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Judges Chapter
Sixteen
Judges 16
Chapter Contents
Samson's escape from Gaza. (1-3) Samson enticed to
declare his strength lay. (4-17) The Philistines take Samson
and put out his
eyes. (18-21) Samson's strength is renewed. (22-24) He destroys many of the
Philistines. (25-31)
Commentary on Judges 16:1-3
(Read Judges 16:1-3)
Hitherto Samson's character has appeared glorious
though
uncommon. In this chapter we find him behaving in so wicked a manner
that many
question whether or not he were a godly man. But the apostle has determined
this
Hebrews 11:32. By adverting to the doctrines and
examples of Scripture
the artifices of Satan
the deceitfulness of the human
heart
and the methods in which the Lord frequently deals with his people
we
may learn useful lessons from this history
at which some needlessly stumble
while others cavil and object. The peculiar time in which Samson lived may
account for many things
which
if done in our time
and without the special
appointment of Heaven
would be highly criminal. And there might have been in
him many exercises of piety
which
if recorded
would have reflected a
different light upon his character. Observe Samson's danger. Oh that all who
indulge their sensual appetites in drunkenness
or any fleshly lusts
would see
themselves thus surrounded
way-laid
and marked for ruin by their spiritual
enemies! The faster they sleep
the more secure they feel
the greater their
danger. We hope it was with a pious resolution not to return to his sin
that
he rose under a fear of the danger he was in. Can I be safe under this guilt?
It was bad that he lay down without such checks; but it would have been worse
if he had laid still under them.
Commentary on Judges 16:4-17
(Read Judges 16:4-17)
Samson had been more than once brought into mischief and
danger by the love of women
yet he would not take warning
but is again taken
in the same snare
and this third time is fatal. Licentiousness is one of the
things that take away the heart. This is a deep pit into which many have
fallen; but from which few have escaped
and those by a miracle of mercy
with
the loss of reputation and usefulness
of almost all
except their souls. The
anguish of the suffering is ten thousand times greater than all the pleasures
of the sin.
Commentary on Judges 16:18-21
(Read Judges 16:18-21)
See the fatal effects of false security. Satan ruins men
by flattering them into a good opinion of their own safety
and so bringing
them to mind nothing
and fear nothing; and then he robs them of their strength
and honour
and leads them captive at his will. When we sleep our spiritual enemies
do not. Samson's eyes were the inlets of his sin
verse 1
and now his punishment began there. Now
the Philistines blinded him
he had time to remember how his own lust had
before blinded him. The best way to preserve the eyes
is
to turn them away
from beholding vanity. Take warning by his fall
carefully to watch against all
fleshly lusts; for all our glory is gone
and our defence departed from us
when our separation to God
as spiritual Nazarites
is profaned.
Commentary on Judges 16:22-24
(Read Judges 16:22-24)
Samson's afflictions were the means of bringing him to
deep repentance. By the loss of his bodily sight the eyes of his understanding
were opened; and by depriving him of bodily strength
the Lord was pleased to
renew his spiritual strength. The Lord permits some few to wander wide and sink
deep
yet he recovers them at last
and marking his displeasure at sin in their
severe temporal sufferings
preserves them from sinking into the pit of
destruction. Hypocrites may abuse these examples
and infidels mock at them
but true Christians will thereby be rendered more humble
watchful
and
circumspect; more simple in their dependence on the Lord
more fervent in
prayer to be kept from falling
and in praise for being preserved; and
if they
fall
they will be kept from sinking into despair.
Commentary on Judges 16:25-31
(Read Judges 16:25-31)
Nothing fills up the sins of any person or people faster
than mocking and misusing the servants of God
even thought it is by their own
folly that they are brought low. God put it into Samson's heart
as a public
person
thus to avenge on them God's quarrel
Israel's
and his own. That
strength which he had lost by sin
he recovers by prayer. That it was not from
passion or personal revenge
but from holy zeal for the glory of God and
Israel
appears from God's accepting and answering the prayer. The house was
pulled down
not by the natural strength of Samson
but by the almighty power
of God. In his case it was right he should avenge the cause of God and Israel.
Nor is he to be accused of self-murder. He sought not his own death
but
Israel's deliverance
and the destruction of their enemies. Thus Samson died in
bonds
and among the Philistines
as an awful rebuke for his sins; but he died
repentant. The effects of his death typified those of the death of Christ
who
of his own will
laid down his life among transgressors
and thus overturned
the foundation of Satan's kingdom
and provided for the deliverance of his
people. Great as was the sin of Samson
and justly as he deserved the judgments
he brought upon himself
he found mercy of the Lord at last; and every penitent
shall obtain mercy
who flees for refuge to that Saviour whose blood cleanses
from all sin. But here is nothing to encourage any to indulge sin
from a hope
they shall at last repent and be saved.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Judges》
Judges 16
Verse 1
[1] Then
went Samson to Gaza
and saw there an harlot
and went in unto her.
And saw —
Going into an house of publick entertainment to refresh himself. He there saw
this harlot accidentally; and by giving way to look upon her
was ensnared
Genesis 3:6.
Verse 2
[2] And it was told the Gazites
saying
Samson is come hither. And they
compassed him in
and laid wait for him all night in the gate of the city
and
were quiet all the night
saying
In the morning
when it is day
we shall kill
him.
In the morning —
This they chose to do
rather than to seize upon him in his bed by night;
either
because they knew not certainly in what house he was; or
because they
thought that might cause great terror
and confusion
and mischief among their
own people; whereas in the day-time they might more fully discover him
and
more certainly use their weapons against him. O that all who indulge any unholy
desire
might see themselves thus surrounded
and marked for destruction by
their spiritual enemies! The more secure they are
the greater is their danger.
Verse 3
[3] And
Samson lay till midnight
and arose at midnight
and took the doors of the gate
of the city
and the two posts
and went away with them
bar and all
and put
them upon his shoulders
and carried them up to the top of an hill that is
before Hebron.
Arose —
Perhaps warned by God in a dream; or rather by the checks of his own
conscience.
Went away —
The watch-men not expecting him 'till morning
and therefore being now retired
into the sides
or upper part of the gate-house
as the manner now is
to get
some rest
to fit themselves for their hard service intended in the morning:
nor durst they pursue him
whom they now again perceived to have such
prodigious strength
and courage; and to be so much above the fear of them
that he did not run away with all speed
but went leisurely.
Hebron —
Which was above twenty miles from Gaza. And Samson did this not out of vain
ostentation
but as an evidence of his great strength
for the encouragement of
its people to join with him vigorously; and for the greater terror and contempt
of the Philistines. It may seem strange that Samson immediately after so foul a
sin should have courage and strength from God
for so great a work. But first
it is probable
that Samson had in some measure repented of his sin
and begged
of God pardon and assistance. 2.This singular strength and courage was not in
itself a grace
but a gift
and it was such a gift as did not so much depend on
the disposition of his mind
but on the right ordering of his body
by the rule
given to him
and others of that order.
Verse 4
[4] And
it came to pass afterward
that he loved a woman in the valley of Sorek
whose
name was Delilah.
Loved —
Probably as an harlot: because the dreadful punishment now inflicted upon
Samson for this sin
whom God spared for the first offence
is an intimation
that this sin was not inferior to the former.
Verse 5
[5] And the lords of the Philistines came up unto her
and said unto her
Entice him
and see wherein his great strength lieth
and by what means we may
prevail against him
that we may bind him to afflict him: and we will give thee
every one of us eleven hundred pieces of silver.
The lords —
The lords of their five principal cities
who were leagued together against him
as their common enemy.
Afflict — To
chastise him for his injuries done to us. They mean to punish him severely
but
they express it in mild words
lest it might move her to pity him.
Pieces of silver —
Shekels
as that phrase is commonly used.
Verse 7
[7] And
Samson said unto her
If they bind me with seven green withs that were never
dried
then shall I be weak
and be as another man.
Samson said —
Samson is guilty both of the sin of lying
and of great folly in encouraging
her enquiries
which he should at first have checked: but as he had forsaken
God
so God had now forsaken him
otherwise the frequent repetition and
vehement urging of this question might easily have raised suspicion in him.
Verse 9
[9] Now
there were men lying in wait
abiding with her in the chamber. And she said
unto him
The Philistines be upon thee
Samson. And he brake the withs
as a
thread of tow is broken when it toucheth the fire. So his strength was not
known.
With her —
That is
in a secret chamber within her call. Nor is it strange that they did
not fall upon him in his sleep
because they expected an opportunity for doing
their work more certainly
and with less danger.
Verse 13
[13] And
Delilah said unto Samson
Hitherto thou hast mocked me
and told me lies: tell
me wherewith thou mightest be bound. And he said unto her
If thou weavest the
seven locks of my head with the web.
Web —
Or
thread which is woven about a weaver's loom: or
with a weaver's beam. If
my hair
which is all divided into seven locks
be fastened about a weaver's
beam; or interwoven with weaver's threads: then I shall be weak as another man.
Verse 15
[15] And
she said unto him
How canst thou say
I love thee
when thine heart is not
with me? thou hast mocked me these three times
and hast not told me wherein
thy great strength lieth.
Not with me —
Not open to me.
Verse 16
[16] And
it came to pass
when she pressed him daily with her words
and urged him
so
that his soul was vexed unto death;
Vexed —
Being tormented by two contrary passions
desire to gratify her
and fear of
betraying himself. So that he had no pleasure of his life.
Verse 17
[17] That
he told her all his heart
and said unto her
There hath not come a razor upon
mine head; for I have been a Nazarite unto God from my mother's womb: if I be
shaven
then my strength will go from me
and I shall become weak
and be like
any other man.
If I be shaven —
Not that his hair was in itself the cause of his strength
but because it was
the chief condition of that covenant
whereby God was pleased to ingage himself
to fit him for
and assist him in that great work to which he called him: but upon
his violation of the condition
God justly withdraws his help. (EFN Isaiah 40:31)
Verse 18
[18] And
when Delilah saw that he had told her all his heart
she sent and called for
the lords of the Philistines
saying
Come up this once
for he hath shewed me
all his heart. Then the lords of the Philistines came up unto her
and brought
money in their hand.
And brought money in their hand — See one of the bravest men then in the world bought and sold
as a sheep
for the slaughter. How does this instance sully all the glory of man
and
forbid the strong man ever to boast of his strength!
Verse 19
[19] And
she made him sleep upon her knees; and she called for a man
and she caused him
to shave off the seven locks of his head; and she began to afflict him
and his
strength went from him.
Sleep — By
some sleepy potion.
Knees —
Resting his head upon her knees. To weaken or hurt
tho' he felt it not.
Verse 20
[20] And
she said
The Philistines be upon thee
Samson. And he awoke out of his sleep
and said
I will go out as at other times before
and shake myself. And he wist
not that the LORD was departed from him.
Said —
Within himself.
Shake myself —
That is
put forth my strength.
Knew not —
Not distinctly feeling the loss of his hair
or not considering what would
follow. Many have lost the favourable presence of God
and are not aware of it.
They have provoked God to withdraw from them; but are not sensible of their
loss.
Verse 21
[21] But
the Philistines took him
and put out his eyes
and brought him down to Gaza
and bound him with fetters of brass; and he did grind in the prison house.
His eyes —
Which was done both out of revenge and policy
to disable him from doing them
harm
in case he should recover his strength; but not without God's providence
punishing him in that part which had been instrumental to his sinful lusts.
Gaza —
Because this was a great and strong city
where he would be kept safely; and
upon the sea-coast
at sufficient distance from Samson's people; and to repair
the honour of that place
upon which he had fastened so great a scorn. God also
ordering things thus
that where he first sinned
Judges 16:1
there he should receive his
punishment.
Grind — As
slaves use to do. He made himself a slave to harlots
and now God suffers men
to use him like a slave. Poor Samson
how art thou fallen! How is thine honour
laid in the dust! Wo unto him
for he hath sinned! Let all take warning by him
carefully to preserve their purity. For all our glory is gone
when the
covenant of our separation to God
as spiritual Nazarites
is profaned.
Verse 22
[22]
Howbeit the hair of his head began to grow again after he was shaven.
The hair —
This circumstance
though in itself inconsiderable
is noted as a sign of the
recovery of God's favour
and his former strength
in some degree
upon his
repentance
and renewing his vow with God
which was allowed for Nazarites to
do.
Verse 23
[23] Then
the lords of the Philistines gathered them together for to offer a great
sacrifice unto Dagon their god
and to rejoice: for they said
Our god hath
delivered Samson our enemy into our hand.
Dagon — An
idol
whose upper part was like a man
and whose lower part was like a fish:
probably one of the sea-gods of the Heathens.
Verse 25
[25] And
it came to pass
when their hearts were merry
that they said
Call for Samson
that he may make us sport. And they called for Samson out of the prison house;
and he made them sport: and they set him between the pillars.
