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FROM JUSTICE TO WILD REVENGE
Judges 19-21
THESE last chapters describe a general and vehement outburst of
moral indignation throughout Israel, recorded for various reasons. A
vile thing is done in one of the towns of Benjamin and the fact is
published in all the tribes. The doers of it are defended by their
clan and fearful punishment is wrought upon them, not without
suffering to the entire people. Like the incidents narrated in the
chapters immediately preceding, these must have occurred at an early
stage in the period of the judges, and they afford another
illustration of the peril of imperfect government, the need for a
vigorous administration of justice over the land. The crime and the
volcanic vengeance belong to a time when there was "no king in
Israel" and, despite occasional appeals to the oracle, "every man
did that which was right in his own eyes." In this we have one clue
to the purpose of the history.
The crime of Gibeah brought under our notice here connects itself
with that of Sodom and represents a phase of immorality which,
indigenous to Canaan, mixed its putrid current with Hebrew life.
There are traces of the same horrible impurity in the Judah of
Rehoboam and Asa; and in the story of Josiah’s reign we are
horrified to read of "houses of Sodomites that were in the house of
the Lord, where the women, wove hangings for the Asherah." With such
lurid historical light on the subject we can easily understand the
revival of this warning lesson from the past of Israel and the
fulness of detail with which the incidents are recorded. A crime
originally that of the off-scourings of Gibeah became practically
the sin of a whole tribe, and the war that ensued sets in a clear
light the zeal for domestic purity which was a feature in every
religious revival and, at length, in the life of the Hebrew people.
It may be asked how, while polygamy was practised among the
Israelites, the sin of Gibeah could rouse such indignation and
awaken the signal vengeance of the united tribes. The answer is to
be found partly in the singular and dreadful device which the
indignant husband used in making the deed known. The ghastly symbols
of outrage told the tale in a way that was fitted to stir the blood
of the whole country. Everywhere the hideous thing was made vivid
and a sense of utmost atrocity was kindled as the dissevered members
were borne from town to town. It is easy to see that womanhood must
have been stirred to the fieriest indignation, and manhood was bound
to follow. What woman could be safe in Gibeah where such things were
done? And was Gibeah to go unpunished? If so, every Hebrew city
might become the haunt of miscreants. Further there is the fact that
the woman so foully murdered, though a concubine, was the concubine
of a Levite. The measure of sacredness with which the Levites were
invested gave to this crime, frightful enough in any view, the
colour of sacrilege. How degenerate were the people of Gibeah when a
servant of the altar could be treated with such foul indignity and
driven to so extraordinary an appeal for justice? There could be no
blessing on the tribes if they allowed the doers or condoners of
this thing to go unpunished. Every Levite throughout the land must
have taken up the cry. From Bethel and other sanctuaries the call
for vengeance would spread and echo till the nation was roused.
Thus, in part at least, we can explain the vehemence of feeling
which drew together the whole fighting force of the tribes.
The doubt will yet remain whether there could have been so much
purity of life or respect for purity as to sustain the public
indignation. Some may say, Is there not here a sufficient reason for
questioning the veracity of the narrative? First, however, let it be
remembered that often where morals are far from reaching the level
of pure monogamic life distinctions between right and wrong are
sharply drawn. Acquaintance with phases of modern life that are most
painful to the mind sensitively pure reveals a fixed code which none
may infringe without bringing upon themselves reprobation, perhaps
more vehement than in a higher social grade visits the breach of a
higher law. It is the fact that concubinage has its unwritten
acknowledgment and protecting customs. There is marriage that is
only a name; there is concubinage that gives the woman more rights
than one who is married. Against the immorality and the gross evils
of cohabitation is to be set this unwritten law. And arguing from
popular feeling in our great cities we reach the conclusion that in
ancient Israel where concubinage prevailed there was a wide and keen
feeling as to the rights of concubines and the necessity of
upholding them. Many women must have been in this relation, below
those who could count themselves legally married, and all the more
that the concubine occupied a place inferior to that of the lawful
wife would popular opinion take up her cause and demand the
punishment of those who did her wrong.
