ELI'S HOUSE.
1Sa 2:11-36.
THE notices of little Samuel, that alternate in this passage with
the sad accounts of Eli and his house, are like the green spots that
vary the dull stretches of sand in a desert; or like the little bits
of blue sky that charm your eye when the firmament is darkened by a
storm. First we are told how, after Elkanah and Hannah departed, the
child Samuel ministered unto the Lord before Eli the priest (1Sa
2:11); then comes an ugly picture of the wickedness practiced at
Shiloh by Eli's sons (1Sa 2:12-17); another episode brings Samuel
again before us, with some details of his own history and that of
his family (1Sa 2:8-21); this is followed by an account of Eli's
feeble endeavours to restrain the wickedness of his sons (1Sa
2:22-25). Once more we have a bright glimpse of Samuel, and of his
progress in life and character, very similar in terms to St. Luke's
account of the growth of the child Jesus (1Sa 2:26); and finally the
series closes with a painful narrative - the visit of a man of God
to Eli, reproving his guilty laxity in connection with his sons, and
announcing the downfall of his house (1Sa 2:27-36). In the
wickedness of Eli's sons we see the enemy coming in like a flood, in
the progress of little Samuel we see the Spirit of the Lord lifting
up a standard against him. We see evil powerful and most
destructive; we see the instrument of healing very feeble - a mere
infant. Yet the power of God is with the infant, and in due time the
force which he represents will prevail. It is just a picture of the
grand conflict of sin and grace in the world. It was verified
emphatically when Jesus was a child. How slender the force seemed
that was to scatter the world's darkness, roll back its wickedness,
and take away its guilt I How striking the lesson for us not to be
afraid though the apparent force of truth and goodness in the world
be infinitesimally small. The worm Jacob shall yet thresh the
mountains; the little flock shall yet possess the kingdom; "there
shall be a handful of corn on the top of the mountains, the fruit
thereof shall shake like Lebanon, and they of the city shall
flourish like grass of the earth."
It is mainly the picture of Eli's house and the behaviour of his
family that fills our eye in this chapter. It is to be noticed that
Eli was a descendant, not of Eleazar, the elder son of Aaron, but of
Ithamar, the younger. Why the high priesthood was transferred from
the one family to the other, in the person of Eli, we do not know.
Evidently Eli's claim to the priesthood was a valid one, for in the
reproof addressed to him it is fully assumed that he was the proper
occupant of the office. One is led to think that either from youth
or natural feebleness the proper heir in Eleazar's line had been
unfit for the office, and that Eli had been appointed to it as
possessing the personal qualifications which the other wanted.
Probably therefore he was a man of vigour in his earlier days, one
capable of being at the head of affairs; and if so his loose
government of his family was all the more worthy of blame. It could
not have been that the male line in Eleazar's family had failed; for
in the time of David Zadok of the family of Eleazar was priest,
along with Abiathar, of the family of Ithamar and Eli. From Eli's
administration great things would seem to have been expected; all
the more lamentable and shameful was the state of things that
ensued.
1. First our attention is turned to the gross wickedness and
scandalous behaviour of Eli's sons. There are many dark pictures in
the history of Israel in the time of the Judges, - pictures of
idolatry, pictures of lust, pictures of treachery, pictures of
bloodshed; but there is none more awful than the picture of the high
priest's family at Shiloh. In the other cases members of the nation
had become grossly wicked; but in this case it is the salt that has
lost its savour - it is those who should have led the people in the
ways of God that have become the ringleaders of the devil's army.
Hophni and Phinehas take their places in that unhonoured band where
the names of Alexander Borgia, and many a high ecclesiastic of the
Middle Ages send forth their stinking savour. They are marked by the
two prevailing vices of the lowest natures - greed and lechery.
Their greed preys upon the worthy men who brought their offerings to
God's sanctuary in obedience to His law; their lechery seduces the
very women who, employed in the service of the place (see Revised
Version), might have reasonably thought of it as the gate to heaven
rather than the avenue of hell. So shameless were they in both kinds
of vice that they were at no pains to conceal either the one or the
other. It mattered nothing what regulations God had made as to the
parts of the offering the priest was to have; down went their fork
into the sacrificial caldron, and whatever it drew up became theirs.
