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GILEAD AND ITS CHIEF
Jdg 10:1-18; Jdg 11:1-11
THE scene of the history shifts now to the east of Jordan, and we
learn first of the influence which the region called Gilead was
coming to have in Hebrew development from the brief notice of a
chief named Jair, who held the position of judge for twenty-two
years. Tola, a man of Issachar, succeeded Abimelech, and Jair
followed Tola. In the Book of Numbers we are informed that the
children of Machir son of Manasseh went to Gilead and took it and
dispossessed the Amorites which were therein; and Moses gave Gilead
unto Machir the son of Manasseh. It is added that Jair, the son or
descendant of Manasseh, went and took the towns of Gilead and called
them Havvoth-jair; and in this statement the Book of Numbers
anticipates the history of the judges.
Gilead is described by modern travellers as one of the most varied
districts of Palestine. The region is mountainous and its peaks rise
to three and even four thousand feet above the trough of the Jordan.
The southern part is beautiful and fertile, watered by the Jabbok
and other streams that flow westward from the hills. "The valleys
green Kith corn, the streams fringed with oleander, the magnificent
screens of yellow-green and russet foliage which cover the steep
slopes present a scene of quiet beauty, of chequered light and shade
of uneastern aspect which makes Mount Gilead a veritable land of
promise." "No one," says another writer, "can fairly judge of
Israel’s heritage who has not seen the exuberance of Gilead as well
as the hard rocks of Judaea, which only yield their abundance to
reward constant toil and care." In Gilead the rivers flow in summer
as well as in winter, and they are filled with fishes and
fresh-water shells. While in Western Palestine the soil is
insufficient now to support a large population, beyond Jordan
improved cultivation alone is needed to make the whole district a
garden.
To the north and east of Gilead lie Bashan and that extraordinary
volcanic region called the Argob or the Lejah, where the
Havvoth-jair or towns of Jair were situated. The traveller who
approaches this singular district from the north sees it rising
abruptly from the plain, the edge of it like a rampart about twenty
feet high. It is of a rude oval shape, some twenty miles long from
north to south, and fifteen in breadth, and is simply a mass of dark
jagged rocks, with clefts between in which were built not a few
cities and villages. The whole of this Argob or Stony Land,
Jephthah’s land of Tob, is a natural fortification, a sanctuary open
only to those who have the secret of the perilous paths that wind
along savage cliff and deep defile. One who established himself here
might soon acquire the fame and authority of a chief, and Jair,
acknowledged by the Manassites as their judge, extended his power
and influence among the Gadites and Reubenites farther south.
But plenty of corn and wine and oil and the advantage of a natural
fortress which might have been held against any foe did not avail
the Hebrews when they were corrupted by idolatry. In the land of
Gilead and Bashan they became a hardy and vigorous race, and yet
when they gave themselves up to the influence of the Syrians,
Sidonians, Ammonites, and Moabites, forsaking the Lord and serving
the gods of these peoples, disaster overtook them. The Ammonites
were ever on the watch, and now, stronger than for centuries in
consequence of the defeat of Midian and Amalek by Gideon, they fell
on the Hebrews of the east, subdued them and even crossed Jordan and
fought with the southern tribes, so that Israel was sore distressed.
We have found reason to suppose that during the many turmoils of the
north the tribes of Judah and Simeon and to some extent Ephraim were
pleased to dwell secure in their own domains, giving little help to
their kinsfolk. Deborah and Barak got no troops from the south, and
it was with a grudge Ephraim joined in the pursuit of Midian. Now
the time has come for the harvest of selfish content. Supposing the
people of Judah to have been specially engaged with religion and the
arranging of worship that did not justify their neglect of the
political troubles of the north. It was a poor religion then, as it
is a poor religion now, that could exist apart from national well
being and patriotic duty. Brotherhood must be realised in the nation
as well as in the church, and piety must fulfil itself through
patriotism as well as in other ways.
