General effect of Elijah's Mission — The Two
Expeditions of Syria
and the Twofold Victory of Israel- Ahab releases Ben-hadad —
The
Prophet's Denunciation and Message
(1 Kings 20)
But the mission of Elijah must also have had other and, in
some respects,
even more deep-reaching results than those with which God
had comforted
His servant in his deep dejection of spirit. Thus the "seven
thousand" who
had never bent the knee to Baal, must have been greatly
quickened and
encouraged by what had taken place on Carmel. Nay, it could
not but have
made lasting impression on King Ahab himself. Too
self-indulgent to
decide for Jehovah, too weak to resist Jezebel, even when
his conscience
misgave him, or directed him to the better way, the
impression of what he
had witnessed could never have wholly passed from his mind.
Even if, as
in the case of Israel after the exile, it ultimately issued
only in pride of
nationality, yet this feeling must ever afterwards have been
in his heart,
that Jehovah He was God — "the God of Gods"
1 — and that
Jehovah was
in Israel, and the God of Israel.
It is this which explains the bearing of Ahab in the first
wars with Ben-
hadad of Syria. 2 It need scarcely be said that this monarch
was not the
same, but the son of him who during the reigns of Baasha (1
Kings 15:20)
and Omri had possessed himself of so many cities, both east
and west of
the Jordan, and whose sovereignty had, in a sense, been
owned within the
semi-independent Syrian bazaars and streets of Samaria
itself (1 Kings
20:34). To judge from various notices, both Biblical and on
Assyrian
monuments, this Ben-hadad had inherited the restless
ambition, although
not the sterner qualities of his father. The motives of his
warfare against
Ahab are not difficult to understand. It was the settled
policy of Syria to
isolate and weaken the neighboring kingdom of Israel. With
this object in
view, Ben-hadad IV. (the father of this king of Syria) had
readily broken
his league with Baasha, and combined with Asa against
Israel. 3 But since
the days of Omri the policy of both Israel and Judah had
changed. Their
former internecine wars had given place, first to peace, and
then to actual
alliance between the two kingdoms, cemented at last by the
marriage of the
son of Jehoshaphat with the daughter of Ahab (2 Chronicles
18:1; 2 Kings
8:18). To this cause for uneasiness to Syria must be added
the close
alliance between Israel and Tyre, indicated, if not brought
about, by the
marriage of Ahab with Jezebel. Thus the kingdom of Israel
was secure both
on its southern and western boundaries, and only threatened
on that
towards Syria. And the increasing prosperity and wealth of
the land
appear not only from the internal tranquillity that obtained
during the
thirty-six years of the reign of Ahab and his two
descendants, but also
from the circumstance that Ahab built so many cities, and
adorned his
capital by a magnificent palace made of ivory (1 Kings
22:39). Lastly, the
jealousy and enmity of Ben-hadad must have been increased by
his own
relations to the great neighboring power of Assyria, which
(as we shall see)
were such as to make a dangerous alliance between the latter
and Israel an
event of political probability.
In these circumstances, Ben-hadad resolved to strike such a
blow at
Samaria as would reduce it to permanent impotence. At the
head of all his
army, and followed by thirty-two vassal kings, or probably
rather
chieftains, who ruled over towns with adjoining districts
within the
territory between the Euphrates and the northern boundary of
Israel, 4 he
invaded Samaria. He met with no opposition, for, as Josephus
notes (Ant.
8. 14, 1), Ahab was not prepared for the attack. But even if
it had been
otherwise, sound policy would have dictated a retreat, and
the
concentration of the Israelitish forces behind the strong
walls of the
capital. This proved a serious check to the plans of Ben-hadad.
The Syrian
army laid, indeed, siege to Samaria, but the heat of the
summer season, 5 the
character and habits of his allies, and even the
circumstance that his own
country seems to have been divided among a number of
semi-savage chiefs,
must have proved unfavorable to a prolonged warfare. Ben-hadad
might
have succeeded if at the first onset he could have crushed
the small,
hastily-raised forces of Ahab by sheer weight of numbers.
