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THE ARM OF ARAM AND OF
OTHNIEL
Jdg 3:1-11
WE come now to a statement of no small importance, which may be
the cause of some perplexity. It is emphatically affirmed that God
fulfilled His design for Israel by leaving around it in Canaan a
circle of vigorous tribes very unlike each other, but alike in this,
that each presented to the Hebrews a civilisation from which
something might be learned but much had to be dreaded, a seductive
form of paganism which ought to have been entirely resisted, an
aggressive energy fitted to rouse their national feeling. We learn
that Israel was led along a course of development resembling that by
which other nations have advanced to unity and strength. As the
Divine plan is unfolded, it is seen that not by undivided possession
of the Promised Land, not by swift and fierce clearing away of
opponents, was Israel to reach its glory and become Jehovah’s
witness, but in the way of patient fidelity amidst temptations, by
long struggle and arduous discipline. And why should this cause
perplexity? If moral education did not move on the same line for all
peoples in every age, then indeed mankind would be put to
intellectual confusion. There was never any other way for Israel
than for the rest of the world.
"These are the nations which the Lord left to prove Israel by them,
to know whether they would hearken unto the commandments of the
Lord." The first named are the Philistines, whose settlements on the
coast plain toward Egypt were growing in power. They were a maritime
race, apparently much like the Danish invaders of Saxon England, sea
rovers or pirates, ready for any fray that promised spoil. In the
great coalition of peoples that fell on Egypt during the reign of
Ramses III, about the year 1260 B.C., Philistines were conspicuous,
and after the crushing defeat of the expedition they appear in
larger numbers on the coast of Canaan. Their cities were military
republics skilfully organised, each with a seren or war chief, the
chiefs of the hundred cities forming a council of federation. Their
origin is not known; but we may suppose them to have been a branch
of the Amorite family, who after a time of adventure were returning
to their early haunts. It may be reckoned certain that in wealth and
civilisation they presented a marked contrast to the Israelites, and
their equipments of all kinds gave them great advantage in the arts
of war and peace. Even in the period of the Judges there were
imposing temples in the Philistine cities and the worship must have
been carefully ordered. How they compared with the Hebrews in
domestic life we have no means of judging, but there was certainly
some barrier of race, language, or custom between the peoples which
made intermarriage very rare. We can suppose that they looked upon
the Hebrews from their higher worldly level as rude and slavish.
Military adventurers not unwilling to sell their services for gold
would be apt to despise a race half-nomad, half-rural. It was in
war, not in peace, that Philistine and Hebrew met, contempt on
either side gradually changing into keenest hatred as century after
century the issue of battle was tried with varying success. And it
must be said that it was well for the tribes of Jehovah rather to be
in occasional subjection to the Philistines, and so learn to dread
them, than to mix freely with those by whom the great ideas of
Hebrew life were despised.
On the northward seaboard a quite different race, the Zidonians, or
Phoenicians, were in one sense better neighbours to the Israelites,
in another sense no better friends. While the Philistines were
haughty, aristocratic, military, the Phoenicians were the great
bourgeoisie of the period, clever, enterprising, eminently
successful in trade. Like the other Canaanites and the ancestors of
the Jews, they were probably immigrants from the lower Euphrates
valley; unlike the others, they brought with them habits of commerce
and skill in manufacture, for which they became famous along the
Mediterranean shores and beyond the pillars of Hercules. Between
Philistine and Phoenician the Hebrew was mercifully protected from
the absorbing interests of commercial life and the disgrace of
prosperous piracy. The conscious superiority of the coast peoples in
wealth and influence and the material elements of civilisation was
itself a guard to the Jews, who had their own sense of dignity,
their own claim to assert. The configuration of the country helped
the separateness of Israel, especially so far as Phoenicia was
concerned, which lay mainly beyond the rampart of Lebanon and the
gorge of the Litany; while with the fortress of Tyre on the hither
side of the natural frontier there appears to have been for a long
time no intercourse, probably on account of its peculiar position.
But the spirit of Phoenicia was the great barrier. Along the crowded
wharves of Tyre and Zidon, in warehouses and markets, factories and
workshops, a hundred industries were in full play, and in their
luxurious dwellings the busy prosperous traders, with their
silk-clad wives, enjoyed the pleasures of the age. From all this the
Hebrew, rough and unkempt, felt himself shut out, perhaps with a
touch of regret, perhaps with scorn equal to that on the other side.
