THE ARK OF GOD TAKEN BY THE PHILISTINES.
1Sa 4:1-22.
WE are liable to form an erroneous impression of the connection of
Samuel with the transactions of this chapter, in consequence of a
clause which ought to belong to the last chapter, being placed, in
the Authorized Version, at the beginning of this. The clause "And
the word of Samuel came to all Israel" belongs really to the
preceding chapter. It denotes that Samuel was now over all Israel
the recognized channel of communication between the people and God.
But it does not denote that the war with the Philistines, of which
mention is immediately made, was undertaken at Samuel's instance. In
fact, the whole chapter is remarkable for the absence of Samuel's
name. What is thus denoted seems to be that Samuel was not consulted
either about the war or about the taking of the ark into the battle.
Whatever he may have thought of the war, he would undoubtedly have
been horrified at the proposal about the ark. That whole transaction
must have seemed to him a piece of infatuation. Probably it was
carried into effect in a kind of tumultuous frenzy. But there can be
no reasonable doubt that whatever Samuel could have done to oppose
it would have been done with the greatest eagerness.
The history is silent about the Philistines from the days of Samson.
The last we have heard of them was the fearful tragedy at the death
of that great Judge of Israel, when the house fell upon the lords
and the people, and such a prodigious slaughter of their great men
took place. From that calamity they seem now to have revived. They
would naturally be desirous to revenge that unexampled catastrophe,
and as Ebenezer and Aphek are situated in the land of Israel, it
would seem that the Philistines were the aggressors. They had come
up from the Philistine plain to the mountainous country of Israel,
and no doubt had already sent many of the people to flight through
whose farms they came. As the Israelites had no standing army, the
troops that opposed the Philistines could be little better than an
untrained horde. When they joined battle, Israel was smitten before
the Philistines, and they slew of the army about four thousand men.
In a moral point of view the defeat was strange; the Philistines had
made the attack, and the Israelites were fighting for their homes
and hearths; yet victory was given to the invaders, and in four
thousand homes of Israel there was lamentation and woe.
But this was not really strange. Israel needed chastening, and the
Philistines were God's instruments for that purpose. In particular,
judgment was due to the sons of Eli; and the defeat inflicted by the
Philistines, and the mistaken and superstitious notion which seized
on the people that they would do well to take God's ark into the
battle, were the means by which their punishment came. How often
Providence seems to follow a retrograde course! And yet it is a
forward course all the time, although from our point of view it
seems backward; just as those planets which are nearer the sun than
the earth sometimes seem to us to reverse the direction of their
movement; although if we were placed in the centre of the system we
should see very plainly that they are moving steadily forward all
the time.
Three things call for special notice in the main narrative of this
chapter - 1. The preparation for the battle; 2. The battle itself;
and 3. The result when the news was carried to Shiloh.
1. The preparation for the battle was the sending for the ark of the
Lord to Shiloh, so that Israel might right under the immediate
presence and protection of their God.
It seemed a brilliant idea. Whichever of the elders first suggested
it, it caught at once, and was promptly acted on. There were two
great objections to it, but if they were so much as entertained they
certainly had no effect given them. The first was, that the elders
had no legitimate control over the ark. The custody of it belonged
to the priests and the Levites, and Eli was the high priest. If the
rulers of the nation at any time desired to remove the ark (as David
afterwards did when he placed it on Mount Zion), that could only be
done after clear indications that the step was in accordance with
the will of God, and with the full consent of the priests. There is
no reason to suppose that any means were taken to find out whether
its removal to the camp was in accordance with the will of God; and
as to the mind of the priests, Eli was probably passed over as too
old and too blind to be consulted, and Hophni and Phinehas would be
restrained by no scruples from an act which everyone seemed to
approve. The second great objection to the step was that it was a
superstitious and irreverent use of the symbol of God's presence.
