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THE DESERT HORDES; AND THE
MAN AT OPHRAH
Jdg 6:1-14
JABIN king of Canaan defeated and his nine hundred chariots
turned into ploughshares, we might expect Israel to make at last a
start in its true career. The tribes have had their third lesson and
should know the peril of infidelity. Without God they are weak as
water. Will they not bind themselves now in a confederacy of faith,
suppress Baal and Astarte worship by stringent laws and turn their
hearts to God and duty? Not yet: not for more than a century. The
true reformer has yet to come. Deborah’s work is certainly not in
vain. She passes through the land administering justice, commanding
the destruction of heathen altars. The people leave their
occupations and gather in crowds to hear her: they shout, in answer
to her appeals, Jehovah is our King. The Levites are called to
minister at the shrines. For a time there is something like religion
along with improving circumstances. But the tide does not rise long
nor far.
Some twenty years have passed, and what is to be seen going on
throughout the land? The Hebrews have addressed themselves
vigorously to their work in field and town. Everywhere they are
breaking up new ground, building houses, repairing roads, organising
traffic. But they are also falling into the old habit of friendly
intercourse with Canaanites, talking with them over the prospects of
the crops, joining in their festivals of new moon and harvest. In
their own cities the old inhabitants of the land sacrifice to Baal
and gather about the Asherim. Earnest Israelites are indignant and
call for action, but the mass of the people are so taken up with
their prosperity that they cannot be roused. Peace and comfort in
the lower region seem better than contention for anything higher. In
the centre of Palestine there is a coalition of Hebrew and Canaanite
cities, with Shechem at their head, which recognise Baal as their
patron and worship him as the master of their league. And in the
northern tribes generally Jehovah has scant acknowledgment; the
people see no great task He has given them to do. If they live and
multiply and inherit the land they reckon their function as His
nation to be fulfilled.
It is a temptation common to men to consider their own existence and
success a sort of Divine end in serving which they do all that God
requires of them. The business of mere living and making life
comfortable absorbs them so that even faith finds its only use in
promoting their own happiness. The circle of the year is filled with
occupations. When the labour of the field is over there are the
houses and cities to enlarge, to improve, and furnish with means of
safety and enjoyment. One task done and the advantage of it felt,
another presents itself, Industry takes new forms and burdens still
more the energies of men. Education, art, science become possible
and in turn make their demands. But all may be for self, and God may
be thought of merely as the great Patron satisfied with His tithes.
In this way the impulses and hopes of faith are made the ministers
of egoism, and as a national thing the maintenance of law, goodwill,
and a measure of purity may seem to furnish religion with a
sufficient object. But this is far from enough. Let worship be
refined and elaborated, let great temples be built and thronged, let
the arts of music and painting be employed in raising devotion to
its highest pitch-still if nothing beyond self is seen as the aim of
existence, if national Christianity realises no duty to the world
outside, religion must decay. Neither a man nor a people can be
truly religious without the missionary spirit, and that spirit must
constantly shape individual and collective life. Among ourselves
worship would petrify and faith wither were it not for the tasks the
church has undertaken at home and abroad. But half-understood,
half-discharged, these duties keep us alive. And it is because the
great mission of Christians to the world is not even yet
comprehended that we have so much practical atheism. When less care
and thought are expended on the forms of worship and the churches
address themselves to the true ritual of our religion, carrying out
the redeeming work of our Saviour, there will be new fervour;
unbelief will be swept away.
Israel, losing sight of its mission and its destiny, felt no need of
faith and lost it; and with the loss of faith came loss of vigour
and alertness as on other occasions. Having no sense of a common
purpose great enough to demand their unity the Hebrews were again
unable to resist enemies, and this time the Midianites and other
wild tribes of the eastern desert found their opportunity. First
some bands of them came at the time of harvest and made raids on the
cultivated districts. But year by year they ventured farther in
increasing numbers. Finally they brought their tents and families,
their flocks and herds, and took possession.