He had to live his life apart from that busy race, apart from its
vivacity and enterprise, apart from its lubricity and worldliness.
The contempt of the world is ill to bear, and the Jew no doubt found
it so. But it was good for him. The tribes had time to consolidate,
the religion of Jehovah became established before Phoenicia thought
it worthwhile to court her neighbour. Early indeed the idolatry of
the one people infected the other and there were the beginnings of
trade, yet on the whole for many centuries they kept apart. Not till
a king throned in Jerusalem could enter into alliance with a king of
Tyre, crown with crown, did there come to be that intimacy which had
so much risk for the Hebrew. The humbleness and poverty of Israel
during the early centuries of its history in Canaan was a
providential safeguard. God would not lose His people, nor suffer it
to forget its mission.
Among the inland races with whom the Israelites are said to have
dwelt, the Amorites, though mentioned along with Perizzites and
Hivites, had very distinct characteristics. They were a mountain
people like the Scottish Highlanders, even in physiognomy much
resembling them, a tall, white-skinned, blue-eyed race. Warlike we
know they were, and the Egyptian representation of the siege of
Dapur by Ramses II shows what is supposed to be the standard of the
Amorites on the highest tower, a shield pierced by three arrows
surmounted by another arrow fastened across the top of the staff. On
the east of Jordan they were defeated by the Israelites and their
land between Arnon and Jabbok was allotted to Reuben and Gad. In the
west they seem to have held their ground in isolated fortresses or
small clans, so energetic and troublesome that it is specially noted
in Samuel’s time that a great defeat of the Philistines brought
peace between Israel and the Amorites. A significant reference in
the description of Ahab’s idolatry -"he did very abominably in
following idols according to all things as did the Amorites"-shows
the religion of these people to have been Baal worship of the
grossest kind; and we may well suppose that by intermixture with
them especially the faith of Israel was debased. Even now, it may be
said, the Amorite is still in the land; a blue-eyed,
fair-complexioned type survives, representing that ancient stock.
Passing some tribes whose names imply rather geographical than
ethnical distinctions, we come to the Hittites, the powerful people
of whom in recent years we have learned something. At one time these
Hittites were practically masters of the wide region from Ephesus in
the west of Asia Minor to Carchemish on the Euphrates, and from the
shores of the Black Sea to the south of Palestine. They appear to us
in the archives of Thebes and the poem of the Laureate, Pentaur, as
the great adversaries of Egypt in the days of Ramses I and his
successors; and one of the most interesting records is of the battle
fought about 1383 B.C. at Kadesh on the Orontes, between the immense
armies of the two nations, the Egyptians being led by Ramses II.
Amazing feats were attributed to Ramses, but he was compelled to
treat on equal terms with the "great king of Kheta," and the war was
followed by a marriage between the Pharaoh and the daughter of the
Hittite prince. Syria too was given up to the latter as his
legitimate possession. The treaty of peace drawn up on the occasion,
in the name of the chief gods of Egypt and of the Hittites, included
a compact of offensive and defensive alliance and careful provisions
for extradition of fugitives and criminals. Throughout it there is
evident a great dependence upon the company of gods of either land,
who are largely invoked to punish those who break and reward those
who keep its terms. "He who shall observe these commandments which
the silver tablet contains, whether he be of the people of Kheta or
of the people of Egypt, because he has not neglected them, the
company of the gods of the land of Kheta and the company of the gods
of the land of Egypt shall secure his reward and preserve life for
him and his servants." From this time the Amorites of southern
Palestine and the minor Canaanite peoples submitted to the Hittite
dominion, and it was while this subjection lasted that the
Israelites under Joshua appeared on the scene. There can be no doubt
that the tremendous conflict with Egypt had exhausted the population
of Canaan and wasted the country, and so prepared the way for the
success of Israel. The Hittites indeed were strong enough, had they
seen fit to oppose with great armies the new comers into Syria. But
the centre of their power lay far to the north, perhaps in
Cappadocia; and on the frontier towards Nineveh they were engaged
with more formidable opponents. We may also surmise that the
Hittites, whose alliance with Egypt was by Joshua’s time somewhat
decayed, would look upon the Hebrews, to begin with, as fugitives
from the misrule of the Pharaoh who might be counted upon to take
arms against their former oppressors. This would account, in part at
least, for the indifference with which the Israelite settlement in
Canaan was regarded; it explains why no vigorous attempt was made to
drive back the tribes.
