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Judges Chapter
Three
Judges 3
Chapter Contents
The nations left to prove Israel. (1-7) Othniel delivers
Israel. (8-11) Ehud delivers Israel from Eglon. (12-30) Shamgar delivers and
judges Israel. (31)
Commentary on Judges 3:1-7
(Read Judges 3:1-7)
As the Israelites were a type of the church on earth,
they were not to be idle and slothful. The Lord was pleased to try them by the
remains of the devoted nations they spared. Temptations and trials detect the
wickedness of the hearts of sinners; and strengthen he graces of believers in
their daily conflict with Satan, sin, and this evil world. They must live in
this world, but they are not of it, and are forbidden to conform to it. This
marks the difference between the followers of Christ and mere professors. The
friendship of the world is more fatal than its enmity; the latter can only kill
the body, but the former murders many precious souls.
Commentary on Judges 3:8-11
(Read Judges 3:8-11)
The first judge was Othniel: even in Joshua's time
Othniel began to be famous. Soon after Israel's settlement in Canaan their
purity began to be corrupted, and their peace disturbed. But affliction makes
those cry to God who before would scarcely speak to him. God returned in mercy
to them for their deliverance. The Spirit of the Lord came upon Othniel. The
Spirit of wisdom and courage to qualify him for the service, and the Spirit of
power to excite him to it. He first judged Israel, reproved and reformed them,
and then went to war. Let sin at home be conquered, that worst of enemies, then
enemies abroad will be more easily dealt with. Thus let Christ be our Judge and
Lawgiver, then he will save us.
Commentary on Judges 3:12-30
(Read Judges 3:12-30)
When Israel sins again, God raises up a new oppressor.
The Israelites did ill, and the Moabites did worse; yet because God punishes
the sins of his own people in this world, Israel is weakened, and Moab
strengthened against them. If lesser troubles do not do the work, God will send
greater. When Israel prays again, God raises up Ehud. As a judge, or minister
of Divine justice, Ehud put to death Eglon, the king of Moab, and thus executed
the judgments of God upon him as an enemy to God and Israel. But the law of
being subject to principalities and powers in all things lawful, is the rule of
our conduct. No such commissions are now given; to pretend to them is to
blaspheme God. Notice Ehud's address to Eglon. What message from God but a message
of vengeance can a proud rebel expect? Such a message is contained in the word
of God; his ministers are boldly to declare it, without fearing the frown, or
respecting the persons of sinners. But, blessed be God, they have to deliver a
message of mercy and of free salvation; the message of vengeance belongs only
to those who neglect the offers of grace. The consequence of this victory was,
that the land had rest eighty years. It was a great while for the land to rest;
yet what is that to the saints' everlasting rest in the heavenly Canaan.
Commentary on Judges 3:31
(Read Judges 3:31)
The side of the country which lay south-west, was
infested by the Philistines. God raised up Shamgar to deliver them; having
neither sword nor spear, he took an ox-goad, the instrument next at hand. God
can make those serviceable to his glory and to his church's good, whose birth,
education, and employment, are mean and obscure. It is no matter what the
weapon is, if God directs and strengthens the arm. Often he works by unlikely
means, that the excellency of the power may appear to be of God.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Judges》
Judges 3
Verse 1
[1] Now
these are the nations which the LORD left, to prove Israel by them, even as
many of Israel as had not known all the wars of Canaan;
Had not known —
That is, such as had no experience of those wars, nor of God's extraordinary
power and providence manifested in them.
Verse 2
[2] Only that the generations of the children of Israel might know, to teach
them war, at the least such as before knew nothing thereof;
Teach them war —
That by the neighbourhood of such warlike enemies, they might be purged from
sloth and security, and obliged them to innure themselves to martial exercises,
and to stand continually upon their guard, and consequently to keep close to
that God whose assistance they had so great and constant need of.
Verse 3
[3]
Namely, five lords of the Philistines, and all the Canaanites, and the
Sidonians, and the Hivites that dwelt in mount Lebanon, from mount Baalhermon
unto the entering in of Hamath.
Five lords —
Whereof three had been in some sort subdued, chap. 1:18. but afterwards recovered their strength.
Canaanites —
Properly so called, who were very numerous, and dispersed through several parts
of the land, whence they gave denomination to all the rest of the people.
Zidonions —
The people living near Zidon, and subject to its jurisdiction.
Baal-hermon —
Which was the eastern part about Lebanon.
Verse 4
[4] And
they were to prove Israel by them, to know whether they would hearken unto the
commandments of the LORD, which he commanded their fathers by the hand of
Moses.
To know —
That is, that they and others might know by experience.
Verse 6
[6] And they took their daughters to be their wives, and gave their daughters
to their sons, and served their gods.
Served their gods —
Were drawn to idolatry by the persuasions and examples of their yoke-fellows.
Verse 7
[7] And
the children of Israel did evil in the sight of the LORD, and forgat the LORD
their God, and served Baalim and the groves.
And the groves —
That is, in the groves, in which the Heathens usually worshipped their Baalim
or idols.
Verse 8
[8]
Therefore the anger of the LORD was hot against Israel, and he sold them into
the hand of Chushanrishathaim king of Mesopotamia: and the children of Israel
served Chushanrishathaim eight years.
Served —
That is, were made subject to him. Mesopotamia was that part of Syria which lay
between the two great rivers, Tigris and Euphrates. This lay at such a
distance, that one would not have thought Israel's trouble should have come
from such a far country: which shews so much the more of the hand of God in it.
Verse 9
[9] And
when the children of Israel cried unto the LORD, the LORD raised up a deliverer
to the children of Israel, who delivered them, even Othniel the son of Kenaz,
Caleb's younger brother.
Cried —
That is, prayed fervently for deliverance.
Verse 10
[10] And
the Spirit of the LORD came upon him, and he judged Israel, and went out to
war: and the LORD delivered Chushanrishathaim king of Mesopotamia into his
hand; and his hand prevailed against Chushanrishathaim.
Came upon him —
With extraordinary influence, endowing him with singular wisdom and courage,
and stirring him up to this great undertaking.
Judged Israel —
That is, pleaded and avenged the cause of Israel against their oppressors.
Verse 11
[11] And
the land had rest forty years. And Othniel the son of Kenaz died.
Forty years — It
rested about forty years, or the greatest part of forty years: it being most
frequent in scripture to use numbers in such a latitude. Nor is it unusual
either in scripture, or in other authors, for things to be denominated from the
greater part; especially, when they enjoyed some degrees of rest and peace even
in their times of slavery.
Verse 12
[12] And
the children of Israel did evil again in the sight of the LORD: and the LORD
strengthened Eglon the king of Moab against Israel, because they had done evil
in the sight of the LORD.
Strengthened Eglon — By
giving him courage, and power, and success against them.
Verse 13
[13] And
he gathered unto him the children of Ammon and Amalek, and went and smote
Israel, and possessed the city of palm trees.
City of Palm-trees —
That is, Jericho. Not the city which was demolished, but the territory
belonging to it. Here he fixed his camp, for the fertility of that soil, and
because of its nearness to the passage over Jordan, which was most commodious
both for the conjunction of his own forces which lay on both sides of Jordan;
to prevent the conjunction of the Israelites in Canaan with their brethren
beyond Jordan; and to secure his retreat into his own country.
Verse 14
[14] So
the children of Israel served Eglon the king of Moab eighteen years.
Eighteen years —
The former servitude lasted but eight years; this eighteen: for if smaller
troubles do not the work, God will send greater.
Verse 15
[15] But
when the children of Israel cried unto the LORD, the LORD raised them up a
deliverer, Ehud the son of Gera, a Benjamite, a man lefthanded: and by him the
children of Israel sent a present unto Eglon the king of Moab.
A Benjamite —
This tribe was next to Eglon, and doubtless most afflicted by him; and hence
God raiseth a deliverer.
Left handed —
Which is here noted, as a considerable circumstance in the following story.
Verse 16
[16] But
Ehud made him a dagger which had two edges, of a cubit length; and he did gird
it under his raiment upon his right thigh.
A cubit length —
Long enough for his design, and not too long for concealment.
His right thigh —
Which was most convenient both for the use of his left hand, and for avoiding
suspicion.
Verse 17
[17] And
he brought the present unto Eglon king of Moab: and Eglon was a very fat man.
The present —
Which was to be paid to him as a part of his tribute.
Verse 18
[18] And
when he had made an end to offer the present, he sent away the people that bare
the present.
Sent the people — He
accompanied them part of the way, and then dismissed them, and returned to
Eglon alone, that so he might have more easy access to him.