In the case of all who fall away from the purpose of life the means
of bringing failure home to them and restoring the balance of
justice are always at hand. Let a man neglect his fields and nature
is upon him; weeds choke his crops, his harvests diminish, poverty
comes like an armed man. In trade likewise carelessness brings
retribution. So in the case of Israel: although the Canaanites had
been subdued other foes were not far away. And the business of this
nation was of so sacred a kind that neglect of it meant great moral
fault, and every fresh relapse into earthliness and sensuality after
a revival of religion implied more serious guilt. We find
accordingly a proportionate severity in the punishment. Now the
nation is chastised with whips, but next time it is with scorpions.
Now the iron chariots of Sisera hold the land in terror; then hosts
of marauders spread like locusts over the country, insatiable,
all-devouring. Do the Hebrews think that careful tilling of their
fields and the making of wine and oil are their chief concern? In
that they shall be undeceived. Not mainly to be good husbandmen and
vine dressers are they set here, but to be a light in the midst of
the nations. If they cease to shine they shall no longer enjoy.
It was by the higher fords of Jordan, perhaps north of the Sea of
Galilee, that the Midianites fell on western Canaan. Under their two
great emirs Zebah and Zalmunna, who seem to have held a kind of
barbaric state, troops of riders on swift horses and dromedaries
swept the shore of the lake and burst into the plain of Jezreel.
There were no doubt many skirmishes between their squadrons and the
men of Naphtali and Manasseh. But one horde of the invaders followed
another so quickly and their attacks were so sudden and fierce that
at length resistance became impossible, the Hebrews had to betake
themselves to the heights and dwell in the caves and rocks. Once in
the desert under Moses they had been more than a match for these
Arabs. Now, although on vantage ground moral and natural, fighting
for their hearths and homes behind the breastwork of lake, river,
and mountain, they are completely routed.
Between the circumstances of this oppressed nation and the present
state of the church there is a wide interval, and in a sense the
contrast is striking. Is not the Christianity of our time strong and
able to hold its own? Is not the mood of many churches of the
present day properly that of elation? As year after year reports of
numerical increase and larger contributions are made, as finer
buildings are raised for the purpose of worship, and work at home
and abroad is carried on more efficiently, is it not impossible to
trace any resemblance between the state of Israel during the
Midianite oppression and the state of religion now? Why should there
be any fear that Baal worship or other idolatry should weaken the
tribes, or that marauders from the desert should settle in their
land?
And yet the condition of things today is not quite unlike that of
Israel at the time we are considering. There are Canaanites who
dwell in the land and carry on their debasing worship. These too are
days when guerilla troops of naturalism, nomads of the primaeval
desert, are sweeping the region of faith. Reckless and irresponsible
talk in periodicals and on platforms; novels, plays, and verses,
often as clever as they are unscrupulous, are incidents of the
invasion, and it is well advanced. Not for the first time is a raid
of this kind made on the territory of faith, but the serious thing
now is the readiness to give way, the want of heart and power to
resist that we observe in family life and in society as well as in
literature. Where resistance ought to be eager and firm it is often
ignorant, hesitating, lukewarm. Perhaps the invasion must become
more confident and more injurious before it rouses the people of God
to earnest and united action. Perhaps those who will not submit may
have to betake themselves to the caves of the mountains while the
new barbarism establishes itself in the rich plain. It has almost
come to this in some countries; and it may be that the pride of
those who have been content to cultivate their vineyards for
themselves alone, the security of those who have too easily
concluded that fighting was over shall yet be startled by some great
disaster.
"Israel was brought very low because of Midian." A traveller’s
picture of the present state of things on the eastern frontier of
Bashan enables us to understand the misery to which the tribes were
reduced by seven years of rapine. "Not only is the country-plain and
hillside alike-chequered with fenced fields, but groves of fig trees
are here and there seen and terraced vineyards still clothe the
sides of some of the hills. These are neglected and wild but not
fruitless. They produce great quantities of figs and grapes, which
are rifled year after year by the Bedawin in their periodical raids.
Nowhere on earth is there such a melancholy example of tyranny,
rapacity, and misrule as here. Fields, pastures, vineyards, houses,
villages, cities are all alike deserted and waste. Even the few
inhabitants that have hid themselves among the rocky fastnesses and
mountain defiles drag out a miserable existence, oppressed by
robbers of the desert on the one hand and robbers of the government
on the other." The Midianites of Gideon’s time acted the part both
of tyrants and depredators. They "left no sustenance for Israel,
neither sheep nor ox nor ass. They entered into the land for to
destroy it."
