
and purposely rejected, trodden under foot, and destroyed the laws
of the sacred code…We are men, and would have laws! It is not new
laws we ask for, but we desire that our secular and spiritual heads
should assemble and press for the enforcement of the holy laws of
the sacred code. Therefore we ask of you this one thing, that you
should proclaim: ‘We are men, and would have laws.'" The East is so
perennially the same, that the two thousand five hundred years which
separate that pathetic cry from the prayers of the true Israel in
Manasseh’s and Amon’s days make no radical difference. The situation
was the same, and the need was the same. Hence came this prophetic
and priestly redaction of the Law of the Covenant. "They were men,
and would have laws." They sought to be freed from the greed, the
cruelty, and the lawlessness of their rulers; and having produced
their revised code, they wished to secure that it should not
disappear from memory, as the more ancient law had been suffered to
do. It must be kept continually before the king’s mind. "It shall be
with him, and he shall read therein all the days of his life; that
he may learn to fear Yahweh his God, to keep all the words of this
law and these statutes to do them." In this way it was thought that
future "great ones" would be prevented from "rejecting, treading
under foot, and destroying the laws of the sacred code."
But the king of Israel was not only to be a law-abiding and a
law-enforcing king. He was to learn from this new law even a deeper
lesson. He was to read daily in the law, "that his heart might not
be lifted up above his brethren." Oriental despots either openly
claim that they are of higher and purer blood than their subjects,
or they deal with these latter as if they had nothing in common with
them. In the laws of Manu it is said, "Even an infant king must not
be despised (from an idea) that he is a (mere) mortal; for he is a
great deity in human form." It was not to be so in Israel. His
subjects were the Israelite king’s "brethren." They all stood in the
same relation to their God. All equally had shared Yahweh’s favor in
being delivered from the bondage of Egypt. Each had the same rights,
the same privileges, the same claims to justice and consideration as
the king himself had. That, this law was to teach the king; and when
he had learned the lesson, it is taken for granted that the root
from which the other evils spring would be destroyed.
Such, then, the ruler of Israel was to be. He was to feel, first of
all his responsibility to God. Then he was to deny himself to the
lust of conquest, to the voluptuous pleasures of the flesh, to the
most devouring lust of all, the love of money. Last of all, and
above all, he was to acknowledge his equality with the poorest of
the people in the sight of God. Could there be even yet a nobler
ideal set before the kings of the world than this? The reign of only
one king of Israel, Josiah, promised its realization. That seemed,
indeed, to be "the fair beginning of a time." But it was not so; it
proved to be only an afterglow, a mere prelude to the night. None of
his successors made even an attempt to imitate him, and the
destruction of the Jewish State put an end to all hope of the
appearance of the Yahwistic king in Israel. Elsewhere, before the
coming of Christ, he did not appear. Since Christ’s coming, here and
there, at rare intervals, such rulers have been found. But in the
East perhaps the only rulers who can be said to have made any
attempt in this direction are the best of the great uncrowned kings
of India, the British viceroys.
Such, for example, was Lord Lawrence’s aim, and his reward. From the
beginning to the end of his Indian career he lived a pure and simple
life, labored with untiring energy for the good of the people, and
kept in his mind, as his aspirations for his Punjaub peasantry show,
the Old Testament ideal of both ruler and ruled. He was, too,
entirely free from the lust of conquest, as some Indian viceroys
have not perhaps been; and he did all his work under a solemn sense
of responsibility to God. To a large extent, the Biblical ideal made
him what he was as a ruler, and the life and power of that ideal
now, in such men, sufficiently show the truth of the prophetic and
priestly insight which is embodied here. Many who have disregarded
these rules have done great things for the world; but we are only
the more sure, after two thousand five hundred years, that on these
lines alone can the ruler attain his highest and purest eminence.
All the aspirations of men today are towards a state of things in
which rulers, whether they be any longer kings or no, shall stand on
a level of brotherhood with their subjects, and shall set the good
of the ruled before them as their sole aim. All men are dreaming now
of a future in which personal ambition shall have little scope, in
which none will be for himself or for a party, but "all will be for
the State." If ever that good dream be realized, rulers of the
Deuteronomic type will be universal; and the depth of wisdom
embodied in the laws of this small and obscure Oriental people, so
many ages ago, will be manifested in a general political and social
happiness such as has never yet been seen, on any large scale at
least, in the history of men.
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