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THE STOLEN GODS
Judges 17, Judges 18
THE portion of the Book of Judges which begins with the
seventeenth chapter and extends to the close is not in immediate
connection with that which has gone before. We read {Jdg 18:30} that
"Jonathan, the son of Gershom, the son of Manasseh, he and his sons
were priests to the tribe of Dan until the day of the captivity of
the land." But the proper reading is, "Jonathan, the son of Gershom,
the son of Moses." It would seem that the renegade Levite of the
narrative was a near descendant of the great lawgiver. So rapidly
did the zeal of the priestly house decline that in the third or
fourth generation after Moses one of his own line became minister of
an idol temple for the sake of a living. It is evident, then, that
in the opening of the seventeenth chapter, we are carried back to
the time immediately following the conquest of Canaan by Joshua,
when Othniel was settling in the south and the tribes were
endeavouring to establish themselves in the districts allotted to
them. The note of time is of course far from precise, but the
incidents are certainly to be placed early in the period.
We are introduced first to a family living in Mount Ephraim
consisting of a widow and: her son Micah, who is married and has
sons of his own. It appears that on the death of the father of Micah
a sum of eleven hundred shekels of silver, about a hundred and
twenty pounds of our money-a large amount for the time-was missed by
the widow, who after vain search for it spoke in strong terms about
the matter to her son. He had taken the money to use in stocking his
farm or in trade and at once acknowledged that he had done so and
restored it to his mother, who hastened to undo any evil her words
had caused by invoking upon him the blessing of God. Further she
dedicated two hundred of her shekels to make graven and molten
images in token of piety and gratitude.
We have here a very significant revelation of the state of religion.
The indignation of Moses had burned against the people when at Sinai
they made a rude image of gold, sacrificed to it and danced about it
in heathen revel. We are reading of what took place say a century
after that scene at the foot of Sinai, and already those who desire
to show their devotion to the Eternal, very imperfectly known as
Jehovah, make teraphim and molten images to represent Him. Micah has
a sort of private chapel or temple among the buildings in his
courtyard: He consecrates one of his sons to be priest of this
little sanctuary. And the historian adds in explanation of this, as
one keenly aware of the benefits of good government under a
God-fearing monarch-"in those days there was no king in Israel.
Every man did that which was right in his own eyes."
We need not take for granted that the worship in this hill chapel
was of the heathen sort. There was probably no Baal, no Astarte
among the images; or, if there was, it may have been merely as
representing a Syrian power prudently recognised but not adored. No
hint occurs in the whole story of a licentious or a cruel cult,
although there must have been something dangerously like the
superstitious practices of Canaan. Micah’s chapel, whatever the
observances were, gave direct introduction to the pagan forms and
notions which prevailed among the people of the land. There already
Jehovah was degraded to the rank of a nature divinity, and
represented by figures.`
In one of the highland valleys towards the north of Ephraim’s
territory Micah had his castle and his ecclesiastical
establishment-state and church in germ. The Israelites of the
neighbourhood, who looked up to the well to do farmer for
protection, regarded him all the more that he showed respect for
religion, that he had this house of gods and a private priest. They
came to worship in his sanctuary and to inquire of the ecclesiastic,
who in some way endeavoured to discover the will of God by means of
the teraphim and ephod. The ark of the covenant was not far away,
for Bethel and Gilgal were both within a day’s journey. But the
people did not care to be at the trouble of going so far. They liked
better their own local shrine and its homelier ways; and when at
length Micah secured the services of a Levite the worship seemed to
have all the sanction that could possibly be desired.
It need hardly be said that God is not confined to a locality, that
in those days as in our own the true worshipper could find the
Almighty on any hill top, in any dwelling or private place, as well
as at the accredited shrine. It is quite true, also, that God makes
large allowance for the ignorance of men and their need of visible
signs and symbols of what is unseen and eternal. We must not
therefore assume at once that in Micah’s house of idols, before the
widow’s graven and molten figures, there could be no acceptable
worship, no prayers that reached the ear of the Lord of Hosts. And
one might even go the length of saying that, perhaps, in this
schismatic sanctuary, this chapel of images, devotion could be quite
as sincere as before the ark itself. Little good came of the
religious ordinances maintained there during the whole period of the
judges, and even in Eli’s latter days the vileness and covetousness
practised at Shiloh more than countervailed any pious influence.