Verse 19
[19] But
he himself turned again from the quarries that were by Gilgal, and said, I have
a secret errand unto thee, O king: who said, Keep silence. And all that stood
by him went out from him.
Turned again — As
if he had forgot some important business.
Keep silence —
'Till my servants be gone: whom he would not have acquainted with a business
which he supposed to be of great importance.
Verse 20
[20] And
Ehud came unto him; and he was sitting in a summer parlour, which he had for
himself alone. And Ehud said, I have a message from God unto thee. And he arose
out of his seat.
A summer parlour —
Into which he used to retire from company: which is mentioned as the reason why
his servants waited so long ere they went in to him, verse 25.
A message — To
be delivered not in words, but by actions. He designedly uses the name Elohim,
which was common to the true God, and false ones; and not Jehovah, which was
peculiar to the true God; because Ehud not knowing whether the message came;
not from his own false god, he would more certainly rise, and thereby give Ehud
more advantage for his blow; whereas he would possibly shew his contempt of the
God of Israel by sitting still to hear his message.
He arose — In
token of reverence to God.
Verse 23
[23] Then
Ehud went forth through the porch, and shut the doors of the parlour upon him,
and locked them.
Went forth —
With a composed countenance and gait, being well assured, that God, who by his
extraordinary call had put him upon that enterprise, would by his special
providence carry him through it.
Upon him —
Upon or after himself.
Locked them —
Either pulling it close after him, as we do when doors have spring locks; or
taking the key with him.
Verse 24
[24] When
he was gone out, his servants came; and when they saw that, behold, the doors
of the parlour were locked, they said, Surely he covereth his feet in his
summer chamber.
Covereth his feet —
This phrase is used only here, and 1 Samuel 24:3. A late judicious interpreter
expounds it, of composing himself to take a little sleep, as was very usual to
do in the day-time in those hot countries. And when they did so in cool places,
such as this summer parlour unquestionably was, they used to cover their feet.
And this may seem to be the more probable, both because the summer parlour was
proper for this use, and because this was a more likely reason of their long
waiting at his door, lest they should disturb his repose. And this sense best
agrees with Saul's case in the cave, when being asleep, David could more
securely cut off the lap of his garment.
Verse 25
[25] And
they tarried till they were ashamed: and, behold, he opened not the doors of
the parlour; therefore they took a key, and opened them: and, behold, their
lord was fallen down dead on the earth.
Ashamed —
Or, confounded, not knowing what to say or think; lest they should either
disturb him, or be guilty of neglect towards him.
A key —
Another key, it being usual in princes courts to have divers keys for the same
door.
Verse 27
[27] And
it came to pass, when he was come, that he blew a trumpet in the mountain of
Ephraim, and the children of Israel went down with him from the mount, and he
before them.
The children of Israel — Whom doubtless he had prepared by his emissaries gathered together in
considerable numbers.
Verse 28
[28] And
he said unto them, Follow after me: for the LORD hath delivered your enemies
the Moabites into your hand. And they went down after him, and took the fords
of Jordan toward Moab, and suffered not a man to pass over.
Fords of Jordan —
Where they passed over Jordan, that neither the Moabites that were got into
Canaan, might escape, nor any more Moabites come over Jordan to their succour.
Verse 30
[30] So
Moab was subdued that day under the hand of Israel. And the land had rest
fourscore years.
Fourscore years —
Chiefly that part of it which lay east of Jordan: for the other side of the country,
which lay south-west, was even then infested by the Philistines.
Verse 31
[31] And
after him was Shamgar the son of Anath, which slew of the Philistines six
hundred men with an ox goad: and he also delivered Israel.
An ox goad — As
Samson did a thousand with the jaw-bone of an ass; both being miraculous
actions, and not at all incredible to him that believes a God, who could easily
give strength to effect this. It is probable Shamgar was following the plough,
when the Philistines made an inroad into the country. And having neither sword
nor spear, when God put it into his heart to oppose them, he took the
instrument that was next at hand. It is no matter how weak the weapon is, if
God direct and strengthen the arm.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Judges》
03 Chapter 3
Verses 1-5
The nations which the Lord left, to prove Israel by them.
The trial and chastisement of an unfaithful people
I. It was God’s
own thought to put them to the proof.
1. Far otherwise were the thoughts of the nations.
2. The nations could do nothing without God’s permission.
3. This proving of character was done out of respect to His covenant.
4. God puts His people under discipline to serve wise and holy ends.
5. God Himself determines the time, manner, and severity of the
trial.
II. It was
necessary to put Israel to the proof.
1. Their allegiance to their God must be ascertained.
2. Human protestations of obedience are little to be trusted.
III. This testing of
character was made in love, not in anger.
1. All God’s dealings with His covenant people are necessarily in
love. This is the very spirit of His covenant: “Your God”--“God is for
you”--always on your side.
2. It was love to prevent a breach of the covenant.
3. It was love to teach the heart the bitterness of sin.
4. It is love to teach self-knowledge and humility.5. It is love where a
false character exists to have the discovery of it made known in good time.
IV. Obedience is
with God the all-important requirement.
1. Obedience is the index which shows that the heart is right with
God.
2. Obedience springs naturally from the fear and the love of God.
3. In the gospel obedience must spring from love.
4. Obedience in the gospel is the obedience of children.
5. Obedience must be shown in the face of opposition. (J. P. Millar.)
Tests and chastisement
I. the work to be
done.
1. Chastisement as well as trial.
2. A special mark is put on the reason for this course of dealing
(chap. 2:20-23).
II. God’s choice of
instruments.
1. God designates His own agency to do His work.
2. God selects His instruments from the camp of His enemies equally
with His friends.
3. A sinning people often supply the means of their own correction.
4. God can turn the most unlikely persons into fit instruments for
doing His work.
III. The tendency of
the covenant people to apostatise from their God.
1. It is what might have been least expected.
2. The root-cause lies in the depravity of the human heart.
3. Remissness of parental training one of the immediate causes.
IV. Each new
generation requires in some degree to be taught by an experience of its own.
1. The strange incapacity of the human heart for receiving Divine
lessons.
2. Personal experience is the most effective method of teaching.
3. Each generation must have a character of its own, and answer for
itself. (J. P. Millar.)
To teach them war.
It was God’s will, then
it was a necessity for the Israelites that they should “learn war.”
In their case “learning war” meant learning that God alone could fight for
them. Do not the Canaanites of unbelief, heresy, and worldliness still remain?
And is not the evil of their remaining presence overruled for a twofold
good--that of teaching His Church how to make war, and of proving their
faithfulness toward Himself? (L. H. Wiseman, M.A.)
Verse 6-7
Served their Gods . . . forgat the Lord, and served Baalim
and the groves.
The downward course of sin
I. The form of
their sin. One of omission (Judges 2:2).
1. No sin of omission is ever small.
2. Sins of omission may become indefinitely great.
II. The tendency of
sin to multiply itself.
1. No sin stands alone.
2. The root-sin here was failure to exterminate the Canaanites.
3. It led to their dwelling among the idolators.
4. Their intermarrying with the ungodly.
5. Their worship of false gods.
6. The facility with which they made the change.
III. The deplorable
end to which their evil course led.
1. There was entire abandonment of God as their God. Sin is a great--
2. There was sinking down to the level of heathen worship and heathen
practices. (J. P. Millar.)
Verse 8
Sold them into the hand of Chushan-rishathaim king of Mesopotamia.
Israel in servitude
1. This was the first servitude of the Israelites ever since they
came out of their house of bondage in Egypt; for now such detestable apostasy
was found in Israel as heaven and earth had caused to be ashamed of (Jeremiah 2:12-13); therefore is he made a
slave and servant (Judges 3:14). They that would not serve
the Lord in the abundance of all things with gladness shall serve their enemies
in the want of all things with sadness (Deuteronomy 28:47-48); therefore God
forsook them, that they might know the worth of His service by the want of it
under woful miseries (2 Chronicles 12:8).
2. As this was the first oppression that Israel met with after their
coming out of Egypt, so this king of Syria was their oppressor. This king had
God’s commission to oppress Israel, for God sold them into this king’s hands,
and yet was he but a lessee; his possession was by virtue of a lease, and that
only a lease limited to eight years. It surely seemed very long for those
“children of light” to walk in such a place of darkness for eight years together;
if so, the time of their suffering bears a due proportion to the time of their
sinning.