But the slow
systematic siege of a well-defended city, into which Ahab
had evidently
gathered all the leading personages in his realm and all
their wealth, 6 must
have appeared even to a boastful Oriental a doubtful
undertaking, which
might at any time be converted into a disaster by the sudden
appearance of
allies to Israel from Judah, Tyre, or perhaps even from
Assyria.
It was probably shortly after the commencement of the siege
of Samaria,
that Ben-hadad sent envoys to demand in imperious terms the
absolute
submission of Ahab (1 Kings 20:2). At least so the latter
seems to have
understood it, when he declared his readiness to agree to
his enemy's
terms. But whether Ben-hadad had from the first meant more,
or his
insolence had grown with what he regarded as the necessities
and fears of
Ahab, the next day other heralds came from Ben-hadad,
requiring in terms
of extreme and wanton insult, not only the surrender of
Ahab, but that of
Samaria; and especially of the palaces of its nobility, for
the avowed
purpose of plunder. It was evident that Ben-hadad intended,
not the
surrender of Ahab, but the destruction ("evil") of the
capital, and the ruin
of the whole land (ver. 7). Possibly the apparently strange
demand of Ben-
hadad (ver. 6) may indicate a deeper scheme. To oblige Ahab
formally to
submit, would be of comparatively small, at most, of only
temporary use.
On the withdrawal of Ben-hadad the hostility of Israel
would, as
experience had shown, once more break forth under Ahab, or
some new
military leader, and threaten Syria with the same or even
graver danger than
before. But if the spirit of the leaders could be crushed by
having their
substance taken from them, then the chiefs of the people
would not only
be detached from their native monarchy, which had proved
powerless to
protect them, but in future rendered dependent on Syria, and
hence led to
seek the favor of Ben-hadad, instead of giving their
allegiance to their own
Israelitish rulers.
But the scheme was foiled by the clumsy frankness of its
avowal. Ahab
summoned to his council the elders of Israel. He told them
how on the
previous day he had expressed to Ben-hadad his willingness
to make
absolute personal submission and surrender of all that he
possessed — as
Josephus, no doubt, correctly puts into his mouth — for the
sake of their
preservation and peace. But the new terms which Ben-hadad
proposed
involved the leaders of the people as well as himself, and
meant ruin
equally to them all. In these circumstances, "the elders"
counselled the
absolute rejection of the terms demanded. Their advice was
ratified by a
popular assembly (ver. 8). These measures of Ahab were wise.
Besides,
the bearing of Ben-hadad must have indicated even to a ruler
less astute
than Ahab, the weakness and folly of his opponent. And,
instead of
attacking the city, on the refusal of his terms, as he would
have done had
he been sure of his army, Ben-hadad now only sent a message
of
ridiculously boastful threatening, 7 to which Ahab replied
with calm dignity
(vv. 10, 11).
Thus, for a time at least, Ahab seems in the school of
adversity to have
learned some of the lessons which his contact with Elijah
might have
taught him. Besides, it is only reasonable to suppose that
both the
composition of the force outside the city, and the utter
demoralization of
its leaders, were known in Samaria. A summer campaign in
Palestine would
have tried even the best disciplined troops. But the Syrian
host contained a
motley following of thirty-two Eastern chiefs, who probably
had little
other interest in the campaign than the hope of plunder. It
was an army
incoherent in its composition, and unwieldy from its very
numbers.
Hitherto their advance had been unchecked, and its progress,
no doubt,
marked by the desolation of the country along their
straggling line of
march. Their easy success would make them not only more
reckless, but
also unwilling to engage in serious fighting, especially in
those hot and
enervating days, when their leaders lay in the cool shadow
of their booths,
indulging in drunken orgies. It was a dissipated rabble,
rather than an army.
Ben-hadad and his allies were engaged in a midday bout when
the reply of
Ahab to the Syrian challenge arrived. Received under such
circumstances,
we scarcely wonder that it provoked the order of Ben-hadad
to make
immediate preparation for an assault on the city. But in
whatever these
preparations consisted, — whether in the advance of siege
engines, or
amassing of the troops, 8 they could scarcely have been very
effective,
since all the Syrian chiefs continued at their orgies, so
that the hour of
battle surprised them while incapacitated by intoxication
(ver. 16).
