|
PROBLEMS OF SETTLEMENT AND
WAR
Jdg 1:1-11 IT was a new hour in the history of Israel. To a
lengthened period of serfdom there had succeeded a time of sojourn
in tents, when the camp of the tribes, half-military, half-pastoral,
clustering about the Tabernacle of Witness, moved with it from point
to point through the desert. Now the march was over; the nomads had
to become settlers, a change not easy for them as they expected it
to be, full of significance for the world. The Book of Judges,
therefore, is a second Genesis or Chronicle of Beginnings so far as
the Hebrew commonwealth is concerned. We see the birth-throes of
national life, the experiments, struggles, errors, and disasters out
of which the moral force of the people gradually rose, growing like
a pine tree out of rocky soil.
If we begin our study of the book expecting to find clear evidence
of an established Theocracy, a spiritual idea of the kingdom of God
ever present to the mind, ever guiding the hope and effort of the
tribes, we shall experience that bewilderment which has not seldom
fallen upon students of Old Testament history. Divide the life of
man into two parts, the sacred and the secular; regard the latter as
of no real value compared to the other, as having no relation to
that Divine purpose of which the Bible is the oracle; then the Book
of Judges must appear out of place in the sacred canon, for
unquestionably its main topics are secular from first to last. It
preserves the traditions of an age when spiritual ideas and aims
were frequently out of sight, when a nation was struggling for bare
existence, or, at best, for a rude kind of unity and freedom. But
human life, sacred and secular, is one. A single strain of moral
urgency runs through the epochs of national development from
barbarism to Christian civilisation. A single strain of urgency
unites the boisterous vigour of the youth and the sagacious
spiritual courage of the man. It is on the strength first, and then
on the discipline and purification of the will, that everything
depends. There must be energy, or there can be no adequate faith, no
earnest religion. We trace in the Book of Judges the springing up
and growth of a collective energy which gives power to each separate
life. To our amazement we may discover that the Mosaic Law and
Ordinances are neglected for a time; but there can be no doubt of
Divine Providence, the activity of the redeeming Spirit. Great ends
are being served, -a development is proceeding which will by and by
make religious thought strong, obedience and worship zealous. It is
not for us to say that spiritual evolution ought to proceed in this
way or that. In the study of natural and supernatural fact our
business is to observe with all possible care the goings forth of
God and to find as far as we may their meaning and issue. Faith is a
profound conviction that the facts of the world justify themselves
and the wisdom and righteousness of the Eternal; it is the key that
makes history articulate, no mere tale full of sound and fury
signifying nothing. And the key of faith which here we are to use in
the interpretation of Hebrew life has yet to be applied to all
peoples and times. That this may be done we firmly believe: there is
needed only the mind broad enough in wisdom and sympathy to gather
the annals of the world into one great Bible or Book of God.
Opening the story of the Judges, we find ourselves in a keen
atmosphere of warlike ardour softened by scarcely an air of
spiritual grace. At once we are plunged into military preparations;
councils of war meet and the clash of weapons is heard. Battle
follows battle. Iron chariots hurtle along the valleys, the
hillsides bristle with armed men. The songs are of strife and
conquest; the great heroes are those who smite the uncircumcised hip
and thigh. It is the story of Jehovah’s people; but where is Jehovah
the merciful? Does He reign among them, or sanction their
enterprise? Where amid this turmoil and bloodshed is the movement
towards the far off Messiah and the holy mountain where nothing
shall hurt or destroy? Does Israel prepare for blessing all nations
by crushing those that occupy the land he claims? Problems many meet
us in Bible history; here surely is one of the gravest. And we
cannot go with Judah in that first expedition; we must hold back in
doubt till clearly we understand how these wars of conquest are
necessary to the progress of the world. Then, even though the tribes
are as yet unaware of their destiny and how it is to be fulfilled,
we may go up with them against Adoni-bezek.
Canaan is to be colonised by the seed of Abraham, Canaan and no
other land. It is not now, as it was in Abraham’s time, a sparsely
peopled country, with room enough for a new race. Canaanites,
Hivites, Perizzites, Amorites cultivate the plain of Esdraelon and
inhabit a hundred cities throughout the land. The Hittites are in
considerable force, a strong people with a civilisation of their
own. To the north Phoenicia is astir with a mercantile and vigorous
race. The Philistines have settlements southward along the coast.
