Chapter 54
Samson
[This chapter is based on Judges 13 to 16.]
AMID the widespread apostasy the faithful worshipers of God continued to plead with Him
for the deliverance of Israel. Though there was apparently no response, though year after
year the power of the oppressor continued to rest more heavily upon the land, God's
providence was preparing help for them. Even in the early years of the Philistine
oppression a child was born through whom God designed to humble the power of these mighty
foes.
On the border of the hill country overlooking the Philistine plain was the little town of
Zorah. Here dwelt the family of Manoah, of the tribe of Dan, one of the few households
that amid the general defection had remained true to Jehovah. To the childless wife of
Manoah "the Angel of Jehovah" appeared with the message that she should have a
son, through whom God would begin to deliver Israel. In view of this the Angel gave her
instruction concerning her own habits, and also for the treatment of her child: "Now
therefore beware, I pray thee, and drink not wine nor strong drink, and eat not any
unclean thing." And the same prohibition was to be imposed, from the first, upon the
child, with the addition that his hair should not be cut; for he was to be consecrated to
God as a Nazarite from his birth.
The woman sought her husband, and, after describing the Angel, she repeated His message.
Then, fearful that they should make some mistake in the important work committed to them,
the husband prayed, "Let the Man of God which Thou didst send come again unto us, and
teach us what we shall do unto the child that shall be born."
When the Angel again appeared, Manoah's anxious inquiry was, "How shall we order the
child, and how shall we do unto him?" The previous instruction was repeated--"Of
all that I said unto the woman let her beware. She may not eat of anything that cometh of
the vine, neither let her drink wine or strong drink, nor eat any unclean thing: all that
I commanded her let her observe."
God had an important work for the promised child of Manoah to do, and it was to secure for
him the qualifications necessary for this work that the habits of both the mother and the
child were to be carefully regulated. "Neither let her drink wine or strong
drink," was the Angel's instruction for the wife of Manoah, "nor eat any unclean
thing. All that I commanded her let her observe." The child will be affected for good
or for evil by the habits of the mother. She must herself be controlled by principle and
must practice temperance and self-denial, if she would seek the welfare of her child.
Unwise advisers will urge upon the mother the necessity of gratifying every wish and
impulse, but such teaching is false and mischievous. The mother is by the command of God
Himself placed under the most solemn obligation to exercise self-control.
And fathers as well as mothers are involved in this responsibility. Both parents transmit
their own characteristics, mental and physical, their dispositions and appetites, to their
children. As the result of parental intemperance children often lack physical strength and
mental and moral power. Liquor drinkers and tobacco users may, and do, transmit their
insatiable craving, their inflamed blood and irritable nerves, to their children. The
licentious often bequeath their unholy desires, and even loathsome diseases, as a legacy
to their offspring. And as the children have less power to resist temptation than had the
parents, the tendency is for each generation to fall lower and lower. To a great degree
parents are responsible not only for the violent passions and perverted appetites of their
children but for the infirmities of the thousands born deaf, blind, diseased, or idiotic.
The inquiry of every father and mother should be, "What shall we do unto the child
that shall be born unto us?" The effect of prenatal influences has been by many
lightly regarded; but the instruction sent from heaven to those Hebrew parents, and twice
repeated in the most explicit and solemn manner, shows how this matter is looked upon by
our Creator.
And it was not enough that the promised child should receive a good legacy from the
parents. This must be followed by careful training and the formation of right habits. God
directed that the future judge and deliverer of Israel should be trained to strict
temperance from infancy. He was to be a Nazarite from his birth, thus being placed under a
perpetual prohibition against the use of wine or strong drink. The lessons of temperance,
self-denial, and self-control are to be taught to children even from babyhood.
