Obrazy na stronie
PDF
ePub

THE JUDGES.

LECTURE XIII.

ISRAEL UNDER THE JUDGES.

istics of the

We are now arrived at the last stage of the first period of the history of the Chosen People. We have Characterseen the nation of slaves turned into a nation of period. freemen in the deliverance from Egypt. We have seen them become the depositaries of a new religion in Mount Sinai. We have seen them in their first flush of conquest in the Promised Land. We have now to see the gradual transition from their primitive state, and to track them through the interval between the death of Joshua and the rise of Samuel-between the establishment of the sanctuary at Shiloh on the first occupation of the country, and its final overthrow by the Philistines.

The characteristics of this period are such as especially invite our critical and historical inquiries. Other portions of Scripture may be more profitable "for doctrine, for correction, for reproof, for instruc❝tion in righteousness;" but for merely human interest for the lively touches of ancient manners - for the succession of romantic incidents-for the conciousness that we are living face to face with the persons described-for the tragical pathos of events and characters there is nothing like the history of the

Judges from Othniel to Eli. No portion of the Hebrew Scriptures, whether by its actual date or by the vividness of its representations, brings us so near to the times described; and on none has more light been thrown by the German scholar, to whose investigations we owe so much in the study of the Older Dispensation. It would seem, if one may venture to say so, as if the Book of Judges had been left in the Sacred Books, with the express view of enforcing upon us the necessity which we are sometimes anxious to evade, of recognizing the human, national, let us even add, barbarian element which plays its part in the sacred history. In other portions of the Hebrew annals, the Divine character of the Revelation is so constantly before us, or the character of the human agents reaches so nearly to the Divine, that we may, if we choose, almost forget that we are reading of men of like passions with ourselves. But in the history of the Judges, the whole tenor of the book, especially of its concluding chapters, renders this forgetfulness impossible. The angles and roughnesses of the sacred narrative, which elsewhere we endeavor to smooth down into one uniform level, here start out from the surface too visibly to be overlooked by the most superficial observer. Like the rugged rock which, to this day, breaks the platform of the Temple area at Jerusalem, and reminds us of the bare natural features of the mountain that must have protruded themselves into the midst of the magnificence of Solomon, so the Book of Judges recalls our thoughts from the ideal, which we imagine of past and of sacred ages, and reminds us by a rude shock. that, even in the heart of the Chosen People, even in the next generation after Joshua, there were irregularities, imperfections, excrescences, which it is the glory

of the Sacred Historian to have recorded faithfully, and which it will be our wisdom no less faithfully to study.

66

[ocr errors]

"In those days there was no king in Israel,' but every "man did that which was right in his own eyes." "In those days there was no king in Israel." "It "came to pass in those days when there was no king in "Israel." "In those days there was no king in Israel.” every man did that which was right in his own eyes." This sentence, thus frequently and earnestly repeated, is the key-note of the whole book. It expresses the freedom, the freshness, the independence, the license, the anarchy, the disorder, of the period. It tells us that we are in a period of transition, gradually drawing near to that time when there will be a "king in Israel," when there will be "peace on all sides "round about him, Judah and Israel dwelling safely, every man under his vine and under his fig-tree, from "Dan unto Beersheba." But meantime the dark and bright sides of the history shift with a rapidity unknown in the latter times of the story" The children of “Israel did evil in the sight of the Lord," and “The "children of Israel cried unto the Lord."2 Never was there a better instance than in these two alternate sentences, ten times repeated, that we need not pronounce any age entirely bad or entirely good.

66

I. First, then, look at the outward relations of the country. The Conquest was over, but the up- Outward heavings of the conquered population still con- struggles. tinued. The ancient inhabitants, like the Saxons under the Normans, still retained their hold on large tracts, or on important positions throughout the coun

1 Judg. xvii. 6; xviii. 1; xix. 1;

XXI. 25.

2 Judg. ii. 4, 11, 18, 19; iii. 7, 9, 12, 15; iv. 1, 3; vi. 1, 7; x. 6, 10; xiii. 1

try. The neighboring powers still looked on the newcomers as an easy prey to incursion and devastation, if not to actual subjugation. Against these enemies, both from without and from within,- but chiefly from within, a constant struggle had to be maintained; with all the dangers, adventures, and trials incident to such a state,—a war of independence such as was not to occur again till the struggle of the Maccabees against the Greek kings, or even of the last insurgents against the Romans. A glance at the first chapter of the Book of Judges will show in a moment the motley, parti-colored character which Palestine must have presented after the death of Joshua. Nearly the whole of the sea-coast, all the strongholds in the rich plain of Esdraelon, and, in the heart of the country the invincible fortress of Jebus, were still in the hands of the unbelievers.1 Every one of Continua- these spots was a focus of disaffection, a bone Conquest. of contention, a natural field of battle. look at the relations of conquerors and conquered as they appear in the story of Abimelech. The insurrection, which then was nearly successful, of the ancient Shechemites - the "sons of Emmor, the father of Sychem"-reveals the fires which must have been smouldering everywhere throughout the land, and which would have broken out more frequently, had the gov ernment oftener fallen into worthless hands. Or look at the migration of the sons of Dan. It is like the story of the whole nation epitomized over again in the portion of a single tribe. "In those days the "tribe of the Danites sought them an inheritance to "dwell in." They were still unprovided. Spies were

tion of the

1 See Lecture XII.
2 See Lecture XV.

3 Josh. xix. 47; Judg. xviii. 1–31.

Or

sent forth, as formerly by Moses and by Joshua. They return with the account of a land "very good," "a place where there is no want of anything;" and their kinsmen follow their guiding. They leave the trace of their encampment on their road, like a second Gilgal, and they track the Jordan to its source, and, in the secluded corner under Mount Hermon, fall on the easternmost of the Phoenician colonies, and es tablish themselves in that beautiful and fertile spot, with a sanctuary of their own, and a priesthood of their own, during the whole period of which we are speaking.

Slowly, gradually, the dominion of the Chosen People was left to work its way. First, they re- Successive pel distant invaders from Mesopotamia. This conflicts. is the special work of the Lion of the tribe of Judah, - of the last hero of the old generation. Then, under Deborah and Barak, they encounter the final rising of the Canaanites.2 The battle of Merom is repeated over again by the waters of Megiddo. In that central conflict of the period, Israel and Canaan met together for the last time face to face in battle. Then follows the most trying invasion to which the country had been ever subjected, the wild Midianite hordes from the desert. How great was the crisis, is proved by the greatness of the champion who was called forth to resist it. In Gideon and his family we see the nearest approach to a king that this epoch produces. Finally, they are brought into collision with the new enemies, the race of strangers, who, as it would seem, had barely settled in Palestine at the Sime of the first conquest, the "Philistines," + — and

1 Judg. xiii. 25; xviii. 12.

2 See Lecture XIV.

3 See Leeture XV.

4 See Lecture XVI.

-

« PoprzedniaDalej »