|
GIDEON, ICONOCLAST AND
REFORMER
Jdg 6:15-32
"The Lord is with thee, thou mighty man of valour":-so has the
prophetic salutation come to the young man at the threshing floor of
Ophrah. It is a personal greeting and call "with thee"-just what a
man needs in the circumstances of Gideon. There is a nation to be
saved, and a human leader must act for Jehovah. Is Gideon fit for so
great a task? A wise humility, a natural fear have held him under
the yoke of daily toil until this hour. Now the needed signs are
given; his heart leaps up in the pulses of a longing which God
approves and blesses. The criticism of kinsfolk, the suspicious
carping of neighbours, the easily affronted pride of greater
families no longer crush patriotic desire and overbear yearning
faith. The Lord is with thee, Gideon, youngest son of Joash, the
toiler in obscure fields. Go in this thy might; be strong in
Jehovah.
But the assurance must widen if it is to satisfy. With me-that is a
great thing for Gideon; that gives him free air to breathe and
strength to use the sword. But can it be true? Can God be with one
only in the land? He seems to have forsaken Israel and sold His
people to the oppressor. Unless He returns to all in forgiveness and
grace nothing can be done; a renewal of the nation is the first
thing, and this Gideon desires. Comfort for himself, freedom from
Midianite vexation for himself and his father’s house would be no
satisfaction if, all around, he saw Israel still crushed under
heathen hordes. To have a hand in delivering his people from danger
and sorrow is Gideon’s craving. The assurance given to himself
personally is welcome because in it there is a sound as of the
beginning of Israel’s redemption. Yet "if the LORD be with us, why
then is all this befallen us?" God cannot be with the tribes, for
they are harassed and spoiled by enemies, they lie prone before the
altars of Baal.
There is here an example of largeness in heart and mind which we
ought not to miss, especially because it sets before us a principle
often unrecognised. It is clear enough that Gideon could not enjoy
freedom unless his country was free, for no man can be safe in an
enslaved land; but many fail to see that spiritual redemption, in
like manner, cannot be enjoyed by one unless others are moving
towards the light. Truly salvation is personal at first and personal
at last; but it is never an individual affair only. Each for himself
must hear and answer the divine call to repentance; each as a moral
unit must enter the strait gate, press along the marrow way of life,
agonise and overcome. But the redemption of one soul is part of a
vast redeeming purpose, and the fibres of each life are interwoven
with those of other lives far and wide. Spiritual brotherhood is a
fact but faintly typified by the brotherhood of the Hebrews, and the
struggling soul today, like Gideon’s long ago, must know God as the
Saviour of all men before a personal hope can be enjoyed worth the
having. As Gideon showed himself to have the Lord with him by a
question charged not with individual anxiety but with keen interest
in the nation, so a man now is seen to have the Spirit of God as he
exhibits a passion for the regeneration of the world. Salvation is
enlargement of soul, devotion to God and to man for the sake of God.
If anyone thinks he is saved while he bears no burdens for others,
makes no steady effort to liberate souls from the tyranny of the
false and the vile, he is in fatal error. The salvation of Christ
plants always in men and women His mind, His law of life, Who is the
Brother and Friend of all.
And the church of Christ must be filled with His Spirit, animated by
His law of life, or be unworthy the name. It exists to unite men in
the quest and realisation of highest thought and purest activity.
The church truly exists for all men, not simply for those who appear
to compose it. Salvation and peace are with the church as with the
individual believer, but only as her heart is generous, her spirit
simple and unselfish. Doubtful and distressed as Gideon was the
church of Christ should never be, for to her has been whispered the
secret that the Abiezrite had not read, how the Lord is in the
oppression and pain of the people, in the sorrow and the cloud. Nor
is a church to suppose that salvation can be hers while she thinks
of any outside with the least touch of Pharisaism, denying their
share in Christ. Better no visible church than one claiming
exclusive possession of truth and grace; better no church at all
than one using the name of Christ for privilege and excommunication,
restricting the fellowship of life to its own enclosure.
But with utmost generosity and humaneness goes the clear perception
that God’s service is the sternest of campaigns, beginning with
resolute protest and decisive deed, and Gideon must rouse himself to
strike for Israel’s liberty first against the idol worship of his
own village. There stands the altar of Baal, the symbol of Israel’s
infidelity; there beside it the abominable Asherah, the sign of
Israel’s degradation. Already he has thought of demolishing these,
but has never summoned courage, never seen that the result would
justify him. For such a deed there is a time, and before the time
comes the bravest man can only reap discomfiture. Now, with the
warrant in his soul, the duty on his conscience, Gideon can make
assault on a hateful superstition.
