SAUL BROUGHT TO SAMUEL.
1Sa 9:1-14.
GOD'S providence is a wonderful scheme; a web of many threads, woven
with marvelous skill; a network composed of all kinds of materials,
great and small, but so arranged that the very smallest of them is
as essential as the largest to the completeness of the fabric.
One would suppose that many of the dramas of the Old Testament were
planned on very purpose to show how intimately things secular and
things sacred, as we call them, are connected together; how entirely
the minutest events are controlled by God, and at the same time how
thoroughly the freedom of man is preserved. The meeting of two
convicts in an Egyptian prison is a vital link in the chain of
events that makes Joseph governor of Egypt; a young lady coming to
bathe in the river preserves the life of Moses, and secures the
escape of the Israelites; the thoughtful regard of a father for the
comfort of his sons in the army brings David into contact with
Goliath, and prepares the way for his elevation to the throne; the
beauty of a Hebrew girl fascinating a Persian king saves the whole
Hebrew race from massacre and extermination.
So in the passage now before us. The straying of some asses from the
pastures of a Hebrew farmer brings together the two men, of whom the
one was the old ruler, and the other was to be the new ruler of
Israel. That these two should meet, and that the older of them
should have the opportunity of instructing and influencing the
younger, was of the greatest consequence for the future welfare of
the nation. And the meeting is brought about in that casual way that
at first sight seems to indicate that all things happen without plan
or purpose. Yet we find, on more careful examination, that every
event has been planned to fit in to every other, as carefully as the
pieces of a dissected map, or the fragments of a fine mosaic. But of
all the actors in the drama, not one ever feels that his freedom is
in any way interfered with. All of them are at perfect liberty to
follow the course that commends itself to their own minds.
Thus wonderfully do the two things go together - Divine ordination
and human freedom. How it should be so, it baffles us to explain.
But that it is so, must be obvious to every thoughtful mind. And it
is because we see the two things so harmonious in the common affairs
of life, that we can believe them to act harmoniously in the higher
plane of redemption and salvation. For in that sphere, too, all
things fall out in accordance with the Divine plan. "Known unto God
are all His works from the beginning of the world." Yet this
universal predestination in no degree interferes with the liberty of
man. If men reject God's offers, it is because they are personally
unwilling to accept of them. If they receive His offers, it is
because they have been made willing to do so. "Ye will not come unto
Me that ye might have life," said our Lord to the Jews. And yet it
is ever true that "it is God that worketh in you both to will and to
do of His good pleasure."
God having given the people permission to appoint a king, that king
has now to be found. What kind of person must the first king be- the
first to supersede the old rule of the Divinely-inspired judges, the
first to fulfill the cravings of the people, the first to guide the
nation which had been appointed by God to stand in so close a
relation to Himself?
It seemed desirable, that in the first king of Israel, two classes
of qualities should be united, in some degree contradictory to one
another. First, he must possess some of the qualities for which the
people desire to have a king; while at the same time, from God's
point of view, it is desirable that under him the people should have
some taste of the evils which Samuel had said would follow from
their choice.
To an Oriental people, a stately and commanding personality was
essential to an ideal king. They liked a king that would look well
on great occasions, that would be a commanding figure at the head of
an army, or in the centre of a procession; that would arrest the eye
of strangers, and inspire at first sight an involuntary respect for
the nation that had such a ruler at its head. Nor could anyone have
more fully realized the wishes of the people in this respect than
Saul. "A choice young man and a goodly; there was not among the
children of Israel a goodlier person than he; from his shoulders and
upward he was higher than any of the people."
Further, though his tribe was small in number, it was not small in
influence. And his family was of a superior caste, for Kish was "a
mighty man of power." And Saul's personal qualities were
prepossessing and promising. He showed himself ready to comply with
his father's order about the asses that had strayed, and to
undertake a laborious journey to look for them. He was interested in
his father's business, and ready to help him in his time of need.
And the business which he undertook he seems to have executed with
great patience and thoroughness. A foot journey over a great part of
the territory of Benjamin was no easy task. Altogether, he shows
himself, as we say, a capable man. He is not afraid to face the
irksome; he does not consult merely for his ease and pleasure;
labour does not distress him, and difficulties do not daunt him.