No doubt the duties we owe to each other and to the nation of which
we form a part are imposed by natural conditions which have arisen
in the course of history, and some may think that the natural should
give way to the spiritual. They may see the interests of a kingdom
of this world as actually opposed to the interests of the kingdom of
God. The apostles of Christ, however, did not set the human and
divine in contrast, as if God in His providence had nothing to do
with the making of a nation. "The powers that be are ordained of
God," says St. Paul in writing to the Romans; and again in his First
Epistle to Timothy, "I exhort that supplications, prayers,
intercessions, thanksgivings be made for all men: for kings and all
that are in high place, that we may lead a tranquil and quiet life
in all godliness and gravity." To the same effect St. Peter says,
"Be subject to every ordinance of man for the Lord’s sake." Natural
and secular enough were the authorities to which submission was thus
enjoined. The policy of Rome was of the earth earthy. The wars it
waged, the intrigues that went on for power savoured of the most
carnal ambition. Yet as members of the commonwealth Christians were
to submit to the Roman magistrates and intercede with God on their
behalf, observing closely and intelligently all that went on, taking
due part in affairs. No room was to be given for the notion that the
Christian society meant a new political centre. In our own times
there is a duty which many never understand, or which they easily
imagine is being fulfilled for them. Let religious people be assured
that generous and intelligent patriotism is demanded of them and
attention to the political business of the time. Those who are
careless will find, as did the people of Judah, that in neglecting
the purity of government and turning a deaf ear to cries for
justice, they are exposing their country to disaster and their
religion to reproach.
We are told that the Israelites of Gilead worshipped the gods of the
Phoenicians and Syrians, of the Moabites and of the Ammonites.
Whatever religious rites took their fancy they were ready to adopt.
This will be to their credit in some quarters as a mark of openness
of mind, intelligence, and taste. They were not bigoted; other men’s
ways in religion and civilisation were not rejected as beneath their
regard. The argument is too familiar to be traced more fully.
Briefly it may be said that if catholicity could save a race Israel
should rarely have been in trouble, and certainly not at this time.
One name by which the Hebrews knew God was El or Elohim. When they
found among the gods of the Sidonians one called El, the careless
minded supposed that there could be no harm in joining in his
worship. Then came the notion that the other divinities of the
Phoenician Pantheon, such as Melcarth, Dagon, Derketo, might be
adored as well. Very likely they found zeal and excitement in the
alien religious gatherings which their own had lost. So they slipped
into practical heathenism.
And the process goes on among ourselves. Through the principles that
culture means artistic freedom and that worship is a form of art we
arrive at taste or liking as the chief test. Intensity of feeling is
craved and religion must satisfy that or be despised. It is the very
error that led Hebrews to the feasts of Astarte and Adonis, and
whither it tends we can see in the old history. Turning from the
strong earnest gospel which grasps intellect and will to shows and
ceremonies that please the eye, or even to music refined and
devotional that stirs and thrills the feelings, we decline from the
reality of religion. Moreover a serious danger threatens us in the
far too common teaching which makes little of truth, everything of
charity. Christ was most charitable, but it is through the knowledge
and practice of truth He offers freedom. He is our King by His
witness bearing not to charity but to truth. Those who are anxious
to keep us from bigotry and tell us that meekness, gentleness, and
love are more than doctrine mislead the mind of the ago. Truth in
regard to God and His covenant is the only foundation on which life
can be securely built, and without right thinking there cannot be
right living. A man may be amiable, humble, patient, and kind though
he has no doctrinal belief and his religion is of the purely
emotional sort; but it is the truth believed by previous
generations, fought and suffered for by stronger men, not his own
gratification of taste, that keeps him in the right way. And when
the influence of that truth decays there will remain no anchorage,
neither compass nor chart for the voyage. He will be like a wave of
the sea driven of the wind and tossed.
Again, the religious so far as they have wisdom and strength are
required to be pioneers, which they can never be in following fancy
or taste, Here nothing but strenuous thought, patient faithful
obedience can avail. Hebrew history is the story of a pioneer people
and every lapse from fidelity was serious, the future of humanity
being at stake. Each Christian society and believer has work of the
same kind not less important, and failures due to intellectual sloth
and moral levity are as dishonourable as they are hurtful to the
human race. Some of our heretics now are more serious than
Christians, and they give thought and will more earnestly to the
opinions they try to propagate. While the professed servants of
Christ, who should be marching in the van, are amusing themselves
with the accessories of religion, the resolute socialist or
nihilist, reasoning and speaking with the heat of conviction, leads
the masses where he will.
