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DEBORAH’S SONG: A CHANT OF
PATRIOTISM
Judges 5
WE have already considered the song of Deborah as a declaration
of God’s working more broad and spiritual than might be looked for
in that age. We now regard it as exhibiting different relations of
men to the Divine purpose. There is a religious spirit in the whole
movement here described. It begins in a revival of faith and
obedience, prospers despite the coldness and opposition of many,
grows in force and enthusiasm as it proceeds, and finally is crowned
with success. The church is militant in a literal sense; yet,
fighting with carnal weapons, it is really contending for the glory
of the Unseen King. There is a close parallel between the enterprise
of Deborah and Barak and that which opens before the church of the
present time. No forced accommodation is needed to gather from the
song lessons of different kinds for our guidance and warning in the
campaign of Christianity.
Here are Deborah herself, a mother in Israel, and the leaders who
take their places at the head of the armies of God. Here also are
the people willingly offering themselves, imperilling their lives
for religion and freedom. The history of the past and the vision of
Jehovah as sole Ruler of nature and providence encourage the
faithful, who rise out of lethargy and leave the byways of life to
take the field in battle array. The levies of Ephraim, Benjamin,
Zebulun, Issachar, and Naphtali represent those who are decisively
Christian, ready to hazard all for the gospel’s sake. But Reuben
sits among the sheepfolds and listens to the pipings for the flocks,
Dan remains in ships, Asher at the haven of the sea; and these may
stand for the self-cultivating, self-serving professors of religion.
Jabin and Sisera again are established opponents of the right cause;
they are brave in their own defence; their positions look most
formidable, their battalions shake the ground. But the stars from
heaven, the floods of Kishon, are only a small part of the forces of
the King of heaven; and the soul of Israel marches on in strength
till the enemy is routed. Meroz practically helps the foe. Those who
dwell within its walls are doubtful of the issue and will not risk
their lives; the curse of sullen apostasy falls upon them. Jael is a
vivid type of the unscrupulous helpers of a good cause, those who,
employing the weapons and methods of the world, would fain be
servants of that kingdom in which nothing base, nothing earthly can
have place. And there are the children of the hour, the fine ladies
of Harosheth whose pleasure and pride are bound up with oppression,
who look through the lattices and listen in vain for the returning
chariots laden with spoil.
1. The leaders and head men of the tribes under Deborah and Barak,
Deborah foremost in the great enterprise, her soul on fire with zeal
for Israel and for God.
Deborah and Barak show throughout that spirit of cordial agreement,
that frank support of each other which at all times are so much to
be desired in religious leaders. There is no jealousy, no striving
for preeminence. Barak is a brave man, but he will not stir without
the prophetess; he is quite content to give her the place of honour
while he does the martial work. Deborah again would commit the task
to Barak’s hands in complete reliance on his wisdom and valour; yet
she is ready to appear along with him, and in her song, while she
claims the prophetic office, it is to Barak she renders the honours
of victory-"Lead thy thraldom in thrall, thou son of Abinoam."
Rarely, it must be confessed, is there entire harmony among the
leaders of affairs. Jealousy is too often with them from the first.
Suspicion lurks under the council table, private ambitions and
unworthy fears make confusion when each should trust and encourage
another. The fine enthusiasm of a great cause does not overcome as
it ought the selfishness of human nature. Moreover, varieties in
disposition as between the cautious and the impetuous, the more and
the less of sagacity or of faith, a failure in sincerity here, in
justice there, are separating influences constantly at work. But
when the pressing importance of the duties entrusted to men by God
governs every will, these elements of division cease; leaders who
differ in temperament are loyal to each other then, each jealous of
the other’s honour as servants of truth. In the Reformation, for
example, prosperity was largely due to the fact that two such men as
Luther and Melanchthon, very different yet thoroughly united, stood
side by side in the thick of the conflict, Luther’s impetuosity
moderated by the calmer spirit of the other, Melanchthon’s craving
for peace kept from dangerous concession by the boldness of his
friend. Their mutual love and fidelity showed the nobleness of both,
showed also what the Protestant Gospel was. Their differences melted
away in enthusiasm for the Word of God, which one thought of as a
celestial ambrosia, the other as a sword, a war, a destruction
springing upon the children of Ephraim like a lioness in the forest.