Had Israel sought a region comparatively unoccupied, such might,
perhaps, have been found on the northern coast of Africa. But Syria
is the destined home of the tribes.
The old promise to Abraham has been kept before the minds of his
descendants. The land to which they have moved through the desert is
that of which he took earnest by the purchase of a grave. But the
promise of God looks forward to the circumstances that are to
accompany its fulfilment; and it is justified because the occupation
of Canaan is the means to a great development of righteousness. For,
mark the position which the Hebrew nation is to take. It is to be
the central state of the world, in verity the Mountain of God’s
House for the world. Then observe how the situation of Canaan fits
it to be the seat of this new progressive power. Egypt, Babylon,
Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage, lie in a rude circle around it.
From its seaboard the way is open to the west. Across the valley of
Jordan goes the caravan route to the East. The Nile, the Orontes,
the Aegean Sea are not far off. Canaan does not confine its
inhabitants, scarcely separates them from other peoples. It is in
the midst of the old world.
Is not this one reason why Israel must inhabit Palestine? Suppose
the tribes settled in the highlands of Armenia or along the Persian
Gulf; suppose them to have migrated westward from Egypt instead of
eastward, and to have found a place of habitation on towards Libya:
would the history in that case have had the same movement and power?
Would the theatre of prophecy and the scene of the Messiah’s work
have set the gospel of the ages in the same relief, or the growing
City of God on the same mountain height? Not only is Canaan
accessible to the emigrants from Egypt, but it is by position and
configuration suited to develop the genius of the race. Gennesaret
and Asphaltitis; the tortuous Jordan and Kishon, that "river of
battles"; the cliffs of Engedi, Gerizim and Ebal, Carmel and Tabor,
Moriah and Olivet, - these are needed as the scene of the great
Divine revelation. No other rivers, no other lakes nor mountains on
the surface of the earth will do.
This, however, is but part of the problem which meets us in regard
to the settlement in Canaan. There are the inhabitants of the land
to be considered - these Amorites, Hittites, Jebusites, Hivites. How
do we justify Israel in displacing them, slaying them, absorbing
them? Here is a question first of evolution, then of the character
of God.
Do we justify Saxons in their raid on Britain? History does. They
become dominant, they rule, they slay, they assimilate; and there
grows up British nationality strong and trusty, the citadel of
freedom and religious life. The case is similar, yet there is a
difference, strongly in favour of Israel as an invading people. For
the Israelites have been tried by stern discipline: they are held
together by a moral law, a religion divinely revealed, a faith
vigorous though but in germ. The Saxons worshipping Thor, Frea, and
Woden sweep religion before them in the first rush of conquest. They
begin by destroying Roman civilisation and Christian culture in the
land they ravage. They appear "dogs," "wolves," "whelps from the
kennel of barbarism" to the Britons they overcome. But the
Israelites have learned to fear Jehovah, and they bear with them the
ark of His covenant.
As for the Canaanitish tribes, compare them now with what they
were-when Abraham and Isaac fed their flocks in the plain of Mamre
or about the springs of Beersheba. Abraham found in Canaan noble,
courteous men. Aner, Eshcol and Mature, Amorites, were his trusted
confederates; Ephron the Hittite matched his magnanimity; Abimelech
of Gerar "feared the Lord." In Salem reigned a king or royal priest,
Melchizedek, unique in ancient history, a majestic unsullied figure,
who enjoyed the respect and tribute of the Hebrew patriarch. Where
are the successors of those men? Idolatry has corrupted Canaan. The
old piety of simple races has died away before the hideous worship
of Moloch and Ashtoreth. It is over degenerate peoples that Israel
is to assert its dominance; they must learn the way of Jehovah or
perish. This conquest is essential to the progress of the world.
Here in the centre of empires a stronghold of pure ideas and
commanding morality is to be established, an altar of witness for
the true God.