For the characteristics of the Hittites, whose appearance and dress
constantly suggest a Mongolian origin, we can now consult their
monuments. A vigorous people they must have been, capable of
government, of extensive organisation, concerned to perfect their
arts as well as to increase their power. Original contributors to
civilisation they probably were not, but they had skill to use what
they found and spread it widely. Their worship of Sutekh or Soutkhu,
and. especially of Astarte under the name of Ma, who reappears in
the Great Diana of Ephesus, must have been very elaborate. A single
Cappadocian city is reported to have had at one time six thousand
armed priestesses and eunuchs of that goddess. In Palestine there
were not many of this distinct and energetic people when the Hebrews
crossed the Jordan. A settlement seems to have remained about
Hebron, but the armies had withdrawn; Kadesh on the Orontes was the
nearest garrison. One peculiar institution of Hittite religion was
the holy city, which afforded sanctuary to fugitives; and it is
notable that some of these cities in Canaan, such as Kadesh-Naphtali
and Hebron, are found among the Hebrew cities of refuge.
It was as a people at once enticed and threatened, invited to peace
and constantly provoked to war, that Israel settled in the circle of
Syrian nations. After the first conflicts, ending in the defeat of
Adoni-bezek and the capture of Hebron and Kiriath-sepher, the
Hebrews had an acknowledged place, partly won by their prowess,
partly by the terror of Jehovah which accompanied their arms. To
Philistines, Phoenicians and Hittites, as we have seen, their coming
mattered little, and the other races had to make the best of
affairs, sometimes able to hold their ground, sometimes forced to
give way. The Hebrew tribes, for their part, were, on the whole, too
ready to live at peace and to yield not a little for the sake of
peace. Intermarriages made their position safer, and they
intermarried with Amorites, Hivites, Perizzites. Interchange of
goods was profitable, and they engaged in barter. The observance of
frontiers and covenants helped to make things smooth, and they
agreed on boundary lines of territory and terms of fraternal
intercourse. The acknowledgment of their neighbours’ religion was
the next thing, and from that they did not shrink. The new
neighbours were practically superior to themselves in many ways,
well informed as to the soil, the climate, the methods of tillage
necessary in the land, well able to teach useful arts and simple
manufactures. Little by little the debasing notions and bad customs
that infest pagan society entered Hebrew homes. Comfort and
prosperity came; but comfort was dearly bought with loss of
pureness, and prosperity with loss of faith. The watchwords of unity
were forgotten by many. But for the sore oppressions of which the
Mesopotamian was the first, the tribes would have gradually lost all
coherence and vigour and become like those poor tatters of races
that dragged out an inglorious existence between Jordan and the
Mediterranean plain.
Yet it is with nations as with men; those that have a reason of
existence and the desire to realise it, even at intervals, may fall
away into pitiful languor if corrupted by prosperity, but when the
need comes their spirit will be renewed. While Hivites, Perizzites,
and even Amorites had practically nothing to live for, but only
cared to live, the Hebrews felt oppression and restraint in their
inmost marrow. What the faithful servants of God among them urged in
vain the iron heel of Cushan-rishathaim made them remember and
realise-that they had a God from Whom they were basely departing, a
birthright they were selling for pottage. In Doubting Castle, under
the chains of Despair, they bethought them of the Almighty and His
ancient promises, they cried unto the Lord. And it was not the cry
of an afflicted church; Israel was far from deserving that name.
Rather was it the cry of a prodigal people scarcely daring to hope
that the Father would forgive and save.
Nothing yet found in the records of Babylon or Assyria throws any
light on the invasion of Cushan-rishathaim, whose name, which seems
to mean Cushan of the Two Evil Deeds, may be taken to represent his
character as the Hebrews viewed it. He was a king one of whose
predecessors a few centuries before had given a daughter in marriage
to the third Amenophis of Egypt, and with her the Aramaean religion
to the Nile valley. At that time Mesopotamia, or Aram-Naharaim, was
one of the greatest monarchies of western Asia. Stretching along the
Euphrates from the Khabour river towards Carchemish and away to the
highlands of Armenia, it embraced the district in which Terah and
Abram first settled when the family migrated from Ur of the Chaldees.
In the days of the judges of Israel, however, the glory of Aram had
faded. The Assyrians threatened its eastern frontier, and about 1325
B.C., the date at which we have now arrived, they laid waste the
valley of the Khabour. We can suppose that the pressure of this
rising empire was one cause of the expedition of Cushan towards the
western sea.
