Chapter 66
The Death
of Saul
[This
chapter is based on 1 Samuel 28; 31.]
AGAIN
war was declared between Israel and the Philistines. "The Philistines
gathered themselves together, and came and pitched in Shunem," on the
northern edge of the plain of Jezreel; while Saul and his forces encamped
but a few miles distant, at the foot of Mount Gilboa, on the southern
border of the plain. It was on this plain that Gideon, with three hundred
men, had put to flight the hosts of Midian. But the spirit that inspired
Israel's deliverer was widely different from that which now stirred the
heart of the king. Gideon went forth strong in faith in the mighty God of
Jacob; but Saul felt himself to be alone and defenseless, because God had
forsaken him. As he looked abroad upon the Philistine host, "he was
afraid, and his heart greatly trembled."
Saul had
learned that David and his force were with the Philistines, and he
expected that the son of Jesse would take this opportunity to revenge the
wrongs he had suffered. The king was in sore distress. It was his own
unreasoning passion, spurring him on to destroy the chosen of God, that
had involved the nation in so great peril. While he had been engrossed in
pursuing David he had neglected the defense of his kingdom. The
Philistines, taking advantage of its unguarded condition, had penetrated
into the very heart of the country. Thus while Satan had been urging Saul
to employ every energy in hunting David, that he might destroy him, the
same malignant spirit had inspired the Philistines to seize their
opportunity to work Saul's ruin and overthrow the people of God. How often
is the same policy still employed by the archenemy! He moves upon some
unconsecrated heart to kindle envy and strife in the church, and then,
taking advantage of the divided condition of God's people, he stirs up his
agents to work their ruin.
On the morrow
Saul must engage the Philistines in battle. The shadows of impending doom
gathered dark about him; he
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longed for help and guidance. But it was in
vain that he sought counsel from God. "The Lord answered him not,
neither by dreams, nor by Urim, nor by prophets." The Lord never
turned away a soul that came to Him in sincerity and humility. Why did he
turn Saul away unanswered? The king had by his own act forfeited the
benefits of all the methods of inquiring of God. He had rejected the
counsel of Samuel the prophet; he had exiled David, the chosen of God; he
had slain the priests of the Lord. Could he expect to be answered by God
when he had cut off the channels of communication that Heaven had
ordained? He had sinned away the Spirit of grace, and could he be answered
by dreams and revelations from the Lord? Saul did not turn to God with
humility and repentance. It was not pardon for sin and reconciliation with
God, that he sought, but deliverance from his foes. By his own
stubbornness and rebellion he had cut himself off from God. There could be
no return but by the way of penitence and contrition; but the proud
monarch, in his anguish and despair, determined to seek help from another
source.
"Then
said Saul unto his servants, Seek me a woman that hath a familiar spirit,
that I may go to her, and inquire of her." Saul had a full knowledge
of the character of necromancy. If had been expressly forbidden by the
Lord, and the sentence of death was pronounced against all who practiced
its unholy arts. During the life of Samuel, Saul had commanded that all
wizards and those that had familiar spirits should be put to death; but
now, in the rashness of desperation, he had recourse to that oracle which
he had condemned as an abomination.
It was told
the king that a woman who had a familiar spirit was living in concealment
at Endor. This woman had entered into covenant with Satan to yield herself
to his control, to fulfill his purposes; and in return, the prince of evil
wrought wonders for her and revealed secret things to her.
Disguising
himself, Saul went forth by night with but two attendants, to seek the
retreat of the sorceress. Oh, pitiable sight! the king of Israel led
captive by Satan at his will! What path so dark for human feet to tread as
that chosen by one who has persisted in having his own way, resisting the
holy influences of the Spirit of God! What bondage so terrible as that of
him who is given over to the control of the worst of tyrants--himself!
Trust
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in God and obedience to His will were the only conditions upon which
Saul could be king of Israel. Had he complied with these conditions
throughout his reign, his kingdom would have been secure; God would have
been his guide, the Omnipotent his shield. God had borne long with Saul;
and although his rebellion and obstinacy had well-nigh silenced the divine
voice in the soul, there was still opportunity for repentance. But when in
his peril he turned from God to obtain light from a confederate of Satan,
he had cut the last tie that bound him to his Maker; he had placed himself
fully under the control of that demoniac power which for years had been
exercised upon him, and which had brought him to the verge of destruction.