Matters were very different within Samaria. There a prophet
appeared, 9 to
announce not only deliverance from the Lord, but to point
its lesson in
the contrast between the great multitude of the enemy, and
the small
number of Israel's host, by which they were to be defeated.
This, with the
view of showing to Ahab and to Israel that He was Jehovah,
the living
Covenant God, Who gave the victory. Thus the teaching of
Elijah on
Mount Carmel was now to find its confirmation and
application in
national blessing. And that the influence of that scene had
not been, as
Elijah had feared, only temporary and transient, appears
even from the
presence of a prophet in Samaria, 10 and from the whole
bearing of Ahab.
He is neither doubtful nor boastful, but, as having learned
the prophetic
lesson, anxious to receive plain Divine direction, and to
follow it
implicitly. Apparently the land was parceled out among
"princes of the
shires," either hereditary chieftains of districts, or
governors appointed by
the king: an arrangement which throws further light on
Ben-Hades'
previously expressed purpose permanently to break the power
of these
leaders of Israel. These "princes of the shires" seem to
have been each
surrounded by a small armed retinue: "the young men" (comp.
2 Samuel
18:15). By these, numbering in all only 232 men, the victory
over the great
Syrian host was to be achieved. It only remained for Ahab to
inquire,
"Who shall commence the warfare?"
11 For in such a victory
the main
condition would be exact conformity to all Divine
directions, in order to
show that all was of God, and to give evidence of the
principle of faith on
the part of the combatants.
Having received the direction that he was to begin the
battle, Ahab lost no
time. At midday — probably of the following day — when, as
no doubt
was well-known in Samaria, Ben-hadad and his thirty-two
confederates
were "drinking" themselves "drunk" in the booths, the 232 of
the body-
guard of the princes marched forth, followed by the 7000 men
which
formed the army of Israel. Although this number naturally
reminds us of
the 7000 who had not bent the knee to Baal, there is no need
to regard it as
referring to them, or (with the Rabbis) to "the true
children of Israel." The
precise number (232) of the body-guard points to an exact
numeration, nor
need we perhaps wonder if in the wonder-working Providence
of God
there was a striking coincidence between the number of the
faithful and
that of Israel's victorious host. 12
The same wonder-working Providence appears in the manner in
which
victory was granted. As so often, we mark the accomplishment
of a result,
miraculous when viewed by itself, yet, as regards the means,
brought about
in the order of natural causation. And thus we ever learn
anew that,
although too frequently we do not perceive it, we are
constantly
surrounded by miracles, since Jehovah is the living God; and
that hence
ours should be the faith of a constant expectancy. It reads
as we might
have expected in the circumstances, that, when Ben-hadad was
informed
that men had come out from Samaria, he commanded in his
drunken conceit
and boastfulness, they should not be attacked, but made
captives and
brought to him. It may have been that those who were sent to
execute this
command went not fully armed. At any rate they seem to have
been quite
unprepared for resistance; and when these 232 Israelitish
soldiers cut
down each a man, no doubt following it up by further
onslaught, the
Syrians might naturally imagine that this was only an
advanced guard,
which was intended to precede a sortie of the whole garrison
of Samaria. A
panic, not uncommon among Orientals, seized the unprepared
and
unmarshalled masses, whose officers the while lay drunken in
the booths.
The very number of the Syrians would make a formation or
rally more
difficult, while it would afterwards increase the confusion
of what soon
became an indiscriminate flight. At this moment King Ahab
issued from
Samaria with his whole army. Whether, as our present Hebrew
text bears,
the king struck at the war-horses and war-chariots of the
enemy, with the
view of capturing them, or, as the ancient Greek translators
(the lxx.)
seem to have read, he "took" them, — implying that there had
not been
time to harness the war-chariots when the Israelitish host
was among them
— the result would be the same. Ben-hadad, followed by a few
horsemen,
escaped by hasty flight, as the word used in the original
conveys, on a
"chariot-horse," showing how sore was the stress when the
king was
obliged hastily to escape on the first horse to hand.