"And the children of Israel cried unto the Lord"; the prodigals
bethought them of their Father. Having come to the husks they
remembered Him who fed His people in the desert. Again the wheel has
revolved and from the lowest point there is an upward movement. The
tribes of God look once more towards the hills from whence their
help cometh. And here is seen the importance of that faith which had
passed into the nation’s life. Although it was not of a very
spiritual kind, yet it preserved in the heart of the people a
recuperative power. The majority knew little more of Jehovah than
His name. But the name suggested availing succour. They turned to
the Awful Name, repeated it and urged their need. Here and there one
saw God as the infinitely righteous and holy and added to the wail
of the ignorant a more devout appeal, recognising the evils under
which the people groaned as punitive, and knowing that the very God
to Whom they cried had brought the Midianites upon them. In the
prayer of such a one there was an outlook towards holier and nobler
life. But even in the case of the ignorant the cry to One higher
than the highest had help in it. For when that bitter cry was raised
self-glorifying had ceased and piety begun.
Ignorant indeed is much of the faith that still expresses itself in
so-called Christian prayer, almost as ignorant as that of the
disconsolate Hebrew tribes. The moral purpose of discipline, the
Divine ordinances of defeat and pain and affliction are a mystery
unread. The man in extremity does not know why his hour of abject
fear has come, nor see that one by one all the stays of his selfish
life have been removed by a Divine hand. His cry is that of a
foolish child. Yet is it not true that such a prayer revives hope
and gives new energy to the languid life? It may be many years since
prayer was tried, not perhaps since he who is now past his meridian
knelt at a mother’s knee. Still as he names the name of God, as he
looks upward, there comes with the dim vision of an Omnipotent
Helper within reach of his cry the sense of new possibilities, the
feeling that amidst the miry clay or the heaving waves there is
something firm and friendly on which he may yet stand. It is a
striking fact as to any kind of religious belief, even the most
meagre, that it does for man what nothing else can do. Prayer must
cease, we are told, for it is mere superstition. Without denying
that much of what is called prayer is an expression of egotism, we
must demand an explanation of the unique value it has in human life
and a sufficient substitute for the habit of appeal to God. Those
who would deprive us of prayer must first remake man, for to the
strong and enlightened prayer is necessary as well as to the weak
and ignorant. The Heavenly is the only hope of the earthly. That we
understand God is, after all, not the chief thing: but does He know
us? Is He there above yet beside us, forever?
The first answer to the cry of Israel came in the message of a
prophet, one who would have been despised by the nation in its
self-sufficient mood, but now obtained a hearing. His words brought
instruction and made it possible for faith to move and work along a
definite line. Through man’s struggle God helps him; through man’s
thought and resolve God speaks to him. He is already converted when
he believes enough to pray, and from this point faith saves by
animating and guiding the strenuous will. The ignorant abject people
of God learns from the prophet that something is to be done. There
is a command, repeated from Sinai, against the worship of heathen
gods, then a call to love the true God the Deliverer of Israel.
Faith is to become life, and life faith. The name of Jehovah which
has stood for one power among others is clearly reaffirmed as that
of the One Divine Being, the only Object of adoration. Israel is
convicted of sin and set on the way of obedience.
The answer to prayer lies very near to him who cries for salvation.
He has not to move a step. He has but to hear the inner voice of
conscience. Is there a sense of neglect of duty, a sense of
disobedience, of faults committed? The first movement towards
salvation is set up in that conviction and in the hope that the evil
now seen may be remedied. Forgiveness is implied in this hope, and
it will become assured as the hope grows strong. The mistake is
often made of supposing that answer to prayer does not come till
peace is found. In reality the answer begins when the will is bent
towards a better life, though that change may be accompanied by the
deepest sorrow and self-humiliation. A man who earnestly reproaches
himself for despising and disobeying God has already received the
grace of the redeeming Spirit.
But to Israel’s cry there was another answer. When repentance was
well begun and the tribes turned from the heathen rites which
separated them from each other and from Divine thoughts, freedom
again became possible and God raised up a liberator. Repentance
indeed was not thorough; therefore a complete national reformation
was not accomplished. Yet as against Midian, a mere horde of
marauders, the balance of righteousness and power inclined now in
behalf of Israel. The time was ripe and in the providence of God the
fit man received his call.