It mattered not that the fat of certain sacrifices was due to God,
and that it ought to have been given oft' before any other use was
made of the flesh; the priests claimed the flesh in its integrity,
and if the offerer would not willingly surrender it their servant
fell upon him and wrenched it away. It is difficult to say whether
the greater hurt was inflicted by such conduct on the cause of
religion or on the cause of ordinary morality. As for the cause of
religion, it suffered that terrible blow which it always suffers
whenever it is dissociated from morality. The very heart and soul is
torn out of religion when men are led to believe that their duty
consists in merely believing certain dogmas, attending to outward
observances, paying dues, and "performing" worship. What kind of
conception of God can men have who are encouraged to believe that
justice, mercy, and truth have nothing to do with His service? How
can they ever think of Him as a Spirit, who requires of them that
worship Him that they worship Him in spirit and in truth? How can
such religion give men a real veneration for God, or inspire them
with that spirit of obedience, trust, and delight of which he ought
ever to be the object? Under such religion all belief in God's
existence tends to vanish. Though His existence may continue to be
acknowledged, it is not a power, it has no influence; it neither
stimulates to good nor restrains from evil. Religion becomes a
miserable form, without life, without vigour, without beauty - a
mere carcase deserving only to be buried out of sight.
And if such a condition of things is fatal to religion, it is fatal
to morality too. Men are but too ready by nature to play loose with
conscience. But when the religious heads of the nation are seen at
once robbing man and robbing God, and when this is done apparently
with impunity, it seems foolish to ordinary men to mind moral
restraints. "Why should we mind the barriers of conscience" (the
young men of Israel might argue) "when these young priests disregard
them? If we do as the priest does we shall do very well." Men of
corrupt lives at the head of religion, who are shameless in their
profligacy, have a lowering effect on the moral life of the whole
community. Down and down goes the standard of living. Class after
class gets infected. The mischief spreads like dry rot in a
building; ere long the whole fabric of society is infected with the
poison.
2. And how did the high priest deal with this state of things? In
the worst possible way. He spoke against it but he did not act
against it. He showed that he knew of it, he owned it to be very
wicked; but he contented himself with words of remonstrance, which
in the case of such hardened transgression were of no more avail
than a child's breath against a brazen wall. At the end of the day,
it is true that Eli was a decrepit old man, from whom much vigour of
action could not have been expected. But the evil began before he
was so old and decrepit, and his fault was that he did not restrain
his sons at the time when he ought and might have restrained them.
Yes, but even if Eli was old and decrepit when the actual state of
things first burst on his view, there was enough of the awful in the
conduct of his sons to have roused him to unwonted activity. David
was old and decrepit, lying feebly at the edge of death, when word
was brought to him that Adonijah had been proclaimed king in place
of Solomon, for whom he had destined the throne. But there was
enough of the startling in this intelligence to bring back a portion
of its youthful fire to David's heart, and set him to devise the
most vigorous measures to prevent the mischief that was so ready to
be perpetrated. Fancy King David sending a meek message to Adonijah
- "Nay, my son, it is not on your head but on Solomon's that my
crown is to rest; go home, my son, and do nothing more in a course
hurtful u yourself and hurtful to your people." But; it was this
foolish and most inefficient course that Eli took with his sons. Had
he acted as he should have acted at the beginning, matters would
never have come to such a flagrant pass. But when the state of
things became so terrible, there was but one course that should have
been thought of. When the wickedness of the acting priests was so
outrageous that men abhorred the offering of the Lord, the father
ought to have been sunk in the high priest; the men who had so
dishonoured their office should have been driven from the place, and
the very remembrance of the crime they had committed should have
been obliterated by the holy lives and holy service of better men.