Made sport —
Either being made by them the matter of their sport and derision
of bitter
scoffs
and other indignities: or
by some proofs of more than ordinary
strength yet remaining in him
like the ruins of a great and goodly building:
whereby he lulled them asleep
until by this complaisance he prepared the way
for that which he designed.
Verse 26
[26] And
Samson said unto the lad that held him by the hand
Suffer me that I may feel
the pillars whereupon the house standeth
that I may lean upon them.
Whereon the house standeth-Whether it were a
temple
or theatre
or some slight building run up for the purpose.
Verse 27
[27] Now
the house was full of men and women; and all the lords of the Philistines were
there; and there were upon the roof about three thousand men and women
that
beheld while Samson made sport.
The roof —
Which was flat
and had window's through which they might see what was done in
the lower parts of the house.
Verse 28
[28] And
Samson called unto the LORD
and said
O Lord GOD
remember me
I pray thee
and strengthen me
I pray thee
only this once
O God
that I may be at once
avenged of the Philistines for my two eyes.
Samson called —
This prayer was not an act of malice and revenge
but of faith and zeal for
God
who was there publickly dishonoured; and justice
in vindicating the whole
common-wealth of Israel
which was his duty
as he was judge. And God
who
heareth not sinners
and would never use his omnipotence to gratify any man's
malice
did manifest by the effect
that he accepted and owned his prayer as
the dictate of his own Spirit. And that in this prayer he mentions only his
personal injury
and not their indignities to God and his people
must be
ascribed to that prudent care which he had
upon former occasions
of deriving
the rage of the Philistines upon himself alone
and diverting it from the
people. For which end I conceive this prayer was made with an audible voice
though he knew they would entertain it only with scorn and laughter.
Verse 30
[30] And
Samson said
Let me die with the Philistines. And he bowed himself with all his
might; and the house fell upon the lords
and upon all the people that were
therein. So the dead which he slew at his death were more than they which he
slew in his life.
Two pillars —
Instances are not wanting of more capacious buildings than this
that have been
supported only by one pillar. Pliny in the 15th chapter of the 36th Book of his
Natural History
mentions two theatres built by C. Curio
in Julius Caesar's
time; each of which was supported only by one pillar
tho' many thousands of
people sat in it together.
Let me die —
That is
I am content to die
so I can but contribute to the vindication of
God's glory
and the deliverance of God's people. This is no encouragement to
those who wickedly murder themselves: for Samson did not desire
or procure his
own death voluntarily
but by mere necessity; he was by his office obliged to
seek the destruction of these enemies and blasphemers of God
and oppressors of
his people; which in these circumstances he could not effect without his own
death. Moreover
Samson did this by Divine direction
as God's answer to his
prayer manifests
and that he might be a type of Christ
who by voluntarily
undergoing death
destroyed the enemies of God
and of his people. They died
just when they were insulting over an Israelite
persecuting him whom God had
smitten. Nothing fills up the measure of the iniquity of any person or people
faster
than mocking or misusing the servants of God
yea
tho' it is by their
own folly
that they are brought low. Those know not what they do
nor whom
they affront
that make sport with a good man.
Verse 31
[31] Then
his brethren and all the house of his father came down
and took him
and
brought him up
and buried him between Zorah and Eshtaol in the buryingplace of
Manoah his father. And he judged Israel twenty years.
Buried —
While the Philistines were under such grief
and consternation
that they had
neither heart nor leisure to hinder them.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Judges》
16 Chapter 16
Verses 1-31
Then went Samson to Gaza.
Pleasure and peril in Gaza
For what reason did Samson go down to Gaza? We imagine that in
default of any excitement such as he craved in the towns of his own land
he
turned his eyes to the Philistine cities which presented a marked contrast.
There life was energetic and gay
there many pleasures were to be had. New colonists
were coming in their swift ships
and the streets presented a scene of constant
animation. The strong
eager man
full of animal passions
found the life he
craved in Gaza where he mingled with the crowds and heard tales of strange
existence. Nor was there wanting the opportunity for enjoyment which at home he
could not indulge. A constant peril this of seeking excitement
especially in
an age of high civilisation. The means of variety and stimulus are multiplied
and even the craving outruns them--a craving yielded to
with little or no
resistance
by many who should know better. The moral teacher must recognise
the desire for variety and excitement as perhaps the chief of all the
hindrances he has now to overcome. For one who desires duty there are scores
who find it dull and tame and turn from it
without sense of fault
to the
gaieties of civilised society in which there is so little of the positively
wrong that conscience is easily appeased. The religious teacher finds the
demand for “brightness” and variety before him at every turn; he is indeed
often touched by it himself
and follows with more or less of doubt a path that
leads straight from his professed goal. “Is amusement devilish?“ asks one. Most
people reply with a smile that life must be lively or it is not worth having.
And the Philistinism that attracts them with its dash and gaudiness is not far
away nor hard to reach. It is not necessary to go across to the Continent
where the brilliance of Vienna or Paris offers a contrast to the grey dulness
of a country village; nor even to London where
amid the lures of the midnight
streets
there is peril of the gravest kind. Those who are restless and
foolhardy can find a Gaza and a valley of Sorek nearer home
in the next market
town. Philistine life
lax in morals
full of rattle and glitter
heat and
change
in gambling
in debauchery
in sheer audacity of movement and talk
presents its allurements in our streets
has its acknowledged haunts in our
midst. Young people brought up to fear God in quiet homes whether of town or
country
are enticed by the whispered counsels of comrades half-ashamed of the
things they say
yet eager for more companionship in what they secretly know to
be folly or worse. Young women are the prey of those who disgrace manhood and
womanhood by the offers they make
the insidious lies they tell. The attraction
once felt is apt to master. As the current that rushes swiftly bears them with
it
they exult in the rapid motion even while life is nearing the fatal
cataract. Subtle is the progress of infidelity. From the persuasion that
enjoyment is lawful and has no peril in it
the mind quickly passes to a doubt
of the old laws and warnings. Is it so certain that there is a reward for
purity and unworldliness? Is not all the talk about the life to come a jangle
of vain words? The present is a reality
death a certainty
life a swiftly
passing possession. They who enjoy know what they are getting. The rest is
dismissed as altogether in the air. (R. A. Watson
M. A.)
And went away with them
bar and all.
Our Champion
Poor Samson! We cannot say much about him by way of an example to
believers. He is a beacon to us all
for he shows us that no strength of body
can suffice to deliver from weakness of mind. Samson is also a prodigy. He is
more a wonder as a believer than he is even as a man. It is marvellous that a
man could smite thousands of Philistines with no better weapon than the jawbone
of a newly-killed ass
but it is more marvellous still that Samson should be a
saint
ranked among these illustrious ones saved by faith
though such a
sinner. St. Paul has put him among the worthies in the eleventh chapter of the
Hebrews. I look upon Samson’s case as a great wonder
put in Scripture for the
encouragement of great sinners. If such a man as Samson
nevertheless
prevails by faith to
enter the kingdom of heaven
so shall you and I. Though our characters may have
been disfigured by many vices
and hitherto we may have committed a multitude
of sins
if we can trust Christ to save us He will purge us with hyssop
and we
shall be clean; and in our death we shall fall asleep in the arms of sovereign
mercy to wake up in the likeness of Christ.
I. Look at our
mighty champion at his work. You remember when our Samson
our Lord Jesus
came
down to the Gaza of this world
‘twas love that brought Him; love to a most
unworthy object
for He loved the sinful Church which had gone astray from Him;
yet came He from heaven
and left the ease and delights of His Father’s palace
to put Himself among the Philistines
the sons of sin and Satan here below.
There He lies silently in the tomb. He who is to bruise the serpent’s head is
Himself bruised. O Thou who art the world’s great Deliverer
there Thou liest
as dead as any stone! Surely Thy foes have led Thee captive
O Thou mighty
Samson! He sleeps; but think not that He is unconscious of what is going on. He
knows everything. He sleeps till the proper moment comes
and then our Samson
awakes; and what now? He has defeated death; He has pulled up his posts and
bar
and taken away his gates. As for sin
He treads that beneath His feet: He
has
utterly overthrown it
and Satan lies broken beneath the heel that once
was bruised. In sacred triumph He drags our enemies behind Him. Sing to Him!
Angels
praise Him in your hymns! Exalt Him
cherubim and seraphim! Our
mightier Samson hath gotten to Himself the victory
and cleared the road to
heaven and eternal life for all His people!
II. Consider the
work itself. We will stand at the gates of this Gaza and see what the Champion
has done. He had three enemies. These three beset Him
and He has achieved a
threefold victory. There was death. Christ
in being first overcome by death
made Himself a conqueror over death
and hath given us also the victory; for
concerning death we may truly say
Christ has not only opened the gates
but He
has taken them away; and not the gates only
but the very posts
and the bar
and all. Christ hath abolished death
and brought life and immortality to
light. He hath abolished it in this sense--that
in the first place
the cause
of death is gone. Believers die
but they do not die for their sins. The curse
of death
then
being taken away
we may say that the posts are pulled up.
Christ has taken away the after-results of death
the soul’s exposure to the
second death. There is no hell for you
believer. Christ has taken away posts
and bar
and all. Death is not to you any longer the gate of torment
but the
gate of paradise. Moreover
Christ has not only taken away the curse
and the after-tumults
of death
but from many of us he has taken away the fear of death. He came on
purpose to deliver “those who through fear of death were all their lifetime
subject to bondage.” Besides
there is a sense in which it may be said that
Christians never die at all. “He that liveth and believeth in Me
though he
were dead
yet shall he live.” “He that liveth and believeth in Me shall never
die.” They do not die; they do but “sleep in Jesus
and are blessed.” But the
main sense in which Christ has pulled up the posts of the gates of death is
that He has brought in a glorious resurrection. If you have imagination
let
the scene now present itself before your eyes. Christ the Samson sleeping in
the dominions of death; death boasting and glorifying itself that now it has
conquered the Prince of Life; Christ waking
striding to that gate
dashing it
aside
taking it upon His shoulders
carrying it away
and saying as He mounts
to heaven
“O death
where is thy sting? O grave
where is thy victory? “
Another host which Christ had to defeat was the army of sin. Christ had come
among sinners
and sins beset Him round. Your sins and my sins beleaguered the
Saviour till He became their captive. In Him was no sin
and yet sins compassed
Him about like bees. Sin was imputed to Him; the sins of all His people stood
in His way to keep Him out of heaven as well as them. I may say
therefore
that all our sins stood in the way of Christ’s resurrection; they were the
great iron gate
and they were the bar of brass
that shut Him out from heaven.
Doubtless
we might have thought that Christ would be a prisoner for ever under
the troops of sin
but oh
see how the mighty Conqueror
as He bears our sins
“in His own body on the tree
” stands with unbroken bones beneath the enormous
load. See how He takes those sins upon His shoulders
and carries them right up
from His tomb
and hurls them away into the deep abyss of forgetfulness
where
if they be sought for
they shall not be found any more for ever. Then there
was a third enemy
and he also has been destroyed--that was Satan. Our
Saviour’s sufferings were not only an atonement for sin
but they were a
conflict with Satan
and a conquest over him. Satan is a defeated foe. The
gates of hell cannot prevail against the Church; but
what is more
Christ has
prevailed against the gates of hell. As for Satan
the posts
and bar
and all
have been plucked up from his citadel in this sense--that Satan has now no
reigning power over believers. He may bark at us like a dog
and he may go
about like a roaring lion
but to rend and to devour are not in his power.
III. We will now see
how we can use this victory. Surely there is some comfort here. You have a
desire to be saved; God has impressed you with a deep sense of sin; the very
strongest wish of your soul is that you might have peace with God. But you
think there are so many difficulties in the way--Satan
your sins
and I know
not what. Let me tell thee
in God’s name there is no difficulty whatever in
the way except in thine own heart
for Christ has taken away the gates of
Gaza--gates
post
bar
and all. They are all gone. Is not this an incentive
for us who profess to be servants of Christ to go out and fight with the world
and overcome it for Christ? Where Jesus leads us it needs not much courage to
follow. “The earth is the Lord’s and the fulness thereof.” Let us go and take
it for Him! (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Tell me
I pray thee
wherein thy great strength lieth.--
Man’s cannot and man’s can: A New Year’s address
Man has the power to turn bad things to a good account
and it is
lawful and right for him to do so. On this principle we shall use these words
of a bad woman to a not very good man to illustrate the ability and the
inability of man.
I. The inability
of man; or what he has no “strength“ for.
1. He cannot destroy the actions of his life.
2. He cannot bring back the neglected opportunities of his life.
3. He cannot blot out the sins of his life.
4. He cannot arrest the course of his life.
5. He cannot destroy the influence of his life.
II. The ability of
man; or
what he has “strength” for. “ I can do all things through Christ which
strengtheneth me.” Through the moral strength of Christ man can--
1. Reverse the ruling impulse of his past sinful life.
2. Make amends for the pernicious influence of his past life.
3. Remove from his own soul the pernicious influence of his past
life.