Southwest from Shechem, among the hills of Manasseh, at Ophrah of
the Abiezrites, lived a family that had suffered keenly at the hands
of Midian. Some members of the family had been slain near Tabor, and
the rest had as a cause of war not only the constant robberies from
field and homestead but also the duty of blood revenge. The deepest
sense of injury, the keenest resentment fell to the share of one
Gideon, son of Joash, a young man of nobler temper than most Hebrews
of the time. His father was head of a Thousand; and as he was an
idolater the whole clan joined him in sacrificing to the Baal whose
altar stood within the boundary of his farm. Already Gideon appears
to have turned with loathing from that base worship; and he was
pondering earnestly the cause of the pitiful state into which Israel
had fallen. But the circumstances perplexed him. He was not able to
account for facts in accordance with faith.
In a retired place on the hillside, where a winepress has been
fashioned in a hollow of the rocks, we first see the future
deliverer of Israel. His task for the day is that of threshing out
some wheat so that, as soon as possible, the grain may be hid from
the Midianites; and he is busy with the flail, thinking deeply,
watching carefully as he plies the instrument with a sense of
irksome restraint. Look at him and you are struck with his stalwart
proportions and his bearing: he is "like the son of a king." Observe
more closely and the fire of a troubled yet resolute soul will be
seen in his eye. He represents the best Hebrew blood, the finest
spirit and intelligence of the nation; but as yet he is a strong man
bound. He would fain do something to deliver Israel he would fain
trust Jehovah to sustain him in striking a blow for liberty; but the
way is not clear. Indignation and hope are baffled.
In a pause of his work, as he glances across the valley with anxious
eye, suddenly he sees under an oak a stranger sitting staff in hand,
as if he had sought rest for a little in the shade. Gideon scans the
visitor keenly, but finding no cause for alarm bends again to his
labour. The next time he looks up the stranger is beside him and
words of salutation are falling from his lips-"Jehovah is with thee,
thou mighty man of valour." To Gideon the words did not seem so
strange as they would have seemed to some. Yet what did they mean?
Jehovah with him? Strength and courage he is aware of. Sympathy with
his fellow Israelites and the desire to help them he feels. But
these do not seem to him proofs of Jehovah’s presence. And as for
his father’s house and the Hebrew people, God seems far from them.
Harried and oppressed, they are surely God-forsaken. Gideon can only
wonder at the unseasonable greeting and ask what it means.
Unconsciousness of God is not rare. Men do not attribute their
regret over wrong, their faint longing for the right to a spiritual
presence within them and a Divine working. The Unseen appears so
remote, man appears so shut off from intercourse with any
supernatural Cause or Source that he fails to link his own strain of
thought with the Eternal. The word of God is nigh him even in his
heart, God is "closer to him than breathing, nearer than hands and
feet." Hope, courage, will, life-these are Divine gifts, but he does
not know it. Even in our Christian times the old error which makes
God external, remote, entirely aloof from human experience survives
and is more common than true faith. We conceive ourselves separated
from the Divine, with springs of thought, purpose, and power in our
own being, whereas there is in us no absolute origin of power-moral,
intellectual, or physical. We live and move in God: He is our Source
and our Stay, and our being is shot through and through with rays of
the Eternal. The prophetic word spoken in our ear is not more
assuredly from God than the pure wish or unselfish hope that frames
itself in our minds or the stern voice of conscience heard in the
soul. As for the trouble into which we fall, that too, did we
understand aright, is a mark of God’s providential care. Would we
err without discipline? Would we be ineffective and have no bracing?
Would we follow lies and enjoy a false peace? Would we refuse the
Divine path to strength, yet never feel the sorrow of the weak? Are
these the proofs of God’s presence our ignorance would desire? Then
indeed we imagine an unholy one, an unfaithful one upon the throne
of the universe. But God has no favourites; He does not rule like a
despot of earth for courtiers and an aristocracy. In righteousness
and for righteousness, for eternal truth He works, and for that His
people must endure.
"Jehovah is with thee": so ran the salutation. Gideon, thinking of
Jehovah, does not wonder to hear His name. But full of doubts
natural to one so little instructed he feels himself bound to
express them: "Why is all this evil befallen us? Hath not Jehovah
cast us off and delivered us into the hand of Midian?"