The idolatrous altar and false worship of one’s own clan, of one’s
own family-these need courage to overturn and, more than courage, a
ripeness of time and a Divine call. A man must be sure of himself
and his motives, for one thing, before he takes upon him to be the
corrector of errors that have seemed truth to his fathers and are
maintained by his friends. Suppose people are actually worshipping a
false god, a world power which has long held rule among them. If one
would act the part of iconoclast the question is, By what right? Is
he himself clear of illusion and idolatry? Has he a better system to
put in place of the old? He may be acting in mere bravado and
self-display, flourishing opinions which have less sincerity than
those which he assails. There were men in Israel who had no
commission and could have claimed no right to throw down Baal’s
altar, and taking upon them such a deed would have had short shrift
at the hands of the people of Ophrah. And so there are plenty among
us who if they set up to be judges of their fellow men and of
beliefs which they call false, even when these are false, deserve
simply to be put down with a strong hand. There are voices,
professing to be those of zealous reformers, whose every word and
tone are insults. The men need to go and learn the first lessons of
truth, modesty, and earnestness. And this principle applies all
round-to many who assail modern errors as well as to many who assail
established beliefs. On the one hand, are men anxious to uphold the
true faith? It is well. But anxiety and the best of motives do not
qualify them to attack science, to denounce all rationalism as
godless. We want defenders of the faith who have a Divine calling to
the task in the way of long study and a heavenly fairness of mind,
so that they shall not offend and hurt religion more by their
ignorant vehemence than they help it by their zeal. On the other
hand, by what authority do they speak who sneer at the ignorance of
faith and would fain demolish the altars of the world? It is no
slight equipment that is needed. Fluent sarcasm, confident
worldliness, even a large acquaintance with the dogmas of science
will not suffice. A man needs to prove himself a wise and humane
thinker, he needs to know by experience and deep sympathy those
perpetual wants of our race which Christ knew and met to the
uttermost. Some facile admiration of Jesus of Nazareth does not give
the right to free criticism of His life and words, or of the faith
based upon them. And if the plea is a rare respect for truth, an
unusual fidelity to fact, humanity will still ask of its would be
liberator on what fields he has won his rank or what yoke he has
borne. Successful men especially will find it difficult to convince
the world that they have a right to strike at the throne of Him who
stood alone before the Roman Pilate and died on the Cross.
Gideon was not unfit to render high service. He was a young man
tried in humble duty and disciplined in common tasks, shrewd but not
arrogant, a person of clear mind and a patriot. The people of the
farm and a good many in Ophrah had learned to trust him and were
prepared to follow when he struck out a new path. He had God’s call
and also his own past to help him. Hence when Gideon began his
undertaking, although to attempt it in broad day would have been
rash and he must act under cover of darkness, he soon found ten men
to give their aid. No doubt he could in a manner command them, for
they were his servants. Still a business of the kind he proposed was
likely to rouse their superstitious fears, and he had to conquer
these. It was also sure to involve the men in some risk, and he must
have been able to give them confidence in the issue. This he did,
however, and they went forth. Very quietly the altar of Baal was
demolished and the great wooden mast, hateful symbol of Astarte, was
cut down and split in pieces. Such was the first act in the
revolution.
We observe, however, that Gideon does not leave Ophrah without an
altar and a sacrifice. Destroy one system without laying the
foundation of another that shall more than equal it in essential
truth and practical power, and what sort of deliverance have you
effected? Men will rightly execrate you. It is no reformation that
leaves the heart colder, the life barer and darker than before; and
those who move in the night against superstition must be able to
speak in the day of a Living God who will vindicate His servants. It
has been said over and over again and must yet be repeated, to
overturn merely is no service. They that break down need some vision
at least of a building up, and it is the new edifice that is the
chief thing. The world of thought today is infested with critics and
destroyers and may well be tired of them. It is too much in need of
constructors to have any thanks to spare for new Voltaires and Humes.
Let us admit that demolition is the necessity of some hours. We look
back on the ruins of Bastilles and temples that served the uses of
tyranny, and even in the domain of faith there have been fortresses
to throw down and ramparts that made evil separations among men. But
destruction is not progress; and if the end of modern thought is to
be agnosticism, the denial of all faith and all ideals, then we are
simply on the way to something not a whit better than primeval
ignorance.
The morning sun showed the gap upon the hill where the symbols had
stood of Baal and Astarte, and soon like an angry swarm of bees the
people were buzzing round the scattered stones of the old altar and
the rough new pile with its smoking sacrifice. Where was he who
ventured to rebuke the city? Very indignant, very pious are these
false Israelites. They turn on Joash with the fierce demand, "Bring
out thy son that he may die." But the father too has come to a
decision. We get a hint of the same nature as Gideon’s, slow, but
firm when once roused; and if anything would rouse a man it would be
this brutal passion, this sudden outbreak of cruelty nursed by
heathen custom, his own conscience meanwhile testifying that Gideon
was right. Tush! says Joash, will you plead for Baal? Will you save
him? Is it necessary for you to defend one whom you have worshipped
as Lord of heaven? Let him ply his lightnings if he has any. I am
tired of this Baal who has no principles and is good only for feast
days. He that pleads for Baal, let him be the man to die. Unexpected
apology, serious too and unanswerable. Conscience that seemed dead
is suddenly awakened and carries all before it. There is a quick
conversion of the whole town because one man has acted decisively
and another speaks strong words which cannot be gainsaid. To be sure
Joash uses a threat-hints something of taking a very short method
with those who still protest for Baal; and that helps conversion.