The angel's prohibition included "every unclean thing." The distinction between
articles of food as clean and unclean was not a merely ceremonial and arbitrary
regulation, but was based upon sanitary principles. To the observance of this distinction
may be traced, in a great degree, the marvelous vitality which for thousands of years has
distinguished the Jewish people. The principles of temperance must be carried further than
the mere use of spirituous liquors. The use of stimulating and indigestible food is often
equally injurious to health, and in many cases sows the seeds of drunkenness. True
temperance teaches us to dispense entirely with everything hurtful and to use judiciously
that which is healthful. There are few who realize as they should how much their habits of
diet have to do with their health, their character, their usefulness in this world, and
their eternal destiny. The appetite should ever be in subjection to the moral and
intellectual powers. The body should be servant to the mind, and not the mind to the body.
The divine promise to Manoah was in due time fulfilled in the birth of a son, to whom the
name of Samson was given. As the boy grew up it became evident that he possessed
extraordinary physical strength. This was not, however, as Samson and his parents well
knew, dependent upon his well-knit sinews, but upon his condition as a Nazarite, of which
his unshorn hair was a symbol. Had Samson obeyed the divine commands as faithfully as his
parents had done, his would have been a nobler and happier destiny. But association with
idolaters corrupted him. The town of Zorah being near the country of the Philistines,
Samson came to mingle with them on friendly terms. Thus in his youth intimacies sprang up,
the influence of which darkened his whole life. A young woman dwelling in the Philistine
town of Timnath engaged Samson's affections, and he determined to make her his wife. To
his God-fearing parents, who endeavored to dissuade him from his purpose, his only answer
was, "She pleaseth me well." The parents at last yielded to his wishes, and the
marriage took place.
Just as he was entering upon manhood, the time when he must execute his divine
mission--the time above all others when he should have been true to God--Samson connected
himself with the enemies of Israel. He did not ask whether he could better glorify God
when united with the object of his choice, or whether he was placing himself in a position
where he could not fulfill the purpose to be accomplished by his life. To all who seek
first to honor Him, God has promised wisdom; but there is no promise to those who are bent
upon self-pleasing.
How many are pursuing the same course as did Samson! How often marriages are formed
between the godly and the ungodly, because inclination governs in the selection of husband
or wife! The parties do not ask counsel of God, nor have His glory in view. Christianity
ought to have a controlling influence upon the marriage relation, but it is too often the
case that the motives which lead to this union are not in keeping with Christian
principles. Satan is constantly seeking to strengthen his power over the people of God by
inducing them to enter into alliance with his subjects; and in order to accomplish this he
endeavors to arouse unsanctified passions in the heart. But the Lord has in His word
plainly instructed His people not to unite themselves with those who have not His love
abiding in them. "What concord hath Christ with Belial? or what part hath he that
believeth with an infidel? and what agreement hath the temple of God with idols?" 2
Corinthians 6:15, 16.
At his marriage feast Samson was brought into familiar association with those who hated
the God of Israel. Whoever voluntarily enters into such relations will feel it necessary
to conform, to some degree, to the habits and customs of his companions. The time thus
spent is worse than wasted. Thoughts are entertained and words are spoken that tend to
break down the strongholds of principle and to weaken the citadel of the soul.
The wife, to obtain whom Samson had transgressed the command of God, proved treacherous to
her husband before the close of the marriage feast. Incensed at her perfidy, Samson
forsook her for the time, and went alone to his home at Zorah. When, afterward relenting,
he returned for his bride, he found her the wife of another. His revenge, in the wasting
of all the fields and vineyards of the Philistines, provoked them to murder her, although
their threats had driven her to the deceit with which the trouble began. Samson had
already given evidence of his marvelous strength by slaying, singlehanded, a young lion,
and by killing thirty of the men of Askelon. Now, moved to anger by the barbarous murder
of his wife, he attacked the Philistines and smote them "with a great
slaughter." Then, wishing a safe retreat from his enemies, he withdrew to "the
rock Etam," in the tribe of Judah.