Unconstrainedly, plainly as man to man Gideon speaks, the burdensome
thought of his people’s misery overcoming the strangeness of the
fact that in a God-forsaken land anyone should care to speak of
things like these. Yet momentarily, as the conversation proceeds,
there grows in Gideon’s soul a feeling of awe, a new and penetrating
idea. The look fastened upon him conveys beside the human strain of
will a suggestion of highest authority; the words, "Go in this thy
might and save Israel, have not I sent thee?" kindle in his heart a
vivid faith. Laid hold of, lifted above himself, the young man is
made aware at last of the Living God, His presence, His will.
Jehovah’s representative has done his mediatorial work. Gideon
desires a sign; but his wish is a note of habitual caution, not of
disbelief, and in the sacrifice he finds what he needs.
Now, why insist as some do on that which is not affirmed in the
text? The form of the narrative must be interpreted: and it does not
require us to suppose that Jehovah Himself, incarnate, speaking
human words, is upon the scene. The call is from Him, and indeed
Gideon has already a prepared heart, or he would not listen to the
messenger. But seven times in the brief story the word Malakh marks
a commissioned servant as clearly as the other word Jehovah marks
the Divine will and revelation. After the man of God has vanished
from the hill swiftly, strangely, in the manner of his coming,
Gideon remains alive to Jehovah’s immediate presence and voice as he
never was before. Humble and shrinking-"forasmuch as I have seen the
angel of the Lord face to face"-he yet hears the Divine benediction
fall from the sky, and following that a fresh and immediate summons.
Whether from the tabernacle at Shiloh an acknowledged prophet came
to the brooding Abiezrite, or the visitor was one who concealed his
own name and haunt that Jehovah might be the more impressively
recognised, it matters not. The angel of the Lord made Gideon thrill
with a call to highest duty, opened his ears to heavenly voices, and
then left him. After this he felt God to be with himself.
"The Lord looked upon Gideon and said, Go in this thy might and save
Israel from the hand of Midian: have not I sent thee?" It was a
summons to stern and anxious work, and the young man could not be
sanguine. He had considered and reconsidered the state of things so
long, he had so often sought a way of liberating his people and
found none that he needed a clear indication how the effort was to
be made. Would the tribes follow him, the youngest of an obscure
family in Manasseh? And how was he to stir, how to gather the
people? He builds an altar, Jehovah-shalom; he enters into covenant
with the Eternal in high and earnest resolution, and with a sudden
flash of prophet sight he sees the first thing to do. Baal’s altar
in the high place of Ophrah must be overthrown. Thereafter it will
be known what faith and courage are to be found in Israel.
It is the call of God that ripens a life into power, resolve,
fruitfulness-the call and the response to it. Continually the Bible
urges upon us this great truth, that through the keen sense of a
close personal relation to God and of duty owing to Him the soul
grows and comes to its own. Our human personality is created in that
way and in no other. There are indeed lives which are not so
inspired and yet appear strong; an ingenious resolute selfishness
gives them momentum. But this individuality is akin to that of ape
or tiger; it is a part of the earth force in yielding to which a man
forfeits his proper being and dignity. Look at Napoleon, the supreme
example in history of this failure. A great genius, a striking
character? Only in the carnal region, for human personality is
moral, spiritual, and the most triumphant cunning does not make a
man; while, on the other hand, from a very moderate endowment put to
the glorious usury of God’s service will grow a soul clear, brave,
and firm, precious in the ranks of life. Let a human being, however
ignorant and low, hear and answer the Divine summons and in that
place a man appears, one who stands related to the source of
strength and light. And when a man roused by such a call feels
responsibility for his country, for religion, the hero is astir.
Something will be done for which mankind waits.
But heroism is rare. We do not often commune with God nor listen
with eager souls for His word. The world is always in need of men,
but few appear. The usual is worshipped; the pleasure and profit of
the day occupy us; even the sight of the cross does not rouse the
heart. Speak, Heavenly Word! and quicken our clay. Let the thunders
of Sinai be heard again, and then the still small voice that
penetrates the soul. So shall heroism be born and duty done, and the
dead shall live.
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