If it were necessary to demonstrate the compatibility of
direct Divine help,
and of reliance upon it, with the most diligent use of the
best means, the
narrative which follows would show it. After this great
victory the king
and people might have indulged in outward, or still worse,
in professedly
religious security, to the neglect of what was plain duty.
But the same
prophet who before had announced Divine deliverance, now
warned Ahab
to gather all his forces, and prepare, for that — "at the
turn of the year,"
that is, in the spring (comp. 2 Samuel 11:1), he might
expect another attack
from Syria. And to make best preparation for the coming
danger, in
obedience to the Divine word, would not supersede but
presuppose faith,
even as we shall work best when we feel that we have the
Divine direction
in, and the Divine blessing on, our undertakings.
It was as the prophet had told. It seems quite natural that
the courtiers of
Ben-hadad should have ascribed the almost incredible defeat
of such an
army to supernatural causes, rather than to the dissipation
and folly of
their king. They suggested that the gods of Israel were
mountain-deities,
and that the rout of Syria around mountainous Samaria had
been due to
this cause. But the result would be far different if the
battle were waged in
the plains, man against man, and not gods against men,
("but, on the other
hand, we shall fight with them in the plain [see,] if we
shall not be stronger
than they!") The grounds of this strange suggestion must be
sought partly
in the notions of the heathen world, but also partly in the
sin of Israel. The
ancient heathen world worshipped not only gods on the
heights, but gods
of the heights, 13 and the sin of Israel in rearing altars
and chapels on "the
high places" must have led to the inference that the
national worship was
that of mountain-deities. Thus did Israel's disobedience
bring also its
temporal punishment. But to their general advice the
courtiers of Ben- hadad added certain practical suggestions, to avoid the
secondary causes to
which they attributed their late defeat. The tributary
"kings" were to be
dismissed, and their places filled by governors. This would
give not only
unity to the army (comp. 1 Kings 22:31), but these officers,
appointed by
Ben-hadad himself, would naturally take a more personal
interest in the
cause of their king. And, instead of the former army, Ben-hadad
was to
raise one equal in numbers, but — as the text has it — "from
those with
thee" 14 (thine own subjects).
In these well-conceived measures there was only one, but
that a fatal, flaw.
They proceeded on the supposition that the God of Israel was
like one of
the heathen deities. And this point was emphasized in the
defeat of the
Syrians, which was announced to Ahab by "a man of God,"
probably
another than "the prophet" who had formerly been
commissioned to him.
But it deserves special notice that this message only came
after the
invasion of the Syrian host. Thus would the temptation be
avoided of
neglecting all ordinary preparations: faith would be tried,
and also called
forth; while, by this prediction, and from the disparity
between Israel and
the host of Syria, Israel would once more learn to recognize
in this
deliverance that Jehovah He was God.
The winter rains had ceased, and the spring wind and sun had
dried the
land. There was a fresh crispness in the air, and a bright
light over the
scene, when the immense Syrian host swarmed down into that
historic
battlefield of Israel, the great plain of Jezreel. We are
carried back in
imagination to the scene of Saul's last fatal defeat (1
Samuel 29: l), 15 and
beyond it to that of Gideon's glorious victory. Once more
the foe lay at Aphek, with his back against the hill on which probably the
fortified city
of that name stood, and facing the plain where it is
broadest. As in
imagination we travel southwards to the highlands, and to
those mountains
among which Samaria lies embosomed, we feel how literally
Ben-hadad had
acted on the suggestion of his servants to avoid a contest
with the
mountain-deities of Israel. It was the very time and place
for Jehovah to
show forth that great lesson which underlies and sums up all
revelation. Of
the Israelitish host we know not the numbers — only that, as
they camped
in two divisions on the opposite side of the valley, perhaps
beneath the
two spurs of the ridge that juts into the plain from the
south-east, they
seemed like two little flocks of kids — so small and weak,
as compared
with their enemies. For seven days the two armies lay
observing each
other. From the circumstance, specially mentioned in the