3. The marvellous proportion God observed in proportioning Israel’s
suffering to the proportion of their sinning. As Israel’s sinning increased in
magnitude so their suffering increased in multitude, every term of their
slavery rising higher and higher. They served this Chushan eight years, and,
because not bettered thereby, they served Eglon eighteen years (Judges 3:14) and afterwards Jabin twenty
years (Judges 4:3, etc.). With the froward God
will deal frowardly (Psalms 18:26). When lesser corrections
could not restrain them from sin, God laid heavier punishments upon them, and
punishes them seven times more; yea, and seven times more, and yet seven times
more to that, as He had threatened (Leviticus 26:18; Leviticus 26:21; Leviticus 26:24; Leviticus 26:28). God will not give over
punishing until men give over sinning.
4. The redeemer that the Lord raised up to redeem Israel out of their
first slavery was Othniel (Judges 3:9), which God would not yet do
for them until they humbled themselves, when God, they saw, would get the
better of them. And this deliverer, whom God sent to redeem Israel, when sold
into the hands of this terrible tyrant, was a type of our Redeemer the Lord
Jesus, who was sent of God to redeem us, and thus all the other judges be types
of Christ, though some more eminently than others. Here the Spirit of the Lord
came upon Othniel, gave him prudence, prowess, and magnanimity to make war
against this tyrannical oppressor, and having vanquished him in battle, he
restored rest to God’s Israel, governing his people in peace and in the
profession and practice of God’s true religion according to His law. (C.
Ness.)
Verses 9-11
Othniel the son of Kenaz . . . and the Spirit of
the Lord came upon him.
The controlling man
It is the personal soul that is the basis of all action.
Your machinery is soulless, and the true driver, after all, is the man with his
hand on the throttle. You invent, and you multiply motions, and actions, and
skilled operations; but you never can dispense with the brain and mind and
heart of the controlling man. In the same way, all movements on this earth need
to head up into personal souls. God sets a man in charge of the machinery, and
as the stars and suns revolve in their cycles, as the events of the human race
happen and are run off the reel, they get their explanation only from the
personal souls that have been in the movements. When the time of the
Reformation was at hand, Luther shakes himself in yonder cell and comes forth.
When the thick mists of Popish darkness were to be rolled away from Scotland,
John Knox appeared. It is the same all down the ages: men, personal souls, are
called forth to lead events to their God-destination and God-purpose. Events
need men. So with God! When the time came, God found the Person who would
undertake this great purpose of redeeming love, who would atone for man, and
suffer on the Cross. (John Robertson.)
Othniel
Othniel, the first of the judges, seems one of the best. He is not
a man of mere rude strength and dashing enterprise; nor is he one who runs the
risk of sudden elevation of power, which few can stand. A person of
acknowledged honour and sagacity, he sees the problem of the time and does his
best to solve it. He is almost unique in this, that he appears without offence,
without shame. And his judgeship is honourable to Israel. It points to a higher
level of thought and greater seriousness among the tribes than in the century
when Jephthah and Samson were the acknowledged heroes. The nation had not lost
its reverence for the great names and hopes of the Exodus when it obeyed
Othniel and followed him to battle. (R. A. Watson, M. A.)
Political leadership
In modern times there would seem to be scarcely any understanding
of the fact that no man can do real service as a political leader unless he is
a fearer of God, one who loves righteousness more than country, and serves the
Eternal before any constituency. Sometimes a nation low enough in morality has
been so far awake to its need and danger as to give the helm, at least for a
time, to a servant of truth and righteousness and to follow where he leads. But
more commonly is it the case that political leaders are chosen anywhere rather
than from the ranks of the spiritually earnest. It is oratorical dash now, and
now the cleverness of the intriguer, or the power of rank and wealth, that
catches popular favour and exalts a man in the State. Members of parliament,
cabinet ministers, high officials need have no devoutness, no spiritual
seriousness or insight. A nation generally seeks no such character in its
legislators, and is often content with less than decent morality. Is it then
any wonder that politics are arid and governments a series of errors? We need
men who have the true idea of liberty and will set nations nominally Christian
on the way of fulfilling their mission to the world. When the people want a
spiritual leader he will appear; when they are ready to follow one of high and
pure temper he will arise and show the way. But the plain truth is that our
chiefs in the State, in society and business must be the men who represent the
general opinion, the general aim. While we are in the main a worldly people,
the best guides, those of spiritual mind, will never be allowed to carry their
plans. And so we come back to the main lesson of the whole history, that only
as each citizen is thoughtful of God and of duty, redeemed from selfishness and
the world, can there be a true commonwealth, honourable government, beneficent
civilisation. (R. A. Watson, M. A.)
Prayer helpful to leadership
You may be as unlike a warrior, as unlike one of the Lord Jesus
Christ’s Ironsides as unlike can be, yet you have a great deal to do with the
making and shaping and sending of them. Can you feel the woes of Israel? Can
you shed tears over her? Have you a large, sympathetic heart? And, summing it
all up in one word, can you cry? can you pray? “When the children of Israel
cried unto the Lord,” the Lord sent this mighty Othniel, upon whom the Spirit
of the Lord came
Ah! I think we are weak there. We would have more great preachers, we would
have more revival movements, in the large meaning of the word revival--not only
the ingathering of sinners, but the up-building and brightening of saints--if
we had more people who sigh and cry for the sad condition of God’s inheritance.
“Ye that make mention of the Lord, keep not silence.” Tossing often on a bed of
sickness, or weakness, or pain, do you sigh and cry? Then will God be getting
ready His Othniels, and Ehuds, and Shamgars. (John McNeill.)
The gift of “the Spirit of the Lord”
This clearly teaches us that all gifts of the Spirit, and all
excellent effects thereof, they are none of ours--they are the Lord’s; He
giveth and distributeth them at His pleasure, as we see here that it was the
Spirit of the Lord that came upon Othniel, whereby he brought to pass the great
things that he did. And whatsoever is of any note in man for price and
excellency it is all of God, and cometh from His mere bounty. Alas! there is no
bird stripped of her feathers more bare and naked than man in himself is void
of goodness; for what hath he that he hath not received? Insomuch as all that
he hath to glory of is his sin--a most holy and approved truth, which giveth
God His due, and
layeth out man in his colours, that he is nothing else, if he rob not God of
His honour, and prank not up himself in his gifts, he is nothing else but
naked, poor, and a mirror of misery: (R. Rogers.)
Judgment, then deliverance
Judgment and then deliverance; judgment of the mistakes and sins
men have committed, thereby bringing themselves into trouble; conviction of sin
and righteousness; thereafter guidance and help that their feet may be set on a
rock and their goings established--this is the right sequence. That God should
help the proud, the self-sufficient out of their troubles in order that they
may go on in pride and vain glory, or that He should save the vicious from the
consequences of their vice and leave them to persist in their iniquity, would
be no Divine work. The new mind and the right spirit must be put in men, they
must bear their condemnation, lay it to heart and repent, there must be a
revival of holy purpose and aspiration first. Then the oppressors will be
driven from the land, the weight of trouble lifted from the soul. (R. A.
Watson, M. A.)
The making of a hero
This is a book of heroes, of strong men, and strong women too,
who, in a time of storm and stress, saved their own souls and the souls of
those around them also. It will brace you up, invigorate, and inspire you. It
is said of Pitt that he breathed his own lofty spirit into his country. “No
man,” said a soldier of the time, “ever entered Mr. Pitt’s room who did not
feel himself a braver man when he came out than when he went in.” And no man
can read this book sympathetically without being moved to emulation of the
mighty souls that move across its pages. It tells us very briefly, but
suggestively, the story of twelve people who helped to make Israel, and of
these the first, and in some respects the best also, is Othniel, the son of
Kenaz. Many of these “saviours,” as they are called, were far from being
perfect characters. But in Othniel’s life, as we have it, there is no hint of
anything that offends either the taste or the conscience. His name means God’s
Lion; and throughout he seems to have been a brave, pure, noble man. And yet
the age in which he lived was a very corrupt one. His surroundings were very
unfavourable to the growth of character. There was no king or leader in
Israel--every man did that which was right in his own eyes. Idolatry and
licentiousness abounded. And the task set before you, young men and women, is
not so very unlike that which faced Othniel. You must first save
yourselves--you must, by God’s help, save your own souls. You must also help
God to save the world. This is your task and your privilege--both to be saved
and to be saviours. But how did Othniel become a hero and a saviour of his
people?
I. “Caleb said ‘He
that smiteth Kiriath-sepher and taketh it, to him will I give Achsah my
daughter to wife.’ And Othniel the son of Kenaz took it.” That is the first
fact given us from Othniel’s life, and that is all that is said about
it--Othniel took it--took the stronghold of the mighty sons of Anak--the oracle
city of idolatry before which even Caleb quailed. Othniel took it. But many
things go to the making of such a deed as that.
