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AT BOCHIM: THE FIRST PROPHET
VOICE
Jdg 2:1-5
FROM the time of Abraham on to the settlement in Canaan the
Israelites had kept the faith of the one God. They had their origin
as a people in a decisive revolt against polytheism. Of the great
Semite forefather of the Jewish people, it has been finely said, "He
bore upon his forehead the seal of the Absolute God, upon which was
written, This race will rid the earth of superstition." The
character and structure of the Hebrew tongue resisted idolatry. It
was not an imaginative language; it had no mythological colour. We
who have inherited an ancient culture of quite another kind do not
think it strange to read or sing:
"Hail, smiling morn, that tip’st the hills with gold,
Whose rosy fingers ope the gates of day,
Who the gay face of nature dost unfold,
At whose bright presence darkness flies away."
These lines, however, are full of latent mythology. The "smiling
morn" is Aurora, the darkness that flies away before the dawn is the
Erebus of the Greeks. Nothing of this sort was possible in Hebrew
literature. In it all change, all life, every natural incident are
ascribed to the will and power of one Supreme Being. "Jehovah
thundered in the heavens and the Highest gave His voice, hailstones
and coals of fire." "By the breath of God ice is given, and the
breadth of the waters is straitened." "Behold, He spreadeth His
light around Him; He covereth His hands with the lightning." "Thou
makest darkness and it is night." Always in forms like these Hebrew
poetry sets forth the control of nature by its invisible King. The
pious word of Fenelon, "What do I see in nature? God; God
everywhere; God alone," had its germ, its very substance, in the
faith and language of patriarchal times. Christ its finest radiance
flashes upon the world.
While the Hebrews were in Egypt, the faith inherited from
patriarchal times must have been sorely tried, and, all
circumstances considered, it came forth wonderfully pure. "The
Israelites saw Egypt as the Mussulman Arab sees pagan countries,
entirely from the outside, perceiving only the surface and external
things." They indeed carried with them into the desert the
recollection of the sacred bulls or calves of which they had seen
images at Hathor and Memphis. But the idol they made at Horeb was
intended to represent their Deliverer, the true God, and the swift
and stern repression by Moses of that symbolism and its pagan
incidents appears to have been effectual. The tribes reached Canaan
substantially free from idolatry, though teraphim or fetishes may
have been used in secret with magical ceremonies. The religion of
the people generally was far from spiritual, yet there was a real
faith in Jehovah as the protector of the national life, the guardian
of justice and truth. From this there was no falling away when the
Reubenites and Gadites on the east of Jordan erected an altar for
themselves. "The Lord God of gods," they said, "He knoweth, and
Israel he shall know if it be in rebellion, or if in transgression
against the Lord." The altar was called Ed, a witness between east
and west that the faith of the one Living God was still to unite the
tribes.
But the danger to Israel’s fidelity came when there began to be
intercourse with the people of Canaan, now sunk from the purer
thought of early times. Everywhere in the land of the Hittites and
Amorites, Hivites and Jebusites, there were altars and sacred trees,
pillars and images used in idolatrous worship. The ark and the altar
of Divine religion, established first at Gilgal near Jericho,
afterwards at Bethel and then at Shiloh, could not be frequently
visited, especially by those who settled towards the southern desert
and in the far north. Yet the necessity for religious worship of
some kind was constantly felt; and as afterwards the synagogues gave
opportunity for devotional gatherings when the Temple could not be
reached, so in the earlier time there came to be sacred observances
on elevated places, a windy threshing floor, or a hilltop already
used for heathen sacrifice. Hence, on the one hand, there was the
danger that worship might be entirely neglected, on the other hand
the grave risk that the use of heathen occasions and meeting places
should lead to heathen ritual, and those who came together on the
hill of Baal should forget Jehovah. It was the latter evil that
grew; and while as yet only a few Hebrews easily led astray had
approached with kid or lamb a pagan altar, the alarm was raised. At
Bochim a Divine warning was uttered which found echo in the hearts
of the people.
There appears to have been a great gathering of the tribes at some
spot near Bethel. We see the elders and heads of families holding
council of war and administration, the thoughts of all bent on
conquest and family settlement. Religion, the purity of Jehovah’s
worship, are forgotten in the business of the hour. How shall the
tribes best help each other in the struggle that is already proving
more arduous than they expected? Dan is sorely pressed by the
Amorites. The chiefs of the tribe are here telling their story of
hardship among the mountains. The Asherites have failed in their
attack upon the seaboard towns Accho and Achzib; in vain have they
pressed towards Zidon. They are dwelling among the Canaanites and
may soon be reduced to slavery. The reports from other tribes are
more hopeful; but everywhere the people of the land are hard to
overcome. Should Israel not remain content for a time, make the best
of circumstances, cultivate friendly intercourse with the population
it cannot dispossess? Such a policy often commends itself to those
who would be thought prudent; it is apt to prove a fatal policy.