To this place he was pursued by a strong force, and the inhabitants of Judah, in great
alarm, basely agreed to deliver him to his enemies. Accordingly three thousand men of
Judah went up to him. But even at such odds they would not have dared approach him had
they not felt assured that he would not harm his own countrymen. Samson consented to be
bound and delivered to the Philistines, but first exacted from the men of Judah a promise
not to attack him themselves, and thus compel him to destroy them. He permitted them to
bind him with two new ropes, and he was led into the camp of his enemies amid
demonstrations of great joy. But while their shouts were waking the echoes of the hills,
"the Spirit of Jehovah came mightily upon him." He burst asunder the strong new
cords as if they had been flax burned in the fire. Then seizing the first weapon at hand,
which, though only the jawbone of an ass, was rendered more effective than sword or spear,
he smote the Philistines until they fled in terror, leaving a thousand men dead upon the
field.
Had the Israelites been ready to unite with Samson and follow up the victory, they might
at this time have freed themselves from the power of their oppressors. But they had become
dispirited and cowardly. They had neglected the work which God commanded them to perform,
in dispossessing the heathen, and had united with them in their degrading practices,
tolerating their cruelty, and, so long as it was not directed against themselves, even
countenancing their injustice. When themselves brought under the power of the oppressor,
they tamely submitted to the degradation which they might have escaped, had they only
obeyed God. Even when the Lord raised up a deliverer for them, they would, not
infrequently, desert him and unite with their enemies.
After his victory the Israelites made Samson judge, and he ruled Israel for twenty years.
But one wrong step prepares the way for another. Samson had transgressed the command of
God by taking a wife from the Philistines, and again he ventured among them--now his
deadly enemies--in the indulgence of unlawful passion. Trusting to his great strength,
which had inspired the Philistines with such terror, he went boldly to Gaza, to visit a
harlot of that place. The inhabitants of the city learned of his presence, and they were
eager for revenge. Their enemy was shut safely within the walls of the most strongly
fortified of all their cities; they felt sure of their prey, and only waited till the
morning to complete their triumph. At midnight Samson was aroused. The accusing voice of
conscience filled him with remorse, as he remembered that he had broken his vow as a
Nazarite. But notwithstanding his sin, God's mercy had not forsaken him. His prodigious
strength again served to deliver him. Going to the city gate, he wrenched it from its
place and carried it, with its posts and bars, to the top of a hill on the way to Hebron.
But even this narrow escape did not stay his evil course. He did not again venture among
the Philistines, but he continued to seek those sensuous pleasures that were luring him to
ruin. "He loved a woman in the valley of Sorek," not far from his own
birthplace. Her name was Delilah, "the consumer." The vale of Sorek was
celebrated for its vineyards; these also had a temptation for the wavering Nazarite, who
had already indulged in the use of wine, thus breaking another tie that bound him to
purity and to God. The Philistines kept a vigilant watch over the movements of their
enemy, and when he degraded himself by this new attachment, they determined, through
Delilah, to accomplish his ruin.
A deputation consisting of one leading man from each of the Philistine provinces was sent
to the vale of Sorek. They dared not attempt to seize him while in possession of his great
strength, but it was their purpose to learn, if possible, the secret of his power. They
therefore bribed Delilah to discover and reveal it.
As the betrayer plied Samson with her questions, he deceived her by declaring that the
weakness of other men would come upon him if certain processes were tried. When she put
the matter to the test, the cheat was discovered. Then she accused him of falsehood,
saying, "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."
Three times Samson had the clearest evidence that the Philistines had leagued with his
charmer to destroy him; but when her purpose failed, she treated the matter as a jest, and
he blindly banished fear.
Day by day Delilah urged him, until "his soul was vexed unto death;" yet a
subtle power kept him by her side. Overcome at last, Samson made known the secret:
"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." A messenger was immediately dispatched to the lords
of the Philistines, urging them to come to her without delay. While the warrior slept, the
heavy masses of his hair were severed from his head. Then, as she had done three times
before, she called, "The Philistines be upon thee, Samson!" Suddenly awaking, he
thought to exert his strength as before and destroy them; but his powerless arms refused
to do his bidding, and he knew that "Jehovah was departed from him." When he had
been shaven, Delilah began to annoy him and cause him pain, thus making a trial of his
strength; for the Philistines dared not approach him till fully convinced that his power
was gone. Then they seized him and, having put out both his eyes, they took him to Gaza.