1. First, of course, comes courage. It was an undertaking full of
desperate difficulties. What was needed was not so much physical as moral
courage. The courage to follow is common enough; it is the courage to lead that
is rare. Othniel had this soul-quality. He led the way and took the city. Well,
if you young people are bent upon saving yourselves from the evil that is in
the world, you too must have and must exercise this soul-courage. It often needs
more courage to handle the yard-wand than the sword--to be a business-man than
to be a soldier. Daily life, all hum-drum as it looks, has its Marathons, its
Waterloos, and its Minas; its Six Hundreds that ride into the jaws of death.
2. But courage, what is it? How does any one get courage? Well, if we
take another look at Othniel we shall see that the lion in him was not born on
the day Debir was taken. It was already strong, matured, full grown. Born long
before this in the desert, it had been nourished by daily deeds of unrewarded
valour. Acts such as this take years to grow. All his life he had been
unconsciously preparing for this. Yes, that is the story of all courage. God
gives it to us as He gives all things in seed form. Every heart is full of germs--courage-germs
among them. If we cultivate any germ it grows and bears fruit; if we neglect it
it dies. If you want courage you must grow it from a seed--that is you must
practise the little you have.
3. Once more: This deed of Othniel’s lays bare to us the central
secret of all true power--faith. You are familiar with great facts of which
Othniel never even dreamt. But your salvation does not depend on how many
beliefs you carry about with you, but on how much do you believe any of them.
Any truth becomes a saving truth to the soul that trusts it and through it
trusts God. Thus this little sentence, unpromising as it looks, gives us three
things that go to the making of a hero: courage, habit, faith, and the greatest
of these is faith.
II. “And he (Caleb)
gave him Achsah his daughter to wife: and it came to pass when she came unto
him that she moved him to ask of her father a field.” This, the second of the
three facts of Othniel’s history, introduces us into a very different set of
circumstances, a different climate of life in fact.
1. Debir is taken; Caleb has kept his word; the bride is coming to
her new home. Applause is not much for a young pair to live on; so, amid the
excitement and the joy, this fair daughter of the wilderness kept her eyes open
and her wits about her. She noted the situation in which her new home lay. It
was south land. It had no water. She moved her husband to ask for the field
that had the springs of water. But Othniel is better at fighting than asking.
Her humour, her sense, and her exquisite tact carried all before them. Caleb
gave her “the upper springs and the nether springs.”
2. But what has this to do with the making of a hero? Much in every
way. Othniel was brave enough but he had a great deal to learn. He had taken
Debir with his sword, but here at his own door he is confronted with a
situation in which his sword is useless. Evidently he must learn the use of
other weapons. He must master the art of gracious speech. He must acquire tact.
There are knots which it avails not to cut, they must be patiently untied by
skilful fingers. He is to help in making a people who shall never become
formidable as a military power--never produce an Alexander or a Caesar--who
shall ultimately lose all their swords, lose every inch of their territory and
every stone of their citadels, and yet shall overcome their enemies through
sheer force of character. That he may do this God sent him to the home-school
and the farm-school to learn those homely virtues of common sense, patience,
and tact, without which strength and courage were of little avail.
3. Well, you too, young people, must not despise these.
III. “The children
of Israel did that which was evil in the sight of the Lord . . . the children
of Israel served Cashan-rishathaim eight years . . . the children of Israel
cried unto the Lord.” Many years--forty, perhaps, or even more--have passed
since Othniel and Achsah took possession of their new home, and we are
confronted with a new and painful situation. The Lord’s people “forgat the Lord
and served the Baalim“--that was their sin! “They served Cushan, King of
Mesopotamia“--that was their punishment Egypt and Pharaoh were not so far away
as they thought. Egypt, the land of bondage, is wherever sin is, and Pharaoh
follows iniquity as the night the day. “And the Lord raised up a saviour . . .
even Othniel, and the Spirit of the Lord came upon him.” He raised him to this
glorious height of manhood by breathing into him His own breath of love and
life. There were many reasons why Othniel should do nothing. The chief,
perhaps, was that apparently he could do nothing. Perhaps Achsah was
another--and the farm a third. Yes, depend upon it there were many voices both
within and without that bade Othniel beware of meddling with things beyond his
power. But the still small voice called. He put himself, all that he was, all
that he had, upon the altar, “and he judged Israel.” He called the erring
people back to truth and duty. Led by God’s spirit he began there, with the
people’s own sin first. Then he “went out to war . . . and his hand prevailed
against Cushan, and the land had rest forty years.” Thus Othniel, even Othniel,
became a saviour of his people, and the lion-like man of war, under the
influence of God’s spirit, was changed into a living prophecy of the Lamb of
God, the Saviour of the world. “And Othniel, the son of Kenaz, died,” having in
a rude, hard age, nobly sustained the character of the Happy Warrior. The phase
“Othniel--a saviour,” is at once his epitaph and his eulogy. Well, even so are
noble lives still made. Faith, patience, wisdom, and the breath of God are the
great life-building powers. Saviourhood is the end of all the ways of God in a
soul. He makes some men strong in order that they may help the weak. He gives
wisdom to some that they may thereby guide the foolish. He makes men holy in
order that they may turn the unholy from the error of their way. Now, young
people, will you be made strong in the Lord and in the strength of His might?
Around you, in numbers that Othniel never dreamed of, are men that “serve the
Baalim and serve Cushan,” that sin, and suffer for their sin in mind, body, and
estate. Will you help to save these? (J. M. Gibbon.)
The Lord strengthened Eglon the king of Moab against Israel.
Sin--suffering; penitence and deliverance repeated
I. New sin added:
“Again”
1. A painful surprise.
2. Deeper guilt. It showed more deliberation in the act of rebellion,
more stubborness of will, and greater defiance of the Divine authority. It also
implied the heavy guilt of despising all the argument involved in the close and
faithful dealing God had with them, in the terrible chastisements He had already brought down
on their heads.
3. A perplexing problem to solve. Why should the children of such
holy men as Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob become such incorrigible rebels? This is
the puzzle that meets us everywhere in the history of God’s Israel.
II. New
chastisement inflicted.
1. The Lord chastises in faithfulness.
2. He makes use of a new rod.
3. He sends a more severe token of His displeasure.
We do not know, indeed, that the oppression of the Moabites was
heavier than that of the Mesepotamian hordes. Probably there was not much to choose
between them. But it was certainly much longer continued. Now it is eighteen
years of servitude, whereas formerly it was but eight years. In this respect,
the scourge was much more severe, not only because the lash was longer applied,
but also because God showed that His ear was more heavy to hear their prayer.
It was also a deeper humiliation to be trodden upon by a people whom till now
they had despised, from their birth onwards, and who had been accustomed for
more than three generations to tremble at the name, and the mention of the God
of Israel.
4. He helps His enemies against His own people.
III. New expressions
of penitence.
1. In distress they flee to the universal refuge.
2. They had a special plea with God as children of the covenant.
3. Their temporary apostasy did not shut them out from the privilege
of prayer.
IV. New
deliverances experienced.
1. This deliverance came in answer to prayer.
2. It was brought about by a suitable instrument. (J. P. Millar.)
Ehud the son of Gera.
The summer parlour
I. A man under
great physical disadvantages may accomplish wonders. Ehud was left-handed; and
the original implies some serious defect in the right hand. So it has often
been. Among poets, the three greatest of all times were totally blind, viz.:
Homer, Ossian, and Milton. Among sculptors: Gambassio could not see the marble
or the chisel. Among authors: Pope, the poet, was a wretched invalid. Among
preachers: Robert Hall, Richard Baxter, Edward Payson, Samuel Rutherford, and
Dr. McAll were all invalids. These men in the battle of life fought with the
right hand tied behind them; but they had something better, viz., the spirit of
consecration to a righteous and noble life.
II. Ehud teaches us
to make thorough work of what belongs to our deliverance from sin. Some are
content to cut down sins which may be ranked as kings, princes, and captains:
but Ehud slew the common soldiers as well. It is to work as thorough that each of
us is called. This is no easy work. But heaven is not to be reached by
easy-going people.
III. God makes ready
in some sense every instrument of death, and is the sovereign disposer of all
events. There are three kingdoms--of Nature, of Providence, and of Grace. Of
each and all Jehovah is King. In the kingdom of Providence, some of the instruments
of death are common sickness, epidemics, accidents in erecting houses,
accidents at sea, accidents on the rail-train. These are no accidents! God has perfect right to slay
a man either by malaria or by the instrumentality of man. He alone has the keys
of the grave.
IV. Nobody steps
out of life as he expects. It was so with the king of Moab. Death to him was a
great surprise. There was but a step between him and death; but he knew it not.