Suddenly a spiritual voice is heard, clear and intense, and all
others are silent. From the sanctuary of God at Gilgal one comes
whom the people have not expected; he comes with a message they
cannot choose but hear. It is a prophet with the burden of reproof
and warning. Jehovah’s goodness, Jehovah’s claim are declared with
Divine ardour; with Divine severity the neglect of the covenant is
condemned. Have the tribes of God begun to consort with the people
of the land? Are they already dwelling content under the shadow of
idolatrous groves, in sight of the symbols of Ashtoreth? Are they
learning to swear by Baal and Melcarth and looking on while
sacrifices are offered to these vile masters? Then they can no
longer hope that Jehovah will give them the country to enjoy; the
heathen shall remain as thorns in the side of Israel and their gods
shall be a snare. It is a message of startling power. From the hopes
of dominion and the plans of worldly gain the people pass to
spiritual concern. They have offended their Lord; His countenance is
turned from them? A feeling of guilt falls on the assembly. "It came
to pass that the people lifted up their voice and wept."
This lamentation at Bochim is the second note of religious feeling
and faith in the Book of Judges. The first is the consultation of
the priests and the oracle referred to in the opening sentence of
the book. Jehovah Who had led them through the wilderness was their
King, and unless He went forth as the unseen Captain of the host no
success could be looked for. "They asked of Jehovah, saying, Who
shall go up for us first against the Canaanites, to fight against
them?" In this appeal there was a measure of faith which is neither
to be scorned nor suspected. The question indeed was not whether
they should fight at all, but how they should fight so as to
succeed, and their trust was in a God thought of as pledged to them,
solely concerned for them. So far accordingly there is nothing
exemplary in the circumstances. Yet we find a lesson for Christian
nations. There are many in our modern parliaments who are quite
ready to vote national prayer in war time and thanksgiving for
victories, who yet would never think, before undertaking a war, of
consulting those best qualified to interpret the Divine will. The
relation between religion and the state has this fatal hitch, that
however Christian our governments profess to be, the Christian
thinkers of the country are not consulted on moral questions, not
even on a question so momentous as that of war. It is passion,
pride, or diplomacy, never the wisdom of Christ, that leads nations
in the critical moments of their history. Who then scorn, who
suspect the early Hebrew belief? Those only who have no right; those
who as they laugh at God and faith shut themselves from the
knowledge by which alone life can be understood; and, again, those
who in their own ignorance and pride unsheathe the sword without
reference to Him in Whom they profess to believe. We admit none of
these to criticise Israel and its faith.
At Bochim, where the second note of religious feeling is struck, a
deeper and clearer note, we find the prophet listened to. He revives
the sense of duty, he kindles a Divine sorrow in the hearts of the
people. The national assembly is conscience stricken. Let us allow
this quick contrition to be the result, in part, of superstitious
fear. Very rarely is spiritual concern quite pure. In general it is
the consequences of transgression rather than the evil of it that
press on the minds of men. Forebodings of trouble and calamity are
more commonly causes of sorrow than the loss of fellowship with God;
and if we know this to be the case with many who are convicted of
sin under the preaching of the gospel, we cannot wonder to find the
penitence of old Hebrew times mingled with superstition.
Nevertheless, the people are aware of the broken covenant, burdened
with a sense that they have lost the favour of their unseen Guide.
There can be no doubt that the realisation of sin and of justice
turned against them is one cause of their tears.
Here, again, if there is a difference between Israel and Christian
nations, it is not in favour of the latter. Are modern senates ever
overcome by conviction of sin? Those who are in power seem to have
no fear that they may do wrong. Glorifying their blunders and
forgetting their errors, they find no occasion for self-reproach, no
need to sit in sackcloth and ashes. Now and then, indeed, a day of
fasting and humiliation is ordered and observed in state; the
sincere Christian for his part feeling how miserably formal it is,
how far from the spontaneous expression of abasement and remorse.
God is called upon to help a people who have not considered their
ways, who design no amendment, who have not even suspected that the
Divine blessing may come in still further humbling. And turning to
private life, is there not as much of self-justification, as little
of real humility and faith? The shallow nature of popular
Christianity is seen here, that so few can read in disappointment
and privation anything but disaster, or submit without disgust and
rebellion to take a lower place at the table of Providence. Our
weeping is so often for what we longed to gain or wished to keep in
the earthly and temporal region, so seldom for what we have lost or
should fear to lose in the spiritual. We grieve when we should
rather rejoice that God has made us feel our need of Him, and called
us again to our true blessedness.