So far we move without difficulty towards a justification of the
Hebrew descent on Canaan. Still, however, when we survey the
progress of conquest, the idea struggling for confirmation in our
minds that God was King and Guide of this people, while at the same
time we know that all nations could equally claim Him as their
Origin, marking how on field after field thousands were left dying
and dead, we have to find an answer to the question whether the
slaughter and destruction even of idolatrous races for the sake of
Israel can be explained in harmony with Divine justice. And this
passes into still wider inquiries. Is there intrinsic value in human
life? Have men a proper right of existence and self-development?
Does not Divine Providence imply that the history of each people,
the life of each person will have its separate end and vindication?
There is surely a reason in the righteousness and love of God for
every human experience, and Christian thought cannot explain the
severity of Old Testament ordinances by assuming that the Supreme
has made a new dispensation for Himself. The problem is difficult,
but we dare not evade it nor doubt a full solution to be possible.
We pass here beyond mere "natural evolution." It is not enough to
say that there had to be a struggle for life among races and
individuals. If natural forces are held to be the limit and
equivalent of God, then "survival of the fittest" may become a
religious doctrine, but assuredly it will introduce us to no God of
pardon, no hope of redemption. We must discover a Divine end in the
life of each person, a member it may be of some doomed race, dying
on a field of battle in the holocaust of its valour and chivalry.
Explanation is needed of all slaughtered and "waste" lives, untold
myriads of lives that never tasted freedom or knew holiness.
The explanation we find is this: that for a human life in the
present stage of existence the opportunity of struggle for moral
ends-it may be ends of no great dignity, yet really moral, and, as
the race advances, religious-this makes life worth living and brings
to every one the means of true and lasting gain. "Where ignorant
armies clash by night" there may be in the opposing ranks the most
various notions of religion and of what is morally good. The
histories of the nations that meet in shock of battle determine
largely what hopes and aims guide individual lives. But to the
thousands who do valiantly this conflict belongs to the vital
struggle in which some idea of the morally good or of religious duty
directs and animates the soul. For hearth and home, for wife and
children, for chief and comrades, for Jehovah or Baal, men fight,
and around these names there cluster thoughts the sacredest possible
to the age, dignifying life and war and death. There are better
kinds of struggle than that which is acted on the bloody field; yet
struggle of one kind or other there must be. It is the law of
existence for the barbarian, for the Hebrew, for the Christian. Ever
there is a necessity for pressing towards the mark, striving to
reach and enter the gate of higher life. No land flowing with milk
and honey to be peaceably inherited and enjoyed rewards the
generation which has fought its way through the desert. No placid
possession of cities and vineyards rounds off the life of
Canaanitish tribe. The gains of endurance are reaped, only to be
sown again in labour and tears for a further harvest. Here on earth
this is the plan of God for men; and when another life crowns the
long effort of this world of change, may it not be with fresh calls
to more glorious duty and achievement?
But the golden cord of Divine Providence has more than one strand;
and while the conflicts of life are appointed for the discipline of
men and nations in moral vigour and in fidelity to such religious
ideas as they possess, the purer and stronger faith always giving
more power to those who exercise it, there is also in the course of
life, and especially in the suffering war entails, a reference to
the sins of men. Warfare is a sad necessity. Itself often a crime,
it issues the judgment of God against folly and crime. Now Israel,
now the Canaanite becomes a hammer of Jehovah. One people has been
true to its best, and by that faithfulness it gains the victory.
Another has been false, cruel, treacherous, and the hands of the
fighters grow weak, their swords lose edge, their chariot wheels
roll heavily, they are swept away by the avenging tide. Or the
sincere, the good are overcome; the weak who are in the right sink
before the wicked who are strong. Yet the moral triumph is always
gained. Even in defeat and death there is victory for the faithful.
In these wars of Israel we find many a story of judgment as well as
a constant proving of the worth of man’s religion and virtue.
Neither was Israel always in the right, nor had those races which
Israel overcame always a title to the power they held and the land
they occupied. Jehovah was a stern arbiter among the combatants.