4. Turn the very scene of his earthly life into a heaven. (Homilist.)
The secret of Samson’s strength
Samson was not transparent to the vision of those who were nearest
him. His true nature was a riddle they could not solve. His phenomenal prowess
was not written in the lines of a vast and unwieldy body
or
as imagined by
some
in the flowing locks of his hair. It was no mere matter of exceptional
physique
of massive thews and sinews
of Titanic proportions visible to every
eye. There was more
in him than met the eye
or the question would not have been repeated with such
despairing urgency
“Tell me wherein thy great strength lieth?” Did it spring
from the dignity and exaltation of his lot? Samson was a “judge” in Israel
the
“saviour” of his tribe
the liberator of his people
an “uncrowned king”; one
of those elect military and moral leaders raised up in an era of gross
barbarity and widespread lawlessness to repress irreligion and godlessness
subdue the foes of Israel
call the people back to truth
and goodness
and
God
and prepare them for the acceptance of law and order at the hands of His
earthly representative
a Divinely-given king. But Samson’s strength lay no
more in his position than in his body. He had to make his opportunity rather
than to take it. Therefore
we repeat Delilah’s inquiry and say--if neither in
the limbs he used
nor in the place he filled
where then lay his great
strength?
I. The first
response
with all the uniqueness and definiteness of inspiration
brings us
face to face with God. The historian of the judges
with characteristic
simplicity and directness
brevity and force
traces Samson’s power
by one
single and swift step
to Jehovah
and credits his marvellous triumphs to the
mighty and immediate movements of the Divine Spirit. His birth is a Divine
incident and his nurture the Divine care. He is reared according to the
directions of God
and whilst still a young man “the Spirit of God moves him
”
“strikes” him repeatedly and with increasing force
as the smith hits and welds
the glowing metal on the anvil with his hammer; “pierces him “through and
through till his pain-born patriotism is unsupportable and he flings himself
against the Philistines with the crushing weight of an avalanche. From first to
last the hero’s life is invested with the supernatural. Samson’s power is
moral
of the will and spirit
and not merely of bone and sinew. He is not a
giant in body and a dwarf in soul. The Spirit of God is the underlying force of
his character
and alone secures for him his rank in the long line of mediators
of Divine truth
and agents of Divine revelation.
II. Now what is
attributed to God directly and at once in the Old Testament is set down to the
credit of Samson’s “faith“ in the New; and accordingly this Divine hero takes
his place in the long roll-call of conquering believers
along with Abel and
Abraham
Jacob and Joseph
Deborah and David. The language changes
but the
fact is the same. It is the view-point that differs. The historian is seated on
high
and reads Samson’s career from beside the throne of the Eternal. The
key-note is the same; both are struck in the high spiritual realm
but the note
has different names in the different notations of the old and new economies. In
the former case the answer to the question reads
“Samson is of God
and has
overcome them; because
greater is He than is in him
than he that is in the
world”; whilst the second case is expressed in the language of the same writer:
“This is the victory that overcometh the world
even our faith.” But this is
not all. The new description is itself a positive addition to our
knowledge--another ray from the Sun of Revelation. The same people do not
describe the same facts in different ways without a motive. Fresh forces of the
Spirit are at work meeting the fresh needs of living and suffering men
in a
fresh and living speech
addressed to the heart and life. “True eloquence
”
says one of our most recent seers
“is to translate a truth into language
perfectly intelligible to the person to whom yon speak.” That is what the
writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews does. In a sustained stream of the purest
and most exalted eloquence he translates the histories of Enoch and Noah
Moses
and Samson
into the language of the Church and the street
brings them into
vital touch with the feelings throbbing in the heart
and makes the Hebrew
Christians to realise the unity of their lives
under the new and revolutionary
conditions created by Christianity
with those of the fathers of the human
race
the founders of the Hebrew nationality
and the prophets and leaders of
the revelation of God. In becoming Christians they were not destroying the law
and the prophets
but filling out their programme
advancing their ideals
and
accomplishing their projects. We can only discharge our obligations to our age
as we catch the spirit of the writers of the New Testament
make the use of the
elder Christianity they made of Mosaism and Judaism
adopt a language that
beats and throbs with the life of to-day
and so reveal the unity of human
life
and of all ages in the living and loving God.
III. Bringing
Samson
then
out of the ancient Eastern world
and looking at him in the full
blaze of all the lights that shine on human character in its making
and on
human struggle in its success and failure
what is the answer yielded to the
demand
”Tell me wherein thy great strength lieth?“
1. No despicable advantage
surely
was that with which our hero
started life. His being was stored with force at his birth. He had an uncommon
I may say
for that day
a uniquely opulent inheritance. He was “born of a good
family
” though in a bad time; a family that dwelt at the topmost heights of spiritual
consecration
had grandly dared in the midst of seething vice and irreligion to
choose the most self-suppressing type of personal and domestic life
and
dedicate its energies to obeying the most strenuous law of living yet made
known
even that of the Nazarite vow. No aspiration soared higher. No range of
service was broader. No attitude was less open to question. No position made
greater demands on courage
fidelity
and self-sacrifice. Can you estimate the
spiritual wealth of such a descent? Have you any measure for the advantages of
such a home? Would not every day be an acquisition of power
and may we not
readily believe that as “the child grew the Lord blessed him“? Parentage and
nurture are among the chief agents for continuing and advancing the spiritual
welfare of the world; and so
whilst God was the fountain-head of all the power
of Samson
one stream of the spirit-force assuredly came along the line of
inherited sanctities and family training
constituting him the typical
Nazarite
the chief example of that special phase of the Hebrew religion--at
once of its splendid strength and of its possible weakness.
2. Again
Samson’s Nazarism
practised from boyhood
nourished by a
mother’s watchful care
and intensified by his isolation from the rest of the
world
must have exercised an incalculable power upon his mind
and fixed in
the “porcelain” of his nature the faith that he had a supreme work to do for
God
and was responsible to Him
till the last stroke was given. The man who
means to do any real work in a brief life must know what not to do. Samson’s
vow was of signal service in teaching that. The root of his religion was
separation
and his vow roused and stimulated his nature
opened his being to
the access of God’s Spirit with unresisted fulness and all-subduing might
developed the feeling of the sacred inviolability of his life
assured him he
could not be hurt so long as he was faithful to his calling
and rendered him
susceptible of that strength of will
heroic fearlessness
and resistless dash
which made him indomitable. Samson is a dedicated will; and once dedicated in
will to God we are strong for God and by God.
3. The reputation of Samson has suffered from the grim humour marking
some of his exploits and the gigantic and boisterous mirth that runs riot
through some of his achievements. We men of the West set so high an estimate on
strenuous earnestness
rigid intensity
and serious ardour
that we always
prefer majesty to grace
sober sincerity to playful humour. The massive dignity
and royal gravity of Milton win upon us
whilst the nimble pliancy and
occasional sportfulness of Shakespeare are ignored. But we must not forget that
great natures are rarely wanting in humour. Samson’s natural cheerfulness; his
light and cheerful temperament
sending forth a full buoyant river of mirth
was one of the sources of his strength
saving him from the weakness that
in a
time of oppression and calamity
nurses care
frets away power
anticipates
disaster
and wastes existence. Never quailing before the superiority of his
foes
he is as sunny as he is strong
as bright as he is bold
and thus is able
to husband his strength for the heaviest demand that the day may bring. Joy is
a duty
and of priceless worth is the temperament that makes obedience easy
opening the soul to every genial ray that shines
and closing it to the access
of brooding care and darkening anxiety.
4. It was one of the darkest hours in Israel’s history. The tribes
generally had lost heart and hope
and Judah was so disorganised that
instead
of co-operating with Samson
they betrayed him into the hands of the common
enemy. Here then was urgent need
and the need provoked and stimulated Samson’s
faith
as his vow had inspired it. Necessity was laid upon him. The Spirit of God
moved him mightily by the sight of the work to be done
the widespread anarchy
and confusion
and the vast suffering and misery. Consecrated souls are goaded
to battle by the sympathetic pains they feel with the wronged and the
oppressed. Oh
for the quick sympathy that sees in every lost soul a call to
service
and in every national and social evil a Divine summons to a quenchless
zeal in service for God and men!
5. But the function of Samson in revelation would be most imperfectly
discharged for us if we did not recognise the teaching of his flagrant and
ignominious fall. Nothing external
though it be the purest and best
can
enable us “to keep the heights the soul is competent to gain.” God
and God
alone
is sufficient for continuous progress and final victory. (J.
Clifford
D. D.)
Individulalism in religion
The lesson of Samson’s life is “Individualism in religion:
what God can accomplish for His people by the power of a single arm.” Wherein
lay his strength?
I. In his early
consecration to God. And just in proportion to the degree of our consecration
will be the extent of our influence and success in the Divine service. We are
weak in the ratio of what we reserve. Give up little for Christ
and we will
accomplish little. Give up all
and we shall be more than conquerors through
Him who loves us.
II. In doing the
work assigned him.
III. In fighting
with the weapon given him.
IV. Samson was
prepared to die for his cause. And Samson said
“Let me die with the
Philistines.” This was the Hebrew warrior’s greatest and most heroic exploit.
He gave his life for his country. ( R. Balgarnie
D. D.)
His soul was vexed unto
death.--
The gradual and subtle advance of sin
That story of the blandishments of Delilah is compassed in a few
verses
but as a matter of fact
I presume
it spreads over a considerable
time. Delilah could not have overcome a man of native wit and ready perception
like Samson by bringing those snares against him in a short period; but she
might now
with soft
silent look
woo the secret from his heart; then
changing her humour
she would try the loving petulance of the toy of his love
as she was: “How canst thou say thou lovest me
seeing thou withholdest this
secret from me?” Then inch by inch she wearied out the strength of resistance
and then came that terrible catastrophe; but it was slow
very slow. He felt
himself strong through it all
perchance; but because he felt himself strong
the snare was biting through the very joints of his harness; and when the day
of danger and necessity came
it fell from off him
and left him a victim to
the powers of the enemy. Now
you are an old man; white hairs are upon your
head. Did you notice their growth? Did you notice how one by one they began to
whiten? Did you not rather
the first day you noticed that symptom of coming
age
pluck out the recreant hair and cast it aside as a mere accidental thing?
But it grew notwithstanding
till it frosted your head. You see it is bleak
cold winter
and there is not a leaf to be seen
and the earth is bound up in
its snowy coat; you never noticed how it stole in
and how bright
warm summer
and the green leaves turned to the crispness of the sere and yellow leaf
and
one by one dropped away
till at length winter came and killed the last leaf
that fluttered in the cold wind. You did not notice this
but it came on. Or
see yon noble berg that floats in the northern seas
and upon its pinnacled
crown the bright spring sunshine plays till it lights it up into a diadem of
glory. How majestically it floats upon the blue bosom of these waters! Then
suddenly as in an instant you see that mighty diadem of crystal pinnacles
plunge into the depths. Sudden? no
not sudden at all. Sudden in its collapse
sudden in its end; but the warm waters of the springtide far beneath the broad
base which weighted it so well were lapping away its strength and melting down
the icy surface
and then
when the gravity was just pitched over
it fell. So
gradual is sin. You go on in all the joyousness of your sinnership; you glory
that you at least have been free from all the grievous pestilences which hang
about sin: aye
go on
and float down towards the south
and remember that the
warm currents which you do not notice are eating out the strength of your life
and your fall will be
sudden
in an instant
because you have not noticed its gradual approach. You
do not notice that first sin; you feel that it has not produced any great
impression upon you; but toils are being prepared
and inch by inch you are let
down to the very edge. It is only taken to put back again; it is only keeping a
little longer; it is only preparing the way for disgrace and exposure. It is
only a light laugh at the corner of the street
and a merry innocent freak with
a strange coy face that meets you. It is only tarrying a while to speak a word
of ready and easy good-humoured jest. But her ways lead down to hell
and her
end is in the grave. (Bp. Boyd Carpenter.)
If I be shaven
then my
strength will go from me.--
The giant’s locks
I. Learn how very
strong people abe sometimes coaxed into great imbecilities. Those who have the
kindest and most sympathetic natures are the most in danger. The warmth and
susceptibility of your nature will encourage the siren. Though strong as a
giant
look out for Delilah’s scissors.