text, that the
Israelites had gone out "provisioned" (ver. 27, margin), and
even from their
camping in two divisions, we infer that the object of Ahab
was to remain
on the defensive, which, indeed, the inferiority of numbers
rendered
imperative. Besides, the Jewish position was most happily
chosen. It
barred the advance of the enemy, who could not move forward
without
first giving battle to Israel. The Syrians must have
perceived the advantage
of Ahab's position, with his back to the base of his
operations, while the
division of Israel into two camps might enable them to
envelop their
enemies if they attempted an advance, in which case the very
size of the
Syrian army would, from its unwieldiness, prove a serious
difficulty. But
the danger of idle delay in a hostile country, and in an
Eastern warfare, was
nearly as great. And so on the seventh day the attack was
made — as we
judge, by the Syrians. Their defeat was crushing. The great
Syrian host of
100,000 was destroyed, 16 and the men who either made their
way from the
battle-field to Aphek, or who had been left there as a
garrison, experienced
another and even more terrible calamity. While crowding into
the gates, or
else while occupying the ramparts, which had probably been
hastily
thrown up or strengthened, a wall fell upon 27,000 of their
number. 17
Further defense being thus rendered impossible, the previous
confidence of
Ben-hadad gave place to abject fear. He fled from room to
room — into the
innermost chamber. His servants, who had formerly given such
warlike
counsel, now advised him to sue in most humble manner for
his life,
holding out the hope of the mercifulness of the kings of
Israel of which
they had heard. There is an ominous sound in this. The kings
of Israel had
never been distinguished for mercy. But they had only too
often shown
their sympathy with the heathen kingdoms around, and
manifested a desire
to make alliance with them, and to conform to their ways.
Yet, even so, it
is not easy to explain the conduct of Ahab when the Syrian
envoys of
Ben-hadad appeared before him, in true Eastern manner, with
sackcloth on
their loins and ropes round their necks, suing only for the
life of him who
now ostentatiously styled himself Ahab's "slave." It could
scarcely have
been due to weakness of character when Ahab broke into the
almost
joyous exclamation, "Is he yet alive?" Nor could it have
been merely from
kindness of disposition that he ostentatiously substituted:
"he is my
brother" for the designation, "thy slave Ben-hadad," used by
the Syrian
envoys. They were not slow to perceive the altered tone of
the king. They
favorably interpreted and laid hold on that which had come
from him; and
they said: "Thy brother Ben-hadad."
18 Presently, at Ahab's
invitation,
Ben-hadad himself was brought, and made to stand by the side
of the king
in his chariot — both in token of companionship and for more
private
conversation. In truth, nothing less than a treaty of
alliance was in hand
between them. Ben-hadad undertook to restore the towns which
his father
had taken from Ahab's father (in a warfare of which we have
no other
record) and to allow to Ahab the same rights and privileges
as to having
"streets," or rather "bazaars" — what in modern language
would be called
an Israelitish "factory" — in the Syrian capital, which
Ben-Hades' father
had possessed in Samaria; and with this covenant Ahab
dismissed the
Syrian king.
We have said that it is not easy to understand what motives
could have
prompted an act which, even politically, was a grave
mistake. Was it
flattered vanity on the part of Ahab, or sympathy with the
heathen king,
or part of his statecraft to secure, not only an ally, but a
vassal on the
northern flank of his kingdom, or all these combined? In any
case he must
have looked upon the victory over the Syrians in a manner
far different
from that in which it had been announced to him by the God
who had
wrought it. Ahab no longer thought of Jehovah; he inquired
not as to His
purpose or will. There was an ominous similarity between his
conduct and
that of Saul in regard to Agag (1 Samuel 15). Evidently,
Ahab claimed to
have himself gained the victory, and felt sure that in like
circumstances —
should Ben-hadad rebel — he would equally gain it once more.
It was he,
and not the Lord, who would shape and direct the destinies
of Israel.
Jehovah was only the national deity of that Israel of which
Ahab was the
king. And so the error of the Syrians was substantially
repeated by Ahab,
and the lesson which Jehovah would have taught by their
defeat had to be
learned anew by Israel and its king — this time in judgment.