But it is force against force, and men cannot object who have
themselves talked of killing. By a rapid popular impulse Gideon is
justified, and with the new name Jerubbaal he is acknowledged as a
leader in Manasseh.
False religion is not always so easily exposed and upset. Truth may
be so mixed with the error of a system that the moral sense is
confused and faith clings to the follies and lies conjoined with the
truth. And when we look at Judaism in contact with Christianity, at
Romanism in contact with the Protestant spirit, we see how difficult
it may be to liberate faith. The Apostle Paul, wielding the weapon
of a singular and keen eloquence, cannot overcome the Pharisaism of
his countrymen. At Antioch, at Iconium he does his utmost with scant
success. The Protestant reformation did not so swiftly and
thoroughly establish itself in every European country as in
Scotland. Where there is no pressure of outward circumstances
forcing new religious ideas upon men there must be all the more a
spirit of independent thought if any salutary change is to be made
in creed and worship. Either there must be men of Berea who search
the Scriptures daily, men of Zurich and Berne with the energy of
free citizens, or reformation must wait on some political emergency.
And in effect conscience rarely has free play, since men are seldom
manly, but more or less like sheep. Hence the value, as things go in
this world, of leaders like Joash, princes like Luther’s Elector,
who give the necessary push to the undecided and check forward
opponents by a significant warning. It is not the ideal way of
reforming the world, but it has often answered well enough within
limits. There are also cases in which the threats of the enemy have
done good service, as when the appearance of the Spanish Armada on
the English coast did more to confirm the Protestantism of the
country than many years of peaceful argument. In truth, were there
not occasionally something like master strokes in Providence the
progress of humanity would be almost imperceptible. Men and nations
are urged on although they have no great desire to advance; they are
committed to a voyage and cannot return; they are caught in currents
and must go where the currents bear them. Certainly in such cases
there is not the ardour, and men cannot reap the reward belonging to
the thinkers and brave servants of the truth. Practically, whether
Protestants or Romanists, they are spiritually inert. Still it is
well for them, well for the world, that a strong hand should urge
them forward, since otherwise they would not move at all. Of many in
all churches it must be said they are not victors in a fight of
faith, they do not work out their own salvation. Yet they are
guided, warned, persuaded into a certain habit of piety and
understanding of truth, and their children have a new platform,
somewhat higher than their fathers’, on which to begin life.
At Ophrah of the Abiezrites, though we cannot say much for the
nature of the faith in God which has replaced idolatry, still the
way is prepared for further and decisive action. Men do not cease
from worshipping Baal and become true servants of the Most Holy in a
single day; that requires time. There, are better possibilities, but
Gideon cannot teach the way of Jehovah, nor is he in the mood for
religious inquiry. The conversion of Abiezer is quite of the same
sort as in early Christian times was effected when a king went over
to the new faith and ordered his subjects to be baptised. Not even
Gideon knows the value of the faith to which the people have
returned, in the strength of which they are to fight. They will be
bold now, for even a little trust in God goes a long way in
sustaining courage. They will face the enemy now to whom they have
long submitted. But of the purity and righteousness into which the
faith of Jehovah should lead them they have no vision.
Now with this in view many will think it strange to hear of the
conversion of Abiezer. It is a great error however to despise the
day of small things. God gives it and we ought to understand its
use. Conversion cannot possibly mean the same in every period of the
world’s history; it cannot even mean the same in any two cases. To
recognise this would be to clear the ground of much that hinders the
teaching and the success of the gospel. Where there has been long
familiarity with the New Testament, the facts of Christianity and
the high spiritual ideas it presents, conversion, properly speaking,
does not take place till the message of Christ to the soul stirs it
to its depths, moves alike the reason and the will, and creates
fervent discipleship. But the history of Israel and of humanity
moves forward continuously in successive discoveries or revelations
of the highest, culminating in the Christian salvation. To view
Gideon as a religious reformer of the same kind as Isaiah is quite a
mistake. He had scarcely an idea in common with the great prophet of
a later day. But the liberty he desired for his people and the
association of liberty with the worship of Jehovah made his
revolution a step in the march of Israel’s redemption. Those who
joined him with any clear purpose and sympathy were therefore
converted men in a true if very limited sense. There must be first
the blade and then the ear before there can be the full corn. We
reckon Gideon a hero of faith, and his hope was truly in the same
God Whom we worship-the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Yet
his faith could not be on a level with ours, his knowledge being far
less. The angel who speaks to him, the altar he builds, the Spirit
of the Lord that comes upon him, his daring iconoclasm, the new
purpose and power of the man are in a range quite above material
life-and that is enough.