The Divine work was the life of each; each in his own way sought
with splendid earnestness to forward the truth of Christ.
Church leaders are responsible for not a little which they
themselves condemn. Differences do not quickly arise among disciples
when the teachers are modest, honourable, and brotherly. Paul cries,
"Is Christ divided? Were ye baptised into the name of Paul? What is
Apollos? What is Paul? Ministers by whom ye believed." When our
leaders speak and feel in like manner there will be peace, not
uniformity but something better. God’s husbandry, God’s building
will prosper.
But it is declared to be jealousy for religion that divides-jealousy
for the pure doctrine of Christ-jealousy for the true church. We try
to believe it. But then why are not all in that spirit of holy
jealousy found side by side as comrades, eagerly yet in cordial
brotherhood discussing points of difference, determined that they
will search together and help each other until they find principles
in which they can all rest? The leaders of different Christian
bodies do not appear like Deborah and Barak engaged in a common
enterprise, but as chiefs of rival or even opposing armies. The
reason is that in this church and the other there has been a
foreclosing of questions, and the elected leaders are almost all men
who are pledged to the tribal decrees. In the decisions of councils
and synods, and not less in the deliverances of learned doctors
apologising each for his own sect and marking out the path his party
must travel, there has been ever since the days of the apostles a
hardening and limiting of opinion. Thought has been prematurely
crystallised and each church prides itself on its own special
deposit. The true church leader should understand that a course
which may have been inevitable in the past is not the virtue of
today and that those are simply adhering to an antiquated position
who affirm one church to be the sole possessor of truth, the only
centre of authority. It may seem strange to advise the churches to
reconsider many of the ideas built into creed and constitution and
to reject all leaders who are such by credit of sitting immovable in
the seats of the rabbis, but the progress of Christianity in power
and assurance waits upon a new brotherliness which will bring about
a new catholicity. Under guides of the right kind the churches will
have qualities and distinctions as heretofore, each will be a
rendezvous for spirits of a certain order, but frankly confessing
each other’s right and honour they will press on abreast to scale
and possess the uplands of truth.
To be sure something is said of tolerance. But that is a purely
political idea. Let it not be so much as named in the assembly of
God’s people. Does Barak tolerate Deborah? Does Moses tolerate
Aaron? Does St. Peter tolerate St. Paul? The disciples of Christ
tolerate each other, do they? What marvellous largeness of soul! One
or two, it appears, have been made sole keepers of the ark, but are
prepared to tolerate the embarrassing help of well meaning
auxiliaries. Neither charity of that sort nor flabbiness of belief
is asked. Let each be strongly persuaded in his own mind of that
which he has learned from Christ. But where Christ has not
foreclosed inquiry, and where sincere and thoughtful believers
differ, there is no place for what is called tolerance; the demand
is for brotherly fellowship in thought and labour.
Deborah was a mother in Israel, a nursing mother of the people in
their spiritual childhood, with a mother’s warm heart for the
oppressed and weary flock. The nation needed a new birth, and that,
by the grace of God, Deborah gave it in the sore travail of her
soul. For many a year she suffered, prayed, and entreated. Israel
had chosen new gods and in serving them was dying to righteousness,
dying to Jehovah. Deborah had to pour her own life into the half
dead, and compared to this effort the battle with the Canaanites was
but a secondary matter. So is it always. The Divine task is that of
the mother-like souls that labour for the quickening of faith and
holy service. Great victories of Christian valour, patience, and
love are never won without that renewal of humanity; and everything
is due to those who have guided the ignorant into knowledge, the
careless to thought, and the weak to strength through years of
patient toil. They are not all prophets, not all known to the
tribes: of many such the record waits, hidden with their God, until
the day of revealing and rejoicing.
Yet Barak also, the Lightning Chief, has honourable part. When the
men are collected, men newborn into life, he can lead them. They are
Ironsides under him. He rushes down from Tabor and they at his feet
with a vigour nothing can resist. If we have Deborah we shall also
have Barak, his army and his victory. The promise is not for women
only but for all in the private ways and obscure settlements of life
who labour at the making of men. Every Christian has the
responsibility and joy of helping to prepare a way for the coming of
Jehovah in some great outburst of faith and righteousness.