II. This narrative
teaches us the power of an ill-disposed woman. While the most excellent and
triumphant exhibitions of character we find among the women of history
and the
world thrills with the names of Marie Antoinette and Josephine and Joan of Arc
and Maria Theresa and hundreds of others
who have ruled in the brightest homes
and sung the sweetest cantos
and enchanted the nations with their art
and
swayed the mightiest of sceptres
on the other hand the names of Mary the First
of England
Margaret of France
Julia of Rome
and Elizabeth Petrowna of Russia
have scorched the eye of history with their abominations
and their names
like
banished spirits
have gone shrieking and cursing through the world. Woman
stands nearest the gate of heaven or nearest the door of hell. When adorned by
grace she reaches a point of Christian elevation which man cannot attain
and
when blasted by crime she sinks deeper than man can plunge.
III. Consider some
of the ways in which strong men get their locks shorn. The strength of men is
variously distributed. Sometimes it lies in physical development
sometimes in
intellectual attainment
sometimes in heart force
sometimes in social
position
sometimes in financial accumulation; and there is always a shears
ready to destroy it. Every day there are Samsons ungianted. I saw a young man
start in life under the most cheering advantages. His acute mind was at home in
all scientific dominions. But he began to tamper with brilliant free-thinking.
Modern theories of the soul threw over him their blandishments. Scepticism was
the Delilah that shore his locks off
and all the Philistines of doubt and
darkness and despair were upon him. He died in a very prison of unbelief
his
eyes out. Far back in the country districts there was born one whose fame will
last as long as American institutions. His name was the terror of all enemies
of free government. He stood the admired of millions; the nation uncovered in
his presence
and when he spoke senates sat breathless under the spell. The
plotters against good government attempted to bind him with green withes and
weave his locks in a web
yet he walked forth from the enthralment
not knowing
he had burst a bond. But from the wine-cup there arose a destroying spirit that
came forth to capture his soul. He drank until his eyes grew dim
and his knees
knocked together
and his strength failed. Exhausted with lifelong
dissipations
he went home to die. It was strong drink that came like the
infamous Delilah
and his locks were shorn. Evil associations
sudden
successes
spendthrift habits
miserly proclivities and dissipation
are the
names of some of the shears with which men are every day made powerless. They
have strewn the earth with the carcases of giant
and filled the great prison
houses with destroyed Samsons
who sit grinding the mills of despair
their
locks shorn and their eyes out. (T. De Witt Talmage.)
Made him sleep upon her
knees.--
The victim and the victor
I remember once walking with a man ever a large mortgaged
farm; the poor owner had fallen somehow in the rear of life; and some years
before he had mortgaged the whole property. He began life badly
and when I
knew him he had been past the prime of life
for some time ineffectually trying
to overtake old mistakes. But it is a difficult matter for the wisdom of to-day
to overtake the folly of yesterday. Thus a mortgaged life is far more affecting
and hopeless than a mortgaged farm; and there are those who mortgage their
lives
and they cannot redeem them. Some mortgage health by the excesses of
intemperance. Oh
it is a sad spectacle
a man trying to overtake or trying to
repossess a mortgaged life. Of course a nature like Samson’s was especially in
danger from women; and there were women in Sorek! His is the old story; so all
these heroes fell. Thus it was with Hercules and Omphale; and Hercules
as we
have said
was the strong Samson of the ancient classic world; his story is so
like that of Samson that some have not unnaturally supposed it derived from
Hebrew story. Omphale was the queen of Lydia
and Hercules fell in love with
her
and became her slave for three years
and led an effeminate life in
winding and carding wool
while Omphale wore the skin of the tremendous Nemean
lion he had slain! What a parable! He had squeezed the lion to death; and
0mphale pressed out his manhood in her embrace! Thus it was with Antony and
Cleopatra; thus it was with Henry IV. of France. Few
like Ulysses
have passed
in safety the isle of Syrens; few escape Calypso! One of the great masters of
modern poetry has
with subtle and matchless power
in the “Idylls of the
King
” drawn in Vivien the very illustration of the history before us; you
pity
you feel contempt for
the great prince lying there
his head in the lap
of the Syren of Sorek; you cannot believe it! You say
“Did he not know?” You
say
“Could there be such matchless folly? Could he surrender his secret?” Yes
wise men fall
great men fall! Notice the manner of Samson’s fall; it was by
the extortion of his secret; therefore has it been said
“Keep thine heart with
all diligence
for out of it are the issues
” or
which is the same thing
within it is the secret of life. There are around us constantly those who seek
to know our secret
the secret of our strength and of our weakness; for there
is a dangerous secret
there is in all of us a charm; we know it. Surrender to
others the charm
and they put it forth against us. And then the victim lies
dead; “lost to life
and use
and name
and fame.” You remember the wonderful
dream of John Newton. He was
he thought
in the harbour of Venice
on
the deck of a ship
when a stranger brought him a ring of inestimable value
giving him charge to keep it
because its loss would entail on him trouble and
misery. The ring was accepted
and also the responsibility of keeping it; but
while he was meditating on the value of the ring
a second person appeared. He
talked to him about the supposed value and virtues of the ring; he laughed at
the idea of its value
and
in the end
advised him to throw it away. He plucked
it from his finger
and threw it into the sea. Immediately
from the Alps
behind Venice
burst forth flames; and the tempter
laughing
told him that he
was a fool
that the whole mercy of God was in that ring. He trembled with
agony and fear
when a third person came
or the same who had first given him
the ring; he blamed his rashness
but
exactly where the ring went down
he
plunged
and brought it up again; instantly the Alps ceased their burning
and
the seducer fled. He approached his friend
expecting to receive again the
ring. “No
” said his friend
“if you kept it
you would soon bring your self
into the same distress. You are not able to keep it; I will keep it for you
and produce it
when needful
on your behalf.” A wonderful dream--do not doubt
it. We all have something to keep--something precious. We must not let the
enemy of our spirits steal our secret from us. Do you remember Samson in the
lap of Delilah? Samson had his secret; “Show me
” said the crafty woman
“wherein thy great strength lieth.” But Samson kept his secret. “How canst thou
say
” said she
“I love thee
when thy heart is not with me?” So he gave up his
secret; he parted with his heart. “Then
in one moment
she put forth the charm
of woven paces and waving hands; and he lay as dead
and lost to life
and use
and name
and fame.” Then they burst forth into laughter. “Ha! ha! ha! Samson
where is thy secret now? Ha! Ha! “But he had parted with his heart; he had
lost
he had mortgaged his secret. “And was lost to life
and use
and name
and fame.” And what a spectacle is that of Samson asleep! Behold here the
recklessness
the carelessness
of the tempted soul. There is but one thing
more; the price of his ruin is paid
now awake him! “The Philistines be upon
thee
Samson! And he awoke out of his sleep
and said
I will go out as at
other times before
and shake myself. And he wist not that the Lord had
departed from him.” He rouses
but all is lost! How strange it all seemed; how
new! Where am I? What?” No man knows well the value of what he has had until he
has lost it. A character gone! Young Weltly sat at his desk; a clerk came to
him and said
“Weltly
Mr. Drummond
the principal
wants to speak to you.” He
went into the office; he knew! The principal looked to the inspector of police
standing by. “There’s your prisoner
sir.” And the lost young man held out his
hands mechanically for the handcuffs. Poor boy! they were not needed
but it
was a lost life! So here strength is gone! character is gone! Israel has lost
her hero! her hero has lost himself! He surrendered “the secret of the Lord
”
which is only “with them that fear Him
” and awoke to find the Spirit of the
Lord departed from him! (E. P. Hood.)
Samson shorn of his strength
Learn how it was that Samson was shorn of his strength.
1. Because he was not equally strong in all directions.
2. Because he ventured too far into temptation. Samson allowed
Delilah to bind him with green withes
etc. “He laid his head in her lap
” etc.
Beyond a certain point retreat was impossible.
3. Because he relied upon his own strength. He did not realise that
his strength was from God. It is a sad experience that teaches men what Philip
Melanchthon learned at last
“that Satan was stronger than Philip.” (The
Preacher’s Monthly.)
I will go out as at other
times.--
The evil of knowing evil
These were the words of a man once strong
who found
to
his amazement
that he had
through his own fault
lost that in which his
strength lay. What do you try to keep from your children? Is it not the knowledge
of evil? Their innocence you feel to be their safety
as you know it is your
admiration. You preserve it to them while you can. Why? Because when it is gone
they are not the same. At best they go out as at other times before and shake
themselves: they are not aware that
for a season at least
the Lord has
departed from them. Their history is the universal history.
I. There are
no
doubt
many subjects about which we have learned something
and about which
nevertheless we know very little afterwards
and feel little inclination to
make experiments. This is
probably
the case with all sorts of studies except
one; and that one varies in different persons. What would afford me extreme
gratification might be to some one else a very wearisome pursuit; while his
favourite subject would have no charms for me. And so he might have gained an
insight into the nature of my pursuit
or I into the nature of his
without any
danger of either of us injuring our prospects or losing our time by following
the pursuit of the other to the neglect of his own. Now this safeguard
you
will see at once
is wanting as regards the knowledge of evil. We have
naturally a decided taste for wickedness. Here
then
is an answer to the
common excuses for becoming unnecessarily acquainted with the evil that is
being done in the world. It is admitted that the practice of sin is injurious.
Well
the taste is so decided in your heart
that the likelihood of your
stopping short and being satisfied with mere knowledge is reduced to almost nothing.
In your own strength you surely cannot resist. Strength from on high how can
you expect when you are tempting God? On what
then
are you to depend to
preserve you from going beyond knowledge if you once get it? On nothing. Then
you had better not have the knowledge.
II. But
besides
this
it is a fact in our nature that the desire of knowledge is connected with
the desire of society. Now how will this work in the case under our
consideration? The man who has acquired a knowledge of evil from pursuing it as
a study
must seek for the society of those already acquainted with it
or of
those not already acquainted with it. Of the former class--those already
acquainted with it--how many of those he meets are likely to have stopped short
at that point? and how many are likely to be satisfied so long as he stops short of it?
But suppose
on the other hand
that the associates chosen be those to whom the
knowledge of evil is new
and to whom it may be imparted. See what an infinity
of mischief you are bringing about
even supposing--and it is a very wild
supposition--that you avoid actually committing the sins about which you are so
anxious to acquire and to impart knowledge! There is
literally
no end to the
mischief. You have made yourself Satan’s missionary. The effects of your
first--perhaps thoughtless--effort you never can reverse.
III. There is yet
another important practical evil resulting from the knowledge of sins
even
though we neither practise them nor speak of them; that is
the tendency of
such knowledge to deaden in our own minds the sense of sin as such
to divert
us from viewing it as something utterly antagonistic and abhorrent to a pure
and holy God
as something so bad that to save us from it Christ
who was very
God
died on the Cross. There are very many cases where repentance seems
doubtful not so much from an unwillingness to abandon particular acts of sin
as from
apparently
an utter incapability to comprehend the nature of sin
itself. So difficult is it when once we have left the path of safety
which we
trod with the Divine aid
to return to it again--so impossible to come back to
it as we left it. In presumptuous security we part with the innocence which was
the secret of our success
forgetting that our strength was dependent upon its
preservation. In an unfounded conviction that at any time a little effort will
restore us to the position which we wantonly abandon
we do wantonly abandon it and slumber
unconscious of our loss
until at last
like Samson in the text
awakened from
our sleep we say
“I will go out as at other times before
and shake
myself”--not knowing that “the Lord is departed from us.” No words of mine
could at all convey to you my deep sense of the inestimable benefit of
following all through life the injunction of the wise man
“Enter not into the
path of the wicked
and go not in the way of evil men. Avoid it
pass not by
it
turn from it and pass away.” (J. C. Coghlan
D. D.)
As at other times
Now the story of Samson is told in this book
just in the
characteristic fashion of Bible biography. There is nothing extenuated
and
there is nothing concealed. Here you have the man as he is--in his strength and
his weakness
in his right-doing and his wrongdoing. Now
in the story of
Samson itself there is nothing very puzzling. The one puzzling thing about it
is in the Epistle to the Hebrews
where we find this man canonised as one of
the heroes of faith. Now
as we candidly read the story
we must confess that
Samson does not seem to have very much religion about him. That unshorn hair
was a solemn thing to him. It marked out a certain dedication of him to God
a
certain separation of him among men. But so far as we can see that is all the
religion that Samson had about him. Whence that verdict of the Epistle to the
Hebrews? There is no doubt that Samson was possessed of a certain faith in the
God of Israel
and in Israel’s future
which did help to redeem his life from
utter ignobleness
which did inspire him to make a part of that history that
leads up to Christ. As I understand
that is all that the writer of the Epistle
to the Hebrews says. Samson is an illustration of how far a liberal
true
and
noble faith will go to redeem what is essentially a poor life from utter
ignobleness. Samson’s life is far from that of inspiration and example.