There are some circles in which honesty and truth speaking are
evidence of a work of grace. To become honest and to speak truth in
the fear of God is to be converted, in a sense, where things are at
that pass. There are people who are so cold that among them
enthusiasm for anything good may be called superhuman. Nobody has
it. If it appears it must come from above. But these steps of
progress, though we may describe them as supernatural, are
elementary. Men have to be converted again and again, ever making
one gain a step to another. The great advance comes when the soul
believes enthusiastically in Christ, pledging itself to Him in full
sight of the cross. This and nothing less is the conversion we need.
To love freedom, righteousness, charity only prepares for the
supreme love of God in Christ, in which life springs to its highest
power and joy.
Now are we to suppose that Gideon alone of all the men of Israel had
the needful spirit and faith to lead the revolution? Was there no
one but the son of Joash? We do not find him fully equipped, nor as
the years go by does he prove altogether worthy to be chief of the
tribes of God. Were there not in many Hebrew towns souls perhaps
more ardent, more spiritual than his, needing only the prophetic
call, the touch of the Unseen Hand to make them aware of power and
opportunity? The leadership of such a one as Moses is complete and
unquestionable. He is the man of the age; knowledge, circumstances,
genius fit him for the place he has to occupy. We cannot imagine a
second Moses in the same period. But in Israel as well as among
other peoples it is often a very imperfect hero who is found and
followed. The work is done, but not so well done as we might think
possible. Revolutions which begin full of promise lose their spirit
because the leader reveals his weakness or even folly. We feel sure
that there are many who have the power to lead in thought where the
world has not dreamt of climbing, to make a clear road where as yet
there is no path; and yet to them comes no messenger, the daily task
goes on and it is not supposed that a leader, a prophet is passed
by. Are there no better men that Ehud, Gideon, Jephthah must stand
in the front?
One answer certainly is that the nation at the stage it has reached
cannot as a whole esteem a better man, cannot understand finer
ideas. A hundred men of more spiritual faith were possibly brooding
over Israel’s state, ready to act as fearlessly as Gideon and to a
higher issue. But it could only have been after a cleansing of the
nation’s life, a suppression of Baal worship much more rigorous than
could at that time be effected. And in every national crisis the
thought of which the people generally are capable determines who
must lead and what kind of work shall be done. The reformer before
his time either remains unknown or ends in eclipse; either he gains
no power or it passes rapidly from him because it has no support in
popular intelligence or faith.
It may seem well nigh impossible in our day for any man to fail of
the work he can do; if he has the will we think he can make the way.
The inward call is the necessity, and when that is heard and the man
shapes a task for himself the day to begin will come. Is that
certain? Perhaps there are many now who find circumstance a web from
which they cannot break away without arrogance and unfaithfulness.
They could speak, they could do if God called them; but does He call
them? On every side ring the fluent praises of the idols men love to
worship. One must indeed be deft in speech and many other arts who
would hope to turn the crowd from its folly, for it will only listen
to what seizes the ear, and the obscure thinker has not the secret
of pleasing. While those who see no visions lead their thousands to
a trivial victory, many an uncalled Gideon toils on in the threshing
floor. The duties of a low and narrow lot may hold a man; the babble
all around of popular voices may be so loud that nothing can make
way against them. A certain slowness of the humble and patient
spirit may keep one silent who with little encouragement could speak
words of quickening truth. But the day of utterance never comes.
To these waiting in the market place it is comparatively a small
thing that the world will not hire them. But does the church not
want them? Where God is named and professedly honoured, can it be
that the smooth message is preferred because it is smooth? Can it be
that in the church men shrink from instead of seeking the highest,
most real and vital word that can be said to them? This is what
oppresses, for it seems to imply that God has no use in His vineyard
for a man when He lets him wait long unregarded; it seems to mean
that there is no end for the wistful hope and the words that burn
unspoken in the breast. The unrecognised thinker has indeed to trust
God largely. He has often to be content with the assurance that what
he would say but cannot as yet shall be said in good time, that what
he would do but may not shall be done by a stronger hand. And
further, he may cherish a faith for himself. No life can remain
forever unfruitful, or fruitful only in its lower capacities.
Purposes broken off here shall find fulfilment. Where the highways
of being reach beyond the visible horizon leaders will be needed for
the yet advancing host, and the time of every soul shall come to do
the utmost that is in it. The day of perfect service for many of
God’s chosen ones will begin where beyond these shadows there is
light and space. Were it not so, some of the best lives would
disappear in the darkest cloud.
|