“The unexpected is the probable!” The manner in which we step out of life is
pre-eminently unlooked for. If so, we press an inference: Prepare! Be ready!
The accepted time is now! (W.F. Bishop.)
I have a message from God
unto thee.--
A message from God
I. Before
proceeding to the delivery of this message, I would insist upon The fact here
stated--namely, that I come to you, as a messenger “from God.” One chief reason
why mankind hear with so much indifference and with so little effect upon
themselves, is simply that they fail to recognise that he who thus speaks to
them does come from God. Suppose, however, that yonder heaven should open, and
that down through the “everlasting gates” and along the fields of air should
come an angel burning with celestial glory and should stand suddenly in your
midst. Would not your minds be instantly raised to a fixed and reverent
attention? Would you not almost seem to hear in the tones and words of the
heavenly messenger the very voice of the Mighty One by whom he was sent? But I
claim that I as truly come “from God.”
II. We pass on
then, to The delivery of this message. It is a message from God; there is no
place for argument. It is a message to a soul in imminent danger of
destruction; there is no room for the play of imagination.
1. Man of the world, absorbed in the occupations of this present
life, whatever those occupations may be, “I have a message from God unto thee.”
“Riches and honours,” He declares, “come of Me alone.” “Riches,” He affirms,
“certainly take to themselves wings, they fly away as an eagle toward heaven.”
“Riches,” He warns you, “profit not in the day of wrath.” God declares to you,
that if you allow mammon to have a higher place in your hearts than Himself and
His service, you must expect nothing else but that He will strip you of all
your gains when perhaps you least expect it, and render all your labour of none
effect. He reminds you that you “can take nothing out” of this world. And He
bids me remind you that after death there is a judgment.
2. Young man and young woman just entering life, “I have a message from
God unto thee.” God bids me tell you that you have in your possession a
priceless treasure which He has committed to you to be used for His glory, and
for which He will hold you hereafter to a strict account. You are in the
possession of sensibilities not yet dead to the influence of His grace. He has
afforded you a perfect knowledge of His will, and He has, moreover, brought to
bear upon your hearts the power of His Spirit. He tells you that you may
squander and lose all the advantages which you now possess, but He warns you of
the result.
3. Lukewarm Christian, “I have a message from God unto thee.” God
bids me tell you, in few words, just what your religion means, and what it is
worth. You profess with your lips to serve God, while you plot in your heart
how you may serve God and the world. But God tells you that while you imagine
you are deceiving Him, He sees through the duplicity, the meanness of your
conduct.
4. Daring and impenitent man, you who can violate God’s law without a
feeling of alarm or remorse, “I have a message from God unto thee.” You have
travelled far. If ever you repent now, to the saving of your soul, it must be
by a severe and terrible struggle. You have trifled with God’s mercy, but His
justice has abated not one tittle of severity. God, however, sends me once
more, to tell you that if you will even now put forth all your strength to
break the cords wherewith sin has bound you, He will still vouchsafe to assist
and bless you in your endeavours. But if you are deaf to this message, if you
will still go on in impenitence and sin if you refuse to be reconciled to Him,
He informs you that He “reserveth wrath to His enemies.” (W. Rudder, D. D.)
The gospel message
I. The Tidings I
bring to-day are very different from those which Ehud carried to the King of
Moab, and my design in delivering them is very opposite to his. He came,
evidently, with an hostile intention, and concealed, under his garment, a
deadly weapon. The message he brought was a message of vengeance, and though
artfully disguised, was to prove fatal to the King of Moab. But the message I
bring is a message of peace and goodwill to men, and my intention in delivering
it is the most kind and friendly.
1. In the first place, let me beseech you to awake from that slumber
and insensibility in which, perhaps, you have too long remained. If you were
hanging upon the brink of a precipice, would you not haste away to some place
of safety?
2. A second message which I have from God to you is, to intreat you
to be reconciled to Him. Will you persist in your enmity to God when He is
willing to become your friend?
3. A third message I have got from God to you is to beseech you to
kiss the Son; that is, honour, love, and obey the Son lest He be angry, and ye
perish from the way. It was the great object of our blessed Lord’s ministry to
recommend Himself to the affections of men, and to persuade them to come to
Him.
4. A fourth message I have from God to you is, that you be prepared
to meet Him.
5. A fifth message which I have got from God to you is, that you set
your hearts and your house in order, for you must die and not live.
II. I go on to urge
you to comply with the gospel message, by a few motives and arguments.
1. Reflect first on the authority of the Person who sends the
message.
2. A second argument to persuade you to comply with the gospel
message, is the vast importance of it. It is not of a trifling nature, like a
piece of idle news, to which you may listen or not as you please. It is the
most interesting which was ever published to mankind. What is the history of
all the arts and sciences, when compared with the life and doctrine, with the
sufferings and death, with the resurrection and glory of the Son of God? Are
they not mere childish tales? And shall we prefer what tends to amuse and
entertain us, to what contributes to enlighten and to save us? S. A third
argument to engage you to comply with the gospel message is the encouraging and
precious promises contained in it. It is suited to our guilt and depravity as
sinners, and to our weakness and imperfection as creatures.
4. One argument more to engage you to comply with the gospel message
is, that your ruin is certain and inevitable if you do it not. Perhaps the
message I have now delivered you may be the last you ever shall receive; and is
not this a strong argument for complying with it? (D. Johnston, D. D.)
I have a message from God unto thee
And perhaps you are ready to say, If we were certain you had, we
should hang upon your lips with the utmost attention. Have you, indeed, had any
immediate communication from heaven concerning us? No. Have you any new
revelation to deliver to us? No: and yet, “I have a message from God unto you”:
that message is in this book--this book that many of you neglect and despise.
“I have a message from God unto you.” You are all equally interested in
it.
I. To the young.
It may be you start astonished that I begin with you. You fancy I should begin
with the aged who are just stepping into the grave. But how do you know they
are nearer death than you?
II. I have a
message from God unto you who are in the meridian of life. You who are engaged
in its active business--ye merchants, ye tradesmen, I have a message from God
unto you: “Be careful for nothing,” etc. “Seek ye first the kingdom of God,”
etc. “What shall it profit a man, if he should gain,” etc.
III. I have a
message to the old and grey-headed: “The hoary head is a crown of glory, if it
be found in the way of righteousness.” Is that honour yours? “Though you walk
through the valley,” etc. But are you an aged sinner, a hoary-headed trifler,
scoffing at eternity, with one foot in the grave? Alas! alas! I have a message
from God unto you: “The Judge standeth at the door.” “Behold, I come quickly,”
etc.
IV. I have a
message from God unto the rich. I have a message of warning: “Charge those that
are rich in this world,” etc. It is a message of caution: “How hardly shall
they that have riches,” etc. It is a message of admonition. What says the wise
man, “Wilt thou set thine eyes upon that which is not?” “Riches make to
themselves wings,” etc. Are riches the right soil for piety? No--but the most
formidable obstruction to its growth.
V. I have a
message to the poor. Are you poor and pious? Then yours is the kingdom of
heaven. “The poor have the gospel preached unto them.” The promises of
Scripture are principally applicable to the poor.
VI. Are any of you
sceptical? I have a message from God unto you. Are you sincere? Do you really
wish to ascertain the truth? I have a message from God unto you: “If any man will
do His will,” etc., that is the man who shall ascertain the truth, and be
emancipated by its freedom. But it is not the man who comes to speculate--who
comes to gratify an idle curiosity--who comes cherishing the love of sin; that
is not the man who shall know the truth.
VII. is your mind
deistical? You want more evidence to prove that this holy book is the Word of
God. Do you want mathematical demonstration? It were madness to ask it upon a
moral subject. What evidence do you want? Is it evidence of testimony? You have
it; and, I venture to say, there is more evidence of the Scriptures than of any
other history on the face of the earth. What evidence do you want? Is it the
evidence of prophecy? You have it. The Jews, at the present day, are a living and
a mighty argument in proof of the truth of the Scriptures. What evidence do you
want? Is it the evidence of miracles? That evidence was given in the first ages
of Christianity, in order to establish the Divine authority of the Christian
system, and, having accomplished it, it is done away; for if miracles had
continued to the present hour, they would have ceased to operate in the way of
miracles. There is sufficient evidence to justify the ways of God to men in
your condemnation, if, after all this evidence, you reject Him.
VIII. Do I speak to
any who are desponding and penitential? What a sudden change! what a delightful
contrast! “I have a message from God unto you.” “Come, and let us reason
together,” etc. (T. Raffles, D. D.)