This explains the commission with which God now charged one
of "the
sons of the prophets." We mark that the expression here
occurs for the
first time. 19 It referred to those associations
20 under
the leadership of some
prophet (hence sons of the prophets) which, in the decay of
religious life
in Israel, served such important purposes, alike for the
preservation of
religion, and in the execution of the Divine behests. In
fact, they would
recall to Israel, what, as a nation, Israel had been
destined to be, and ever
keep it before them. Thus they represented, so to speak,
ideal Israel in the
midst of apostate Israel. To a member of this community it
came "by the
word of Jehovah" — that is, by direct command from Him — to
confront
Ahab with such a symbolic (or parabolic) presentation of his
late conduct
as would show it in its true light, and lead the king to
pronounce sentence
on himself. Thus only could a man like Ahab be convicted, if
not
convinced, of sin.
In the execution of this commission the "son of the prophet"
went to one
of his colleagues, 21 and, telling him that it was "by the
word of Jehovah,"
bade him "smite" him. It was conduct not unlike that of Ahab
when this
behest was resisted by the prophet. Remembering these two
things: that
the person addressed was also a "son of the prophets," and
that he had
been informed that it was "by the word of Jehovah," we can
understand
the Divine judgment which so speedily overtook him when he
was torn by
a lion. For the fundamental idea, the very law, of prophetism was absolute,
unquestioning obedience to the command of God. This was the
lesson to
be taught by these associations and their leaders, and it
explains how
sometimes exceeding strange things were given them to do in
public, that
so in the absoluteness of their obedience they might exhibit
the
absoluteness of God's authority. Hence not to have visited
with signal
judgment the disobedience of the prophet would have been not
only to
contravene the principle on which the whole prophetic
institution rested,
but also the very lesson and message which was to be
conveyed to Ahab.
But what one "son of the prophets" had refused, another soon
afterwards
did. Then the "son of the prophets," now smitten till he was
wounded,
"disguised himself with a bandage upon his eyes,"
22 and
waited for the
king by the way. The reason of his appearing as a wounded
man was that
he might appeal to the king with the more show of truth, and
of claim
upon his interference, as wounded in the fight. And a
symbolism may also
have been designed. For, as the prophet's conduct was
intended to
represent that of the king, it might be wished to anticipate
this possible
excuse of Ahab that the difficulty of his circumstances had
rendered it not
easy to retain Ben-hadad by the analogous case of a wounded
man, who
might have fair ground of excuse if he allowed his prisoner
to escape.
The story which the wounded prophet told the king was to the
effect that,
while in the battle — and this is an important point, as
intended to indicate
that Ahab was only like a soldier engaged in a warfare in
which God, and
not the king of Israel, was the commander — one had turned
aside and
bidden him have safe custody of a captive, with this
injunction: "If he be
missed [viz., when the prisoners are mustered], thy life
shall be for his life,
or else thou shalt pay a talent of silver."
23 From the
language we infer that
the person who handed over the prisoner was represented as a
superior
officer; that the battle itself was ended, and that the
captive was a very
valuable prisoner, since such a price was set upon him. But
while the
pretended soldier "was busy here and there" — or, as it has
been proposed
to be read: "looked here and there" — the prisoner escaped.
In these
circumstances he appealed to the king that he might not be
punished as
threatened by his leader. The king had no hesitation how to
decide. He told
him that in recounting his story he had already pronounced
sentence upon
himself. Then the prophet, having removed the bandage from
his eyes, so
that the king recognized him, announced the application of
the Divine
parable. The war had been Jehovah's, not Ahab's, and Ben-hadad
had been
the "banned" of the Lord. "Because thou hast let go forth
out of thine hand
(custody) the man of my ban (compare Leviticus 27:29),
therefore thy life
shall be for his life, and thy people for his people."
The judgment pronounced was not only righteous, but alike
the necessary
sequence of God's dealings throughout this history, and of
Ahab's bearing
in it. And in the judgment the people as a whole must also
share. For even
if theirs had not been the same spirit as that which had
prompted the
conduct of Ahab, yet the public acts of rulers are those of
the nation, and
national sins are followed by national judgments. Ahab had
been on his
triumphant return to Samaria, there to receive the popular
applause for his
achievements, when, in presence of all his retinue, he was
thus publicly
confronted by the prophet's message. He now "went to his
house much
excited and angry." 24 And this also casts further light
both on what Ahab
had done, and on what he was about to do.
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