Local and family altars therefore must have been of real use. But
this was the danger, that leaving the appointed centre of Jehovah
worship, where symbolism was confined within safe limits, the people
should in ignorant piety multiply objects of adoration and run into
polytheism. Hence the importance of the decree, afterwards
recognised, that one place of sacrifice should gather to it all the
tribes and that there the ark of the covenant with its altar should
alone speak of the will and holiness of God. And the story of the
Danite migration connected with this of Micah and his Levite well
illustrates the wisdom of such a law, for it shows how, in the far
north, a sanctuary and a worship were set up which, existing long
for tribal devotion, became a national centre of impure worship.
The wandering Levite from Bethlehem-Judah is one, we must believe,
of many Levites, who having found no inheritance because the cities
allotted to them were as yet unconquered spread themselves over the
land seeking a livelihood, ready to fall in with any local customs
of religion that offered them position and employment. The Levites
were esteemed as men acquainted with the way of Jehovah, able to
maintain that communication with Him without which no business could
be hopefully undertaken. Something of the dignity that was attached
to the names of Moses and Aaron ensured them honourable treatment
everywhere unless among the lowest of the people; and when this
Levite reached the dwelling of Micah beside which there seems to
have been a khan or lodging place for travellers, the chance of
securing him was at once seized. For ten pieces of silver, say
twenty-five shillings a year, with a suit of clothes and his food,
he agreed to become Micah’s private chaplain. At this very cheap
rate the whole household expected a time of prosperity and divine
favour. "Now know I," said the head of the family, "that the Lord
will do me good seeing I have a Levite to my priest," We must fear
that, he took some advantage of the man’s need, that he did not much
consider the honour of Jehovah yet reckoned on getting a blessing
all; the same. It was a case of seeking the best religious
privileges as cheaply as possible, a very common thing in all ages.
But the coming of the Levite was to have results Micah did not
foresee. Jonathan had lived in Bethlehem, and some ten or twelve
miles westward down the valley one came to Zorah and Eshtaol, two
little towns of the tribe of Dan of which we have heard. The Levite
had apparently become pretty well known in the district: and
especially in those villages to which he went to offer sacrifice or
perform some other religious rite. And now a series of incidents
brought certain old acquaintances to his new place of abode.
Even in Samson’s time the tribe of Dan, whose territory was to be
along the coast west from Judah, was still obliged to content itself
with the slopes of the hills, not having got possession of the
plain. In the earlier period with which we are now dealing the
Danites were in yet greater difficulty, for not only had they
Philistines on the one side but Amorites on the other. The Amorites
"would dwell," we are told, "in Mount Heres, in Aijalon and in
Shaalbim." It was this pressure which determined the people about
Zorah and Eshtaol to find if possible another place of settlement,
and five men were sent out in search. Travelling north they took the
same way as the Levite had taken, heard of the same khan in the hill
country of Ephraim, and made it their resting place for a night. The
discovery of the Levite Jonathan followed and of the chapel in which
he ministered with its wonderful array of images. We can suppose the
deputation had thoughts they did not express, but for the present
they merely sought the help of the priest, begging him to consult
the oracle on their behalf and learn whether their mission would be
successful. The five went on their journey with the encouragement,
"Go in peace; before the Lord is your way wherein ye go."
Months pass without any more tidings of the Danites until one day a
great company is seen following the hill road near Micah’s farm.
"There are six hundred men girt with weapons of war with their wives
and children and cattle, a whole clan on the march, filling the road
for miles and moving slowly northward. The five men have indeed
succeeded after a fashion. Away between Lebanon and Hermon, in the
region of the sources of Jordan, they have found the sort of
district they went to seek. Its chief town Laish stood in the midst
of fertile fields with plenty of wood and water. It was a place,
according to their large report, where was no want of anything that
is in the earth." Moreover the inhabitants, who seem to have been a
Phoenician colony, dwelt by themselves quiet and secure, having no
dealings or treaty with the powerful Zidonians. They were the very
kind of people whom a sudden attack would be likely to subdue. There
was an immediate migration of Danites to this fresh field, and in
prospect of bloody work the men of Zorah and Eshtaoi seem to have
had no doubt as to the rightness of their expedition; it was enough
that they had felt themselves straitened. The same reason appears to
suffice many in modern times. Were the aboriginal inhabitants of
America and Australia considered by those who coveted their land?