The gospel message
I. The ministers
of the gospel are God’s messengers.
II. The ministers
of the gospel must be faithful in delivering their message.
III. If men refuse
to attend to the message thus delivered to them, it is at their own peril.
IV. A more direct
application of the text: “I have a message from God unto thee.”
1. To the careless, thoughtless person.
2. To the ungodly and the profane.
3. To the humble and serious inquirer after Divine truth (Hebrews 10:38; Revelations 2:5).
4. To those who, having once known the way of righteousness, are turned from the holy
commandment delivered unto them.
5. To him whose heart now labours under a sense of sin; who, being
brought to see his guilt and danger, is full of fear, and trembles for the
consequences. How shall he escape the sentence of His righteous law? What shall
he do to be saved? “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ,” etc.
6. To the established Christian; the man who, having fled to Christ
for refuge, from the guilt and power of sin, has found peace and joy in
believing; and being now professedly devoted to the Lord’s service, is living
in hope of the glory that shall be revealed. “Be faithful unto death,” etc. “Be
not weary of well-doing.” “Grow in grace,” and “Let thy profiting appear unto
all men.” (E. Cooper, M. A.)
God’s messages
I. God’s messages
are of different kinds.
1. Reconciliation.
2. Repentance.
3. Faith.
4. Life and salvation.
5. Gospel privileges.
6. Special tokens of Divine favour.
7. Deliverances.
8. Warning and threatening.
9. Calls to duty.
10. Commands.
11. Encouragement.
12. Doom.
II. Every man has
Divine messages sent to him personally. In the gospel, in the ordinary
providence of God, and in the workings of his own conscience.
1. God individualises every man.
2. The wise thing for every man is to act as if he were the only
person dealt with.
3. The messages are framed so as to have always an individual
application.
III. God’s messages
are always to be reverently received.
IV. it is dangerous
to turn a deaf ear to God’s messages.
V. Messages of
good to the righteous and of evil to the wicked often come together.
VI. God sends
messages of mercy before he sends messages of judgment.
VII. It is our duty
and our wisdom to be always ready to receive the Lord’s messages. Most men are
not ready when the message comes (Luke 17:27-30; Luke 12:20; Luke 16:19, with 23; Matthew 25:5; 1 Thessalonians 5:3; 1 Kings 22:26-27, with 34-37; Proverbs 14:32; Matthew 7:13; 2 Samuel 18:9). Some are ready (Luke 2:29-30; 2 Timothy 4:6-8; Acts 7:59-60; Hebrews 11:13-16; 2 Corinthians 5:2; 2 Corinthians 5:9; 2 Samuel 15:26; 1 Chronicles 23:5; 1 Samuel 3:18). (J. P. Millar.)
A distinct message
Can there be any person to whom God has never sent a message? Is
He your Creator? And has He made you to drift on the tempestuous sea of life in
solitude without compass or guide?
I. Messages from
God. This Bible is in the house of every Englishman. It is “a message from God
unto thee.” Other messengers you have had. Ought not the kindness and
compassion extended to you in providence to have led you to say, “How can I
grieve such a God?” Other messages have come to you draped in black. Can you
forget the season when life trembled in the scale, and the physician knew not
which way it would turn? Another dark messenger has come to you. Death has
bereaved you of friends and comrades. Are there those whom thou didst ensnare
who have gone their way before thee to feel their terrible remorse? Let the
remembrance of them make you pause and think and turn from your sins to the
living and true God.
II. The gospel of
the grace of God is in itself a message from God to you. Be sure of this, let
our case be what it may, the gospel preached is a message from God to our
souls. The hypocrite cannot long attend upon the means of grace without finding
that its doctrines are very heart-searching. They pierce his thoughts; they
hold a candle up to him, and if he would but look they would expose his desperate
condition. The formalists, the men who delight in ceremonies, cannot long
frequent God’s hallowed courts, where His true ministers proclaim His name,
with out perceiving that there is a message from God to them. The most careless
spirit will find in the Word a looking-glass held up to his face in which he
can see a reflection of himself.
III. If there be
such a message as this from God to us, how should we treat it? (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
The Christian minister bearing a message from God to man
I. The bearers of
the message.
II. The nature of
the message. Ehud.
III. The danger of
neglecting this message. (H. S. Plumptre, M. A.)
A message from God
I. It is a message
of truth.
II. It is a message
of love.
III. It is a message
of peace.
IV. It is a message
of reconciliation.
V. It is needed by
thee. This alone is the message humanity needs; it alone meets the breadth and
depth and multitude of its necessities. The light of nature is Cimmerian
darkness. It reveals your danger, but reveals no means of rescue.
VI. It is suited to
thee.
1. It is suited to your ignorance, “making wise unto salvation.”
2. It is suited to man’s sin, expiating its guilt by the blood of the
Cross,
3. It is suited to man’s misery.
VII. It is
sufficient for thee. No want is there in our being which it cannot fill--no
multitude it cannot minister to. VIII. It is sent to thee. (J. Cumming, D.
D.)
A message from God
Think, first of all, of the feelings with which we should expect
such a message to be received. For, consider the scene from which that message
comes: from God’s throne on high. And consider the Presence from which that
message emanates--even from our Creator, our Preserver, in whose presence we
may at any moment be called to stand. And think next of the effects which we
should expect the delivery of such a message to produce--profound attention,
deep gratitude, perfect obedience. “A message from God! “Is such a thing
possible? Has there ever come to earth, and to us men, a message from God?
Surely. The whole world is full of voices of God. The night wears away--the
grey light comes stealing on. And the sweet dawn of early day says, “I have a
message from God unto thee.” To the sick--“I have a message to thee.” “There
shall be neither sorrow, nor crying . . . neither shall there be any more
pain.” To the mourner--“I have a message to thee.” “God shall wipe away all
tears from their eyes.” To the secret sinner--“I have a message from God unto
thee.” “God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing,
whether it be good, or whether it be evil.” The day goes on--a clock strikes.
“I have a message from God unto thee,” it says: “to thee, O careless one. The
sands are fast running out--take heed how you waste time.” Men are at work in
the fields. Suddenly there comes a booming sound, borne towards them on the
breezes, “Hark! that’s the passing bell.” “I have a message from God”--“It is
appointed unto men once to die; and after this, the judgment!” (J. B. C.
Murphy, B. A.)
Application of the truth
D. L. Moody was first awakened to an interest in spiritual things
while sitting drowsily in Dr. Kirk’s church in Boston, by some one suddenly
rousing him and telling him that the sermon “meant him.”
Ehud . . . took the dagger . . . and thrust it into his belly.--
Ehud: left-handedness
According to the Septuagint, Ehud was an ambidexter; that is, a
man who could use both hands with equal facility. Hector boasted ”Many a Greek
hath bled by me, and I can shift my shield from right to left.” Of the children
of Benjamin we read (Judges 20:16). Plato recommended all
soldiers to acquire equal facility in the use of both hands. It is evident from
all this, as well as from what is known amongst ourselves, that left-handedness
has always been considered peculiar, otherwise it would, not have been pointed
out as a feature in any case. We never say of a man that he is right-handed,
but we do remark upon any man whom we see using his left hand for purposes
which are usually assigned to the right.
I. Many men may be
dependent upon one man.
1. The one man may be in a better position than the many, and this
may account for his influence. Take the case of a besieged city: one man
outside the walls may work out the deliverance of the whole, etc.
2. The one man may be able to move about more quickly than the many.
Crowds cannot be hurried to any wise action. They soon lose themselves in
confusion. They need leadership to give unity and precision to their movements.
3. Specially is one good man more than all the hosts of evil. For the
sake of the one God preserves the many.
II. The instruments
chosen of God may often surprise and disappoint men. God sent a left-handed man
to deliver Israel! It seemed like a mockery. In view of this apparent eccentricity
of the Divine method we should remember--
1. A man is not a great man merely because he is left-handed. Bunyan
was a tinker, but it does not follow that every tinker is a Bunyan. George
Whitefield was cross-eyed, but it does not follow that squinting is a condition
of good preaching.
2. No man should be condemned merely because he does not take hold of
things in the common way. Give every man an opportunity of proving himself.
III. Some good use
may be made of the most unlikely qualifications. Many are secretly lamenting
some peculiarity of temperament, some defect of body, or some circumstance
which seems to shut them off from the general band of workers. Let such persons
look at the text and take heart again! (J. Parker, D. D.)