He is here rather as a signal warning. I daresay some of you are familiar with
Milton’s poem of Samson Agonistes. If so
let me remind you that the Samson of
the Bible is not at all the Samson of the poem. Milton’s tragedy depicts Samson
as a stately
majestic
fallen hero
great and admirable in every respect
even
in his overthrow. The Samson of the Book of Judges is quite another man. I do
not think that he is
on the whole
a man whom you can possibly respect
though
I think he is a man that you cannot possibly help liking. A boyish
sunny
radiant soul--keen for life as he understands it. Just the sort of man to be
exposed to extra temptation by the very qualities that were fitted to make him
so popular. Aye
we too need that natural and happy hopefulness in God’s
campaigns--and we have too little of it. We are too sour and grim
we who fight
His battles. And yet
I think
there is a false ring in Samson’s laughter.
There is just a touch of the crackling of the thorns under the pot
of the
noisy laughter of the fool. The youth of him was the best of him; and that is a
hard thing to say of any man. The strongest man of his day
he was about
essentially the weakest man of his day. No doubt he did much to save his
country; he began to save Israel from the Philistines. But himself he could not
save. First of all
glance at his childhood and youth in Zorah
for that is the
first chapter of his life. How the story of Samson’s birth is as beautiful and
tender as a summer morning. And how mother and father resolve together that the
life God would have their boy lead they
by God’s grace
will help him towards.
They will not take God’s gift apart from God’s purpose. They will not plan
their boy’s career to please themselves. And so
under these happy auspices
the boy is born
and under such training he grows up in his happy youth until
the time comes that
as an Israelite
he must take his responsible part in the
burden and the pain of his people. And now I think we may entitle the second
chapter
“Samson in the camp of Dan.” There he has betaken himself
with his
consecrated life
where the manhood of his tribe are wont to gather for
military exercise
or perhaps for grave counsel concerning the public peril;
for they seemed to be ever in peril in those days. There his forefathers
long
ago
had established their camp. There was the ancestral burying-place of his
people. There he felt himself moved nearer to all that was great and glorious
in the world and in the history of his people. There we read
“The Spirit of
the Lord moved him in the camp of Dan.” And I think that to all of us ere we
took our plunge into life there came this same experience in some sacred spot
when a vision was given us of the future that dawned so fair for us when we were
children
but now shown so near
a vision of the heaving and wresting of
immortal powers
of the battle between good and evil
between God and the
world; and when we felt
oh
a great scorn of the world and the trivial and the
selfish
and a great purpose to strike in and strike out on the right side--to
be for God and for God’s cause in this world
to win the glory that is of God.
Well
well
the Spirit of the Lord
I venture to say
hath moved us all in the
camp of Dan. And now we pass on to the third chapter
and we may entitle it
“Samson in Gaza
” or “Samson plunging into Life
” or if you prefer
“Peril and
Pleasure in Gaza.” Gaza was the chief seaport of the Philistines
a great
commercial city
a gay
pleasure-loving place
contrasting strikingly with the
quiet monotony of the home-life in the tribe of Dan. And
although Samson’s
first visit to Gaza is first spoken of well on in his life
there is no doubt
whatever that he had visited Gaza in early youth. Gaza lay very near to the
camp of Dan
and there all that he had purposed and felt was to be put to the
test. The fact is
there is no escaping Gaza for you and me. We have to mix
with life. One ought
in one sense
to trust life utterly. You cannot believe
too strongly in the good of life
and in all that you can get from life if you
live it rightly. Yet
on the other hand
one is bound to say you must distrust
life. Ah
it is life that undoes folk
and undoes them smilingly and tenderly
as Delilah undid Samson in Gaza. It is life that lays the unholy hand on the
holy secret
that asks insinuatingly
“Tell me
tell me
wherein the secret of
thy strength lies. Tell me what makes thee different from other folk. Tell me
what prevents thee now from coming in with us. Tell me--“ and wins the secret
from us
laying the unholy hand upon the holy secret for the unholy purpose. So
Samson in Gaza gives himself away. Not knowingly
mark you. He believed that
even if he got into some kind of mess
he was strong enough to get out of it.
He believed that he could touch the fire and not be burnt. Samson one day woke
up finding he had made a mistake
but saying to himself
“Well
I must
retrieve; I will go out as at other times
and resume my life.” But he was
never more to go out as at other times. He had gone too far; he had done it
once too often; he had given way too much. Now
it seems to me that this is the
teaching of Samson’s life. The man had no principle
no definite and
consecutive purpose in life. Even an inferior principle
even any kind of
purpose
would have spared him much that he suffered. Why
one would rather
have seen that man set himself to be a millionaire than drift as he did; one
would rather see the man’s heart given to gold than to Delilah. But the man had
no purpose at all
he had no rudder to steer by. That man was doomed to drift
upon the rocks
to make shipwreck of his life. Ah
what a strange and awful
trust this life of ours is! It is the one thing that you must not play with.
You must take it very seriously. The gift that God gives you
if you do not use
it properly
it will undo you. “I will go out as at other times.” That is the
history of every temptation and of every failure. That is the encouragement
every one applies to his soul
ere he goes into temptation. You cannot do that.
It cannot be with you as it was
you who have yielded to the temptress
you who
have yielded to sin. Oh
then
you must come straight back to God
and get His
forgiveness
and begin life again with His help. But be very sure you can never
without that leave your sin behind you; you cannot go out as at other times. (J.
Durran.)
He wist not that the Lord
was departed from him.--
Moral strength
I. The source of
Samson’s strength. Evidently then there was a supernatural element in it. But
on the other hand
Samson’s vow as a Nazarite bound him to a mode of life
calculated to secure a healthy
vigorous physical development; and the
rationalist will contend that that of itself is a sufficient explanation of the
matter. There was both the natural and the supernatural. And is not Samson’s
strength in these respects typical of a higher strength
that which is moral
and spiritual? Here also we may discern two elements
the Divine and human. The
highest form of strength
the strength of goodness
by which a man triumphs over
evil
and which finds its highest joy in holy and righteous action
is not to
be gained by a life of dreamy contemplation
or by sitting still and affecting
that God will some day transform us into giants. It is to be attained by
self-denial
self-sacrifice
and true work.
II. The loss of
Samson’s strength. Now
what is the key to this sad affair? In one word
it is
weakness; and that is the key to half the wickedness committed in the world.
When temptation presents itself
instead of saying with a soul in utter revolt
“How can I do this great wickedness and sin against God?” men stop to think and
dally
and once that is done there is fearful danger. They never intend doing
any harm; they have good feelings and desires
and yet through moral weakness
commit all kinds of wickedness
and involve themselves and others in misery. If
we would be safe from breakdown
we must have a well-fortified moral character.
Guard scrupulously the outworks; beware of everything that is morally
enervating. If we fail to do this
ere we are aware we may find ourselves shorn
of our strength.
III. The restoration
of Samson’s strength. Have we not here the conditions of moral restoration
with its limitations? The first condition is a painful consciousness of
weakness. Without this a man will never desire any change in his condition
and
therefore he will never seek any. There must further be a realisation of the
folly and wickedness of his conduct
producing sincere regret for it and
earnest desires and resolution of amendment. Hence
in true penitence there is
an element that will deter a man from committing the sin again. And then there
must also be the prayer of faith. Samson prayed and looked for an immediate
answer. But there is something lost never to be regained. Samson’s strength was
restored
but not his eyesight; and he lost his life into the bargain. And that
typifies a solemn truth. The man who
like Samson or David
is guilty of
glaring sin
may
by the mercy and grace of God
be restored; but he can never
regain the feeling of comparative innocence he once enjoyed. To the backslider
these thoughts should bring sadness indeed
but not despair. (Joseph Ritson.)
The man who has trifled once too often
The text speaks of one who has trifled once too often. He has
allowed some influence
it scarcely matters what
to steal from him the secret
of his strength. He has parted with it by his own folly--in a certain sense
with his eyes open--and yet he treats it as still recoverable by the exercise
of quite a common kind of effort and of resolution. “I will go out
” he says
“as at other times before
and shake myself.” In vain. The strength is gone
from him
and the Lord with it. Such is the parable; and to every thoughtful
hearer it is its own interpreter. There is in many men
perhaps in most men
an
erroneous idea
in two respects
of the free agency and the free will. We
exaggerate to ourselves
in the first place
what is sometimes called the
bondage of the will. It is an article of our religion
that we cannot of
ourselves either will or do the thing that we ought. This
which is all true in
its place--true as a reason for humility
and true as a motive for
prayer--becomes a terrible falsehood on lips which utter it as an excuse for
indolence
or as a sufficient explanation of any neglect or any sin by which we
may be dishonouring God or giving an ill example to our generation. On the
other hand
the same man who has pleaded the bondage of the will in excuse for
his own negligences
follies
and sins will be the first to exaggerate his
freedom in reference to the reparative powers of the future. “I have but to
resolve
any day
and I shall shake myself free--free from the chain of habit
free from the binding force of past action
and from the connection
of
yesterday and to-morrow in the living man of to-day”--this is language quite
familiar to us all
in the ear
if not in the heart. In this state of mind we
exaggerate our freedom
as in the other we unduly disparaged it. The real
bondage of the will lies in the having sinned away the freedom. It would be
easy to apply this general experience to the various departments of the life.
“I will go out
as at other times before
and shake myself.” Thus speaks the
man who has allowed some influence of evil to fasten itself upon his conduct
and yet refuses to regard the fetter as anything more than a daily separate
willing
which could any morning be reversed and willed into the opposite. The
doctrine which that man wants is the true doctrine of the bondage. Tell him
that to-morrow
if he does not take heed
he will be a slave; tell him that
“whosoever committeth sin is sin’s bondman”; tell him that
for anything he
knows
by to-morrow the Lord may have departed; tell him that this one night’s
sinning may be to him like that fatal sleep upon the knees of the traitoress
which cost Samson eyesight and life--“I made haste and prolonged not the time”
is his one chance; the dream of liberty is not false only
for him
but fatal;
let him awake and cry mightily unto God
if so be He may yet this once hear
him
that he perish not. We cannot doubt that the same delusion has place in
the faith as well as in the life. There are thousands at this moment dallying
with scepticism
who would be terrified if they thought that they could not at
any moment go forth from it all and shake themselves free. A man may count
himself free to believe or to disbelieve; he may even set himself above his own
scruples
and say
“To-morrow
if it so pleases me
I will go out and shake
myself free of them”; but
in reality
he is fastening them upon himself to-day
by the very postponement
and to-morrow
if it ever dawn upon him
may find him
one from whom God Himself has departed. There is in us all
as God has created
us
a marvellous elasticity of mind
body
and estate. The recuperative power
is perhaps the greatest of His gifts. We have seen it wonderfully exemplified
on the bed of sickness. We have seen it wonderfully exemplified in the fortunes
of men and nations. We have seen it wonderfully exemplified in the moral being.
Some terrible flaw there was
in early days
in the character; some vice of
untruthfulness
or some worse vice still
brought disgrace and punishment after
it into the school-life and into the young home. But
by the blessing of God
upon discipline tempered with love
a new growth of honesty and of purity
showed itself in the life
and a noble career of usefulness and honour
obliterated
long before death
the very memory of the sad beginning. We have
seen it wonderfully exemplified in the one higher region
of the spiritual
life. Once there was carelessness; once there was unbelief; once there was
scoffing: but the blessed promise of the “last first” had place
by the grace
of God
in the history as a whole; and one of the brightest ornaments of the faith
and of the Church has been the product of a “trying in the fire” which promised
only
to the eye of flesh
scorching and scathing
if not destruction. This is
one side of human experience. But there is another. The recuperative power is
wonderful
but it has its limit. “Thus far and no further” is written upon it
or it would bring evil and not blessing with it. There is a point beyond which
recovery is not. If we could foresee the exact moment at which
or the precise
act by which
the limit of the possible recovery would be overpassed
it would
be contrary to God’s uniform dealing; it would but tempt to presumption on the
way to it. No man knows exactly how many injuries he may do himself
in health
or wealth
in conduct or faith
and be scatheless. He must take his chance. If
he will trifle in any of these ways
there is no Divine Mentor to say to him
The next time but two
or
the next time but twenty
will be fatal. The man is
standing aloof from God all the time
and by the nature of the case must look
to himself alone for monition. Whatever has been said
and said truly
of the
restorative powers of this being
there is another sense
and a yet more grave
one
in which we must read the words
“I am fearfully and wonderfully made.” We
speak now of the identity and the continuity of the life
which makes it utter
childishness for a man to say suddenly to himself
“I will go out and shake
myself
and I shall be another man.” There is a mighty power in the will
there
is a mightier power still in Divine grace; but the former cannot
and the
latter could not consistently
isolate one period of the life altogether from
another
or make that in the past
which was most of all to be regretted and
mourned over
actually unmade or undone again
so as to be as though it had
never been. All this is no reason for despondency. Although we are warned by
the text that there is always a danger
for those who are living without God in
the world
that they may
even without knowing it
overstep the limit of grace
and find God departed from them when they would shake themselves from their
bonds
yet we must remember that all this is no matter of chance
caprice
or
destiny; it is the result of a long process of sinning and neglecting
which
need not be any man’s; it is a loud call to awake and arise while we may; to
seek God now while He certainly may be found
and
instead of trusting in our
independent powers of recovery and self-amendment
to cast ourselves earnestly
upon the help of His grace who giveth to all men liberally and upbraideth not.