The Ammonite oppression made the Hebrews feel keenly the uselessness
of heathenism. Baal and Melcarth had been thought of as real
divinities, exercising power in some region or other of earth or
heaven, and Israel’s had been an easy backsliding. Idolatry did not
appear as darkness to people who had never been fully in the light.
But when trouble came and help was sorely needed they began to see
that the Baalim were nothing. What could these idols do for men
oppressed and at their wits’ end? Religion was of no avail unless it
brought an assurance of One Whose strong hand could reach from land
to land, Whose grace and favour could revive sad and troubled souls.
Heathenism was found utterly barren, and Israel turned to Jehovah
the God of its fathers. "We have sinned against Thee even because we
have forsaken our God and have served the Baalim."
Those who now fall away from faith are in worse case by far than
Israel. They have no thought of a real power that can befriend them.
It is to mere abstractions they have given the Divine name. In sin
and sorrow alike they remain with ideas only, with bare terms of
speculation in which there is no life, no strength, no hope for the
moral nature. They are men and have to live; but with the living God
they have entirely broken. In trouble they can only call on the
Abyss or the Immensities, and there is no way of repentance though
they seek it carefully with tears. At heart therefore they are
pessimists without resource. Sadness deep and deadly ever waits upon
such unbelief, and our religion today suffers from gloom because it
is infected by the uncertainties and denials of an agnosticism at
once positive and confused.
Another paganism, that of gathering and doing in the world sphere,
is constantly beside us, drawing multitudes from fidelity to Christ
as Baal worship drew Israel from Jehovah, and it is equally barren
in the sharp experiences of humanity. Earthly things venerated in
the ardour of business and the pursuit of social distinction appear
as impressive realities only while the soul sleeps. Let it be
aroused by some overturn of the usual, one of those floods that
sweep suddenly down on the cities which fill the valley of life, and
there is a quick pathetic confession of the truth. The soul needs
help now, and its help must come from the Eternal Spirit. We must
have done with mere saying of prayers and begin to pray. We must
find access, if access is to be had, to the secret place of the Most
High on Whose mercy we depend to redeem us from bondage and fear.
Sad therefore is it for those who having never learned to seek the
throne of divine succour are swept by the wild deluge from their
temples and their gods. It is a cry of despair they raise amid the
swelling torrent. You who now by the sacred oracles and the
mediation of Christ can come into the fellowship of eternal life, be
earnest and eager in the cultivation of your faith. The true
religion of God which avails the soul in its extremity is not to be
had in a moment, when suddenly its help is needed. That confidence
which has been established in the mind by serious thought, by the
habit of prayer and reliance on divine wisdom can alone bring help
when the foundations of the earthly are destroyed.
To Israel troubled and contrite came as on previous occasions a
prophetic message; and it was spoken by one of those incisive ironic
preachers who were born from time to time among this strangely
heathen, strangely believing people. It is in terms of earnest
remonstrance he speaks, at first almost going the length of
declaring that there is no hope for the rebellious and ungrateful
tribes. They found it an easy thing to turn from their Divine King
to the gods they chose to worship. Now they perhaps expect as easy a
recovery of His favour. But healing must begin with deeper wounding,
and salvation with much keener anxiety. This prophet knows the need
for utter seriousness of soul. As he loves and yearns over his
country folk he must so deal with them; it is God’s way, the only
way to save. Most irrationally, against all sound principles of
judgment they had abandoned the Living One, the Eternal to worship
hideous idols like Moloch and Dagon. It was wicked because it was
wilfully stupid and perverse. And Jehovah says, "I will save you no
more, Go and cry unto the gods which ye have chosen; let them save
you in the day of your distress." The rebuke is stinging. The
preacher makes the people feel the wretched insufficiency of their
hope in the false, and the great strong pressure upon them of the
Almighty, Whom, even in neglect, they cannot escape. We are pointed
forward to the terrible pathos of Jeremiah:-"Who shall have pity
upon thee, O Jerusalem? or who shall bemoan thee? or who shall turn
aside to ask of thy welfare? Thou hast rejected me, saith the Lord,
thou art gone backward: therefore have I stretched out my hand
against thee, and destroyed thee: I am weary with repenting."