All this was so far promising, and it seems to have been exactly
what the people desired. But on the other hand, there seems to have
been, from the very beginning, a great want in Saul. He appears from
the very first to have wanted all that was most conspicuous and most
valuable in Samuel. It is a circumstance not without its
significance, that the very name and work of Samuel do not seem to
have been familiar or even known to him. It was his servant that
knew about Samuel, and that told Saul of his being in the city, in
the land of Zuph (1Sa 9:5-6). This cannot but strike us as very
strange. We should have thought that the name of Samuel would have
been as familiar to all the people of Israel as that of Queen
Victoria to the people of Great Britain. But Saul does not appear to
have heard it, as in any way remarkable. Does not this indicate a
family living entirely outside of all religious connections,
entirely immersed in secular things, caring nothing about godly
people, and hardly ever even pronouncing their name? It is singular
how utterly ignorant worldly men are of what passes in religious
circles, if they happen to have no near relative, or familiar
acquaintance in the religious world to carry the news to them from
time to time. And as Saul thus lived outside of all religious
circles, so he seems to have been entirely wanting in that great
quality which was needed for a king of Israel - loyalty to the
Heavenly King. Here it was that the difference between him and
Samuel was so great. Loyalty to God and to God's nation was the very
foundation of Samuel's life. Anything like self-seeking was unknown
to him. He had early undergone that momentous change, when God is
substituted for self as the pivot of one's life. The claims of the
great King were ever paramount in his eyes. What would please God
and be honouring to Him, was the first question that rose to his
mind. And as Israel was God's people, so the interest and the
welfare of Israel were ever dear to him. And thus it was that Samuel
might be relied on not to think of himself, not to think of his own
wishes or interests, except as utterly subordinate to the wishes and
interests of his God and his nation. It was this that gave such
solidity to Samuel's character, and made him so invaluable to his
people. In every sphere of life it is a precious quality. Whether as
domestic servants, or clerks, or managers, dependent on others,
those persons are ever of priceless worth whose hearts are thus set
on objects outside themselves, and who are proof against the common
temptations of selfishness and worldliness. And when they are the
rulers of a nation, and are able to disregard their personal welfare
in their burning desire to benefit the whole people, they rise to
the rank of heroes, and after their death, their names are enshrined
in the memories of a grateful and admiring people.
But in these high qualities, Saul seems to have been altogether
wanting. For though he was not selfish and self-indulgent at first,
though he readily obeyed his father in going to search for the
strayed asses, he had no deep root of unselfishness in his nature,
and by-and-bye, in the hour of temptation, the cloven foot unhappily
appeared. And ere long the people would learn, that as Saul had in
him no profound reverence for the will of God, so he had in him no
profound and indefeasible regard for the welfare of God's people.
The people would come to see what a fatal mistake they had made in
selecting a king merely for superficial qualities, and passing by
all that would have allied him, as Samuel was allied, to God
himself. Now it seems to have been God's purpose that the first king
of Israel should be a man of this kind. Through him the people were
to learn that the king who simply fulfilled their notions, was
capable, when his self-will was developed, of dragging the nation to
ruin. No! it was not the superficial qualities of Saul that would be
a blessing to the nation. It was not a man out of all spiritual
sympathy with the living God that would raise the standing of Israel
among the kingdoms around, and bring them the submission and respect
of foreign kings. The intense and consistent godliness of Samuel was
probably the quality that was not popular among the people. In the
worldliness of his spirit, Saul was probably more to their liking.
Yet it was this unworldly but godly Samuel that had delivered them
from the bitter yoke of the Philistines, and it was this handsome
but unspiritual Saul that was to bring them again into bondage to
their ancient foes. This was the sad lesson to be learned from the
reign of Saul.
But God did not design altogether to abandon His people. When the
lesson should be learnt from Saul's history, He would guide them to
a king of a different stamp. He would give them a king after His own
heart - one that would make the will of God the great rule, and the
welfare of the people the great end of his government. David would
engrave in the history of the nation in deeper letters than even
Samuel, the all-important lesson, that for kings and countries as
much as for individuals, "the fear of the Lord is the beginning of
wisdom;" that God honours them that honour Him, while they that
despise Him shall indeed be lightly esteemed.
But let us now come to the circumstances that led to the meeting of
Saul and Samuel. The asses of Kish had strayed. Very probably they
had strayed at a time when they were specially needed. The
operations of the farm had to be suspended for want of them, perhaps
at a season when any delay would be especially inconvenient. In all
ranks of life, men are subject to these vexations, and he is a happy
man who does not fret under them, but keeps his temper calm, in
spite of all the worry. Especially is he a happy man who retains his
equanimity under the conviction that the thing is appointed by God,
and that He who overruled the loss of Kish's asses to such high
events in the history of his son, is able so to order all their
troubles and worries that they shall be found conducive to their
highest good. At Kish's order, Saul and one of the servants go forth
to seek the asses. With the precise localities through which they
passed, we are not accurately acquainted, such places as Shalim or
Zuph not having yet been identified. But the tour m.ust have been an
extensive one, extending over most of the territory of Benjamin; and
as it must have been necessary to make many a detour, uphill and
down dale, to this farm and to that, the labour involved must have
been very great. It was not a superficial but a thorough search.
At last, when they came to the land of Zuph, they had been away so
long that Saul thought it necessary to return, lest his father
should think that some evil had befallen them. But the servant had
another string to his bow. Though Saul was not familiar with the
name or the character of Samuel, his servant was What God hides from
the wise and prudent, He sometimes reveals to babes. It is an
interesting thing in the history of the Church, how often great
people have been indebted to servants for important guidance,
perhaps even for their first acquaintance with saving truth. The
little captive maid that ministered in the house of Naaman the
Syrian was the channel through whom he came to know of the prophet
of Israel who was able to heal him. Many a distinguished Christian
has acknowledged, like the Earl of Shaftesbury, his obligations to
some pious nurse that when he was a child told him Bible stories and
pressed on his heart the claims of God. Happy those servants who are
faithful in these circumstances, and of whom it can be said, ''They
have done what they could!" Of this servant of Saul's we know
nothing whatever, save that, in his master's dilemma, he told him of
the Lord's servant, and induced him to apply to him to extricate him
from his difficulty.