And here we are led to a point which demands clear statement and
recognition. It has been too readily supposed that polygamy is
always a result of moral decline and indicates a low state of
domestic purity. It may, in truth, be a rude step of progress. Has
it been sufficiently noted that in those countries in which the name
of the mother, not of the father, descended to the children the
reason may be found in universal or almost universal unchastity? In
Egypt at one time the law gave to women, especially to mothers,
peculiar rights; but to praise Egyptian civilisation for this reason
and hold up its treatment of women as an example to the nineteenth
century is an extraordinary venture. The Israelites, however lax,
were doubtless in advance of the society of Thebes. Among the
Canaanites the moral degradation of women, whatever freedom may have
gone with it, was so terrible that the Hebrew with his two or three
wives and concubines but with a morality otherwise severe, must have
represented a new and holier social order as well as a new and
holier religion. It is therefore not incredible, but appears simply
in accordance with the instincts and customs proper to the Hebrew
people, that the sin of Gibeah should provoke overwhelming
indignation. There is no pretence of purity, no hypocritical anger.
The feeling is sound and real. Perhaps in no other matter of a moral
kind would there have been such intense and unanimous exasperation.
A point of justice or of belief would not have so moved the tribes.
The better self of Israel appears, asserting its claim and power.
And the miscreants of Gibeah representing the lower self, verily an
unclean spirit, are detested and denounced on every hand.
The time was that of fresh feeling, unwarped by those customs which
in the guise of civilisation and refinement afterwards corrupted the
nation. And we may see the prophetic or hortatory use of the
narrative for an after age in which doings as vile as those at
Gibeah were sanctioned by the court and protected even by religious
leaders. It would be hoped by the sacred historian that this tale of
the fierce indignation of the tribes might rouse afresh the same
moral feeling. He would fain stir a careless people and their
priests by the exhibition of this tumultuous vengeance. Nor can we
say that the necessity for the impressive lesson has ceased. In the
heart of our large cities vices as vile as those of Gibeah are heard
muttering in the nightfall, life as abandoned lurks and festers,
creating a social gangrene.
Recognise, then, in these chapters a truth for all time boldly drawn
out-the great truth as to moral reform and national purity. Law will
not cure moral evils; a statute book the purest and noblest will not
save. Those who by the impulse of the Spirit gathered the various
traditions of Israel’s life knew well that on a living conscience in
men everything depended, and they at least indicate the further
truth which many of ourselves have not grasped, that the early and
rude workings of conscience, producing stormy and terrible results,
are a necessary stage of development. As there must be energy before
there can be noble energy, so there must be moral vigour, it may be
rude, violent, ignorant, a stream rushing out of barbarian hills,
sweeping with most appalling vehemence, before there can be
spiritual life patient, calm, and holy. Law is a product, not a
cause; it is not the code we make that will perserve us but the
God-given conscience that informs the code and ever goes before it a
pillar of fire, at times flashing vivid lightning. Even Christian
law cannot save a people if it be merely a series of injunctions.
Nothing will do but the mind of Christ in every man and woman
continually inspiring and directing life. The reformer who thinks
that a statute or regulation will end some sin or evil custom is in
sad error. Say the decree he contends for is enacted; but have the
consciences of those against whom it is made been quickened? If not,
the law merely expresses a popular mood, and the life of the whole
community will not be permanently raised in tone.
The church finds here a perpetual mission of influence. Her doctrine
is but half her message. From the doctrine as from an eternal fount
must go life-giving moral heat in every range, and the Spirit is
ever with her to make the world like a fire. Her duty is wide as
righteousness, great as man’s destiny; it is never ended, for each
generation comes in a new hour with new needs. The church, say some,
is finishing its work; it is doomed to be one of the broken moulds
of life. But the church that is the instructor of conscience and
kindles the flame of righteousness has a mission to the ages. We are
far yet from that day of the Lord when all the people shall be
prophets; and until then how can the world live without the church?
It would be a body without a soul.
Conscience the oracle of life, conscience working badly rather than
held in chains of mere rule without spontaneity and inspiration,
moral energy widespread, personal, and keen, however rude-here is
one of the notes of the sacred writer; and another note, no less
distinct, is the assertion of moral intolerance. It has not occurred
to this prophetic annalist that endurance of evil has any curative
power. He is a Hebrew, full of indignation against the vile and
false, and he demands a heat of moral force in his people. Foul
things are done at the court and even in the temple; there is a
depraving indifference to purity, a loose notion (very similar to
the idea of our day), that all the sides of life should have free
play and that the heathen had much to teach Israel. The whole of the
narrative before us is infused with a righteous protest against
evil, a holy plea for intolerance of sin. Will men refuse
instruction and persist in making themselves one with bestiality and
outrage? Then judgment must deal with them on the ground they have
chosen to occupy, and until they repent the conscience of the race
must repudiate them together with their sin. Along with a keenly
burning conscience there goes this necessity of moral intolerance.