And notice to what state of mind the Hebrews were brought. Renewing
their confession they said, "Do thou unto us whatsoever seemeth good
unto Thee." They would be content to suffer now at the hand of God
whatever He chose to inflict on them. They themselves would have
exacted heavy tribute of a subject people that had rebelled and came
suing for pardon. Perhaps they would have slain every tenth man.
Jehovah might appoint retribution of the same kind; He might afflict
them with pestilence; He might require them to offer a multitude of
sacrifices. Men who traffic with idolatry and adopt gross notions of
revengeful gods are certain to carry back with them when they return
to the better faith many of the false ideas they have gathered. And
it is just possible that a demand for human sacrifices was at this
time attributed to God, the general feeling that they might be
necessary connecting itself with Jephthah’s vow.
It is idle to suppose that Israelites who persistently lapsed into
paganism could at any time, because they repented, find the
spiritual thoughts they had lost. True those thoughts were at the
heart of the national life, there always even when least felt. But
thousands of Hebrews even in a generation of reviving faith died
with but a faint and shadowy personal understanding of Jehovah.
Everything in the Book of Judges goes to show that the mass of the
people were nearer the level of their neighbours the Moabites and
Ammonites than the piety of the Psalms. A remarkable ebb and flow
are observable in the history of the race. Look at some facts and
there seems to be decline. Samson is below Gideon, and Gideon below
Deborah; no man of leading until Isaiah can be named with Moses. Yet
ever and anon there are prophetic calls and voices out of a
spiritual region into which the people as a whole do not enter,
voices to which they listen only when distressed and overborne.
Worldliness increases, for the world opens to the Hebrew; but it
often disappoints, and still there are some to whom the heavenly
secret is told. The race as a whole is not becoming more devout and
holy, but the few are gaining a clearer vision as one experience
after another is recorded. The antithesis is the same we see in the
Christian centuries. Is the multitude more pious now than in the ago
when a king had to do penance for rash words spoken against an
ecclesiastic? Are the churches less worldly than they were a hundred
years ago? Scarcely may we affirm it. Yet there never was an age so
rich as ours in the finest spirituality, the noblest Christian
thought. Our van presses up to the Simplon height and is in constant
touch with those who follow; but the rear is still chaffering and
idling in the streets of Milan. It is in truth always by the
fidelity of the remnant that humanity is saved for God.
We cannot say that when Israel repented it was in the love of
holiness so much as in the desire for liberty. The ways of the
heathen were followed readily, but the supremacy of the heathen was
ever abominable to the vigorous Israelite. By this national spirit
however God could find the tribes, and a special feature of the
deliverance from Ammon is marked where we read: "The people, the
princes of Gilead said one to the other, What man is he that will
begin to fight against the children of Ammon? he shall be head over
all the inhabitants of Gilead." Looking around for the fit leader
they found Jephthah and agreed to invite him.
Now this shows distinct progress in the growth of the nation. There
is, if nothing more, a growth in practical power. Abimelech had
thrust himself upon the men of Shechem. Jephthah is chosen apart
from any ambition of his own. The movement which made him judge
arose out of the consciousness of the Gileadites that they could act
for themselves and were bound to act for themselves. Providence
indicated the chief, but they had to be instruments of providence in
making him chief. The vigour and robust intelligence of the men of
Eastern Palestine come out here. They lead in the direction of true
national life. While on the west of Jordan there is a fatalistic
disposition, these men move. Gilead, the separated country, with the
still ruder Bashan behind it and the Argob a resort of outlaws, is
beneath some other regions in manners and in thought, but ahead of
them in point of energy. We need not look for refinement, but we
shall see power; and the chosen leader, while he is something of the
barbarian, will be a man to leave his mark on history.
