SAUL CHOSEN KING
1Sa 10:17-27.
WHEN first the desire to have a king came to a height with the
people, they had the grace to go to Samuel, and endeavour to arrange
the matter through him. They .did not, indeed, show much regard to
his feelings; rather they showed a sort of childlike helplessness,
not appearing to consider how much he would be hurt both by their
virtual rejection of his government, and by their blunt reference to
the unworthy behaviour of his sons. But it was a good thing that
they came to Samuel at all. They were not prepared to carry out
their wishes by lawless violence; they were not desirous to make use
of the usual Oriental methods of revolution - massacre and riot. It
was so far well that they desired to avail themselves of the
peaceful instrumentality of Samuel. We have seen how Samuel carried
the matter to the Lord, and how the Lord yielded so far to the wish
of the nation as to permit them to have a king. And Samuel having
determined not to take offence, but to continue in friendly
relations to the people and do his utmost to turn the change to the
best possible account, now proceeds to superintend the business of
election. He summons the people to the Lord to Mizpeh; that is, he
convenes the heads of the various tribes to a meeting, which was not
to be counted a rough political convention, but a solemn religious
gathering in the very presence of the Lord. Either before the
meeting, or at the meeting, the principle must have been settled on
which the election was to be made. It was, however, not so much the
people that were to choose as God. The selection was to take place
by lot. This method was resorted to as the best fitted to show who
was the object of God's choice. There seems to have been no trace of
difference of opinion as to its being the right method of procedure.
But before the lot was actually cast, Samuel addressed to the
assembly one of those stern, terrible exposures of the spirit that
had led to the transaction which would surely have turned a less
self-willed and stiff-necked people from their purpose, and
constrained them to revert to their original economy. "Thus saith
the Lord God of Israel: I brought up Israel out of Egypt, and
delivered you out of the hand of the Egyptians, and out of the hand
of all kingdoms, and of them that oppressed you; and ye have this
day rejected your God, who Himself saved you out of all your
adversities and your tribulations; and ye have said unto Him, Nay,
but set a king over us." How could the people, we may well ask, get
over this? How could they prefer an earthly king to a heavenly? What
possible benefit worth naming could accrue to them from a
transaction dishonouring to the Lord of heaven, which, if it did not
make Him their enemy, could not but chill His interest in them?
Perhaps, however, we may wonder less at the behaviour of the
Israelites on this occasion if we bear in mind how often the same
offence is committed, and with how little thought and consideration,
at the present day. To begin with, take the case - and it is a very
common one - of those who have been dedicated to God in baptism, but
who cast their baptismal covenant to the winds. The time comes when
the provisional dedication to the Lord should be followed up by an
actual and hearty consecration of themselves. Failing that, what can
be said of them but that they reject God as their King? And with
what want of concern is this often done, and sometimes in the face
of remonstrances, as, for instance, by the many young men in our
congregations who allow the time for decision to pass without ever
presenting themselves to the Church as desirous to take on them the
yoke of Christ! A moment's thought might show them that if they do
not actively join themselves to Christ, they virtually sever them-
selves from Him. If I make a provisional bargain with anyone to last
for a short time, and at the end of that time take no steps to renew
it, I actually renounce it. Not to renew the covenant of baptism,
when years of discretion have been reached, is virtually to break it
off. Much consideration must be had for the consciousness of
unworthiness, but even that is not a sufficient reason, because our
worthiness can never come from what we are in ourselves, but from
our faith in Him who alone can supply us with the wedding garment.
Then there are those who reject God in a more outrageous form. There
are those who plunge boldly into the stream of sin, or into the
stream of worldly enjoyment, determined to lead a life of pleasure,
let the consequences be what they may. As to religion, it is nothing
to them, except a subject of ridicule on the part of those who
affect it. Morality - well, if it fall within the fashion of the
world, it must be respected otherwise let it go to the winds. God,
heaven, hell, - they are mere bugbears to frighten the timid and
superstitious. Not only is God rejected, but He is defied. Not only
are His blessing. His protection, His gracious guidance scorned, but
the devil, or the world, or the flesh is openly elevated to His
throne. Yet men and women too can go on through years of life
utterly unconcerned at the slight they offer to God, and unmoved by
any warning that may come to them "Who is the Almighty that we
should serve Him? And what profit shall we have if we bow down
before Him?" Their attitude reminds us of the answer of the
persecutor, when the widow of his murdered victim protested that he
would have to answer both to man and to God for the deed of that
day. "To man," he said, "I can easily answer; and as for God, I will
take Him in my own hands."
But there is still another class against whom the charge of
rejecting God may be made. Not, indeed, in the same sense or to the
same degree, but with one element of guilt which does not attach to
the others, inasmuch as they have known what it is to have God for
their King. I advert to certain Christian men and women who in their
early days were marked by much earnestness of spirit, but having
risen in the world, have fallen back from their first attainments,
and have more or less accepted the world's law. Perhaps it was of
their poorer days that God had cause to remember "the kindness of
their youth and the love of their espousals." Then they were earnest
in their devotions, full of interest in Christian work, eager to
grow in grace and in all the qualities of a Christ-like character.