The scene at Bochim connects itself very notably with one nine
hundred and fifty years later. The poor fragments of the exiled
tribes have been gathered again in the land of their fathers. They
are rebuilding Jerusalem and the Temple. Ezra has led back a company
from Babylon and has brought with him, by the favour of Artaxerxes,
no small treasure of silver and gold for the house of God. To his
astonishment and grief he hears the old tale of alliance with the
inhabitants of the land, intermarriage even of Levites, priests and
princes of Israel with women of the Canaanite races. In the new
settlement of Palestine the error of the first is repeated. Ezra
calls a solemn assembly in the Temple court-"every one that trembles
at the words of the God of Israel." Till the evening sacrifice he
sits prostrate with grief, his garment rent, his hair torn and
dishevelled. Then on his knees before the Lord he spreads forth his
hands in prayer. The trespasses of a thousand years afflict him,
afflict the faithful. "After all that is come upon us for our evil
deeds, shall we again break Thy commandments, and join in affinity
with the peoples that do these abominations? wouldest not Thou be
angry with us till Thou hadst consumed us so that there should be no
remnant nor any to escape? Behold we are before Thee in our
guiltiness; for none can stand before Thee because of this." The
impressive lament of Ezra and those who join in his confessions
draws together a great congregation, and the people weep very sore.
Nine centuries and a half appear a long time in the history of a
nation. What has been gained during the period? Is the weeping at
Jerusalem in Ezra’s time, like the weeping at Bochim, a mark of no
deeper feeling, no keener penitence? Has there been religious
advance commensurate with the discipline of suffering, defeat,
slaughter and exile, dishonoured kings, a wasted land? Have the
prophets not achieved anything? Has not the Temple in its glory, in
its desolation, spoken of a Heavenly power, a Divine rule, the sense
of which entering the souls of the people has established piety, or
at least a habit of separateness from heathen manners and life? It
may be hard to distinguish and set forth the gain of those
centuries. But it is certain that while the weeping at Bochim was
the sign of a fear that soon passed away, the weeping in the Temple
court marked a new beginning in Hebrew history. By the strong action
of Ezra and Nehemiah the mixed marriages were dissolved, and from
that time the Jewish people became, as they never were before,
exclusive and separate. Where nature would have led the nation
ceased to go. More and more strictly the law was enforced; the age
of puritanism began. So, let us say, the sore discipline had its
fruit.
And yet it is with a reservation only we can enjoy the success of
those reformers who drew the sharp line between Israel and his
heathen neighbours, between Jew and Gentile. The vehemence of
reaction urged the nation towards another error-Pharisaism. Nothing
could be purer, nothing nobler than the desire to make Israel a holy
people. But to inspire men with religious zeal and yet preserve them
from spiritual pride is always difficult, and in truth those Hebrew
reformers did not see the danger. There came to be, in the new
development of faith, zeal enough, jealousy enough, for the purity
of religion and life, but along with these a contempt for the
heathen, a fierce enmity towards the uncircumcised, which made the
interval till Christ appeared a time of strife and bloodshed worse
than any that had been before. From the beginning the Hebrews were
called with a holy calling, and their future was bound up with their
faithfulness to it. Their ideal was to be earnest and pure, without
bitterness or vainglory; and that is still the ideal of faith. But
the Jewish people like ourselves, weak through the flesh, came short
of the mark on one side or passed beyond it on the other. During the
long period from Joshua to Nehemiah there was too little heat, and
then a fire was kindled which burned a sharp narrow path, along
which the life of Israel has gone with ever-lessening spiritual
force. The unfulfilled ideal still waits, the unique destiny of this
people of God still bears them on.
Bochim is a symbol. There the people wept for a transgression but
half understood and a peril they could not rightly dread. There was
genuine sorrow, there was genuine alarm. But it was the prophetic
word, not personal experience, that moved the assembly. And as at
Florence, when Savonarola’s word, shaking with alarm a people who
had no vision of holiness, left them morally weaker as it fell into
silence, so the weeping at Bochim passed like a tempest that has
bowed and broken the forest trees. The chiefs of Israel returned to
their settlements with a new sense of duty and peril; but Canaanite
civilisation had attractions, Canaanite women a refinement which
captivated the heart. And the civilisation, the refinement, were
associated with idolatry, The myths of Canaan, the poetry of Tammuz
and Astarte, were fascinating and seductive. We wonder not that the
pure faith of God was corrupted, but that it survived. In Egypt the
heathen worship was in a foreign tongue, but in Canaan the stories
of the gods were whispered to Israelites in a language they knew, by
their own kith and kin. In many a home among the mountains of
Ephraim or the skirts of Lebanon the pagan wife, with her
superstitious fears, her dread of the anger of this god or that
goddess, wrought so on the mind of the Jewish husband that he began
to feel her dread and then to permit and share her sacrifices. Thus
idolatry invaded Israel, and the long and weary struggle between
truth and falsehood began.