It was inexcusable in Eli to allow them to remain. If he had had a
right sense of his office he would never for one moment have allowed
the interest of his family to outweigh the claims of God. What! Had
God in the wilderness, by a solemn and deadly judgment, removed from
office and from life the two elder sons of Aaron simply because they
had offered strange fire in their censers? And what was the crime of
offering strange fire compared to the crime of robbing God, of
violating the Decalogue, of openly practicing gross and daring
wickedness, under the very shadow of the tabernacle? If Eli did not
take steps for stopping these atrocious proceedings, he might rely
on it that steps would be taken in another quarter - God Himself
would mark His sense of the sin.
For what were the interests of his sons compared with the credit of
the national worship? What mattered it that the sudden stroke would
fall on them with startling violence? If it did not lead to their
repentance and salvation it would at least save the national
religion from degradation, and it would thus bring benefit to tens
of thousands in the land. All this Eli did not regard. He could not
bring himself to be harsh to his own sons. He could not bear that
they should be disgraced and degraded. He would satisfy himself with
a mild remonstrance, notwithstanding that every day new disgrace was
heaped on the sanctuary, and new encouragement given to others to
practice wickedness, by the very men who should have been foremost
in honouring God, and sensitive to every breath that would tarnish
His name.
How differently God's servants acted in other days! How differently
Moses acted when he came down from the mount and found the people
worshipping the golden calf! "It came to pass, as soon as he came
nigh unto the camp, that he saw the calf and the dancing: and Moses'
anger waxed hot, and he cast the tables out of his hands and brake
them beneath the mount. And he took the calf which they had made,
and burnt it in the fire, and ground it to powder, and strawed it
upon the water, and made the children of Israel drink of it. . . .
And Moses stood in the gate of the camp and said. Who is on the
Lord's side? let him come unto me. And all the sons of Levi gathered
themselves together unto him. And he said unto them, Thus saith the
Lord God of Israel, Put every man his sword by his side, and go in
and out from gate to gate through the camp, and slay every man his
brother, and every man his companion, and every man his neighbour."
Do we think this too sharp and severe a retribution? At all events
it marked in a suitable way the enormity of the offence of Aaron and
the people, and the awful provocation of Divine judgments which the
affair of the golden calf implied. It denoted that in presence of
such a sin the claims of kindred were never for a moment to be
thought of; and in the blessing of Moses it was a special
commendation of the zeal of Levi, that "he said unto his father, and
to his mother, I have not seen him neither did he acknowledge his
brethren, nor knew his own children." It was the outrageous
character of the offence in the matter of the golden calf that
justified the severe and abrupt procedure; but it was Eli's
condemnation that though the sin of his sons was equally outrageous,
he was moved to no indignation, and took no step to rid the
tabernacle of men so utterly unworthy.
It is often very difficult to explain how it comes to pass that
godly men have had ungodly children. There is little difficulty in
accounting for this on the present occasion. There was a fatal
defect in the method of Eli. His remonstrance with his sons is not
made at the proper time. It is not made in the fitting tone. When
disregarded, it is not followed up by the proper consequences. We
can easily think of Eli letting the boys have their own will and
their own way when they were young; threatening them for
disobedience, but not executing the threat; angry at them when they
did wrong, but not punishing the offence; vacillating perhaps
between occasional severity and habitual indulgence, till by-and-bye
all fear of sinning had left them, and they coolly calculated that
the grossest wickedness would meet with nothing worse than a
reproof. How sad the career of the young men themselves! We must not
forget that, however inexcusable their father was, the great guilt
of the proceeding was theirs. How must they have hardened their
hearts against the example of Eli, against the solemn claims of God,
against the holy traditions of the service, against the interests
and claims of those whom they ruined, against the welfare of God's
chosen people! How terribly did their familiarity with sacred things
react on their character, making them treat even the holy priest-
hood as a mere trade, a trade in which the most sacred interests
that could be conceived were only as counters, to be turned by them
into gain and sensual pleasure! Could anything come nearer to the
sin against the Holy Ghost? No wonder though their doom was that of
persons judicially blinded and hardened. They were given up to a
reprobate mind, to do those things that were not convenient. ''They
hearkened not to the voice of their father, because the Lord would
slay them." They experienced the fate of men who deliberately sin
against the light, who love their lusts so well that nothing will
induce them to fight against them; they were so hardened that
repentance became impossible, and it was necessary for them to
undergo the full retribution of their wickedness.