Charity is good, but not always in place; and brotherhood itself
demands at times strong uncompromising judgment of the evildoer. How
else among men of weak wills and wavering hearts can righteousness
vindicate and enforce itself as the eternal reality of life?
Compassion is strong only when it is linked to unfaltering
declarations; mercy is divine only when it turns a front of mail to
wickedness and flashes lightning at proud wrong, Any other kind of
charity is but a new offence-the sinner pardoning sin.
Now the people of Gibeah were not all vile. The wretches whose crime
called for judgment were but the rabble of the town. And we can see
that the tribes when they gathered in indignation were made serious
by the thought that the righteous might be punished with the wicked.
We are told that they went up to the sanctuary and asked counsel of
the Lord whether they should attack the convicted city. There was a
full muster of the fighting men, their blood at fever heat, yet they
would not advance without an oracle. It was an appeal to heavenly
justice and demands notice as a striking feature of the whole
terrible series of events. For an hour there is silence in the camp
till a higher voice shall speak.
But what is the issue? The oracle decrees an immediate attack on
Gibeah in the face of all Benjamin, which has shown the temper of
heathenism by refusing to give up the criminals. Once and again
there is trial of battle which ends in defeat of the allied tribes.
The wrong triumphs; the people have to return humbled and weeping to
the Sacred Presence and sit fasting and disconsolate before the
Lord.
Not without the suffering of the entire community is a great evil to
be purged from a land. It is easy to execute a murderer, to imprison
a felon. But the spirit of the murderer, of the felon, is widely
diffused, and that has to be cast out. In the great moral struggle
year after year the better have not only the openly vile but all who
are tainted, all who are weak in soul, loose in habit, secretly
sympathetic with the vile, arrayed against them. There is a
sacrifice of the good before the evil are overcome. In vicarious
suffering many must pay the penalty of crimes not their own ere the
wide-reaching wickedness can be seen in its demonic power and struck
down as the cruel enemy of the people.
When an assault is made on some vile custom the sardonic laugh is
heard of those who find their profit and their pleasure in it. They
feel their power. They know the wide sympathy with them spread
secretly through the land. Once and again the feeble attempt of the
good is repelled. With sad hearts, with impoverished means, those
who led the crusade retire baffled and weary. Has their method been
unintelligent? There very possibly lies the cause of its failure.
Or, perhaps, it has been, though nominally inspired by an oracle,
all too human, weak through human pride. Not till they gain with new
and deeper devotion to the glory of God, with more humility and
faith, a clearer view of the battleground and a better ordering of
the war shall defeat be changed into victory. And may it not be that
the assault on moral evils of our day, in which multitudes are
professedly engaged, in which also many have spent substance and
life, shall fail till there is a true humiliation of the armies of
God before Him, a new consecration to higher and more spiritual
ends? Human virtue has ever to be jealous of itself, the reformer
may so easily become a Pharisee.
The tide turned and there came another danger, that which waits on
ebullitions of popular feeling. A crowd roused to anger is hard to
control, and the tribes having once tasted vengeance did not cease
till Benjamin was almost exterminated. The slaughter extended not
only to the fighting men, but to women and children. The six hundred
who fled to the rock fort of Rimmon appear as the only survivors of
the clan. Justice overshot its mark and for one evil made another.
Those who had most fiercely used the sword viewed the result with
horror and amazement, for a tribe was lacking in Israel. Nor was
this the end of slaughter. Next for the sake of Benjamin the sword
was drawn and the men of Jabesh-gilead were butchered. It has to be
noticed that the oracle is not made responsible for this horrible
process of evil. The people came of their own accord to the decision
which annihilated Jabesh-gilead. But they gave it a pious colour;
religion and cruelty went together, sacrifices to Jehovah and this
frightful outbreak of demonism. It is one of the dark chapters of
human history. For the sake of an oath and an idea death was dealt
remorselessly. No voice suggested that the people of Jabesh may have
been more cautious than the rest, not less faithful to the law of
God. The others were resolved to appear to themselves to have been
right in almost annihilating Benjamin; and the town which had not
joined in the work of destruction must be punished.
