SINS AGAINST CHASTITY
The preceding chapter was originally published as an article in
'The War Cry,' and in various Army periodicals in other countries.
One result was that I shortly after received a communication from
across the sea, in which a man wrote: 'I observe that you make a
statement concerning Eli with which I do not altogether agree.' The
writer says he does not consider Eli's appeal to his sons to be
weak, as was stated in the article. Then he compares the sins of the
sons of Eli (recorded in I Samuel ii. 12-17 and 22-25) with the sins
of Samuel's sons (recorded in I Samuel viii. 1-3), and argues that
the sins of Samuel's sons were more heinous than the sins of Eli's
sons, 'one of which,' he writes, 'was a sin against morality, a
natural following out of an instinct for the propagation of the
race, and the other a violation of a ceremonial law. But the
dealings of Samuel's sons constituted a violation of fundamental
righteousness.
Then my correspondent questions why such terrible judgments fell
upon Eli and his sons, while, so far as the record shows, Samuel and
his sons escaped. Finally, he asks, 'Why this differentiation? Do
you consider that it is a more heinous sin to go against forms and
ceremonials in connection with religion than it is to deal
unrighteously with your neighbor?'
This letter is private, but it raises the question of the
comparative wickedness of sins against womanhood and chastity -- a
question that is seldom discussed except in private or in scientific
or semi-scientific books which are not generally read. If I may, I
wish to reply to it publicly, as follows:--
1. First, I have no lawyer's brief for Samuel. He is one of the very
few men in the Bible of whom no ill thing is written. He seems to
have been acceptable to God from his youth up, and since God has
recorded no charge against him I can bring none. 'To his own Master
he standeth or falleth.' I can only rejoice with him, as a brother,
in his victorious life and walk with God. There is no record as to
how Samuel dealt with his miscreant sons, but since he retained
God's favor he must have acted in harmony with God's will. I have no
doubt, however, that his sons were rewarded according to their
works, if not in this world then in the next, even though no mention
is made of it in the Bible. (Ezekiel x. 10-13.)
2. As regards Eli, he seems to have been a kindly old man, but weak
in his abhorrence and condemnation of evil, at least in his own
sons. In I Samuel iii. 13, God tells us plainly His reasons for
dealing as He did with the old man and his vicious son, 'because his
sons made themselves vile (margin, 'accursed'), and he restrained
them not' (margin frowned not upon them). He knew their evil; as
judge and high priest he had the authority and power to put a stop
to their evil doings, and, according to the law of the land, which
was the law of God, it was his duty to do so, therefore he should so
have acted. But all he did was to offer a feeble reproof. My
correspondent objects to my describing it thus, and writes, 'To me
it seems one of the most pathetic and moving appeals that an aged
father could make to reprobate sons; he points out to them in moving
language the difference between sinning against man and sinning
against God.'
But Eli was not only a father -- he was a ruler, clothed with
authority and power, he should therefore have done more than make 'a
pathetic and moving appeal.' He should have exercised all the
authority and power of his great office to put a stop to the vile
practices of his reprobate sons. 'He that loveth son or daughter
more than me is not worthy of Me,' said Jesus. 'Cursed be he that
doeth the work of the Lord deceitfully (margin, negligently '), and
cursed be he that keepeth back his sword from blood,' said the Lord
to His ancient people. (Jeremiah xlviii. 10.)
Eli might have saved himself, and possibly his boys, if he had
acted, as he ought, promptly and vigorously, and as a righteous
ruler abhorring evil and bent on protecting the sacred rights of
society and the reverent worship of God. It is the duty of a ruler
to rule diligently (Romans xii. 8) and impartially, and of a priest
to insist on reverence in the service of God. Here Eli failed, so
the terrible and swift judgment of God cut him and his family down,
and the priesthood and judgeship passed to others.
3. As to the comparative heinousness of the sins of the two sets of
men, the sin of Eli's sons was far the worse. Let any right-minded
man consider what it would mean to have the sacred shelter of his
home invaded, and the purity of the wife or sister or daughter he
loves assailed, and he must admit this. To rob a man of money is
bad, but to rob a woman of her virtue is worse. To defraud a man in
a court of justice and mete out to him injustice is vile, but to rob
him of the sanctity of his home and the purity of his wife or mother
or sister or daughter is far more vile. To debauch the future
mothers of the race, and so to rob unborn children and generations
yet to be, of the noblest of all rights -- the right of pure, sweet,
holy, reverent motherhood -- seems to me to be like poisoning the
wells and springs from which cities must drink or perish, and hence
the supremest of all crimes.
All the moralities and sanctions of religion were despised and cast
away, and all the sacred rights of men were trampled upon and
imperiled by the apostate sons of Eli. They were set apart as the
heralds and guardians of both religion and morality, yet their
actions seem to have been the grossest insult to both God and man
and the most flagrant neglect and violation possible of their high
and sacred calling.
My correspondent writes that the offense of Eli's sons was 'a
natural following out of the instinct for the propagation of the
species,' as though that were some palliation of their crime. But
among all nations, and even among savage races, there is a higher
instinct that forbids men following the lower instinct, except
lawfully, and among many tribes the punishment was death where this
law was violated. Further, it was not the propagation of the
species, but the gratification of lust, that moved these sons of
Eli, as it is with all who break the law of chastity. The
propagation of the species is the last thing such people desire, the
one thing they wish to avoid.
The instinct and power of reproduction is the noblest physical gift
God has bestowed upon man; it makes man a partner with God in the
creation of the race, and therefore the prostitution of that noble
instinct and power is the vilest and worst of all crimes, and has
brought into the world more sorrow, shame, disease, ruin, and woe
than probably all other crimes combined.
It is far more dangerous to the morals and ultimate well-being of
society, to say nothing of the sin against God, for ministers of
religion in exalted positions, such as were Eli's sons, to fall into
open, flagrant, unblushing immorality and sacrilege than for a judge
to cause justice to miscarry, wicked as that is. When will war
against the unjust judge and condemn him, but what can they do when
the sanctions of religion are destroyed, when the holy fear of God
is lost, and when all the foundations of morality are rotted away --
when their fathers are slaves of lust and full of corruption, and
when the mothers of the race -- who are our first and best teachers
of righteousness and reverence -- have no virtue? 'If the
foundations be destroyed, what can the righteous do?' asks the
Psalmist. The sins of the sons of Eli seem to me to be in the
forefront of the worst sins and crimes mentioned in the Bible or
committed among men.
'Do you consider that it is a more heinous sin to go against forms
and ceremonies in connection with religion than it is to deal
unrighteously with your neighbor? ' asks my correspondent. I answer,
No! But the sons of Eli were doing far more than going 'against
forms and ceremonies in connection with religion.' They were
violating the most sacred rights of their neighbors, as well as
robbing God of that reverent service which He claimed and which was
His due, and so were bringing the service and worship of God into
contempt and undermining all morality at one and the same time.
In all this I am not forgetting nor condoning the wickedness of
Samuel's sons, nor do I suspect for an instant that they escaped the
due judgments of God. Why there is no record of His dealing with
them we do not know. We do know, however, that the Bible declares
the principles of God's moral government, and we may rest assured
that in every instance He acts in harmony with those principles,
whether or not we have a record of it.
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