Evidently the people ascribed to the symbol the glorious properties
that belonged only to the reality. They expected that the symbol of
God's presence would do for them all that might be done by His
presence itself. And doubtless there had been occasions when the
symbol and the reality went together. In the wilderness, in the days
of Moses, "It came to pass, when the ark set forward, that Moses
said. Rise up, Lord, and let Thine enemies be scattered, and let
them that hate Thee flee before Thee "Num 10:35). But these were
occasions determined by the cloud rising and going before the host,
an unmistakable indication of the will of God (Num 9:15-22). God's
real presence accompanied the ark on these occasions, and all that
was expressed in the symbol was actually enjoyed by the people.
There was no essential or inherent connection between the two; the
actual connection was determined merely by the good pleasure of God.
It pleased Him to connect them, and connected they were. But the
ignorant and superstitious elders forgot that the connection between
the symbol and the reality was of this nature; they believed it to
be inherent and essential. In their unthinking and unreasoning minds
the symbol might be relied on to produce all the effect of the
reality. If only the ark of God were carried into the battle, the
same effect would take place as when Moses said in the wilderness,
"Rise up, Lord, and let Thine enemies be scattered."
Could anything show more clearly the unspiritual tendencies of the
human mind in its conceptions of God, and of the kind of worship He
should receive? The idea of God as the living God is strangely
foreign to the human heart. To think of God as one who has a will
and purpose of His own, and who will never give His countenance to
any undertaking that does not agree with that will and purpose, is
very hard for the unspiritual man. To make the will of God the first
consideration in any enterprise, so that it is not to be thought of
if He do not approve, and is never to be despaired of if He be
favourable, is a bondage and a trouble beyond his ability. Yet even
superstitious men believe in a supernatural power. And they believe
in the possibility of enlisting that power on their side. And the
method they take is to ascribe the virtue of a charm to certain
external objects with which that powder is associated. The elders of
Israel ascribed this virtue to the ark. They never inquired whether
the enterprise was agreeable to the mind and will of God. They never
asked whether in this case there was any ground for believing that
the symbol and the reality would go together. They simply ascribed
to the symbol the power of a talisman, and felt secure of victory
under its shadow.
Would that we could think of this spirit as extinct even in
Christian communities! What is the Romish and the very High Church
doctrine of the sacraments but an ascription to them, when rightly
used, of the power of a charm? The sacraments, as Scripture teaches,
are symbols of very glorious realities, and wherever the symbols are
used in accordance with God's will the realities are sure to be
enjoyed. But it has long been the doctrine of the Church of Rome,
and it is the doctrine of Churches, with similar views, that the
sacraments are reservoirs of grace, and that to those who place no
fatal obstacle in their way, grace comes from them ex opere operato,
from the very act of receiving them. It is the Protestant and
scriptural doctrine that by stimulating faith, by encouraging us to
look to the living Saviour, and draw from Him in whom all fullness
dwells, the sacraments bring to us copious supplies of grace, but
that without the presence of that living Saviour they would be
merely as empty wells. The High Church view regards them as charms,
that have a magic virtue to bless the soul. The superstitious mother
thinks if only her child is baptized it will be saved, the act of
baptism will do it, and she never thinks of the living Saviour and
His glorious grace. The dying sinner thinks, if only he had the last
sacraments, he would be borne peacefully and well through the dark
scenes of death and judgment, and forgets that the commandment of
Scripture is not, Look unto the last sacraments, but, "Look unto Me
and be ye saved." Alas! what will men not substitute for personal
dealings with the living God? The first book and the last book of
the Bible present sad proof of his recoil from such contact. In
Genesis, as man hears God's voice, he runs to hide himself among the
trees of the garden. In Revelation, when the Judge appears, men call
on the mountains to fall on them and hide them from Him that sitteth
on the throne. Only when we see God's face, beautiful and loving, in
Christ, can this aversion be overcome.
If the presence of the ark in the field of battle did much to excite
the hopes of the Israelites, it did net less to raise the fears of
their opponents. The shout with which its arrival was hailed by the
one struck something of consternation into the breasts of the other.