But as they grew in wealth, and rose in the world, a change came
o'er the spirit of their dream. They must have fine houses and
equipages, and give grand entertainments, and cultivate the
acquaintance of this great family and that, and get a recognized
position among their fellows. Gradually their life comes to be
swayed by considerations they never would have thought of in early
days. Gradually the strict rules by which they used to live are
relaxed, and an easier and more accommodating attitude towards the
world is taken up. And as surely the glow of their spiritual
feelings cools down; the charm of their spiritual enjoyments goes
off; the blessed hope, even the glorious appearing of our Lord Jesus
Christ, fades away; and one scheme after another of worldly
advancement and enjoyment occupies their minds. What glamour has
passed over their souls to obliterate the surpassing glory of Jesus
Christ, the image of the invisible God? What evil spell has robbed
the Cross of its holy influence, and made them so indifferent to the
Son of God, who loved them and gave Himself for them? Is the gate of
heaven changed, that they no longer care to linger at it, as in
better times they used so fondly to do? No. But they have left their
first love; they have gone away after idols; they have been caught
in the snares of the god of this world. In so far, they have
rejected their God that saved them out of all their adversities and
tribulations; and if they go on to do so after solemn warning, their
guilt will be like the guilt of Israel, and the day must come when
"their own wickedness shall correct them, and their backslidings
shall reprove them."
But let us come back to the election. The first lot was cast between
the twelve tribes, and it fell on Benjamin. The next lot was cast
between the families of Benjamin, and it fell on the family of Matri;
and when they came to closer quarters, as it were, the lot fell on
Saul, the son of Kish. Again we see how the most casual events are
all under government, and conspire to accomplish the purpose of Him
who worketh all things after the counsel of His own will. "The lot
is cast into the lap; but the whole disposing thereof is of the
Lord."
No doubt Saul had anticipated this consummation. He had had too many
supernatural evidences to the same effect to have any lingering
doubt what would be the result of the lot. But it was too much for
him. He hid himself, and could not be found. And we do not think the
worse of him for this, but rather the better. It is one of the many
favourable traits that we find at the outset of his kingly career.
However pleasant it might be to ruminate on the privileges and
honours of royalty, it was a serious thing to undertake the
leadership of a great nation. In this respect, Saul shared the
feeling that constrained Moses to shrink back when he was appointed
to deliver Israel from Egypt, and that constrained Jeremiah to
remonstrate when he was appointed a prophet unto the nations. Many
of the best ministers of Christ have had this feeling when they Were
called to the Christian ministry. Gregory Nazianzen actually fled to
the wilderness after his ordination, and Ambrose, Bishop of Milan,
in the civil office which he held, tried to turn the people from
their choice even by acts of cruelty and severity, after they had
called on him to become their bishop.
But, besides the natural shrinking of Saul from so responsible an
office, we may believe that he was not unmoved by the solemn
representation of Samuel that in their determination to have a human
king the people had been guilty of rejecting God. This may have been
the first time that that view of the matter seriously impressed
itself on his mind. Even though it was accompanied by the
qualification that God in a sense sanctioned the new arrangement,
and though the use of the lot would indicate God's choice, Saul
might well have been staggered by the thought that in electing a
king the people had rejected God. Even though his mind was not a
spiritual mind, there was something frightful in the very idea of a
man stepping, so to speak, into God's place. No wonder then though
he hid himself! Perhaps he thought that when he could not be found
the choice would fall on someone else. But no. An appeal was again
made to God, and God directly indicated Saul, and indicated his
place of concealment. The stuff or baggage among which Saul was hid
was the collection of packages which the people would naturally
bring with them, and which it was the custom to pile up, often as a
rampart or defense, while the assembly lasted. We can fancy the
scene when, the pile of baggage being indicated as the hiding-place,
the people rushed to search among it, knocking the contents asunder
very unceremoniously, until Saul was at length discovered. From his
inglorious place of retreat the king was now brought out, looking no
doubt awkward and foolish, yet with that commanding figure which
seemed so suitable for his new dignity. And his first encouragement
was the shout of the people - "God save the king!" How strange and
quick the transition! A minute ago he was safe in his hiding-place,
wondering whether someone else might not get the office. Now the
shouts of the people indicate that all is settled. King of Israel he
is henceforward to be.
Three incidents are recorded towards the end of the chapter as
throwing light on the great event of the day. In the first place,
"Samuel told the people the manner of the kingdom, and wrote it in a
book, and laid it up before the Lord." This was another means taken
by the faithful prophet to secure that this new step should if
possible be for good, and not for evil. It was a new protest against
assimilating the kingdom of Israel to the other kingdoms around. No!
although Jehovah was no longer King in the sense in which He had
been, His covenant and His law were still binding, and must be
observed in Israel to their remotest generation. No change could
repeal the law of the ten words given amid the thunders of Sinai. No
change could annul the promise to Abraham, "In thee and in thy seed
shall all the nations of the earth be blessed." No change could
reverse that mode of approach to a holy God which had been ordained
for the sinner - through the shedding of atoning blood. The destiny
of Israel was not changed, as the medium of God's communications to
the world on the most vital of all subjects in which sinners could
be interested. And king though he was, Saul would find that there
was no way of securing the true prosperity of his kingdom but by
ruling it in the fear of God, and with the highest regard to His
will and pleasure; while nothing was so sure to drive it to ruin, as
to depart from the Divine prescription, and plunge into the ways
that were common among the heathen.