At the start we are not prepossessed in favour of Jephthah. There is
some confusion in the narrative which has led to the supposition
that he was a foundling of the clan. But taking Gilead as the actual
name of his father, he appears as the son of a harlot, brought up in
the paternal home and banished from it when there were legitimate
sons able to contend with him. We get thus a brief glance at a
certain rough standard of morals and see that even polygamy made
sharp exclusions. Jephthah, cast out, betakes himself to the land of
Tob and getting about him a band of vain fellows or freebooter,
becomes the Robin Hood or Rob Roy of his time. There are natural
suspicions of a man who takes to a life of this kind, and yet the
progress of events shows that though Jephthah was a sort of outlaw
his character as well as his courage must have commended him. He and
his men might occasionally seize for their own use the cattle and
corn of Israelites when they were hard pressed for food. But it was
generally against the Ammonites and other enemies their raids were
directed, and the modern instances already cited show that no little
magnanimity and even patriotism may go along with a life of lawless
adventure. If this robber chief, as some might call him, now and
again levied contributions from a wealthy flock master, the poorer
Hebrews were no doubt indebted to him for timely help when bands of
Ammonites swept through the land. Something of this we must read
into the narrative, otherwise the elders of Gilead would not so
unanimously and urgently have invited him to become their head.
Jephthah was not at first disposed to believe in the good faith of
those who gave him the invitation. Among the heads of households who
came he saw his own brothers who had driven him to the hills. He
must have more than suspected that they only wished to make use of
him in their emergency and, the fighting over, would set him aside.
He therefore required an oath of the men that they would really
accept him as chief and obey him. That given, he assumed the
command.
And here the religious character of the man begins to appear. At
Mizpah on the verge of the wilderness where the Israelites, driven
northward by the victories of Ammon, had their camp there stood an
ancient cairn or heap of stones which preserved the tradition of a
sacred covenant and still retained the savour of sanctity. There it
was that Jacob, fleeing from Padanaram on his way back to Canaan,
was overtaken by Laban, and there raising the Cairn of Witness they
swore in the sight of Jehovah to be faithful to each other. The
belief still lingered that the old monument was a place of meeting
between man and God. To it Jephthah repaired at this new point in
his life. No more an adventurer, no more an outlaw, but the chosen
leader of eastern Israel, "he spake all his words before Jehovah in
Mizpah." He had his life. to review there, and that could not be
done without serious thought. He had a new and strenuous future
opened to him. Jephthah the outcast, the unnamed, was to be leader
in a tremendous national struggle. The bold Gileadite feels the
burden of the task. He has to question himself, to think of Jehovah.
Hitherto he has been doing his own business and to that he has felt
quite equal; now with large responsibility comes a sense of need.
For a fight with society he has been strong enough; but can he be
sure of himself as God's man, fighthing against Ammon? Not a few
words but many would he have to utter as on the hilltop in the
silence he lifted up his soul to God and girt himself in holy
resolution, as a father and a Hebrew, to do his duty in the day of
battle. Thus we pass from doubt of Jephthah to the hope that the
banished man, the freebooter, will yet prove to be an Israelite
indeed, of sterling character, whose religion, very rude perhaps,
has a deep strain of reality and power. Jephthah at the cairn of
Mizpah lifting up his hands in solemn invocation of the God of Jacob
reminds us that there are great traditions of the past of our nation
and of our most holy faith to which we are bound to be true, that
there is a God, our witness and our judge, in Whose strength alone
we can live and do nobly. For the service of humanity and the
maintenance of faith we need to be in close touch with the brave and
good of other days and in the story of their lives find quickening,
for our own. Along the same line and succession we are to bear our
testimony, and no link of connection with the Divine Power is to be
missed which the history of the men of faith supplies. Yet as our
personal Helper especially we must know God. Hearing His call to
ourselves we must lift the standard and go forth to the battle of
life. Who can serve his family and friends, who can advance the well
being of the world, unless he has entered into that covenant with
the Living God which raises mortal insufficiency to power and makes
weak and ignorant men instruments of a divine redemption?
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