(Dean Vaughan.)
Blessed and tragic unconsciousness
(with Exodus 34:29):--The recurrence of the
same phrase in two such opposite connections is very striking.
I. Beauty and
strength come from communion with God. In both the cases with which we are
dealing these were of a merely material sort. The light on Moses’ face and the
strength in Samson’s arm were
at the highest
but types of something far
higher and nobler than themselves. But still
the presence of the one and the
departure of the other alike teach us the conditions on which we may possess
both in nobler form
and the certainty of losing them if we lose hold of God.
There have been in the past
and there are to-day
thousands of simple souls
shut out by lowliness of position
and other circumstances from all the
refining and ennobling influences which the world makes so much of
who yet in
character and bearing
aye
and sometimes in the very look of their meek faces
are living witnesses how true and mighty is the power of loving gazing upon
Jesus Christ to transform a nature. All of us who have had much to do with
Christians of the humbler classes know that. There is no influence to refine
and beautify men like that of living near Jesus Christ and walking in the light
of that beauty which is the effulgence of the Divine glory and express image of
His person. And in like manner as beauty
so strength comes from communion with
God
and laying hold on Him. Samson’s consecration
rude and external as that
consecration was
both in itself and in its consequences
had passed away from
him.
II. The bearer of
the radiance is unconscious of it. “Moses wist not that the skin of his face
shone.” In all regions of life
the consummate apex and crowning charm of
excellence is unconsciousness of excellence. Whenever a man begins to suspect
that he is good
he begins to be bad; and you rob every virtue and beauty of
character of some portion of its attractive fairness when the man who bears it
knows
or fancies that he knows it. The charm of childhood is its perfect
unconsciousness
and the man has to win back the child’s heritage
and become
as a little child
if he would enter into and dwell in the kingdom of heaven.
And so in the loftiest region of all
that of the religious life
depend on it
the more a man is like Christ the less he knows it
and the better he is the
less he suspects it.
III. The strong man
made weak is unconscious of his weakness. The very fact that you do not suppose
the statement to have the least application to yourself is perhaps the very
sign that it has. When the life blood is pouring out of a man he faints before
he dies. The swoon of unconsciousness is the condition of some professing Christians.
Frost-bitten limbs are quite comfortable
and only tingle when circulation is
coming back. I remember a great elm-tree
the pride of an avenue in the South
that had spread its branches for more years than the oldest man could count
and stood
leafy and green. Not until a winter storm came one night and laid it
low with a crash did anybody suspect what everybody saw in the morning--that
the heart was eaten out of it
and nothing left but a shell of bark. Some
Christian people are like that; they manage leaves
they manage fruit; when the
storm comes they will go down
because the heart has been out of their religion
for years. “Samson wist not that the Lord was departed from him.” And so
because there are so many things that mask the ebbing away of a Christian life
and because our own self-love and habits come in to hide declension
let me
earnestly exhort you and myself to watch our selves very narrowly. Again let me
say
let us ask God to help us. “Search me
O God
and try me.” We shall never
rightly understand what we are unless we spread ourselves out before Him
and
crave that Divine Spirit
which is the candle of the Lord
to be carried even
in our hands into the secret recesses of our sinful hearts. And
last of all
let us keep near to Jesus Christ
near enough to Him to feel His touch
to hear
His voice
to see His face
and to carry down with us into the valley some
radiance on our countenances which may tell even the world that we have been up
where the Light lives and reigns. (A. Maclaren
D.D.)
The withdrawal of Divine influences
I. Christians in a
state of grace and Divine favour may
in a great measure
be forsaken of God
and yet be insensible thereof.
1. The prevalence of some darling idol in the heart may so blind the
discerning faculty and disorder the understanding that the soul may not
perceive its distance
from the ways of religion.
2. There can be no doubt concerning this truth
that God withdraws
sometimes from His people
if we observe the many complaints they make to this
purpose (Psalms 30:7). These complaints were not
without cause
nor would such pious characters complain without reason. The
deadened state of their souls made them feel that the Divine influences and
power were withdrawn; they found the stream was in a great measure stopped
when the waters of life did not revive their souls.
3. Christians may not perceive the withdrawing of the Divine
influence
because there may be a counterfeit resemblance between their idols
and their duty. When we have a strong affection for something connected with
another thing that is good
we seldom see the difference between them
but fall
into error and mistake through inattention. We view under one character things
different in their nature; and perceive not the unlawfulness of what we covet
when we find it
in some measure
related to other things that are innocent.
4. The subtlety and the deceitfulness of sin in the souls of the best
Christians hinder them from distinguishing the knowledge of Christianity from
its life and practice.
5. Believers may not only be insensible of God’s withdrawing from
them
but also embrace false for true grounds of comfort and enlargement. Sin
is so deceitful that it will creep in upon the believer under a mask: sometimes
a false hope
at other times a deceitful joy will deceive the saints
themselves.
II. Evidences of
this condition.
1. When men live easy and indifferent under the means of salvation;
when they are not active in the performance of the duties belonging to their
several stations and characters in life
but like Samson
instead of destroying
the Philistines
for which he was raised up
fall asleep in carnal security
and begin to enter into league with the enemies of God; when they begin to
remit their watchfulness
and live secure and careless.
2. When men not only have no fears of their present evil condition
but think well of it; when they imagine that they are rich
and increased in
goods
and stand in need of nothing
etc.
3. When thoughts of death and a future judgment are removed from
men’s meditation and consideration; when the evil day is put far away
and
people
like those of whom the prophet Ezekiel speaks
say
“The Lord hath
forsaken the earth
neither doth He consider it.” (J. Williamson.)
Samson conquered
I. The strength of
the consecrated man. Even though he may consecrate himself to a wrong object
yet if it be a thorough consecration
he will have strength. In the old Roman
wars with Pyrrhus
you remember an ancient story of self-devotion. There was an
oracle which said that victory would attend that army whose leader should give
himself up to death. Decius
the Roman Consul
knowing this
rushed into the
thickest of the battle
that his army might overcome by his dying. The
prodigies of valour which he performed are proofs of the power of consecration.
The Romans at that time seemed to be every man a hero
because every man was a
consecrated man. They went to battle with this thought--“I will conquer or die;
the name of Rome is written on my heart; for my country I am prepared to live
or for that to shed my blood.” And no enemies could ever stand against them. If
a Roman fell
there were no wounds in his back
but all in his breast. His
face
even in cold death
was like the face of a lion
and when looked upon it
was of terrible aspect. They were men consecrated to their country. How much
more is this true if I limit the description to that which is peculiar to the
Christian--consecration to God!
II. the secret of
his strength. I have heard some men talk as if the strength of free-will
of
human nature
was sufficient to carry men to heaven. No strength of nature can
suffice to serve the Lord aright. No man can say that Jesus is the Christ but
by the Holy Ghost. If
then
the first act of Christian life is beyond all
human strength
how much more are those higher steps far beyond any one of us?
III. What is the
peculiar danger of a consecrated man? His danger is that his locks may be
shorn; that is to say
that his consecration may be broken
Now there are a
thousand razors with which the devil can shave off the locks of a consecrated
man without his knowing it. Sometimes he takes the sharp razor of pride
and
when the Christian falls asleep
and is not vigilant
he comes with it and
begins to run his fingers upon the Christian’s locks
and says
“What a fine
fellow you are! What wonders you have done! Didn’t you rend that lion finely?
Wasn’t it a great feat to smite those Philistines hip and thigh? Ah! you will
be talked of as long as time endures for carrying those gates of Gaza away! You
need not be afraid of anybody.” And so on goes the razor
lock after lock
falling off
and Samson knows it not. He is just thinking within himself
“How
brave am I! How great am I!“ Thus works the razor of pride--cut
cut
cut
away--and he wakes up to find himself bald
and all his strength gone. Another
razor he uses is self-sufficiency. The moment we begin to think that it is our
own arm that has gotten us the victory
it will be all over with us--our locks
of strength shall be taken away
and the glory shall depart from us. There is
yet another and a more palpable danger still. When a consecrated man begins to
change his purpose in life and live for himself--that razor shaves clean
indeed. Oh
Christian
above all things take care of thy consecration. Ever
feel that thou art wholly given up to God
and to God alone.
IV. The Christian’s
disgrace. His locks are cut off. I have seen him in the ministry. He spake like
an angel of God; many there were that regarded him; he seemed to be sound in
doctrine and earnest in manner. I have seen him turn aside; it was but a little
thing--some slight deviation from the ancient orthodoxy of his fathers
some
slight violation of the law of his Church. I have seen him
till he has given
up doctrine after doctrine
until at last the very place wherein he preached
has become a bye-word and a proverb. What disgrace was there! What a fall! The
man who came out in the camps of Dan
and seemed to be moved by the Spirit of
the Lord
has become the slave of error. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Strength lost
I. A man may lose
his strength
and yet live in the experiences of the past. You may have made a
profession of faith in Christ; you were “strong in the Lord and in the power of
His might”; but you have departed from the Lord
and yet you still retain the
forms and habits of your spiritual life. You have a name to live--that is all.
You do not know that the Lord has departed from you.
II. When a man
departs from the Lord
it is certain the Lord will depart from him. The
departure is at first scarcely perceptible--it is in thought and feeling and
then in life. I have seen glaciers
like rivers that
flowing down the sides of
the Alps
have been stopped and arrested in a moment. There seems no movement
for all appears to be the same year after year. Though not perceptible to the
eye
it can be proved by experiment that the frozen river is always moving on
and on. So with you--the distance from God may be increasing and widening
but
it is so slowly that no one perceives it. At length some circumstance leads to
the manifestation of your real state
and the fearful consciousness of your
departure from God. The Lord does not all at once depart--there are restraints
remonstrances
difficulties put in the way of backsliding; there are
invitations to return. At last
when all is vain
and the man will have his own
way
a Divine voice says
“Let him alone.”
III. When God
departs from a man
the consequence will be
that the man loses his strength.
Have you ever seen an eagle in its captivity
wearing its chains
an uncrowned
king? How sad the spectacle
how deep the humiliation--what a seeming
consciousness of fallen greatness! The eagle was made for the glorious mountains
its home is on the summit of the lofty rocks
its wings are fitted for flight
its eye to look on the sun. How much sadder is it to see the change that has
come over this man. How are the mighty fallen! (H. J. Bevis.)
The weakness of strength
We still need to learn what true strength is
and that both
physical and intellectual power may be the means of moral weakness.
I. Strength from
ancestry. Victor Hugo remarks: “If you want to reform a man
you must begin
with his grandmother.” The parents of Samson were sober and pious people. The
weakening effects of strong drinks upon posterity are well known. One thing
that makes it hard to be born again is being born wrong the first time.
II. Strength
through consecration.
III. Strength may
become weakness. Great powers imply great passions. With every increase of
faculty come more subtle temptations. There is nothing so destructive to
strength and youth as sensual sin.
IV. Strength
forfeited through falsehood. He broke his vow
and with it broke faith with
God. No one can really betray the strong man but himself. Break trust with God
and sin will be too strong for you
and the Philistines of the soul will
enslave you.
V. Last effort of
strength. The mercy of God gave him still a chance. He was not wholly
lost. So do you
already weakened by falsehood to God and your best self
use
the strength that remains. Make one last effort to break the chains that bind
you. A little more
and your strength will be entirely gone. (G. Elliott.)
Loss of strength
I. The strength by
which alone we can overcome evil is to be obtained from the Spirit of God.
II. This spiritual
strength is lost by us when we yield ourselves to sin.
III. One may lose
this spiritual strength without at the Moment being conscious of the privation.
Samson “wist not that the Lord was departed from him.” That was melancholy
enough
but its spiritual antitype is infinitely more so
for it is terribly
true that one may become morally feeble through habitual indulgence in sin
and
yet at the time be unaware of the change that has passed upon him. How shall we
account for this?
1. We may explain it by the fact that all outward things may be with
him as they were before. He may be outwardly attentive to the ordinances of
religion
but his heart has been given to some earthly object.
2. Another explanation of the unconsciousness of many to the terrible
loss of which we speak may be the stealthiness of the growth of the sin which
has caused it. No man becomes helplessly wicked all at once.