Even the pretence of buying has not always been maintained. Murder
and rapine have been the methods used by men of our own blood, our
own name, and no nation under the sun has a record darker than the
tale of British conquest.
Men who go forth to steal land are quite fit to attempt the strange
business of stealing gods that is appropriating to themselves the
favour of divine powers and leaving other men destitute. The Danites
as they pass Micah’s house hear from their spies of the priest and
the images that are in his charge. "Do you know that that there is
in these houses an ephod and teraphim and a graven image and a
molten image? Now therefore consider what ye have to do." The hint
is enough. Soon the court of the farmstead is invaded, the images
are brought out and the Levite Jonathan, tempted by the offer of
being made priest to a clan, is fain to accompany the marauders.
Here is confusion on confusion. The Danites are thieves, brigands,
and yet they are pious; so pious that they steal images to assist
them in worship. The Levite agrees to the theft and accepts the
offer of priesthood under them. He will be the minister of a set of
thieves to forward their evil designs, and they, knowing him to be
no better than themselves, expect that his sacrifices and prayers
will do them good. It is surely a capital instance of perverted
religious ideas.
As we have said, these circumstances are no doubt recounted in order
to show how dangerous it was to separate from the pure order of
worship at the sanctuary. In after times this lesson was needed,
especially when the first king of the northern tribes set his golden
calves the one at Bethel, the other at Dan. Was Israel to separate
from Judah in religion as well as in government? Let there be a
backward look to the beginning of schism in those extraordinary
doings of the Danites. It was in the city founded by the six hundred
that one of Jeroboam’s temples was built. Could any blessing rest
upon a shrine and upon devotions which had such an origin, such a
history?
May we find a parallel now? Is there a constituted religious
authority with which soundness of belief and acceptable worship are
so bound up that to renounce the authority is to be in the way of
confusion and error, schism and eternal loss? The Romanist says so.
Those who speak for the Papal church never cease to cry to the world
that within their communion alone are truth and safety to be found.
Renounce, they say, the apostolic and divine authority which we
conserve and all is gone. Is there anarchy in a country? Are the
forces that make for political disruption and national decay showing
themselves in many lands? Are monarchies overthrown? Are the people
lawless and wretched? It all comes of giving up the Catholic order
and creed. Return to the one fold under the one Shepherd if you
would find prosperity. And there are others who repeat the same
injunction, not indeed denying that there may be saving faith apart
from their ritual, but insisting still that it is an error and a sin
to seek God elsewhere than at the accredited shrine.
With Jewish ordinances we Christians have nothing to do when we are
judging as to religious order and worship now. There is no central
shrine, no exclusive human authority. Where Christ is, there is the
temple; where He speaks, the individual conscience must respond. The
work of salvation is His alone, and the humblest believer is His
consecrated priest. When our Lord said, "The hour cometh and now
is-when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and
in truth"; and again, "Where two or three are gathered together in
My name there am I in the midst of them"; when He as the Son of God
held out His hands directly to every sinner needing pardon and every
seeker after truth, when He offered the one sacrifice upon the cross
by which a living way is opened into the holiest place, He broke
down the walls of partition and with the responsibility declared the
freedom of the soul.
And here we reach the point to which our narrative applies as an
illustration. Micah and his household worshipping the images of
silver, the Levite officiating at the altar, seeking counsel of
Jehovah by ephod and teraphim, the Danites who steal the gods, carry
off the priest and set up a new worship in the city they build-all
these represent to us types and stages of what is really schism
pitiful and disastrous-that is, separation from the truth of things
and from the sacred realities of divine faith. Selfish untruth and
infidelity are schism, the wilderness and outlawry of the soul.
1. Micah and his household, with their chapel of images, their ephod
and teraphim, represent those who fall into the superstition that
religion is good as insuring temporal success and prosperity, that
God will see to the worldly comfort of those who pay respect to Him.
Even among Christians this is a very common and very debasing
superstition. The sacraments are often observed as signs of a
covenant which secures for men divine favour through social
arrangements and human law.