It does not appear that the city was Samuel's usual place of abode.
It was a place to which he had come to hold a religious service, and
the occasion was evidently one of much importance. It is interesting
to observe how the difficulty was got over, of their having no
present to offer to the man of God, in accordance with the custom of
the country. Saul, though in comfortable circumstances, had
absolutely no particle of money with him. His servant had but a
quarter of a shekel, not designed apparently for spending purposes,
but perhaps a little keepsake or kind of amulet he carried about
with him. But there was such hospitality in those days that people
going about the country had no need for money. So it was when our
Lord instructed the disciples when sending them out on their
missionary tour - "Provide neither gold nor silver nor brass in your
purses, nor scrip for your journey, neither two coats, neither
shoes, nor yet staves, for the labourer is worthy of his meat."
Those who have presumed on these instructions, holding that the
modern missionary does not need any sustenance to be provided for
him, but may safely trust to the hospitality of the heathen, forget
how different was the case and the custom among the Hebrew people.
But now, as Saul and his servant came to the city, another
providential meeting takes place to help them to their object. "As
they went up the hill to the city, they found young maidens going
out to draw water." The city was up the hill, and the water supply
would naturally be at the bottom. From the maidens that were going
down to the fountain, they obtained information fitted to quicken
their movements. They learned that the prophet had already arrived.
The preparations for the sacrifice which he was to offer were now
going on. It was just the time to get a word with him, if they had
business to transact. Very soon he would be going up to the high
place, and then the solemn rites would begin, and be followed by the
feast, which would engross his whole attention. If they would catch
him at the proper moment they must "make haste." That they did
quicken their pace, we cannot doubt. And it was necessary; for just
as they reached the city Samuel made his appearance, about to go up
to the high place. If they had lost that moment, they would probably
have had no opportunity during the whole day. Nor is it likely that
Saul, who had no great desire for the company of the prophet, would
have waited till the sacrifice and the feast were over. The two men
were brought together just in the nick of time. And thus another
essential link of God's chain, bringing the old and the new ruler of
Israel into contact with each other, was happily adjusted, all
through means to us apparently accidental, but forming parts of the
great scheme of God.
From this part of the narrative we may derive two great lessons, the
one with reference to God, and the other with reference to man.
First, as it regards God, we cannot but see how silently, secretly,
often slowly, yet surely, He accomplishes His purposes. There are
certain rivers in nature that flow so gently, that when looking at
the water only, the eye of the spectator is unable to discern any
movement at all. Often the ways of God resemble such rivers. Looking
at what is going on in common life, it is so ordinary, so absolutely
quiet, that you can see no trace whatever of any Divine plan. Things
seem left to themselves, and God appears to have no connection with
them. And yet, all the while, the most insignificant of them is
contributing towards the accomplishment of the mighty plans of God.
By means of ten thousand times ten thousand agents, conscious and
un- conscious, things are moving on towards the grand consummation.
Men may be instruments in God's hands without knowing it. When Cyrus
was moving his armies towards Babylon, he little knew that he was
accomplishing the Divine purpose for the humbling of the oppressor
and the deliverance of His oppressed people. And in all the events
of common life, men seem to be so completely their own masters,
there seems such a want of any influence from without, that God is
liable to slip entirely out of sight. And yet, as we see from the
chapter before us, God is really at work. Whether men know it or
not, they are really fulfilling the purposes of His will. Calmly but
steadily, like the stars in the silent heavens, men are bringing to
pass the schemes of God. His wildest enemies are really helping to
swell His triumphs. Oh, how vain is the attempt to resist His mighty
hand! The day cometh, when all the tokens of confusion and defeat
shall disappear, when the bearing even of the fall of a sparrow on
the plans of God shall be made apparent, and every intelligent
creature in earth and heaven shall join in the mighty shout - "Alleluiah,
for the Lord God Omnipotent reigneth."
But again, there is a useful lesson in this chapter for directing
the conduct of men. You see in what direction the mind of Saul's
servant moved for guidance in the day of difficulty. It was toward
the servant of God. And you see likewise how, when Saul and he had
determined to consult the man of God, they were providentially
guided to him. To us, the way is open to God Himself, without the
intervention of any prophet. Let us in every time of trouble seek
access to God. Have we not a thousand examples of it in Bible
history, and in other history too? Men say it is not right we should
trouble God with trifles. Nay, the living God knows not what trouble
is, and in His scheme there are no trifles. There is no limit one
way or other in the command, "In everything by prayer and
supplication with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known unto
God." "Acknowledge Him in all your ways, and He will direct your
steps." But above all, acknowledge Him with reference to the way of
life eternal. Make sure that you are in the way to heaven. Use well
the guide book with which you are furnished. Let God's word be a
light to your feet and a lamp to your path; and then your path shall
itself "be like the shining light, shining brighter and brighter
unto the perfect day."
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