When His own people failed in the courage and humility of faith,
they were chastised. On the other hand, there were tyrants and
tyrannous races, freebooters and banditti, pagan hordes steeped in
uncleanness who had to be judged and punished. Where we cannot trace
the reason of what appears mere waste of life or wanton cruelty,
there lie behind, in the ken of the All-seeing, the need and perfect
vindication of all He suffered to be done in the ebb and flow of
battle, amid the riot of war.
Beginning now with the detailed narrative, we find first a case of
retribution, in which the Israelites served the justice of God. As
yet the Canaanite power was unbroken in the central region of
Western Palestine, where Adoni-bezek ruled over the cities of
seventy chiefs. It became a question who should lead the tribes
against this petty despot, and recourse was had to the priests at
Gilgal for Divine direction. The answer of the oracle was that Judah
should head the campaign, the warlike vigour and numerical strength
of that tribe fitting it to take the foremost place. Judah accepting
the post of honour invited Simeon, closely related by common descent
from Leah, to join the expedition; and thus began a confederacy of
these southern tribes which had the effect of separating them from
the others throughout the whole period of the judges. The locality
of Bezek which the king of the Canaanites held as his chief fortress
is not known. Probably it was near the Jordan valley, about halfway
between the two greater lakes. From it the tyranny of Adoni-bezek
extended northward and southward over the cities of the seventy,
whose submission he had cruelly ensured by rendering them unfit for
war. Here, in the first struggle, Judah was completely successful.
The rout of the Canaanites and Perizzites was decisive, and the
slaughter so great as to send a thrill of terror through the land.
And now the rude judgment of men works out the decree of God.
Adoni-bezek suffers the same mutilation as he had inflicted on the
captive chiefs and in Oriental manner makes acknowledgment of a just
fate. There is a certain religousness in his mind, and he sincerely
bows himself under the judgment of a God against Whom he had tried
issues in vain. Had these troops of Israel come in the name of
Jehovah? Then Jehovah had been watching Adoni-bezek in his pride
when, as he daily feasted in his hall, the crowd of victims
grovelled at his feet like dogs.
Thus early did ideas of righteousness and of wide authority attach
themselves in Canaan to the name of Israel’s God. It is remarkable
how on the appearance of a new race the first collision with it on
the battlefield will produce an impression of its capacity and
spirit and of unseen powers fighting along with it. Joshua’s dash
through Canaan doubtless struck far and wide a belief that the new
comers had a mighty God to support them; the belief is reinforced,
and there is added a thought of Divine justice. The retribution of
Jehovah meant Godhead far larger and more terrible, and at the same
time more august, than the religion of Baal had ever presented to
the mind. From this point the Israelites, if they had been true to
their heavenly King, fired with the ardour of His name, would have
occupied a moral vantage ground and proved invincible. The fear of
Jehovah would have done more for them than their own valour and
arms. Had the people of the land seen that a power was being
established amongst them in the justice and benignity of which they
could trust, had they learned not only to fear but to adore Jehovah,
there would have been quick fulfilment of the promise which
gladdened the large heart of Abraham. The realisation, however, had
to wait for many a century.
It cannot be doubted that Israel had under Moses received such an
impulse in the direction of faith in the one God, and such a
conception of His character and will, as declared the spiritual
mission of the tribes. The people were not all aware of their high
destiny, not sufficiently instructed to have a competent sense of
it; but the chiefs of the tribes, the Levites and the heads of
households, should have well understood the part that fell to Israel
among the nations of the world. The law in its main outlines was
known, and it should have been revered as the charter of the
commonwealth. Under the banner of Jehovah the nation ought to have
striven not for its own position alone, the enjoyment of fruitful
fields and fenced cities, but to raise the standard of human
morality and enforce the truth of Divine religion. The gross
idolatry of the peoples around should have been continually
testified against; the principles of honesty, of domestic purity, of
regard for human life, of neighbourliness and parental authority, as
well as the more spiritual ideas expressed in the first table of the
Decalogue, ought to have been guarded and dispensed as the special
treasure of the nation. In this way Israel, as it enlarged its
territory, would from the first have been clearing one space of
earth for the good customs and holy observances that make for
spiritual development. The greatest of all trusts is committed to a
race when it is made capable of this; but here Israel often failed,
and the reproaches of her prophets had to be poured out from age to
age.