2. We contrast next the people who offered themselves willingly, who
"jeoparded their lives unto the death upon the high places of the
field," and those who for one reason or another held aloof.
With united leaders there is a measure of unity among the tribes.
Barak and Deborah summon all who are ready to strike for liberty,
and there is a great muster. Yet there might be double the number.
Those who refuse to take arms have many pretexts, but the real cause
is want of heart. The oppression of Jabin does not much affect some
Israelites, and so far as it does they would rather go on paying
tribute than risk their lives, rather bear the ills they have than
hazard anything in joining Barak. These holding back, the work has
to be done by a comparatively small number, a remnant of the nobles
and the people.
But a remnant is always found; there are men and women who do not
bow the knee to the Baal of worldly fashion, who do not content
their souls amid the fleshpots of low servitude. They have to
venture and sacrifice much in a long and varying war, and oftentimes
their flesh and heart may almost fail. But a great reward is theirs.
While others are spiritless and hopeless, they know the zest of
life, its real power and joy. They know what believing means, how
strong it makes the soul. Their all is in the spiritual kingdom
which cannot be moved. God is the portion of their souls, their
gladness and glory. Those who stand by and look on while the
conflict rages may share to a certain extent in the liberty that is
won, for the gains of Christian warfare are not limited, they are
for all mankind. There is a wider and better ordered life for all
when this evil custom and that have been overcome, when one Jabin
after another ceases to oppress. Yet what is it after all to touch
the border of Christian liberty? To the fighters belongs the
inheritance itself, an ever-extending conquest, a land of olives and
vineyards and streams of living water.
Different tribes are named that sent contingents to the army of
Barak. They are typical of different churches, different orders of
society that are forward in the campaign of faith. The Hebrews who
came most readily at the battle call appear to have belonged to
districts where the Canaanite oppression was heavy, the country that
lay between Harosheth, the headquarters of Sisera, and Hazor the
city of Jabin. So in the Christian struggle of the ages the
strenuous part falls to those who suffer from the tyranny of the
temporal and see clearly the hopelessness of life without religion.
The gospel of Christ is peculiarly precious to men and women whose
lot is hard, whose earthly future is clouded. Sacrifices for God’s
cause are made as a rule by these. In His great purpose, in His deep
knowledge of the facts of life, our Lord joined Himself to the poor
and left with them a special blessing. It is not that men who dwell
in comfort are independent of the gospel, but they are tempted to
think themselves so. In proportion as they are fenced in amongst
possessions and social claims they are apt, though devout, to miss
that very call which is the message of the gospel to them. Well
meaning but absorbed, they can rarely bestir themselves to hear and
do until some personal calamity or public disaster awakens them to
the truth of things. The steady support of Christian ordinances and
work in our day is largely the honour of people who have their full
share in the struggle for earthly necessaries or a humble standing
in the ranks of the independent. The paradox is real and striking;
it claims the attention of those who vainly dream that a comfortable
society would certainly become Christian, as effect follows cause.
While the religion of Christ makes for justice and temporal well
being, blessing even the unbeliever, while it leads the way to a
high standard of social order, these things remain of no value in
themselves to men unspiritual: it holds true that man can never live
by bread alone, but by the words which proceed out of the mouth of
God. And there are forces at work among us on behalf of the Divine
counsel that shall not fail to maintain the struggle necessary to
the discipline and growth of souls.