But now, an effect took place on which the Israelites had not
reckoned. The Philistines were too wise a people to yield to panic.
If the Hebrew God, that did such wonders in the wilderness, was
present with their opponents, there was all the more need for their
bestirring themselves and quitting them like men. The elders of
Israel had not reckoned on this wise plan. It teaches us, even from
a heathen point of view, never to yield to panic. Even when
everything looks desperate, there may be some untried resource to
fall back on. And if this be a lesson to be learnt from pagans, much
more surely may it be thought of by believers, who know that man's
extremity is often God's opportunity, and that no peril is too
imminent for God not to be able to deliver.
2. And now the battle rages. The hope of misguided Israel turns out
an illusion. They find, to their consternation, that the symbol does
not carry the reality. It pleases God to allow the ark with which
His name is so intimately associated to be seized by the enemy. The
Philistines carry everything before them. The ark is taken, Hophni
and Phinehas are slain, and there fall of Israel thirty thousand
foot-men.
Can we fancy the feelings of the two priests who attended the ark as
the defeat of the army of Israel became inevitable? The ark would
probably be carried near the van of the army, preceded by some of
the most valiant troops of Israel. No doubt it had been reckoned on
that as soon as its sacred form was recognized by the Philistines,
fear would seize on them, and they would fly before it. It must have
made the two priests look grave when nothing of the kind took place,
but the host of the Philistines advanced in firm and intrepid
phalanx to the fight. But surely the first onset of the advanced
guard will show with whose army the victory is to lie. The advanced
guards are at close quarters, and the men of Israel give way. Was
there conscience enough left in these two men to flash into their
minds that God, whose Holy Spirit they had vexed, was turned to be
their enemy, and was now fighting against them? Did they, in that
supreme moment, get one of those momentary glimpses, in which the
whole iniquities of a lifetime seem marshaled before the soul, and
the enormity of its guilt overwhelms it? Did they feel the anguish
of men caught in their own iniquities, every hope perished, death
inevitable, and after death the judgment? There is not one word,
either in this chapter or in what precedes it, from which the
slightest inference in their favour can be drawn. They died
apparently as they had lived, in the very act of dishonouring God.
With the weapons of rebellion in their hands, and the stains of
guilt on their hearts, they were hurried into the presence of the
Judge. Now comes the right estimate of their reckless, guilty life.
All the arts of sophistry, all the refuges of lies, all their daring
contempt of the very idea of a retribution on sin, are swept away in
a moment. They are confronted with the awful reality of their doom.
They see more vividly than even Eli or Samuel the truth of one part,
certainly, of the Divine rule - "Them that honour Me I will honour;
but they that despise Me shall be lightly esteemed."
The time of guilty pleasure has passed for ever away; the time of
endless retribution has begun. Oh, how short, how miserable, how
abominable appears to them now the revelry of their evil life! what
infatuation it was to forswear all the principles in which they had
been reared, to laugh at the puritanical strictness of their father,
to sit in the seat of the scorner, and pour contempt on the law of
God's house! How they must have cursed the folly that led them into
such awful ways of sin, how sighed in vain that they had not in
their youth chosen the better part, how wished they had never been
born!