3. Another reason why a man may be unconscious of the loss of his
spiritual strength is the blinding effect of sin upon the conscience. When the
snow is untrodden you may easily distinguish the first footprints that are made
upon it
but after multitudes have hardened it by their tread
it is no longer
possible to mark each separate traveller’s tracks. So conscience may take
faithful note of the first sins which one commits
but when habits have
as I
may say
formed footmarks over it
the soft impressiveness of its early stage
has gone
and it becomes impenetrable as a rock.
IV. The
consciousness of this loss of strength will be realised when the strength
itself is most needed. You know the dreadful agony of nightmare
when in your
dream
being pursued by some assassin
your limbs refuse to perform their
office
and you seem to be left in the assailant’s power. Such is the
experience of the man who discovers in some time of urgency that his strength
has departed from him. Enumerate a few of the times of crisis
which will
infallibly test whether we have God with us or not: temptation
affliction
death
judgment. As all these are experiences through which every one of us
must pass
we ought to be sure that we have strength enough to sustain us in
them all. If we have not strength enough for these occasions
we have virtually
no strength at all. It is for such times we must prepare
and not for the mere
review days of showy profession. Men do not build a ship to lie all decked with
bunting in the harbour
but to weather the rough storms of mid-ocean
and the
cable that will not bear the toughest strain is in time of hurricane as bad as
none at all. (W. M. Taylor
D. D.)
Man’s power for God’s work
I. That it is
derived from a special connection with God. All power comes from God: this is true
not only of physical
but also of intellectual and moral power.
1. God is in a good man
morally--dwells in him as the favourite
author dwells in the mind of the devoted reader. God’s thoughts live in his
intellect
God’s love glows in his heart: he is filled with all the fulness of
God.
2. That God is with a good man operationally. Without Him we can do
nothing in His cause.
II. That sin
dissolves this special connection between man and God.
1. By destroying our sympathy with God.
2. By awakening a dread of God.
3. By generating an opposition to God.
III. That this
dissolution may occur when the subject is unconscious of it.
1. Because of the gradual way in which it takes place. God does not
give a man up at once.
2. Because external circumstances continue the same. Providence
pursues its wonted course; health continues
business prospers
the sun shines
as usual
and temporal blessings fall free and full as ever on the path.
3. Because the mechanical habits of religion are maintained. There
may be family worship
regular attendance on the house of God
but no soul in
anything.
IV. That a period
will arrive when the dissolution will be painfully realised. In the hour of
severe temptation--in the hour of suffering--in the dark hour of death--in the
solemn hour of judgment the want of Divine moral strength will be deeply felt.
Its lack will be ruin. (Homilist)
.
Samson
the Jewish Hercules
I. That God has
respect to the emergencies of His people. The raising of one man
rather than a
host
to break the power of the Philistines
served to manifest the Divine
power.
II. That moral
feebleness may co-exist with the highest physical energy. Many giants in body
are dwarfs in soul. Many who have slain an army have been slain by their own
lusts.
III. Samson’s history
shows that great physical strength is not the highest good of man. Here God
furnishes the world with a striking example that great muscular energy
apart
from moral goodness
is of little worth. Look at the misery to which he was
reduced--blinded
deluded
destroyed.
IV. Samson’s
history shows that one man
through God
can accomplish great things. (Homilist)
The fall and rise of a great man
I. The fall of a
great man.
1. The whence and the whither of the fall.
(a) “They put out his eyes.” When a man falls from God
he sinks into
darkness; he is like a planet cut
off from its centre
rolling in a starless
moonless midnight.
Hell is “outer darkness.”
(b) “They bound him in fetters of brass.” Emblem of the fettering
power of sin. Evil prejudices and habits--how they manacle the limbs of the
soul!
(c) “He did grind in the prison house.” The little liberty of limb he
had was only allowed that he might feel his bondage more. Servants of sin are
slaves of the devil. The corn the sinner grinds is not for himself.
2. The wherefore and the how of this man’s fall.
II. The rise of a
great man.
1. The demonstrations of his recovered strength.
2. The means of his recovered power.
Lessons:
1. A solemn warning to men of signal ability. There are many
intellectual giants every day being stripped of their power
and lying eyeless
and crippled in the dungeon.
2. A special encouragement to great men who have fallen. (Homilist)
Lost grace unrealised
He knew not that the Lord was departed from him. No wonder; he
felt not the smarting effect of it as yet: he fared as he who is robbed in the
night of all his treasure or wares of his storehouse; but till the light of the
day he misseth nothing. But then
oh what an inventory makes he of his several
losses! And so did this poor self-robber in this place. When the Philistines
came upon him there was no power to resist; then it appeared indeed that he was
robbed to purpose. It is woeful to lose grace
but more to feel no such loss. (R.
Rogers.)
He did grind in the prison
house.--
Ignominious tasks
Look at the ignoble task to which Samson is put by the
Philistines
a type of the ignominious uses to which the hero may be doomed by
the crowd. The multitude cannot be trusted with a great man. In the prison at
Gaza the fallen chief was set to grind corn
to do the work of slaves. To him
indeed
work was a blessing. From the bitter thoughts that would have eaten out
his heart he was somewhat delivered by the irksome labour. In reality
as we
now perceive
no work degrades; but a man of Samson’s type and period thought
differently. The Philistine purpose was to degrade him; and the Hebrew captive
would feel in the depths of his hot brooding nature the humiliating doom. Look
then
at the parallels. Think of a great statesman placed at the head of a
nation to guide its policy in the line of righteousness
to bring its laws into
harmony with the principles of human freedom and Divine justice--think of such
an one
while labouring at his sacred task with all the ardour of a noble
heart
called to account by those whose only desire is for better trade
the
means of beating their rivals in some market or bolstering up their failing
speculations. Or see him at another time pursued by the cry of a class that
feels its prescriptive rights invaded or its position threatened. Take again a
poet
an artist
a writer
a preacher intent on great themes
eagerly following
after the ideal to which he has devoted himself
but exposed every moment to
the criticism of men who have no soul--held up to ridicule and reprobation
because he does not accept vulgar models and repeat the catchwords of this or
that party. Philistinism is always in this way asserting its claim
and ever
and anon it succeeds in dragging some ardent soul into the dungeon to grind
thenceforth at the mill. With the very highest
too
it is not afraid to
intermeddle. Christ Himself is not safe. The Philistines of to-day are doing
their utmost to make His name inglorious. For what else is the modern cry that
Christianity should be chiefly about the business of making life comfortable in
this world and providing not only bread but amusement for the crowd? The ideas
of the Church are not practical enough for this generation. To get rid of
sin--that is a dream; to make men fearers of God
soldiers of truth
doers of
righteousness at all hazards--that is in the air. Let it be given up; let us
seek what we can reach; bind the name of Christ and the Spirit of Christ in
chains to the work of a practical secularism and let us turn churches into
pleasant lounging-places and picture galleries. Why should the soul have the
benefit of so great a name as that of the Son of God? Is not the body more? Is
not the main business to have houses and railways
news and enjoyment? The
policy of undeifying Christ is having too much success. If it makes way there
will soon be need for a fresh departure into the wilderness. (R. A. Watson
M. A.)
A grist from the prison mill of Gaza
I. In Samson’s
history we see the wonderful forbearance of God
notwithstanding his misuse of
great mercies and of supernatural strength.
II. Samson lost his
great strength in an unconscious manner. His frame was not convulsed when the
barber removed his locks. No sobs revealed the fact that he had become as another
man. He slept on just as other men sleep.
III. Samson’s
history is pictorial of the progressive downward tendencies of sinning.
Glorious were the hopes of his infancy.
IV. Once more
the
downward course of the Hebrew judge illustrates our reluctance to give up the
last badge of our Nazarite consecration. We find him disgustingly in dalliance
with sin
and yet keeping
as it were
to the very last moment the outward sign
of his covenant relation to God. His vows were for life. But in those cases
where the Nazarite covenant was for a limited period of life
the expiration of
that period was signalised by shaving the head. When Samson
therefore
told
his religious secret
he took the formal step to separate himself wholly from
his God. The substance of his covenant he had long since lost
but the seal of
it he now throws to the devil. I do not wonder
children of pious parents
that
you are uneasy if living in sin under such vows as rest upon you. Nor do I
wonder that you are reluctant to part with the last locks that bind you to the
God of your fathers. (W. A. Scott
D. D.)
The hair of his head began
to grow.--
Strength lost and restored
I. The right
relation of man to God is the condition of his real strength. There were many
remarkable circumstances connected with the birth of Samson; and the angel who
appeared to his mother gave her most minute directions about the training of
the child
that thus he might be fitted for the great work to which he was
designated. Where there is a right relation to God there is personal
dedication
and as the result there will be separateness and sanctity. The
consecrated man was to be temperate and chaste
to avoid everything that would
defile him. You are not to suffer the flesh to overshadow the spirit. You are
to “abstain from fleshly lusts
which war against the soul”; to mortify your
members which are upon the earth; and to keep your body under and bring it into
subjection. The Divine presence will be recognised by the man who stands in a
right relation to God--the true strength of the man is in God. The Spirit of
the Lord came upon Samson--moving him at times
rousing him to
activity--stirring up his whole nature to great and heroic deeds
and giving
him strength to do them. You realise the Divine presence. You can say
“I have
set the Lord always before me; because He is at my right hand I shall not be
moved.” God is with you in all events and circumstances--in all conflicts and
victories--in life and in death.
II. This relation
to God may be weakened and broken
and then the strength of the man departs.
1. This may be the result of an unhallowed alliance. This was the
first wrong step on the part of Samson. Marriage is the oldest human institute
and the one that has been most perverted and abused. In many instances the two
never become one--and never can become one--but must remain in awful
separateness and loneliness. Their souls never touch each other at any point.
In many instances there are no true affinities--no real
abiding love. Marriage
is sometimes created by mere excitement or passion--it is based on prudential
or mercenary motives. Where there are no mental or moral fitnesses
these
ill-assorted matches become the pregnant source of the miseries and
wretchedness that abound in the world.
2. This relation may be broken through the indulgence of unrestrained
passions. The strong man is a child when governed by his passions; he has no
self-mastery or control--his affections are misplaced; they have degenerated
into passions. His weakness is known--not the secret of his strength--but men
take advantage of his weakness to find out where his strength lies
that they
may thus deprive him of it. Our weaknesses lead to the loss of strength.
3. A man may lose his strength and yet live in the experiences of the
past. The man’s strength was gone
but “he wist not that the Lord had departed
from him.”
4. When a man departs from the Lord
it is certain the Lord will
depart from him.
5. When God departs from a man
the consequence will be that the man
loses his strength. He cannot retain his strength and lose God. When he falls
into the hands of his enemies
then comes the fearful consciousness of his
loss. What a contrast between strength and weakness--light and
darkness--liberty and captivity!
III. This relation
may be renewed
and the strength restored. “Howbeit the hair of his head began
to grow after he was shaven.” The man turns to God. This is true repentance. In
the parable
the son when he has spent all--when he has nothing left--when a
mighty famine comes
and he begins to be in want--when his servitude is the
most degrading--comes to himself
and says
“I will arise
” etc. So the
captivity and wretchedness of this man may have awakened reflection
and led to
repentance.
IV. Strength may be
restored
but there are some things that are lost for ever. There is the return
of strength
but not of sight. Sin does fearful injury. You may return after
your backslidings--God may forgive you. There are some things you have
lost--freshness
purity
peace
wholeness
light
joy. You know you are
pardoned
but the light is gone. You walk softly. There are the traces and
scars of the past. The lightning has scathed you--has blinded you. Never think
lightly of sin; it is an evil and a bitter thing--darkness follows it. (H.
J. Bevis.)
Shaven and shorn
but not beyond hope
I. What this
growing of the hair pictures. I think that this pictures the gradual
restoration of certain among us who have backslidden from God.
II. What it
specifically symbolises. Samson’s strength lay in his consecration. His hair
was the token of his dedication to God. I know Christian people who used to
spend an hour a day in prayer. The hour has dwindled into five minutes. They
used to be constant at week-night services. They very seldom gladden us with
their presence now; and they are not as happy as they once were. I can read
this riddle. If a man were to reduce his meals to eating once a week
we could
not warrant his health. So I do not think that people who neglect the means of
grace
and give up their consecration
can expect to be lively
happy
or vigorous.
III. What it
prophesied when Samson’s hair began to grow again. I wonder why these
Philistines did not care to keep his hair from growing to any length. But
wicked men are not in all matters wise men; indeed
they so conspicuously fail
in one point or another that Scripture calls them fools. The devil
himself is a fool after all. He thinks that he is wonderfully cunning
but
there is always a place where he breaks down. Satan is very cunning in getting
hold of backsliders
but he generally manages to let them slip by his
over-confidence in their wilfulness. When Samson’s hair began to grow
what did
it prophesy?