2. The spiritual nature and power of religion are not denied, but
they are uncomprehended. The national custom and the worldly hope
have to do with the observance of devout forms rather than any
movement of the soul heavenward. A church may in this way become
like Micah’s household, and prayer may mean seeking good terms with
Him who can fill the land with plenty or send famine and cleanness
of teeth. Unhappily many worthy and most devout persons still hold
the creed of an early and ignorant time. The secret of nature and
providence is hid from them. The severities of life seem to them to
be charged with anger, and the valleys of human reprobation appear
darkened by the curse of God. Instead of finding in pain and loss a
marvellous divine discipline they perceive only the penalty of sin,
a sign of God’s aversion, not of His Fatherly grace. It is a sad, a
terrible blindness of soul. We can but note it here and pass on, for
there, are other applications of the old story.
3. The Levite represents an unworthy worldly ministry. With sadness
must confession be made that there are in every church pastors
unspiritual, worldlings in heart, whose desire is mainly for
superiority of rank or of wealth, who have no vision of Christ’s
cross and battle except as objective and historical. Here, most
happily, the cases of complete worldliness are rare. It is rather a
tendency we observe than a developed and acknowledged state of
things. Very few of those in the ranks of the Christian ministry are
entirely concerned with the respect paid to them in society and the
number of shekels to be got in a year. That he keeps pace with the
crowd instead of going before it is perhaps the hardest thing that
can be said of the worldly pastor. He is humane, active,
intelligent; but it is for the church as a great institution, or the
church as his temporal hope and stay. So his ministry becomes at the
best a matter of serving tables and providing alms-we shall not say
amusement. Here indeed is schism; for what is farther from the truth
of things, what is farther from Christ?
Once more we have with us today, very much with us, certain Danites
of science, politics, and the press who, if they could, would take
away our God and our Bible, our Eternal Father and spiritual hope,
not from a desire to possess but because they hate to see us
believing, hate to see any weight of silver given to religious uses.
Not a few of these are marching, as they think triumphantly, to
commanding and opulent positions whence they will rule the thought
of the world. And on the way, even while they deride and detest the
supernatural, they will have the priest go with them. They care
nothing for what he says; to listen to the voice of a spiritual
teacher is an absurdity of which they would not be guilty; for to
their own vague prophesying all mankind is to give hoed, and their
interpretations of human life are to be received as the bible of the
age. Of the same order is the socialist who would make use of a
faith he intends to destroy, and a priesthood whose claim is
offensive to him, on his way to what he calls the organisation of
society. In his view the uses of Christianity and the Bible are
temporal and earthly. He will not have Christ the Redeemer of the
soul, yet he attempts to conjure with Christ’s words and appropriate
the power of His name. The audacity of these would be robbers is
matched only by their ignorance of the needs and ends of human life.
We might here refer to the injustice practised by one and another
band of our modem Israel who do not scruple to take from obscure and
weak households of faith the sacraments and Christian ministry, the
marks and rights of brotherhood. We can well believe that those who
do this have never looked at their action from the other side, and
may not have the least idea of the soreness they leave in the hearts
of humble and sincere believers.
In fine, the Danites with the images of Micah went their way and he
and his neighbours had to suffer the loss and make the best of their
empty chapel, where no oracle thenceforth spoke to them. It is no
parable, but a very real example of the loss that comes to all who
have trusted in forms and symbols, the outward signs instead of the
living power of religion. While we repel the arrogance that takes
from faith its symbolic props and stays we must not let ourselves
deny that the very rudeness of an enemy may be an excellent
discipline for the Christian. Agnosticism and science and other
Danite companies sweep with them a good deal that is dear to the
religious mind and may leave it very distressed and anxious-the
chapel empty, the oracle as it may appear lost forever. With the
symbol the authority, the hope, the power seem to be lost
irrecoverably. What now has faith to rest upon? But the modern
spirit with its resolution to sweep away every unfact and mere form
is no destroyer. Rather does it drive the Christian to a science, a
virtue far beyond its own. It forces we may say on faith that severe
truthfulness and intellectual courage which are the proper qualities
of Christianity, the necessary counterpart of its trust and love and
grace. In short, when enemies have carried off the poor teraphim and
fetishes which are their proper capture they have but compelled
religion to be itself, compelled it to find its spiritual God, its
eternal creed and to understand its Bible. This, though done with
evil intent, is surely no cruelty, no outrage. Shall a man or a
church that has been so roused and thrown back on reality sit
wailing in the empty chapel for the images of silver and the
deliverances of the hollow ephod? Everything remains, the soul and
the spiritual world, the law of God, the redemption of Christ, the
Spirit of eternal life.
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