Lessons from the death of Eglon
I. The power of
left-handed men. There are some men who, by physical organisation, have as much
strength in their left hand as in their right hand; but there is something in
this text which implies that Ehud had some defect in his right hand which compelled him to use
the left. Oh, the power of left-handed men! Genius is often self-observant,
careful of itself, not given to much toil, bringing increase to its own
aggrandisement, while many a man with no natural endowments, actually defective
in physical and mental organisation, has an earnestness for the right, a
patient industry, an all-consuming perseverance, which achieves marvels for the
kingdom of Christ. Though left-handed, as Ehud, they can strike down a sin as
great and imperial as Eglon. But! don’t suppose that Ehud, the first time he
took a sling in his left hand, could throw a stone a hair’s breadth and not
miss. I suppose it was practice that gave him the wonderful dexterity. Go forth
to your spheres of duty, and be not discouraged if in your first attempts you
miss the mark. There was an oculist performing a very difficult operation on
the human eye. A young doctor stood by and said, “How easily you do that--it
don’t seem to cause you any trouble at all.” “Ah,” said the old oculist, “it is
very easy now, but I spoiled a hat full of eyes to learn that.” Be not
surprised if it takes some practice before we can help men to moral eyesight,
and bring them to a vision of the Cross. Left-handed men, to the work! Take the
gospel for a sling, and faith and repentance for the smooth stone from the
brook. Take sure aim, God directs the weapon, and great Goliaths will tumble
before you.
II. The danger of
worldly elevations. This Eglon was what the world called a great man. There
were hundreds of people who would have considered it the greatest honour of
their life just to have him speak to them; yet, although he is so high up in
worldly position, he is not beyond the reach of Ehud’s dagger. I see a great
many people trying to climb up in social position, having an idea that there is
a safe place somewhere far above, not knowing that the mountain of fame has a
top like Mont Blanc, covered with perpetual snow. Oh, be content with just such
a position as God has placed you in. It may not be said of us, “He was a great
general,” or “He was an honoured chieftain,” or “He was mighty in worldly
attainments”; but this thing may be said of you and me, “He was a good citizen,
a faithful Christian, a friend of Jesus.” And that in the last day will be the
highest of all eulogiums.
III. Death comes to
the summer-house. Eglon did not expect to die in that fine place. Amid all the
flower-leaves that drifted like summer snow into the window; in the tinkle and
dash of the fountains; in the sound of a thousand leaves fluttering on one tree
branch; in the cool breeze that came up to shake feverish troubles out of the
king’s locks--there was nothing that spake of death, but there he died! In the
winter, when the snow is a shroud, and when the wind is a dirge, it is easy to
think of our mortality. And yet my text teaches that death does sometimes come
to the summer-house. He is blind, and cannot see the leaves. He is deaf, and
cannot hear the fountains. Gather about us what we will of comfort and luxury,
when the pale messenger comes he does not stop to look at the architecture of
the house before he comes in; nor, entering, does he wait to examine the
pictures we have gathered on the wall. (T. De Witt Talmage.)
Unexpected perils
1. I daresay you think it was a rash thing of Eglon to receive Ehud
in private, when he knew very well that the man who asked to see him was one of
a people that hated him and longed to be rid of his oppression. And what is
more extraordinary in his rashness is that he suffers Ehud to come to him with
that great dagger a cubit long on his thigh. It is true that Ehud had a cloak,
but I do not think it could altogether have concealed the weapon. I believe the
reason why Eglon was easy in mind was this, Ehud had got his dagger slung on
the wrong side. He left the fact of Ehud being left-handed entirely out of his
calculation, and that was his ruin.
2. “Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall.” We
have enemies, temptations without and within, to watch against. It is just
when, and where, and how you least expect danger, that a fall may come. Take
care! be sober! be vigilant l (S. Baring-Gould, M. A.)
Effective preachers compared to Ehud
When you see a man with a gift in his right hand, and his dagger
concealed where only his left hand could get at it, that man is worth the
watching. There is no preacher in the world worth his salt who is not like
that. Like Ehud, have the right hand filled with the gift, with the gospel
offer and present, if you like, but for God’s sake, and for the sake of
everything, hit hard with the left! Preaching that does any good is typified in
Ehud. The gift, and the gift in the best hand, and the gift put first; but look
out for the left, look out for the blow. It is not to be all coddling, and
wheedling, and coaxing, and pleading, “Oh!” and “Ah!” and “Won’t you come?”
There must be the law, the terror, the close-quarters, the words that are
daggers, and the daggers driven home, and that unexpectedly. For that is
another element in Ehud. Ehud is what we may call a man who does his work in
his own way, and therefore he abounds in what I may call ”surprise.” In the
Church, in all our pulpits, in all our active operations for God at home and
abroad, would that we had more of the surprise; more unexpected things happening.
More men who can work the left hand when the right hand gets tired, And when
God sends a surprise-man to us, don’t you turn round and find fault with that
man. Encourage him; cheer him on. He doesn’t do as you do--he does, it may be,
the other way; don’t find fault with his methods. The test of all preaching
styles is, do they hit? Do they go home? Do they minimise man and magnify God?
Then they are all right. (John McNeill.)
They took a key.--
A sermon upon keys
There are many different kinds of keys in the world, but I think
we might select one or two of them, and try if we can make them keys of wisdom,
to open our understandings. We shall, then, begin with a small but a very
important key, namely--
I. The Watch-Key.
The heart of the watch is the mainspring. The watch will not go unless the main
spring is right.
II. The “Safe” Key.
Two burglars have been trying hard for hours to break into a merchant’s safe.
At last they give it up as hopeless and make their escape. In due time the
merchant opens his shop, and takes a small key out of his pocket, and in less
than a minute, and as if by magic, the heavy iron doors swing open. Then he
takes out the gold, silver, and other valuables that he only can reach. The
Bible is the “safe” of the Christian. Many people look at it, but only a few
possess the key and are able to get at the treasures. Some people are so
foolish as to
deny that there are treasures in the Word of God because they cannot find them.
III. The House Key.
To be presented with the key of a house signifies to have liberty to go in and
out of that house. Christ speaks of a house of which He is the door (John 10:9). Faith is the key to open it,
for He again tells us that (John 3:19). All who are in Christ are
safe from the many dangers that ruin the souls of men. Within the fold there is
pasture for the sheep. So in Christ there is refreshing and satisfying pasture.
Nothing else can satisfy us. (John Mitchell.)
Shamgar the son of Anath.
Shamgar
This is one of the most singular and astonishing battles in the
history of the world. If Shamgar had been stationed in some Thermopylae, where
the foe could only come one or two at a time it would not have been so
wonderful; but he was in the open field, literally surrounded by six hundred
desperadoes, bent on plunder and death. It gives us some idea of what pluck can
do for a man when fired with the love of home and country. To my mind, there is
something wonderful, almost miraculous, in this strange battle and unparalleled
victory. I wonder, first of all, how he could muster courage to face so many,
and how he escaped when surrounded by such a multitude. I wonder also, that
when the Philistines saw that they were being slaughtered at every blow, and
that they had no power to injure their mysterious antagonist, that they fought
on and stood their ground until the last man was slain. It only shows that men
may have courage in fighting on the side of evil without a particle of truth or
righteousness to inspire them; that they will sacrifice their lives on the
altar of a bad cause as well as a good one.
I. Men determine
their future by the manner in which they meet the duties and provocations of
the present. God never selects a lazy, idle man, when He is going to choose a
person to do some noble work. He promotes none but busy men. Shamgar was
ploughing when the Philistines came upon him. It speaks well for him that he
had heart to plough at such a time, for the whole country was thrown into great
fear and discouragement. Few men, I am inclined to think, had courage enough
just then to plough. Such men are an inspiration and a blessing to any
community. So far as we can ascertain, Shamgar was an humble labouring man. Yet
his heroic conduct on this occasion brought him into notice, and raised him to
be one of the judges of Israel. The world is looking for men who can bring
things to pass. Noble deeds are the stairway leading to greatness and honour.
If you would be trusted, first learn to be honest; if you would rule, first
learn how to obey; if you would rise to a more important position, fill the
place where you are to overflowing with yourself, and God will soon beckon you
to a wider sphere.
II. In the absence
of success, it is poor logic to throw the blame on our instruments or
surroundings. The workman is more than his tools. The spirit and skill of the
worker tower above his surroundings, and give value and significance to the
instruments he wields. Shamgar fought this battle with an ox goad. However
discouraging your circumstances, if you give yourself fully to God, and walk in
the full honours of uprightness before Him, the great Captain of our salvation
will not only give you blessed foretastes of the “rest that remaineth for the
people of God,” but He will also enable you to cut your way to victory through
all the spiritual Philistines that may confront you, even though your
instruments may be as insignificant as those of Shamgar.