The warning conveyed here is intensely keen. It is that men, made
doubtful by the issue of their actions whether they have done
wisely, may fly to the resolution to justify themselves and may do
so even at the expense of justice; that a nation may pass from the
right way to the wrong and then, having sunk to extraordinary
baseness and malignity, may turn writhing and self-condemned to add
cruelty to cruelty in the attempt to still the upbraidings of
conscience. It is that men in the heat of passion which began with
resentment against evil may strike at those who have not joined in
their errors as well as those who truly deserve reprobation. We
stand, nations and individuals, in constant danger of dreadful
extremes, a kind of insanity hurrying us on when the blood is heated
by strong emotion. Blindly attempting to do right we do evil, and
again having done the evil, we blindly strive to remedy it by doing
more. In times of moral darkness and chaotic social conditions, when
men are guided by a few rude principles, things are done that
afterwards appal themselves, and yet may become an example for
future outbreaks. During the fury of their Revolution the French
people, with some watchwords of the true ring as liberty,
fraternity, turned hither and thither, now in terror, now panting
after dimly seen justice or hope, and it was always from blood to
blood. We understand the juncture in ancient Israel and realise the
excitement and the rage of a self-jealous people, when we read the
modern tales of surging ferocity in which men appear now hounding
the shouting crowd to vengeance, then shuddering on the scaffold.
In private life the story has an application against wild and
violent methods of self-vindication. Many a man, hurried on by a
just anger against one who has done him wrong, sees to his horror
after a sharp blow is struck that he has broken a life and thrown a
brother bleeding to the dust. One wrong thing has been done perhaps
more in haste than vileness of purpose, and retribution, hasty,
ill-considered, leaves the moral question tenfold more confused.
When all is reckoned we find it impossible to say where the right
is, where the wrong.
Passing to the final expedient adopted by the chiefs of Israel to
rectify their error-the rape of the women at Shiloh-we see only to
how pitiful a pass moral blundering brings those who fall into it:
other moral teaching there is none. We might at first be disposed to
say that there was extraordinary want of reverence for religious
order and engagements when the men of Benjamin were invited to make
a sacred festival the occasion of taking what the other tribes had
solemnly vowed not to give. But the festival at Shiloh must have
been far more of a merry making than of a sacred assembly. It needs
to be recognised that many gatherings even in honour of Jehovah were
mainly, like those of Canaanite worship, for hilarity and feasting.
There was probably no great incongruity between the occasion and the
plot.
But the scenes certainly change in the course of this narrative with
extraordinary swiftness. Fierce indignation is followed by pity,
weeping for defeat by tears for too complete a victory. Horrible
bloodshed wastes the cities and in a month there is dancing in the
plain of Shiloh not ten miles from the field of battle. Chaotic
indeed are the morality and the history; but it is the disorder of
social life in its early stages, with the vehemence and tenderness,
the ferocity and laughter of a nation’s youth. And, all along, the
Book of Judges bears the stamp of veracity as a series of records
because these very features are to be seen-this tumult, this
undisciplined vehemence in feeling and act. Were we told here of
decorous solemn progress at slow march, every army going forth with
some stereotyped invocation of the Lord of Hosts, every leader a man
of conventional piety supported by a blameless priesthood and
orderly sacrifices, we should have had no evidence of truth. The
traditions preserved here, whoever collected them, are singularly
free from that idyllic colour which an imaginative writer would have
endeavoured to give.
At the last, accordingly, the book we have been reading stands a
real piece of history, proving itself over every kind of suspicion a
true record of a people chosen and guided to a destiny greater than
any other race of man has known. A people understanding its call and
responding with eagerness at every point? Nay. The worm is in the
heart of Israel as of every other nation, The carnal attracts, and
malignant cries overbear the divine still voice; the air of Canaan
breathes in every page, and we need to recollect that we are viewing
the turbulent upper waters of the nation and the faith. But the
working of God is plain; the divine thoughts we believed Israel to
have in trust for the world are truly with it from the first, though
darkened by altars of Baal and of Ashtoreth. The Word and Covenant
of Jehovah are vital facts of the supernatural which surrounds that
poor struggling erring Hebrew flock. Theocracy is a divine fact in a
larger sense than has ever been attached to the word. Inspiration
too is no dream, for the history is charged with intimations of the
spiritual order. The light of the unrealised end flashes on spear
and altar, and in the frequent roll of the storm the voice of the
Eternal is heard declaring righteousness and truth. No story this to
praise a dynasty or magnify a conquering nation or support a
priesthood. Nothing so faithful, so true to heaven and to human
nature could be done from that motive. We have here an imperishable
chapter in the Book of God.
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