We have spoken of Bochim as a symbol, and to us it may be the symbol
of this, that the very thing which men put from them in horror and
with tears, seeing the evil, the danger of it, does often insinuate
itself into their lives. The messenger is heard, and while he speaks
how near God is, how awful is the sense of His being! A thrill of
keen feeling passes from soul to soul. There are some in the
gathering who have more spiritual insight than the rest, and their
presence raises the heat of emotion. But the moment of revelation
and of fervour passes, the company breaks up, and very soon those
who have won no vision of holiness, who have only feared as they
entered into the cloud, are in the common world again. The finer
strings of the soul were made to thrill, the conscience was touched;
but if the will has not been braced, if the man’s reason and
resoluteness are not engaged by a new conception of life, the
earthly will resume control and God will be less known than before.
So there are many cast down today, crying to God in trouble of soul
for evil done or evil which they are tempted to do, who tomorrow
among the Canaanites will see things in another light. A man cannot
be a recluse. He must mingle in business and in society with those
who deride the thoughts that have moved him and laugh at his
seriousness. The impulse to something better soon exhausts itself in
this cold atmosphere. He turns upon his own emotion with contempt.
The words that came with Divine urgency, the man whose face was like
that of an angel of God, are already subjects of uneasy jesting,
will soon be thrust from memory. Over the interlude of superficial
anxiety the mind goes back to its old haunts, its old plans and
cravings. The religious teacher, while he is often in no way
responsible for this sad recoil, should yet be ever on his guard
against the risk of weakening the moral fibre, of leaving men as
Christ never left them, flaccid and infirm.
Again, there are cases that belong not to the history of a day, but
to the history of a life. One may say, when he hears the strangely
tempting voices that whisper in the twilight streets, "Am I a dog
that from the holy traditions of my people and country I should fall
away to these?" At first he flies the distasteful entreaty of the
new nature cult, its fleshly art and song, its nefarious science.
But the voices are persistent. It is the perfecting of man and woman
to which they invite. It is not vice, but freedom, brightness, life
and the courage to enjoy it they cunningly propose. There is not
much of sweetness; the voices rise, they become stringent and
overbearing. If the man would not be a fool, would not lose the good
of the age into which he is born, he will be done with unnatural
restraints, the bondage of purity. Thus entreaty passes into
mastery. Here is truth; there also seems to be fact. Little by
little the subtle argument is so advanced that the degradation once
feared is no longer to be seen. It is progress now; it is full
development, the assertion of power and privilege, that the soul
anticipates. How fatal is the lure, how treacherous the vision, the
man discovers when he has parted with that which even through
deepest penitence he may never regain. People are denying, and it
has to be reasserted, that there is a covenant which the soul of man
has to keep with God. The thought is "archaic," and they would
banish it. But it stands the great reality for man; and to keep that
covenant in the grace of the Divine Spirit, in the love of the
holiest, in the sacred manliness learned of Christ, is the only way
to the broad daylight and the free summits of life. How can nature
be a saviour? The suggestion is childish. Nature, as we all know,
allows the hypocrite, the swindler, the traitor, as well as the
brave, honest man, the pure, sweet woman. Is it said that man has a
covenant with nature? On the temporal and prudential side of his
activities that is true. He has relations with nature which must be
apprehended, must be wisely realised. But the spiritual kingdom to
which he belongs requires a wider outlook, loftier aims and hopes.
The efforts demanded by nature have to be brought into harmony with
those diviner aspirations. Man is bound to be prudent, brave, wise
for eternity. He is warned of his own sin and urged to fly from it.
This is the covenant with God which is wrought into the very
constitution of his moral being.
It would be a mistake to suppose that the scene at Bochim and the
words which moved the assembly to tears had no lasting effect
whatever. The history deals with outstanding facts of the national
development. We hear chiefly of heroes and their deeds, but we shall
not doubt that there were minds which kept the glow of truth and the
consecration of penitential tears. The best lives of the people
moved quietly on, apart from the commotions and strifes of the time.
Rarely are the great political names even of a religious community
those of holy and devout men, and, undoubtedly, this was true of
Israel in the time of the judges. If we were to reckon only by those
who appear conspicuously in these pages, we should have to wonder
how the spiritual strain of thought and feeling survived. But it did
survive; it gained in clearness and force. There were those in every
tribe who kept alive the sacred traditions of Sinai and the desert,
and Levites throughout the land did much to maintain among the
people the worship of God. The great names of Abraham and Moses, the
story of their faith and deeds, were the text of many an impressive
lesson. So the light of piety did not go out; Jehovah was ever the
Friend of Israel, even in its darkest day, for in the heart of the
nation there never ceased to be a faithful remnant maintaining the
fear and obedience of the Holy Name.
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