The real army of faith is largely drawn from the ranks of the
toilers and the heavy laden. Yet not entirely. We reckon many and
fine exceptions. There are rich who are less worldly than those who
have little. Many whose lot lies far from the shadow of tyranny in
green and pleasant valleys are first to hear and quickest to answer
every call from the Captain of the Lord’s host. Their possessions
are nothing to them. In the spiritual battle all is spent,
knowledge, influence, wealth, life. And if you look for the highest
examples of Christianity, a faith pure, keen, and lovely, a
generosity that most clearly reveals the Master, a passion for truth
consuming all lower regards, you will find them where culture has
done its best for the mind and the bounty of providence has kindled
a gracious humility and an abounding gentleness of heart. The tawdry
vanities of their fellows in rank and wealth seem what they are to
these, the gaudy toys of children who have not yet seen the glory
and the goal of life. And how can men and women hear the clarion of
the Christian war ringing over the valleys of degradation and fear,
see the Divine contest surging through the land, and not perceive
that here and here only is life? Men play at statecraft and grow
cold as they intrigue; they play at financing and become ciphers in
a monstrous sum; they toil at pleasure till Satan himself might pity
them, for at least he has a purpose to serve. All the while there is
offered to them the vigour, the buoyancy, the glow of an ambition
and a service in which no spirit tires and no heart withers. Passing
strange it is that so few noble, so few mighty, so few wise hear the
keen cry from the cross as one of life and power.
Among the tribes that held aloof from the great conflict several are
specially named. Messengers have gone to the land of Reuben beyond
Jordan, and carried the fiery cross through Bashan. Dan has been
summoned and Asher from the haven of the sea. But these have not
responded. Reuben indeed has searchings of heart. Some of the people
remember the old promise made at Shittim in the plain of Moab, that
they would help their brethren who crossed into Canaan, never
refusing assistance till the land was fully possessed. Moses had
solemnly charged them with that duty, and they had bound themselves
in covenant: "As the Lord hath said unto thy servants, so will we
do." Could anything have been more seriously, more decisively
undertaken? Yet, when this hour of need came, though the duty lay
upon the conscience nothing was done. Along the watercourses of
Gilead and Bashan there were flocks to tend, to protect from the
Amalekites and Midianites of the desert, who would be sure to make a
raid in the absence of the fighting men. To Asher and Dan the
reference is perhaps somewhat ironical. The "ships" for trade, the
"haven of the sea," were never much to these tribes, and their
maritime ambition made an unworthy excuse. They had perhaps a little
fishing, some small trade on the coast, and petty as the gain was it
filled their hearts. Asher "abode by his creeks." It is not to a
religious festival that Deborah and Barak have called the tribes. It
is to serious and dangerous duty. Yet the call of duty should come
with more power than any invitation even to spiritual enjoyment. The
great religious gathering has its use, its charm. We know the
attraction of the crowded convocation in which Christian hope and
enthusiasm are rekindled by stirring words and striking instances,
faith rising high as it views the wide mission of gospel truth and
hears from eloquent lips the story of a modern day of Pentecost. To
many, because their own spiritual life burns dull, the daily and
weekly routine of things becomes empty, vain, unsatisfying. In the
common round even of valued religious exercise the heat and promise
of Christianity seem to be lacking. In the convention they appear to
be realised as nowhere else, and the persuasion that God may be felt
there in a special manner is laying hold of Christian people. They
are right in their eager desire to be borne along with the flood of
redeeming grace, but we have need to ask what the life of faith is,
how it is best nourished. To have a personal share in God’s
controversy with evil, to have a place however obscure in the actual
struggle of truth with falsehood, -this alone gives confidence in
the result and power in believing. Those who are in contact with
spiritual reality because they have their own testimony to bear,
their own watch to keep at some outpost, find stimulus in the
urgency of duty and exultation in the consciousness of service. Men
often seek in public gatherings what they can only find in the
private ways of effort and endurance; they seek the joy of harvest
when they should be at the labour of sowing; they would fain be
cheered by the song of victory when they should be roused by the
trumpet of battle. And the result is that where spiritual work waits
to be done there are but few to do it. Examine the state of any
Christian church, reckon up those who are deeply interested in its
efficiency, who make sacrifices of time and means, and set against
these the half-hearted, who ignobly accept the religious provision
made for them and perhaps complain that it is not so good as they
would like, that progress is not so rapid as they think it might be,
-the one class far outnumbers the other. As in Israel twice or three
times as many might have responded to Barak’s call, so in every
church the resolute, the energetic, and devoted are few compared
with those who are capable of energy and devotion. It is sometimes
maintained that the worship of goodness and the Christian ideal
command the minds of men more today than ever they did, and proof
seems ready to hand. But, after all, is it not religious taste
rather than reverence that grows? Self-culture leads many to a
certain admiration of Christ and a form of discipleship. Christian
worship is enjoyed and Christian philanthropy also, but when the
spiritual freedom of mankind calls for some effort of the soul and
life, we see what religion means-a wave of the hand instead of
enthusiasm, a guinea subscription instead of thoughtful service. Is
it a Christian or a selfish culture which is content with
fragmentary concessions and complacent patronage where the claims of
social "inferiors" are concerned? That there is a wide diffusion of
religious feeling is clear enough; but in many respects it is mere
dilettantism.