The ascendency which Israel secured in Canaan, or that which Britain
has won in India, is not, to begin with, justified by superior
strength, nor by higher intelligence, nor even because in practice
the religion of the conquerors is better than that of the
vanquished. It is justified because, with all faults and crimes that
may for long attend the rule of the victorious race, there lie,
unrealised at first, in conceptions of God and of duty, the promise
and germ of a higher education of the world. Developed in the course
of time, the spiritual genius of the conquerors vindicates their
ambition and their success. The world is to become the heritage and
domain of those who have the secret of large and ascending life.
Judah, moving southward from Bezek, took Jerusalem, not the
stronghold on the hilltop, but the city, and smote it with the edge
of the sword. Not yet did that citadel which has been the scene of
so many conflicts become a rallying point for the tribes. The army,
leaving Adoni-bezek dead in Jerusalem, with many who owned him as
chief, swept southward still to Hebron and Debir. At Hebron the task
was not unlike that which had been just accomplished. There reigned
three chiefs, Sheshai, Ahiman, and Talmai, who are mentioned again
and again in the annals as if their names had been deeply branded on
the memory of the age. They were sons of Anak, bandit captains,
whose rule was a terror to the countryside. Their power had to be
assailed and overthrown, not only for the sake of Judah which was to
inhabit their stronghold, but for the sake of humanity. The law of
God was to replace the fierce unregulated sway of inhuman violence
and cruelty. So the practical duty of the hour carried the tribes
beyond the citadel where the best national centre would have been
found to attack another where an evil power sat entrenched.
One moral lies on the surface here. We are naturally anxious to gain
a good position in life for ourselves, and every consideration is
apt to be set aside in favour of that. Now, in a sense, it is
necessary, one of the first duties, that we gain each a citadel for
himself. Our influence depends to a great extent on the standing we
secure, on the courage and talent we show in making good our place.
Our personality must enlarge itself, make itself visible by the
conquest we effect and the extent of affairs we have a right to
control. Effort on this line needs not be selfish or egoistic in a
bad sense. The higher self or spirit of a good man finds in chosen
ranges of activity and possession its true development and calling.
One may not be a worldling by any means while he follows the bent of
his genius and uses opportunity to become a successful merchant, a
public administrator, a great artist or man of letters. All that he
adds to his native inheritance of hand, brain and soul should be and
often is the means of enriching the world. Against the false
doctrine of self-suppression, still urged on a perplexed generation,
stands this true doctrine, by which the generous helper of men
guides his life so as to become a king and priest unto God. And when
we turn from persons of highest character and talent to those of
smaller capacity, we may not alter the principle of judgment. They,
too, serve the world, in so far as they have good qualities, by
conquering citadels and reigning where they are fit to reign. If a
man is to live to any purpose, play must be given to his original
vigour, however much or little there is of it.
Here, then, we find a necessity belonging to the spiritual no less
than to the earthly life. But there lies close beside it the shadow
of temptation and sin. Thousands of people put forth all their
strength to gain a fortress for themselves, leaving others to fight
the sons of Anak-the intemperance, the unchastity, the atheism of
the time. Instead of triumphing over the earthly, they are ensnared
and enslaved. The truth is, that a safe position for ourselves we
cannot have while those sons of Anak ravage the country around. The
Divine call therefore often requires of us that we leave a Jerusalem
unconquered for ourselves, while we pass on with the hosts of God to
do battle with the public enemy. Time after time Israel, though
successful at Hebron, missed the secret and learnt in bitter sadness
and loss how near is the shadow to the glory.
And for anyone today, what profits it to be a wealthy man, living in
state with all the appliances of amusement and luxury, well knowing,
but not choosing to share the great conflicts between religion and
ungodliness, between purity and vice? If the ignorance and woe of
our fellow creatures do not draw our hearts, if we seek our own
things as loving our own, if the spiritual does not command us, we
shall certainly lose all that makes life-enthusiasm, strength,
eternal joy.
Give us men who fling themselves into the great struggle, doing what
they can with Christ-born ardour, foot soldiers if nothing else in
the army of the Lord of Righteousness.
|