It remains a question, however, why the Mesopotamian king should
have been allowed to traverse the land of the Hittites, either by
way of Damascus or the desert route that led past Tadmor, in order
to fall on the Israelites; and there is this other question, What
led him to think of attacking Israel especially among the dwellers
in Canaan? In pursuing these inquiries we have at least presumption
to guide us. Carchemish on the Euphrates was a great Hittite
fortress commanding the fords of that deep and treacherous river.
Not far from it, within the Mesopotamian country, was Pethor, which
was at once a Hittite and an Aramaean town-Pethor the city of Balaam
with whom the Hebrews had had to reckon shortly before they entered
Canaan. Now Cushan-rishathaim, reigning in this region, occupied the
middle ground between the Hittites and Assyria on the east, also
between them and Babylon on the southeast; and it is probable that
he was in close alliance with the Hittites. Suppose then that the
Hittite king, who at first regarded the Hebrews with indifference,
was now beginning to view them with distrust or to fear them as a
people bent on their own ends, not to be reckoned on for help
against Egypt, and we can easily see that he might be more than
ready to assist the Mesopotamians in their attack on the tribes. To
this we may add a hint which is derived from Balaam’s connection
with Pethor, and the kind of advice he was in the way of giving to
those who consulted him. Does it not seem probable enough that some
counsel of his survived his death and now guided the action of the
king of Aram? Balaam, by profession a soothsayer, was evidently a
great political personage of his time, foreseeing, crafty, and
vindictive. Methods of his for suppressing Israel, the force of
whose genius he fully recognised, were perhaps sold to more than one
kingly employer. "The land of the children of his people" would
almost certainly keep his counsel in mind and seek to avenge his
death. Thus against Israel particularly among the dwellers in Canaan
the arms of Cushan-rishathaim would be directed, and the Hittites,
who scarcely found it needful to attack Israel for their own safety,
would facilitate his march.
Here then we may trace the revival of a feud which seemed to have
died away fifty years before. Neither nations nor men can easily
escape from the enmity they have incurred and the entanglements of
their history. When years have elapsed and strifes appear to have
been buried in oblivion, suddenly, as if out of the grave, the past
is apt to arise and confront us, sternly demanding the payment of
its reckoning. We once did another grievous wrong, and now our
fondly cherished belief that the man we injured had forgotten our
injustice is completely dispelled. The old anxiety, the old terror
breaks in afresh upon our lives. Or it was in doing our duty that we
braved the enmity of evil-minded men and punished their crimes. But
though they have passed away their bitter hatred, bequeathed to
others, still survives. Now the battle of justice and fidelity has
to be fought over again, and well is it for us if we are found ready
in the strength of God.
And, in another aspect, how futile is the dream some indulge of
getting rid of their history, passing beyond the memory or
resurrection of what has been. Shall Divine forgiveness obliterate
those deeds of which we have repented? Then the deeds being
forgotten the forgiveness too would pass into oblivion, and all the
gain of faith and gratitude it brought would be lost. Do we expect
never to retrace in memory the way we have travelled?
As well might we hope, retaining our personality, to become other
men than we are. The past, good and evil, remains and will remain,
that we may be kept humble and moved to ever-increasing thankfulness
and fervour of soul. We rise "on stepping stones of our dead selves
to higher things," and every forgotten incident by which moral
education has been provided for must return to light. The heaven we
hope for is not to be one of forgetfulness, but a state bright and
free through remembrance of the grace that saved us at every stage
and the circumstances of our salvation. As yet we do not half know
what God has done for us, what His providence has been. There must
be a resurrection of old conflicts, strifes, defeats, and victories
in order that we may understand the grace which is to keep us safe
forever.
Attacked by Cushan of the Two Crimes the Israelites were in evil
case. They had not the consciousness of Divine support which
sustained them once. They had forsaken Him whose presence in the
camp made their arms victorious. Now they must face the consequences
of their fathers’ deeds without their fathers’ heavenly courage. Had
they still been a united nation full of faith and hope, the armies
of Aram would have assailed them in vain. But they were without the
spirit which the crisis required. For eight years the northern
tribes had to bear a sore oppression, soldiers quartered in their
cities, tribute exacted at the point of the sword, their harvests
enjoyed by others. The stern lesson was taught them that Canaan was
to be no peaceful habitation for a people that renounced the purpose
of its existence. The struggle became more hopeless year by year,
the state of affairs more wretched. So at last the tribes were
driven by stress of persecution and calamity to call again on the
name of God, and some faint hope of succour broke like a misty
morning over the land.