Under the
cover of darkness Saul and his attendants made their way across the plain,
and, safely passing the Philistine host, they crossed the mountain ridge,
to the lonely home of the sorceress of Endor. Here the woman with a
familiar spirit had hidden herself away that she might secretly continue
her profane incantations. Disguised as he was, Saul's lofty stature and
kingly port declared that he was no common soldier. The woman suspected
that her visitor was Saul, and his rich gifts strengthened her suspicions.
To his request, "I pray thee, divine unto me by the familiar spirit,
and bring me him up, whom I shall name unto thee," the woman
answered, "Behold, thou knowest what Saul hath done, how he hath cut
off those that have familiar spirits, and the wizards, out of the land:
wherefore then layest thou a snare for my life, to cause me to die?"
Then "Saul sware to her by the Lord, saying, As the Lord liveth,
there shall no punishment happen to thee for this thing." And when
she said, "Whom shall I bring up unto thee?" he answered,
"Samuel."
After
practicing her incantations, she said, "I saw gods ascending out of
the earth. . . . An old man cometh up; and he is covered with a mantle.
And Saul perceived that it was Samuel, and he stooped with his face to the
ground, and bowed himself."
It was not
God's holy prophet that came forth at the spell of a sorcerer's
incantation. Samuel was not present in that haunt of evil spirits. That
supernatural appearance was produced solely by the power of Satan. He
could as easily assume the form of Samuel as he could assume that of an
angel of light, when he tempted Christ in the wilderness.
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The woman's
first words under the spell of her incantation had been addressed to the
king, "Why hast thou deceived me? for thou art Saul." Thus the
first act of the evil spirit which personated the prophet was to
communicate secretly with this wicked woman, to warn her of the deception
that had been practiced upon her. The message to Saul from the pretended
prophet was, "Why hast thou disquieted me, to bring me up? And Saul
answered, I am sore distressed; for the Philistines make war against me,
and God is departed from me, and answereth me no more, neither by
prophets, nor by dreams: therefore I have called thee, that thou mayest
make known unto me what I shall do."
When Samuel
was living, Saul had despised his counsel and had resented his reproofs.
But now, in the hour of his distress and calamity, he felt that the
prophet's guidance was his only hope, and in order to communicate with
Heaven's ambassador he vainly had recourse to the messenger of hell! Saul
had placed himself fully in the power of Satan; and now he whose only
delight is in causing misery and destruction, made the most of his
advantage, to work the ruin of the unhappy king. In answer to Saul's
agonized entreaty came the terrible message, professedly from the lips of
Samuel:
"Wherefore
then dost thou ask of me, seeing the Lord is departed from thee, and is
become thine enemy? And the Lord hath done to him, as he spake by me: for
the Lord hath rent the kingdom out of thine hand, and given it to thy
neighbor, even to David: because thou obeyedst not the voice of the Lord,
nor executedst His fierce wrath upon Amalek, therefore hath the Lord done
this thing unto thee this day. Moreover the Lord will also deliver Israel
with thee into the hand of the Philistines."
All through
his course of rebellion Saul had been flattered and deceived by Satan. It
is the tempter's work to belittle sin, to make the path of transgression
easy and inviting, to blind the mind to the warnings and threatenings of
the Lord. Satan, by his bewitching power, had led Saul to justify himself
in defiance of Samuel's reproofs and warning. But now, in his extremity,
he turned upon him, presenting the enormity of his sin and the
hopelessness of pardon, that he might goad him to desperation. Nothing
could have been better chosen to destroy his courage
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and confuse his
judgment, or to drive him to despair and self-destruction.
Saul was
faint with weariness and fasting; he was terrified and
conscience-stricken. As the fearful prediction fell upon his ear, his form
swayed like an oak before the tempest, and he fell prostrate to the earth.
The sorceress
was filled with alarm. The king of Israel lay before her like one dead.
Should he perish in her retreat, what would be the consequences to
herself? She besought him to arise and partake of food, urging that since
she had imperiled her life in granting his desire, he should yield to her
request for the preservation of his own. His servants joining their
entreaties, