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THE DAGGER AND THE OX-GOAD
Jdg 3:12-31
THE world is served by men of very diverse kinds, and we pass now
to one who is in strong contrast to Israel’s first deliverer.
Othniel the judge without reproach is followed by Ehud the regicide.
The long peace which the country enjoyed after the Mesopotamian army
was driven out allowed a return of prosperity and with it a relaxing
of spiritual tone. Again there was disorganisation; again the Hebrew
strength decayed and watchful enemies found an opportunity. The
Moabites led the attack, and their king was at the head of a
federation including the Ammonites and the Amalekites. It was this
coalition the power of which Ehud had to break.
We can only surmise the causes of the assault made on the Hebrews
west of Jordan by those peoples on the east. When the Israelites
first appeared on the plains of the Jordan under the shadow of the
mountains of Moab, before crossing into Palestine proper, Balak king
of Moab viewed with alarm this new nation which was advancing to
seek a settlement so near his territory. It was then he sent to
Pethor for Balaam, in the hope that by a powerful incantation or
curse the great diviner would blight the Hebrew armies and make them
an easy prey. Notwithstanding this scheme, which even to the
Israelites did not appear contemptible, Moses so far respected the
relationship between Moab and Israel that he did not attack Balak’s
kingdom, although at the time it had been weakened by an
unsuccessful contest with the Amorites from Gilead. Moab to the
south and Ammon to the north were both left unharmed.
But to Reuben, Gad, and the half tribe of Manasseh was allotted the
land from which the Amorites had been completely driven, a region
extending from the frontier of Moab on the south away towards Hermon
and the Argob; and these tribes entering vigorously on their
possession could not long remain at peace with the bordering races.
We can easily see how their encroachments, their growing strength
would vex Moab and Ammon and drive them to plans of retaliation.
Balaam had not cursed Israel; he had blessed it, and the blessing
was being fulfilled. It seemed to be decreed that all other peoples
east of Jordan were to be overborne by the descendants of Abraham;
yet one fear wrought against another, and the hour of Israel’s
security was seized as a fit occasion for a vigorous sally across
the river. A desperate effort was made to strike at the heart of the
Hebrew power and assert the claims of Chemosh to be a greater god
than He Who was reverenced at the sanctuary of the ark.
Or Amalek may have instigated the attack. Away in the Sinaitic
wilderness there stood an altar which Moses had named Jehovah-Nissi,
Jehovah is my banner, and that altar commemorated a great victory
gained by Israel over the Amalekites. The greater part of a century
had gone by since the battle, but the memory of defeat lingers long
with the Arab-and these Amalekites were pure Arabs, savage,
vindictive, cherishing their cause of war, waiting their revenge. We
know the command in Deuteronomy, "Remember what Amalek did unto thee
by the way, when ye were come forth out of Egypt. How he met thee by
the way and smote the hindmost of thee, even all that were feeble
behind thee. Thou shalt blot out the remembrance of Amalek from
under heaven. Thou shalt not forget it." We may be sure that Reuben
and Gad did not forget the dastardly attack; we may be sure that
Amalek did not forget the day of Rephidim. If Moab was not of itself
disposed to cross the Jordan and fall on Benjamin and Ephraim, there
was the urgency of Amalek, the proffered help of that fiery people
to ripen decision. The ferment of war rose. Moab, having walled
cities to form a basis of operations, took the lead. The
confederates marched northward along the Dead Sea, seized the ford
near Gilgal and mastering the plain of Jericho pushed their conquest
beyond the hills. Nor was it a temporary advance. They established
themselves. Eighteen years afterwards we find Eglon, in his palace
or castle near the City of Palm Trees, claiming authority over all
Israel.
So the Hebrew tribes, partly by reason of an old strife not
forgotten, partly because they have gone on vigorously adding to
their territory, again suffer assault and are brought under
oppression, and the coalition against them reminds us of
confederacies that are in full force today. Ammon and Moab are
united against the church of Christ, and Amalek joins in the attack.
The parable is one, we shall say, of the opposition the church is
constantly provoking, constantly experiencing, not entirely to its
own credit. Allowing that, in the main, Christianity is truly and
honestly aggressive, that on its march to the heights it does
straight battle with the enemies of mankind and thus awakens the
hatred of bandit Amaleks, yet this is not a complete account of the
assaults which are renewed century after century. Must it not be
owned that those who pass for Christians often go beyond the lines
and methods of their proper warfare and are found on fields where
the weapons are carnal and the fight is not "the good fight of
faith"? There is a strain of modern talk which defends the worldly
ambition of Christian men, sounding very hollow and insincere to all
excepting those whose interest and illusion it is to think it
heavenly. We hear from a thousand tongues the gospel of
Christianised commerce, of sanctified success, of making business a
religion. In the press and hurry of competition there is a less and
a greater conscientiousness. Let men have it in the greater degree,
let them be less anxious for speedy success than some they know, not
quite so eager to add factory to factory and field to field, more
careful to interpret bargains fairly and do good work; let them
figure often as benefactors and be free with their money to the
church, and the residue of worldly ambition is glorified, being
sufficient, perhaps, to develop a merchant prince, a railway king, a
"millionaire" of the kind the age adores. Thus it comes to pass that
the domain which appeared safe enough from the followers of Him who
sought no power in the earthly range is invaded by men who reckon
all their business efforts privileged under the laws of heaven, and
every advantage they win a Divine plan for wresting money from the
hands of the devil.
Now it is upon Christianity as approving all this that the Moabites
and Ammonites of our day are falling. They are frankly worshippers
of Chemosh and Milcom, not of Jehovah; they believe in wealth, their
all is staked on the earthly prosperity and enjoyment for which they
strive. It is too bad, they feel, to have their sphere and hopes
curtailed by men who profess no respect for the world, no desire for
its glory but a constant preference for things unseen; they writhe
when they consider the triumphs wrested from them by rivals who
count success an answer to prayer and believe themselves favourites
of God. Or the frank heathen finds that in business a man professing
Christianity in the customary way is as little cumbered as himself
by any disdain of tarnished profits and "smart" devices. What else
can be expected but that, driven back and back by the energy of
Christians so called, the others shall begin to think Christianity
itself largely a pretence? Do we wonder to see the revolution in
France hurling its forces not only against wealth and rank, but also
against the religion identified with wealth and rank? Do we wonder
to see in our day socialism, which girds at great fortunes as an
insult to humanity, joining hands with agnosticism and secularism to
make assault on the church? It is precisely what might be looked
for; nay, more, the opposition will go on till Christian profession
is purged of hypocrisy and Christian practice is harmonised with the
law of Christ. Not the push, not the equivocal success of one person
here and there is it that creates doubt of Christianity and provokes
antagonism, but the whole systems of society and business in
so-called Christian lands, and even the conduct of affairs within
the church, the strain of feeling there. For in the church as
without it wealth and rank are important in themselves, and make
some important who have little or no other claim to respect. In the
church as without it methods are adopted that involve large outlay
and a constant need for the support of the wealthy; in the church as
without it life depends too much on the abundance of the things that
are possessed. And, in the not unfair judgment of those who stand
outside, all this proceeds from a secret doubt of Christ’s law and
authority, which more than excuses their own denial. The strifes of
the day, even those that turn on the Godhead of Christ and the
inspiration of the Bible, as well as on the divine claim of the
church, are not due solely to hatred of truth and the depravity of
the human heart. They have more reason than the church has yet
confessed. Christianity in its practical and speculative aspects is
one; it cannot be a creed unless it is a life. It is essentially a
life not conformed to this world, but transformed, redeemed. Our
faith will stand secure from all attacks, vindicated as a
supernatural revelation and inspiration, when the whole of church
life and Christian endeavour shall rise above the earthly and be
manifest everywhere as a fervent striving for the spiritual and
eternal.
We have been assuming the unfaithfulness of Israel to its duty and
vocation. The people of God, instead of commending His faith by
their neighbourliness and generosity, were, we fear, too often proud
and selfish, seeking their own things, not the well being of others,
sending no attractive light into the heathenism around. Moab was
akin to the Hebrews and in many respects similar in character. When
we come to the Book of Ruth we find a certain intercourse between
the two. Ammon, more unsettled and barbarous, was of the same stock.
Israel, giving nothing to these peoples, but taking all she could
from them, provoked antagonism all the more bitter that they were of
kin to her, and they felt no scruple when their opportunity came.
Not only had the Israelites to suffer for their failure, but Moab
and Ammon also. The wrong beginning of the relations between them
was never undone. Moab and Ammon went on worshipping their own gods,
enemies of Israel to the last.
Ehud appears a deliverer. He was a Benjamite, a man left-handed; he
chose his own method of action, and it was to strike directly at the
Moabite king. Eager words regarding the shamefulness of Israel’s
subjection had perhaps already marked him as a leader, and it may
have been with the expectation that he would do a bold deed that he
was chosen to bear the periodical tribute on this occasion to
Eglon’s palace. Girding a long dagger under his garment on his right
thigh, where if found it might appear to be worn without evil
intent, he set out with some attendants to the Moabite headquarters.
The narrative is so vivid that we seem able to follow Ehud step by
step. He has gone from the neighbourhood of Jebus to Jericho,
perhaps by the road in which the scene of our Lord’s parable of the
Good Samaritan was long afterwards laid, Having delivered the
tribute into the hands of Eglon he goes southward a few miles to the
sculptured stones at Gilgal, where possibly some outpost of the
Moabites kept guard. There he leaves his attendants, and swiftly
retracing his steps to the palace craves a private interview with
the king and announces a message from God, at Whose name Eglon
respectfully rises from his seat. One flash of the dagger and the
bloody deed is done. Leaving the king’s dead body there in the
chamber, Ehud bolts the door and boldly passes the attendants, then
quickening his pace, is soon beyond Gilgal and away by another route
through the steep hills to the mountains of Ephraim. Meanwhile the
murder is discovered and there is confusion at the palace. No one
being at hand to give orders, the garrison is unprepared to act, and
as Ehud loses no time in gathering a band and returning to finish
his work, the fords of Jordan are taken before the Moabites can
cross to the eastern side. They are caught, and the defeat is so
decisive that Israel is free again for fourscore years.
Now this deed of Ehud’s was clearly a case of assassination, and as
such we have to consider it. The crime is one which stinks in our
nostrils because it is associated with treachery and cowardice, the
basest revenge or the most undisciplined passion. But if we go back
to times of ruder morality and regard the circumstances of such a
people as Israel, scattered and oppressed, waiting for a sign of
bold energy that may give it new heart, we can easily see that one
who chose to act as Ehud did would by no means incur the reprobation
we now attach to the assassin. To go no farther back than the French
Revolution and the deed of Charlotte Corday, we cannot reckon her
among the basest-that woman of "the beautiful still countenance" who
believed her task to be the duty of a patriot. Nevertheless, it is
not possible to make a complete defence of Ehud. His act was
treacherous. The man he slew was a legitimate king, and is not said
to have done his ruling ill. Even allowing for the period, there was
something peculiarly detestable in striking one to death who stood
up reverently expecting a message from God. Yet Ehud may have
thoroughly believed himself to be a Divine instrument.
This too we see, that the great just providence of the Almighty is
not impeached by such an act. No word in the narrative justifies
assassination; but, being done, place is found for it as a thing
overruled for good in the development of Israel’s history. Man has
no defence for his treachery and violence, yet in the process of
events the barbarous deed, the fierce crime, are shown to be under
the control of the Wisdom that guides all men and things. And here
the issue which justifies Divine providence, though it does not
purge the criminal, is clear. For through Ehud a genuine deliverance
was wrought for Israel. The nation, curbed by aliens, overborne by
an idolatrous power, was free once more to move toward the great
spiritual end for which it had been created. We might be disposed to
say that on the whole Israel made nothing of freedom, that the faith
of God revived and the heart of the people became devout in times of
oppression rather than of liberty. In a sense it was so, and the
story of this people is the story of all, for men go to sleep over
their best, they misuse freedom, they forget why they are free. Yet
every eulogy of freedom is true. Man must even have the power of
misusing it if he is to arrive at the best. It is in liberty that
manhood is nursed, and therefore in liberty that religion matures.
Autocratic laws mean tyranny, and tyranny denies the soul its
responsibility to justice, truth, and God. Mind and conscience held
from their high office, responsibility to the greatest overborne by
some tyrant hand that may seem beneficent, the soul has no space,
faith no room to breathe; man is kept from the spontaneity and
gladness of his proper life. So we have to win liberty in hard
struggle and know ourselves free in order that we may belong
completely to God.
See how life advances! God deals with the human race according to a
vast plan of discipline leading to heights which at first appear
inaccessible. Freedom is one of the first of these, and only by way
of it are the higher summits reached. During the long ages of the
dark and weary struggle, which seem to many but a fruitless
martyrdom, the Divine idea was interfused with all the strife. Not
one blind stroke, not one agony of the craving soul was wasted in
all the wisdom of God wrought for man, through man’s pathetic
feebleness or most daring achievement. So out of the chaos of the
gloomy valleys a highway of order was raised by which the race
should mount to Freedom and thence to Faith. We see it in the
history of nations, those that have led the way and those that are
following. the possessors of clear faith have won it in liberty. In
Switzerland, in Scotland, in England, the order has been, first
civil freedom, then Christian thought and vigour. Wallace and Bruce
prepare the way for Knox; Boadicea, Hereward, the Barons of Magna
Charta for Wycliffe and the Reformation; the men of the Swiss
Cantons who won Morgarten and routed Charles the Bold were the
forerunners of Zwingli and Farel. Israel, too, had its heroes of
freedom; and even those who, like Ehud and Samson, did little or
nothing for faith and struck wildly, wrongly for their country, did
yet choose consciously to serve their people and were helpers of a
righteousness and a holy purpose they did not know. When all has
been said against them it remains true that the freedom they brought
to Israel was a Divine gift.
It is to be remarked that Ehud did not judge Israel. He was a
deliverer, but nowise fitted to exercise high office in the name of
God. In some way not made clear in the narrative he had become the
centre of the resolute spirits of Benjamin and was looked to by them
to find an opportunity of striking at the oppressors. His calling,
we may say, was human, not Divine; it was limited, not national; and
he was not a man who could rise to any high thought of leadership.
The heads of tribes, ingloriously paying tribute to the Moabites,
may have scoffed at him as of no account. Yet he did what they
supposed impossible. The little rising grew with the rapidity of a
thundercloud, and, when it passed, Moab, smitten as by a lightning
flash, no longer overshadowed Israel. As for the deliverer, his work
having been done apparently in the course of a few days, he is seen
no more in the history. While he lived, however, his name was a
terror to the enemies of Israel, for what he had effected once he
might be depended upon to do again if necessity arose. And the land
had rest.
Here is an example of what is possible to the obscure whose
qualifications are not great, but who have spirit and firmness, who
are not afraid of dangers and privations on the way to an end worth
gaining, be it the deliverance of their country, the freedom or
purity of their church, or the rousing of society against a flagrant
wrong. Do the rich and powerful angrily refuse their patronage? Do
they find much to say about the impossibility of doing anything, the
evil of disturbing people’s minds, the duty of submission to
Providence and to the advice of wise and learned persons? Those who
see the time and place for acting, who hear the clarion call of
duty, will not be deterred. Armed for their task with fit
weapons-the two-edged dagger of truth for the corpulent lie, the
penetrating stone of a just scorn for the forehead of arrogance,
they have the right to go forth, the right to succeed, though
probably, when the stroke has told, many will be heard lamenting its
untimeliness and proving the dangerous indiscretion of Ehud and all
who followed him.
In the same line another type is represented by Shamgar, son of
Anath, the man of the ox-goad, who considered not whether he was
equipped for attacking Philistines, but turned on them from the
plough, his blood leaping in him with swift indignation. The
instrument of his assault was not made for the use to which it was
put: the power lay in the arm that wielded the goad and the fearless
wilt of the man who struck for his own birthright, freedom, -for
Israel’s birthright, to be the servant of no other race. Undoubtedly
it is well that, in any efforts made for the church or for society,
men should consider how they are to act and should furnish
themselves in the best manner for the work that is to be done. No
outfit of knowledge, skill, experience is to be despised. A man does
not serve the world better in ignorance than in learning, in
bluntness than in refinement. But the serious danger for such an age
as our own is that strength may be frittered away and zeal expended
in the mere preparation of weapons, in the mere exercise before the
war begins. The important points at issue are apt to be lost sight
of, and the vital distinctions on which the whole battle turns to
fade away in an atmosphere of compromise. There are those who, to
begin, are Israelites indeed, with a keen sense of their
nationality, of the urgency of certain great thoughts and the
example of heroes. Their nationality becomes less and less to them
as they touch the world; the great thoughts begin to seem parochial
and antiquated; the heroes are found to have been mistaken, their
names cease to thrill. The man now sees nothing to fight for, he
cares only to go on perfecting his equipment. Let us do him justice.
It is not the toil of the conflict he shrinks from, but the rudeness
of it, the dust and heat of warfare. He is no voluntary now, for he
values the dignity of a State Church and feels the charm of ancient
traditions. He is not a good churchman, for he will not be pledged
to any creed or opposed to any school. He is rarely seen on any
political platform, for he hates the watchwords of party. And this
is the least of it. He is a man without a cause, a believer without
a faith, a Christian without a stroke of brave work to do in the
world. We love his mildness; we admire his mental possessions, his
broad sympathies. But when we are throbbing with indignation he is
too calm; when we catch at the ox-goad and fly at the enemy we know
that he disdains our weapon and is affronted by our fire. Better, if
it must be so, the rustic from the plough, the herdsman from the
hillside; better far he of the camel’s-hair garment and the keen
cry, Repent, repent!
Israel, then, appears in these stories of her iron age as the cradle
of the manhood of the modern world; in Israel the true standard was
lifted up for the people. It is liberty put to a noble use that is
the mark of manhood, and in Israel’s history the idea of
responsibility to the one living and true God takes form and
clearness as that alone which fulfils and justifies liberty. Israel
has a God Whose will man must do, and for the doing of it he is
free.
If at the outset the vigour which this thought of God infused into
the Hebrew struggle for independence was tempestuous; if Jehovah was
seen not in the majesty of eternal justice and sublime magnanimity,
not as the Friend of all, but as the unseen King of a favoured
people, -still, as freedom came, there came with it always, in some
prophetic word, some Divine psalm, a more living conception of God
as gracious, merciful, holy, unchangeable; and notwithstanding all
lapses the Hebrew was a man of higher quality than those about him.
You stand by the cradle and see no promise, nothing to attract. But
give the faith which is here in infancy time to assert itself, give
time for the vision of God to enlarge, and the finest type of human
life will arise and establish itself, a type possible in no other
way. Egypt with its long and wonderful history gives nothing to the
moral life of the new world, for it produces no men. Its kings are
despots, tomb builders, its people contented or discontented slaves.
Babylon and Nineveh are names that dwarf Israel’s into
insignificance, but their power passes and leaves only some
monuments for the antiquarian, some corroborations of a Hebrew
record. Egypt and Chaldea, Assyria and Persia never reached through
freedom the idea of man’s proper life, never rose to the sense of
that sublime calling or bowed in that profound adoration of the Holy
One which made the Israelite, rude fanatic as he often was, a man
and a father of men. From Egypt, from Babylon, -yea, from Greece and
Rome came no redeemer of mankind, for they grew bewildered in the
search after the chief end of existence and fell before they found
it. In the prepared people it was, the people cramped in the narrow
land between the Syrian desert and the sea, that the form of the
future Man was seen, and there, where the human spirit felt at
least, if it did not realise its dignity and place, the Messiah was
born.
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