Notice the history of the tribes that lag behind in the day of the
Lord’s summons. What do we hear of Reuben after this? "Unstable as
water, thou shalt not excel." Along with Gad Reuben possessed a
splendid country, but these two faded away into a sort of barbarism,
scarcely maintaining their separateness from the wild races of the
desert. Asher in like manner suffered from the contact with
Phoenicia and lost touch with the more faithful tribes. So it is
always. Those who shirk religious duty lose the strength and dignity
of religion. Though greatly favoured in place and gifts they fall
into that spiritual impotence which means defeat and extinction.
"Curse ye Meroz, said the angel of the Lord, curse ye bitterly the
inhabitants thereof; because they came not to the help of the Lord
against the mighty." It is a stern judgment upon those whose active
assistance was, humanly speaking, necessary in the day of battle.
The men only held back, held back in doubt, supposing that it was
vain for Hebrews to fling themselves against the iron chariots of
Sisera. Were they not prudent, looking at the matter all round? Why
should a curse so heavy be pronounced on men who only sought to save
their lives? The reply is that secular history curses such men,
those of Sparta for example to whom Athens sent in vain when the
battle of Marathon was impending; and further that Christ his
declared the truth which is for all time, "Whosoever will save his
life shall lose it." Erasmus was a wise man; yet he made the great
blunder. He saw clearly the errors of Romanism and the miserable
bondage in which it kept the souls of men, and if he had joined the
reformers his judgment and learning would have become part of the
world’s progressive life. But he held back doubting, criticising, a
friend to the Reformation but not an apostle of it. Admire as we may
the wit, the reasoner, the philosopher, there must always be severe
judgment of one who, professing to love truth, declared that he had
no inclination to die for it. There are many who, without the
intellect of Erasmus, would fain be thought catholic in his company.
Large is the family of Meroz, and little thought have they of any
ban lying upon them. Is it a fanciful danger, a mere error of
opinion without any peril in it, to which we point here? People
think so; young men especially think so and drift on until the day
of service is past and they find themselves under the contempt of
man and the judgment of Christ. "Lord, when saw we Thee a stranger
or in prison and did not minister unto Thee?" "Depart from Me, I
never knew you."
3. Jael, a type of the unscrupulous helpers of a good cause.
Long has the error prevailed that religion can be helped by using
the world’s weapons, by acting in the temper and spirit of the
world. Of that mischievous falsehood have been born all the pride
and vainglory, the rivalries and persecutions that darken the past
of Christendom, surviving in strange and pitiful forms to the
present day. If we shudder at the treachery in the deed of Jael,
what shall we say of that which through many a year sent victims to
inquisition dungeons and to the stake in the name of Christ? And
what shall we say now of that moral assassination which in one tent
and another is thought no sin against humanity, but a service of
God? Among us are too many who suffer wounds keen and festering that
have been given in the house of their friends, yea, in the name of
the one Lord and Master. The battle of truth is a frank and
honourable fight, served at no point by what is false or proud or
low. To an enemy a Christian should be chivalrous, and surely no
less to a brother. Granting that a man is in error, he needs a
physician, not an executioner; he needs an example, not a dagger.
How much farther do we get by the methods of opprobrium and cruelty,
the innuendo and the whisper of suspicion? Besides, it is not the
Siseras today who are dealt with after this manner. It is the
"schismatic" within the camp on whom some Jael falls with a hammer
and a nail. If a church cannot stand by itself, approved to the
consciences of men, it certainly will not be helped by a return to
the temper of barbarism and the craft of the world. "The weapons of
our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God to the casting
down of strongholds."
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