It was from the far south that help came in response to the piteous
cry of the oppressed in the north; the deliverer was Othniel, who
has already appeared in the history. After his marriage with Achsah,
daughter of Caleb, we must suppose him living as quietly as possible
in his south-lying farm, there increasing in importance year by year
till now he is a respected chief of the tribe of Judah. In frequent
skirmishes with Arab marauders from the wilderness he has
distinguished himself, maintaining the fame of his early exploit.
Better still, he is one of those who have kept the great traditions
of the nation, a man mindful of the law of God, deriving strength of
character from fellowship with the Almighty. "The Spirit of Jehovah
came upon him and he judged Israel; and he went out to war, and
Jehovah delivered Cushan-rishathaim king of Mesopotamia into his
hand."
"He judged Israel and went out to war." Significant is the order of
these statements. The judging of Israel by this man, on whom the
Spirit of Jehovah was, meant no doubt inquisition into the religious
and moral state, condemnation of the idolatry of the tribes, and a
restoration to some extent of the worship of God. In no other way
could the strength of Israel be revived. The people had to be healed
before they could fight, and the needed cure was spiritual. Hopeless
invariably have been the efforts of oppressed peoples to deliver
themselves unless some trust in a Divine power has given them heart
for the struggle. When we see an army bow in prayer as one man
before joining battle, as the Swiss did at Morat and the Scots at
Bannockburn, we have faith in their spirit and courage, for they are
feeling their dependence in the Supernatural. Othniel’s first care
was to suppress idolatry, to teach Israelites anew the forgotten
name and law of God and their destiny as a nation. Well did he know
that this alone would prepare the way for success. Then, having
gathered an army fit for his purpose, he was not long in sweeping
the garrisons of Cushan out of the land.
Judgment and then deliverance; judgment of the mistakes and sins men
have committed, thereby bringing themselves into trouble; conviction
of sin and righteousness; thereafter guidance and help that their
feet may be set on a rock and their goings established-this is the
right sequence. That God should help the proud, the self-sufficient
out of their troubles in order that they may go on in pride and
vainglory, or that He should save the vicious from the consequences
of their vice and leave them to persist in their iniquity, would be
no Divine work. The new mind and the right spirit must be put in
men, they must hear their condemnation, lay it to heart and repent,
there must be a revival of holy purpose and aspiration first. Then
the oppressors will be driven from the land, the weight of trouble
lifted from the soul.
Othniel, the first of the judges, seems one of the best. He is not a
man of mere rude strength and dashing enterprise. Nor is he one who
runs the risk of sudden elevation to power, which few can stand. A
person of acknowledged honour and sagacity, he sees the problem of
the time and does his best to solve it. He is almost unique in this,
that he appears without offence, without shame. And his judgeship is
honourable to Israel. It points to a higher level of thought and
greater seriousness among the tribes than in the century when
Jephthah and Samson were the acknowledged heroes. The nation had not
lost its reverence for the great names and hopes of the exodus when
it obeyed Othniel and followed him to battle.
In modern times there would seem to be scarcely any understanding of
the fact that no man can do real service as a political leader
unless he is a fearer of God, one who loves righteousness more than
country, and serves the Eternal before any constituency. Sometimes a
nation low enough in morality has been so far awake to its need and
danger as to give the helm, at least for a time, to a servant of
truth and righteousness and to follow where he leads. But more
commonly is it the case that political leaders are chosen anywhere
rather than from the ranks of the spiritually earnest. It is
oratorical dash now, and now the cleverness of the intriguer, or the
power of rank and wealth, that catches popular favour and exalts a
man in the state. Members of parliament, cabinet ministers, high
officials need have no devoutness, no spiritual seriousness or
insight. A nation generally seeks no such character in its
legislators and is often content with less than decent morality. Is
it then any wonder that politics are arid and government a series of
errors? We need men who have the true idea of liberty and will set
nations nominally Christian on the way of fulfilling their mission
to the world. When the people want a spiritual leader he will
appear; when they are ready to follow one of high and pure temper he
will arise and show the way. But the plain truth is that our chiefs
in the state, in society and business must be the men who represent
the general opinion, the general aim.
While we are in the main a worldly people, the best guides, those of
spiritual mind, will never be allowed to carry their plans. And so
we come back to the main lesson of the whole history, that only as
each citizen is thoughtful of God and of duty, redeemed from
selfishness and the world, can there be a true commonwealth,
honourable government, beneficent civilisation.
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