The next circumstance mentioned in the history is, that when the
people dispersed, and when Saul returned to his home at Gibeah,
"there went with him a band of men, whose hearts God had touched."
They were induced to form a body-guard for the new king, and they
did so under no physical constraint from him or anyone else, but
because they were moved to do it from sympathy, from the desire to
help him and be of service to him in the new position to which he
had been raised. Here was a remarkable encouragement. A friend in
need is a friend indeed. Could there have been any time when Saul
was more in need of friends? How happy a thing it was that he did
not need to go and search for them; they came to him with their
willing service. And what a happy start it was for him in his new
office that these helpers were at hand to serve him! A band of
willing helpers around one takes off more than half the difficulty
of a difficult enterprise. Men that enter into one's plans, that
sympathize with one's aims, that are ready to share one's burdens,
that anticipate one's wishes, are of priceless value in any
business. But they are of especial value in the Church of Christ.
One of the first things our Lord did after entering on His public
ministry was to call to Himself the twelve, who were to be His
staff, His ready helpers wherever they were able to give help. Is it
not the joy of the Christian minister, as he takes up his charge, if
there go with him a band of men whose hearts God has touched? How
lonely and how hard is the ministry if there be no such men to help!
How different when efficient volunteers are there, in readiness for
the Sunday-school, and the Band of hope, and the missionary society,
and the congregational choir, and for visiting the sick, and every
other service of Christian love! Congregations ought to feel that it
cannot be right to leave all the work to their minister. What kind
of battle would it be if all the fighting were left to the officer
in command? Let the members of congregations ever bear in mind that
it is their duty and their privilege to help in the work. If we wish
to see the picture of a prosperous Apostolic Church, let us study
the last chapter of the Epistle to the Romans. The glory of the
primitive Church of Rome was that it abounded in men and women whose
hearts God had touched, and who "laboured much in the Lord."
Do any of us shrink from such work? Are any willing to pray for
God's work, but unwilling to take part in it personally? Such a
state of mind cannot but suggest the question, Has the Lord touched
your hearts? The expression is a very significant one. It implies
that one touch of God's hand, one breathing of His Spirit, can
effect such a change that what was formerly ungenial becomes
agreeable; a vital principle is imparted to the heart. Life can come
only from the fountain of life. Hearts can be quickened only by the
living Spirit of God. In vain shall we try to serve Him until our
hearts are touched by His Spirit. Would that that Spirit were poured
forth so abundantly that "one should say, I am the Lord's, and
another should call himself by the name of Jacob, and another should
subscribe with his hand to the Lord, and surname himself with the
name of Israel"!
The last thing to be noticed is the difference of feeling toward
Saul among the people. While he was received cordially by most,
there was a section that despised him, that scorned the idea of his
delivering the nation, and, in token of their contempt, brought him
no presents. They are called the children of Belial. It was not that
they regarded his election as an invasion of the ancient
constitution of the country, as an interference with the sovereign
rights of Jehovah, but that, in their pride, they refused to submit
to him; they would not have him for their king. The tokens of Divine
authority - the sanction of Samuel, the use of the lot, and the
other proofs that what was done at Mizpeh had been ratified in
heaven - made no impression upon them. We are told of Saul that he
held his peace; he would rather refute them by deeds than by words;
he would let it be seen, when the opportunity offered, whether he
could render any service to the nation or not. But does not this
ominous fact, recorded at the very threshold of Saul's reign, at the
very time when it became so apparent that he was the Lord's
anointed, suggest to our minds a corresponding fact, in reference to
One who is the Lord's Anointed in a higher sense? Is there not in
many a disposition to say even of the Lord Jesus Christ, "How shall
this man save us"? Do not many rob the Lord Jesus Christ of His
saving power, reducing Him to the level of a mere teacher, denying
that He shed His blood to take away sin? And are there not others
who refuse their homage to the Lord from sheer self-dependence and
pride? They have never been convinced of their sins, never shared
the publican's feeling, but rather been disposed to boast, like the
Pharisee, that they were not like other men. And is not Christ still
to many as a root out of a dry ground, without form or comeliness
wherefore they should desire Him? Oh for the spirit of wisdom and
illumination in the knowledge of Him! Oh that, the eyes of our
understandings being enlightened, we might all see Jesus fairer than
the children of men, the chief among ten thousand, yea altogether
lovely; and that, instead of our manifesting any unwillingness to
acknowledge Him and follow Him, the language of our hearts might be,
"Whom have we in heaven but Thee? and there is none on the earth
that we desire besides Thee." "Entreat us not to leave Thee, nor to
return from following after Thee; for where Thou goest we will go,
and where Thou lodgest we will lodge; Thy people shall be our
people," and Thou Thyself our Lord and our God.
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