3. But it is time we should look at the message brought to Eli by
the man of God. In that message Eli was first reminded of the
gracious kindness shown to the house of Aaron in their being
entrusted with the priesthood, and in their having an honourable
provision secured for them. Next he is asked why he trampled on
God's sacrifice and offering (marg. Revised Version), and considered
the interests of his sons above the honour of God? Then he is told
that any previous promise of the perpetuity of his house is now
qualified by the necessity God is under to have regard to the
character of his priests, and honour or degrade them accordingly. In
accordance with this rule the house of Eli would suffer a terrible
degradation. He (this includes his successors in office) would be
stript of "his arm," that is, his strength. No member of his house
would reach a good old age. The establishment at Shiloh would fall
more and more into decay, as if there was an enemy in God's
habitation. Any who might remain of the family would be a grief and
distress to those whom Eli represented. The young men themselves,
Hophni and Phinehas, would die the same day. Those who shared their
spirit would come crouching to the high priest of the day and
implore him to put them into one of the priest's offices, not to
give them the opportunity of serving God, but that they might eat a
piece of bread. Terrible catalogue of curses and calamities! Oh,
sin, what a brood of sorrows dost thou bring forth! Oh, young man,
who walkest in the ways of thine heart, and in the sight of thine
eyes, what a myriad of distresses dost thou prepare for those whom
thou art most bound to care for and to bless! Oh, minister of the
gospel, who allowest thyself to tamper with the cravings of the
flesh till thou hast brought ruin on thyself, disgrace on thy
family, and confusion on thy Church, what infatuation was it to
admit thy worst foe to the sanctuary of thy bosom, and allow him to
establish himself in the citadel till thou couldst not get quit of
him, so that thou art now helpless in his hands, with nothing but
sadness for thy present inheritance, and for the future a fearful
looking for of judgment and fiery indignation!
One word, in conclusion, respecting that great principle of the
kingdom of God announced by the prophet as that on which Jehovah
would act in reference to His priests - "Them that honour Me I will
honour, but they that despise Me shall be lightly esteemed." It is
one of the grandest sayings in Scripture. It is the eternal rule of
the kingdom of God, not limited to the days of Hophni and Phinehas,
but, like the laws of the Medes and Persians, eternal as the
ordinances of heaven. It is a law confirmed by all history; every
man's life confirms it, for though this life is but the beginning of
our career, and the final clearing up of Divine providence is to be
left to the judgment-day, yet when we look back on the world's
history we find that those that have honoured God, God has honoured
them, while they that have despised Him have indeed been lightly
esteemed. However men may try to get their destiny into their own
hands; however they may secure themselves from this trouble and from
that; however, like the first Napoleon, they may seem to become
omnipotent, and to wield an irresistible power, yet the day of
retribution comes at last; having sown to the flesh, of the flesh
also they reap corruption. While the men that have honoured God, the
men that have made their own interests of no account, but have set
themselves resolutely to obey God's will and do God's work; the men
that have believed in God as the holy Ruler and Judge of the world,
and have laboured in private life and in public service to carry out
the great rules of His kingdom, - justice, mercy, the love of God
and the love of man, - these are the men that God has honoured;
these are the men whose work abides; these are the men whose names
shine with undying honour, and from whose example and achievements
young hearts in every following age draw their inspiration and
encouragement. What a grand rule of life it is, for old and young!
Do you wish a maxim that shall be of high service to you in the
voyage of life, that shall enable you to steer your barque safely
both amid the open assaults of evil, and its secret currents, so
that, however tossed you may be, you may have the assurance that the
ship's head is in the right direction, and that you are moving
steadily towards the desired haven; where can you find anything more
clear, more fitting, more sure and certain than just these words of
the Almighty, "Them that honour Me I will honour; but they that
despise Me shall be lightly esteemed"?
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