3. But we must leave the field of battle and hasten back to Shiloh.
Since the ark was carried off Eli must have had a miserable time of
it, reproaching himself for his weakness if he gave even a reluctant
assent to the plan, and feeling that uncertainty of conscience which
keeps one even from prayer, because it makes one doubtful if God
will listen. Poor old man of ninety-eight years, he could but
tremble for the ark! His official seat had been placed somewhere on
the wayside, where he would be near to get tidings from the field of
anyone who might come with them, and quite probably a retinue of
attendants was around him. At last a great shout of horror is heard,
for a man of Benjamin has come in sight with his clothes rent and
earth upon his head. It is but too certain a sign oŁ calamity. But
who could have thought of the extent of the calamity which with such
awful precision he crowded into his answer? Israel is fled before
the Philistines - calamity the first; there hath been a great
slaughter among the people - calamity the second; thy two sons,
Hophni and Phinehas, are slain - calamity the third; and last, and
most terrible of all, the ark of God is taken! The ark of God is
taken! The Divine symbol, with its overshadowing cherubim and its
sacred light, into which year by year Eli had gone alone to sprinkle
the blood of atonement on the mercy-seat, and where he had solemnly
transacted with God on behalf of the people, was in an enemy's
hands! The ark, that no Canaanite or Amalekite had ever touched, on
which no Midianite or Ammonite had ever laid his polluted finger,
which had remained safe and sure in the perils of their journeys and
all the storms of battle, was now torn from their grasp! And there
perishes with it all the hope of Israel, and all the sacred service
which was associated with it; and Israel is a widowed, desolate,
godless people, without hope and without God in the world; and all
this has come because they dragged it away from its place, and these
two sons of mine, now gone to their account, encouraged the
profanation!
"And it came to pass, when he made mention of the ark of God, that
he fell from off the seat backward by the side of the gate, and his
neck brake, and he died; for he was an old man and heavy. And he had
judged Israel forty years."
This was calamity the fifth; but even yet the list was not
exhausted. "His daughter-in-law, Phinehas' wife, was with child,
near to be delivered; and when she heard the tidings that the ark of
God was taken, and that her father-in-law and her husband were dead,
she bowed herself and travailed, for her pains came upon her. And
about the time of her death the women that stood by her said unto
her. Fear not, for thou hast born a son. But she answered not,
neither did she regard it. And she named the child Ichabod, saying,
The glory is departed from Israel; because the ark of God was taken,
and because of her father-in-law and her husband. And she said, The
glory is departed from Israel; for the ark of God is taken."
Poor, good woman! with such a husband she had no doubt had a
troubled life. The spring of her spirit had probably been broken
long ago; and what little of elasticity yet remained was all too
little to bear up under such an overwhelming load. But it may have
been her comfort to live so near to the house of God as she did, and
to be thus reminded of Him who had commanded the sons of Aaron to
bless the people saying, ''The Lord bless thee and keep thee; the
Lord make His face shine upon thee and be gracious to thee; the Lord
lift up His countenance upon thee and give thee peace." But now the
ark of God is taken, its services are at an end, and the blessing is
gone. The tribes may come up to the feasts as before, but not with
the bright eye or the merry shouts of former days; the bullock may
smoke on the altar, but where is the sanctuary in which Jehovah
dwelt, and where the mercy-seat for the priest to sprinkle the
blood, and where the door by which he can come out to bless the
people? Oh, my hapless child, what shall I call thee, who hast been
ushered on this day of midnight gloom into a God-forsaken and
dishonoured place? I will call thee Ichabod, for the glory is
departed. The glory is departed from Israel, for the ark of God is
taken.
What an awful impression these scenes convey to us of the
overpowering desolation that comes to believing souls with the
feeling that God has taken His departure. Tell us that the sun is no
longer to shine; tell us that neither dew nor rain shall ever fall
again to refresh the earth; tell us that a cruel and savage nation
is to reign unchecked and unchallenged over all the families of a
people once free and happy; you convey no such image of desolation
as when you tell to pious hearts that God has departed from their
community. Let us learn the obvious lesson, to do nothing to provoke
such a calamity. It is only when resisted and dishonoured that the
Spirit of God departs - only when He is driven away. Oh, beware of
everything that grieves Him - everything that interferes with His
gracious action on your souls. Beware of all that would lead God to
say, "I will go and return to My place, till they acknowledge their
offence and seek My face." Let our prayer be the cry of David: -
"Cast me not away from Thy presence, and take not Thy Holy Spirit
from me. Restore unto me the joy of Thy salvation, and uphold me
with Thy free Spirit"
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