III. In our life
work we should be natural, and use the instruments we know best how to handle.
Shamgar fought with the ex-goad. He knew so well how to handle it that, at
close range, it was a terrible weapon to come in contact with. He could kill
more men with it in a crowd than with sword or musket. He knew the spring and
feel of it so perfectly that every stroke brought two or three Philistines to the
ground. What we want in order to our greatest possible efficiency is, not
somebody else’s way of doing things, but our own, trained and sanctified by the
grace of God. No two persons are exactly alike; and so there are phases of work
which each individual is constitutionally fitted to do which no other person
can ever do quite as well.
IV. New
instrumentalities should not be condemned simply because they are new and out
of the regular order, but should be judged and valued according to their
results. As a weapon of destruction the ox goad was unknown up to this time;
but, judged of by its results, it was worthy of high appreciation. It may be
that, in the past, the Church has been a little too conservative in the matter
of new agency; that she has been too much inclined to condemn any agency that
was not officially sanctioned or technically approved. There is nothing that
carries conviction like the logic of facts, and nothing succeeds like success.
Think of one man against six hundred, with nothing in his hands but an ox goad.
You may not be as well qualified for the work as some others; but still God has
a work for you to do, and He will help you to do it if you do your best and
trust Him. It may be that your sphere is humble and obscure, but you can live a
noble life and do grand work in obscurity. Some of the greatest evangelists of
our own day teach us two lessons--
1. That sanctified individuality is the condition of usefulness and
the great want of the times.
2. That the vast majority of Christians have talent enough to become
each a mighty power, in the hands of God, to hasten the millennial glory of the
future. (T. Kelly.)
A man for the time
From this let all true patriots take heart--with the hour and the
peril comes the man required.
I. The apparent incompatibility
and insufficiency of the deliverer and his weapon. A herdman carrying a goad,
an ugly implement some eight or ten feet long, and shod with iron. Uncouth,
without such military training as the science of the times could give,
destitute of such arms as the Philistines would be likely to fear. He could
only be looked upon as an improvised leader with an extemporised armament.
Opposed to him was a host led by hereditary chieftains. Now, as ever, the
Philistine opponents of Christ and the truth grin inanely at the rabble rout,
as they deem the Lord’s host to be. They sneer at the Word, albeit they bear
many scars inflicted by that old Damascene blade. They laugh at the praying,
the preaching, and the labour of the “unlearned and ignorant men” whom the Lord
has called to do His work.
II. The triumphant
efficacy of both. Shamgar’s generalship, strong arm, awful ox-goad, proved to
be no laughing matters. The soul of a patriot, the genius of a leader, the
skill of a strategist, were all in him. Neither devil, lords, nor army had much
time to sneer when Shamgar reached them. They had mistaken the man, the
instrument, and the God behind all. History repeats and spiritualises itself.
For, we ask, in what is the augury, whence is the success of our Christian
warfare, waged against the enemies of God and man? In numbers, literary
efficiency, dialectical skill, scientific theology? Not so; Satan can beat us
out of the field in every one of these. He is constantly doing it. Not all the
drum-beating, banner-waving, and shouting of our conferences and demonstrations
ever frighten him. But his doom is sealed when a Christ-filled Shamgar leads.
That man who on his knees pleads and waits to know, “Lord, what wilt Thou have
me to do?”--such are the men we want, the men we should pray for, the men we
ought to be. The fact that we are Christians should be a certificate that we
are surrendered, Christ-filled men, or our profession is a lie. Would that all
were so. Oh, that all may become so! Whatever the sacrifice involved, there is
no more happy life, and, at its close, can be no more glorious epitaph than “he
saved Israel!” (James Dann.)
Shamgar: mean instruments
1. How absurd it is for any man to blame his tools for bad work.
Shamgar used an ox-goad; Samson wielded the jawbone of an ass; David had but a
sling and stone. Some times we think what wonders we could do if we had better
instruments.
2. How important it is that men should use those instruments which
they can handle most skilfully. Shamgar knew how to use the ox-goad, and David
knew how to use the sling and stone.
3. How foolish it would be to ridicule the instruments when the
results are so obviously good. Look at the six hundred dead men! Look at the
slain giant! Look at the prostrate walls of Jericho! The rule applies to
every department of life. It applies to preaching. It applies to foreign
missions. It applies to every Christian effort.
4. How victories are sometimes won in the face of the greatest
improbabilities. One man against six hundred! Some men would have succumbed
under the mere pressure of numbers, but Shamgar fought the crowd. Do not let us
blame men for working with instruments that have not been officially or
technically approved. The one great object is to do good. What meaner
instrument can there be than the Cross? (J. Parker, D. D.)
Shamgar’s ox-goad
Shamgar considered not whether he was equipped for attacking
Philistines, but turned on them from the plough, his blood leaping in him with
swift indignation. The instrument of his assault was not made for the use to
which it was put: the power lay in the arm that wielded the goad and the
fearless will of the man who struck for his own birthright, freedom--for
Israel’s birth right, to be the servant of no other race. Undoubtedly it is
well that in any efforts made for the Church or for society men should consider
how they are to act, and should furnish themselves in the best manner for the
work that is to be done. No outfit of knowledge, skill, experience, is to be
despised. A man does not serve the world better in ignorance than in learning,
in bluntness than in refinement. But the serious danger for such an age as our
own is that strength may be frittered away and zeal expended in the mere
preparation of weapons, in the mere exercise before the war begins. The
important points at issue are apt to be lost sight of, and the vital
distinctions on which the whole battle turns to fade away in an atmosphere of
compromise. (R. A. Watson, M. A.)
Shamgar’s ox-goad
The ox-goad was not much; but Shamgar with the ox-goad,
that was the sight to see. Perhaps you cannot work the ox-goad. It fitted
Shamgar, and he fitted it; but, after all, it was the man. It is the man. I
read Wesley’s sermons--those sermons that routed the Philistines of a hundred
years ago, and delivered Israel over all this England; I read those sermons of
Wesley and Whitefield, and, I say, what is in them? You would be tired of them
from me. Why? You see the obvious answer. You look at that ox-goad and say,
“There is not much in that”; neither is there. It was the man, and God in the
man. One was taken to see a famous sword that had belonged to a famous
swordsman, and when he saw it he said, “I do not see much in that sword,” and
there came the obvious answer, “No, but you should have seen the arm that
wielded it.” Shamgar’s hand grew into the hilt of that ox-goad, and it became
part of him. The ox-goad and Shamgar, again, became part of the arm of the Lord
God Almighty. That was all in it, and that may be in you and me, God taking our
individuality and consecrating it and using it for His eternal glory. Now, be
yourself, whether you be at the plough or at the desk; God can do His work with
the ox-goad; He can do it with the pen; He can do it with anything if it lies
near His hand. And, last of all, what honourable mention this ploughman gets:
“He also delivered Israel.” Why, the mighty Joshua did no more! (John
McNeill.)
Great results with imperfect tools
Many of the discoveries in astronomy, chemistry, mathematics,
navigation, and science generally, were made with very imperfect instruments.
Dr. Valentine Mott’s remarkable surgical skill is the more honourable because
of his comparatively poor instruments. True genius shows itself in
accomplishing grand results with imperfect tools. Rittenhouse, whose name is a
synonym for marvellous scientific attainments, worked in boyhood on his
father’s farm, and calculated eclipses on plough-handles and fences; and,
although studying alone, made himself master of Newton’s “Principia,” and
discovered for himself the method of fluxions when in his nineteenth year. It
is little wonder that when he observed the transit of Venus (June 3, 1769),
while in his private observatory at Norriton, he fainted from excitement at the
moment of apparent contact. Benjamin West, the Anglo-American painter, made his
first colours from leaves and berries, and his first brushes were taken from a
cat’s tail. Thus self-taught, at the age of sixteen he practised
portrait-painting in the villages near Philadelphia, his first historical picture
being “The Death of Socrates.” Humphry Davy had but little opportunity to
acquire scientific knowledge, but he made old pans, kettles, and bottles
contribute to his success as he experimented in the attic of the apothecary
shop in which he was employed. Over a stable in London lived Michael Faraday, a
poor boy who made a living by carrying news papers to customers. While
apprenticed to a bookbinder and engaged in binding the “Encyclopaedia
Britannica,” his eyes fell on the article on electricity. He had only a glass
vial, an old pan, and a few other articles with which to make experiments. A
friend took him to hear Sir Humphry Davy lecture on chemistry. Later the great
Davy called on the humble Michael. The years pass, and Tyndall said of Faraday,
“He is the greatest experimental philosopher the world has ever seen.”.
──《The Biblical Illustrator》