1. Well
it prophesied hope for Samson. Now
if any of you have signs
of restoring grace in your hearts
and you are coming back to your God and
Saviour
be glad
be thankful. Do not hesitate to let your renewed devotion to
God be seen by those round about you. If the grace of God is moving you at all
be hopeful and quicken your steps
and come to Jesus.
2. Joy for Samson
but also hope for Israel. Oh
if any of the
Israelites did get in to see him in prison
how they must have been cheered by
the sight of his returning hair! Oh
you do not know the joy that you
backsliders will give to the hearts of God’s people if you do but return! There
is joy not only with the Great Shepherd
but with His friends and His
neighbours when the lost sheep is restored to the fold.
3. Well
it prophesied mischief for the Philistines. They did not
know it
but if they could have read the writing in Samson’s heart
they would
have understood that he meant to shave their nation quite as closely as they
had shaven him. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Call for Samson
that he
may make us sport.--
The influence of amusements on character and destiny
The best men that the world ever knew have had their
sports. William Wilberforce trundled hoop with his children. Martin Luther
helped dress the Christmas-tree. Show me a man who never lights up with
sportfulness and has no sympathy with the recreations of others
and I will
show you a man who is a stumbling-block to the kingdom of God. Such men are
caricatures of religion. I have no confidence in a man who makes a religion of
his gloomy looks. God means you to be happy. But
when there are so many
sources of innocent pleasure
why tamper with anything that is dangerous and
polluting?
1. You may judge of any amusement by its healthful result or by its
baleful reaction. If an amusement sends you home at night nervous so you cannot
sleep
you have been where you ought not to have been. There are amusements
that send a man next day to his work bloodshot
yawning
stupid
nauseated
and
they are wrong kinds of amusements. There are entertainments that give a man
disgust with the drudgery of life. Our recreations are intended to build us up
and if they pull us down as to our moral or as to our physical strength
you
may come to the conclusion that they are obnoxious.
2. Those amusements are wrong which lead into expenditure beyond your
means.
3. You may judge of amusements by their effect upon physical health.
4. Again
judge of the places of amusement by the companionship into
which they put you.
5. Again
any amusement that gives you a distaste for domestic life
is bad. How many bright domestic circles have been broken up by sinful
amusements! (T. De Witt Talmage.)
Only this once.--
How not to pray
We have heard these words until we are heartsick of them. It seems
as if such words
could not be done without in the history of human experience. Samson would
gather himself up for a grand final effort; he said in effect
“O Lord
the
Philistines have taken away mine eyes
I am no longer what I was
I am no longer a
prophet and servant of Thine
I am a poor fool; I gave up my secret; Lord
this
once
only this once; I pray Thee let the old strength come back
and I will be
avenged for my two eyes.” It was very natural
it was most human
it was just
what we would have done under similar circumstances
and therefore do not let
us laugh at the dismantled giant. Let us accommodate the passage
so that it may
become a lamp which we can hold over various points of life. “‘Only this once’:
forgive me
I will never ask it again
this is the very last time; I have no
excuse
I did the evil deed
I spoke the false word
but I am getting old
and
I shall not trouble my family much longer; give me the final pardon; I seem as
if I could not do without it; it seems as if I had it I would die easily and
triumphantly; I do not deserve it
but add one more to your forbearances; I
will never ask again
but pardon me this one time.” You know that speech; it is
now a stale speech in your ears; you have pardoned seventy times seven
and
another pardon is requested with the promise that it shall be the last. This is
the very thing we have done in the case of the Divine Creator and Redeemer of
the worlds; we have told Him that we would never repeat the sin. It is not of
our necessity we go again
but for the very selfsame sin we did last week
and
we will do to-morrow. Life is critical. I am sure I thought I would never do it
again; I said this shall not occur again; then I told a blacker lie than ever
and put myself more thoroughly into the devil’s service. And then we have it
again in the daily cry from familiar voices: “Deliver me out of this perplexity
only this once
no more; I will never ask for deliverance again
I will take
the literal consequences; nay
I will pray to go to hell rather than come back
to be delivered.” And the fool means it; he thinks he will be brave next time.
You know this in your own family
in your own soul
in your own son
daughter
fastest friend. “Only this once
this other ten pounds; this once screen me
and I will never
never return.” You know the cry. Which of us has not in his
desk a hundred promises that this shall be the last solicitation of love? We
say again and again
“Lord
let Thy providence help me in this case
only this
once; this is really the final perplexity of my life; I am very ill
and I am
afraid of the other world; I have suffered much on account of it in a dream but
yesternight; I heard the groanings of the lost
I heard the cry for water
and
the water had fled away. I do not want to die just now; if Thou wilt give the
doctor great success and turn the herbal medicines of the field into
sacramental wine
I will never grieve Thee more; only this once! and I promised
God many things; I said I would love His Church
I would support His altar
I
would vindicate the Cross; I would take up a new line and become a new man.” He
did
and the devil has never had a sturdier soldier. Oh
the pity of it! the
utter
utter sadness of it! Now let us note three things about this prayer.
1. First of all
the prayer was to the true God. It was not offered
to an idol. Know
then
that we may be praying to the right God; that is no
guarantee that we shall get the answer which we desire. You may read the right
book and get nothing out of it. Not every man who reads the Bible receives a
revelation
or has the slightest idea that there is a revelation of a spiritual
and effective kind in the whole range of Holy Scripture. The right God does not
make the right prayer; the prayer is in the spirit
in the will; it is in the
temper or disposition of the heart; it is in the self-crucifixion of the soul:
not a cry
but a sacrifice.
2. What ailed this poor prayer? what was its mortal disease? The
mortal disease of this prayer uttered by Samson was that it was offered in the
wrong spirit. It is the spirit that determines the quality. “That I may be at
once avenged of the Philistines for my two eyes.” It was a prayer for
vengeance. That prayer comes easily to the natural spirit. We love to magnify
the individual
and to think that individualism is personality. What grave
mistakes we make in our verbal definitions! A man will say that he stands up
for personality
when he knows nothing about it. He is standing up for
individuality
his own little miserable self. Here is a man who comes forward
to avenge his personal or individual or physical loss; in that spirit a man
cannot pray. What he says may have the form of prayer
so to say the likeness
of prayer
and yet the man may not be praying; he may be in reality simply and
deeply cursing. A curse is not a prayer; an imprecation is not part of the
great liturgy in which all redeemed souls ought to take part. Prayer is
self-renunciation; prayer says
“Lord
Thy will be done
not mine.” Thus the
Divine will is done by consent
human and Divine
and is the law
in its own
degree
of the universe; the soul then falls into the rhythmic movement of the
creation
and the man is translated out of individuality into personality in
its broadest definitions
and he is part and parcel of the great unity which
swings like a censer round the altar Divine.
3. In the third place this prayer was answered
but answered in
judgment. Samson had his way
but his way killed him. God has many ways of
answering prayer. One sad case is recorded which will at once occur to your
memory: “He gave them their request; but sent leanness into their soul.” They
had their way
and lost it; they got what they wanted
and it poisoned them.
How marvellous it is in all this process that Samson still had within him what
I may call a spark of vital faith. He knew he had lost his opportunities
and
forfeited his privileges
and betrayed his trust; yet he knew something higher
than all this
namely
that God lives
and that God is a God of
judgment
and that the way of God shall yet prevail upon the earth
be human
circumstances and conditions what they may. He made the most of that vital
spark. But Samson might have said
“Do not upbraid me; I have played the fool
before God; I yielded up my secret
I parted with my strength
I ceased at once
to be a judge in Israel and to be a child of God; but there is one last
lingering flash of faith
and I want to turn that last lingering flash into
works
into actions
into palpable and crushing results.” Samson was then at
the very height of his will; he then touched the sublimest personality of his
own consciousness
and he was dealing not only with his enemies
but with the
enemies of the Lord. This we may say; for the eternal comfort of the race it is
written according to the blessing pronounced by father Jacob
“Gad
a troop
shall overcome him: but he shall overcome at the last.” So we come upon the
familiar thought of intermediate and final victories. Gad
my poor
poor son
a
troop shall overcome him
but he
my son Gad
shall overcome at the last. When
they think he is dead he will spring to his feet; when they report it in pagan
uncircumcised cities that Gad is dead
Gad will rise and whet his sword and
challenge the enemy to a deadlier combat. Do not pronounce upon intermediate
failures; there may be many of them
and yet there may be conquest at the last.
So it shall be with our poor hearts. Yes
we were caught in all the sins
the
devil was triumphing over us
but we overcame at the last. “All these sins are
ours
and we repent them
” who can tell whether God will be gracious unto us
and give us a nail in His tabernacle
and one small place in His great providential
plan? As a nation we have sinned; I do not see that our cup of iniquity could
hold one drop more; it is not for us to fall back upon a history we have
dishonoured
it is for us to go forward to a throne that is still a throne of
mercy. (J. Parker
D. D.)
Let me die with the
Philistines.--
The death of Samson
I. Humiliation and
weakness are sure to follow the failure to keep covenant with God. He lacks the
highest motive and the holiest hope who has not consciously agreed to fulfil
the conditions on which the exceeding great and precious promises of God are
given.
II. The discipline
of humiliation is the only way to a restoration of strength. All great
endowments bring with them also especial weaknesses. This big burly body
carried great passions with it. This giant strength led easily to
over-confidence. But a sudden gleam of light seems to show him the opportunity
to complete his mission as the champion of Israel. Blind and alone
he may yet
gain a victory for God and for His people over their oppressors. Now he
confesses that his strength is in Jehovah. To Him he cries for help. His hair
has grown again
but he does not put his trust in that. Perhaps he feels the
vigour of his returning power
but in his blindness he needs God
however
strong he may be. And as soon as he can pray again he is the hero again.
III. While one who
has broken covenant with God can never come back and be what he was before
God
may sometimes accomplish more through a fallen man restored than if he had not
fallen. Poor Samson never could get back his eyes. No penitence or prayer could
restore the lost faculty. Even though his strength came back
his eyesight did
not. He must beg the aid of a boy to find his way. It is thus with all who fall
from God and fail from duty
who turn their back upon the Lord and neglect the
conditions of His blessing. The scars remain though the man is healed. One who
has fallen into gross sin may be restored
but he is weakened. Do not let us
think too lightly of the peril of sin
and especially of the sin of one who is
pledged to God. The disability which comes from the violation of a conscious
obligation is more severe and more lasting than any other. (G. M. Boynton.)
Lessons from the life of Samson
His character is unlike that of the other heroes of Hebrew story.
Alone in the Old Testament he overflows with joyfulness. His very name is
probably associated with the sunshine--“sunlike.” He is light of heart
and his
courage rises in the hour of danger. He has a sportive wit which sparkles in
rhythmic couplets
flashes in epigrams
plays upon words. It will not be
forgotten that the great child of daring and genius is brought up a
Neziyr-Elohim with his vow of abstinence. Unquestionably
he derived an inward
strength of a certain kind from the conviction that he was indeed God’s own
consecrated to Him from his mother’s womb. Certainly
also
the circumstances
which called him to be a judge must have had a strengthening and ennobling
influence. We must remember that in Israel God’s Spirit takes the place which
in human history is ascribed to natural genius. But this influence of the
Spirit was a gift and not necessarily a sanctifying grace. Now
such measure of
spiritual strength as may have been given to Samson by his being a
Neziyr-Elohim was
so to speak
artificial. No chain is stronger than its
weakest link; no vow is stronger than the will behind it. Add to this
that the
vow only covers an isolated fragment of the world of moral duty. Unnatural
strictness in one direction sometimes compensates itself by unnatural laxity in
another. Samson was a rigid total abstainer. I mean no unworthy sneer at a
cause to which I wish well. But if Samson was a rigid total abstainer
so I
believe is the Mormon
and so I know is the Moslem. At all events
Samson’s
strictness in one direction was compensated for by laxity in another. A fiercer
passion than that for wine coursed through the hero’s veins
and set his blood
on fire. The unrivalled bodily strength co-exists with abject moral weakness.
Why will so many novelists and poets speak as if strength and passion were
almost convertible terms? What we call the strength of passion is really its
weakness. It is not passion
but the repression of passion
which is really
strong. And the strongest character is that in which what are called the
strongest passions are held in leash by the sternest will. Lessons:
1. Flee from every sin that has light in its eye
and honey upon its
tongue. Flee from the touch that wins
but blisters as it touches
and fills
the vein with fire.
2. A second lesson derived from the fallen Nazarite is the weakness
of our will; the helplessness of our resolutions; their imperfect and partial
action upon our moral nature. How
then
is the will to be emancipated and
strengthened? I am not now speaking of prudential rules
and humble efforts
indispensable though they are--I am not just yet speaking of a sacramental
means of grace--but of ultimate Divine principles.
3. And now we are led to see from all this the fitness and
reasonableness of the view entertained by the Church of the reality of grace in
sacraments and ordinances. (Abp. Wm. Alexander.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》