Here he was bound with fetters in their prison house and confined to hard labor.
What a change to him who had been the judge and champion of Israel!--now weak, blind,
imprisoned, degraded to the most menial service! Little by little he had violated the
conditions of his sacred calling. God had borne long with him; but when he had so yielded
himself to the power of sin as to betray his secret, the Lord departed from him. There was
no virtue in his long hair merely, but it was a token of his loyalty to God; and when the
symbol was sacrificed in the indulgence of passion, the blessings of which it was a token
were also forfeited.
In suffering and humiliation, a sport for the Philistines, Samson learned more of his own
weakness than he had ever known before; and his afflictions led him to repentance. As his
hair grew, his power gradually returned; but his enemies, regarding him as a fettered and
helpless prisoner, felt no apprehensions.
The Philistines ascribed their victory to their gods; and, exulting, they defied the God
of Israel. A feast was appointed in honor of Dagon, the fish god, "the protector of
the sea." From town and country throughout the Philistine plain the people and their
lords assembled. Throngs of worshipers filled the vast temple and crowded the galleries
about the roof. It was a scene of festivity and rejoicing. There was the pomp of the
sacrificial service, followed by music and feasting. Then, as the crowning trophy of
Dagon's power, Samson was brought in. Shouts of exultation greeted his appearance. People
and rulers mocked his misery and adored the god who had overthrown "the destroyer of
their country." After a time, as if weary, Samson asked permission to rest against
the two central pillars which supported the temple roof. Then he silently uttered the
prayer, "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." With these words
he encircled the pillars with his mighty arms; and crying, "Let me die with the
Philistines!" he bowed himself, and the roof fell, destroying at one crash all that
vast multitude. "So the dead which he slew at his death were more than they which he
slew in his life."
The idol and its worshipers, priest and peasant, warrior and noble, were buried together
beneath the ruins of Dagon's temple. And among them was the giant form of him whom God had
chosen to be the deliverer of His people. Tidings of the terrible overthrow were carried
to the land of Israel, and Samson's kinsmen came down from their hills, and, unopposed,
rescued the body of the fallen hero. And they "brought him up, and buried him between
Zorah and Eshtaol, in the burying place of Manoah his father."
God's promise that through Samson He would "begin to deliver Israel out of the hand
of the Philistines" was fulfilled; but how dark and terrible the record of that life
which might have been a praise to God and a glory to the nation! Had Samson been true to
his divine calling, the purpose of God could have been accomplished in his honor and
exaltation. But he yielded to temptation and proved untrue to his trust, and his mission
was fulfilled in defeat, bondage, and death.
Physically, Samson was the strongest man upon the earth; but in self-control, integrity,
and firmness, he was one of the weakest of men. Many mistake strong passions for a strong
character, but the truth is that he who is mastered by his passions is a weak man. The
real greatness of the man is measured by the power of the feelings that he controls, not
by those that control him.
God's providential care had been over Samson, that he might be prepared to accomplish the
work which he was called to do. At the very outset of life he was surrounded with
favorable conditions for physical strength, intellectual vigor, and moral purity. But
under the influence of wicked associates he let go that hold upon God which is man's only
safeguard, and he was swept away by the tide of evil. Those who in the way of duty are
brought into trial may be sure that God will preserve them; but if men willfully place
themselves under the power of temptation, they will fall, sooner or later.
The very ones whom God purposes to use as His instruments for a special work, Satan
employs his utmost power to lead astray. He attacks us at our weak points, working through
defects in the character to gain control of the whole man; and he knows that if these
defects are cherished, he will succeed. But none need be overcome. Man is not left alone
to conquer the power of evil by his own feeble efforts. Help is at hand and will be given
to every soul who really desires it. Angels of God, that ascend and descend the ladder
which Jacob saw in vision, will help every soul who will, to climb even to the highest
heaven.
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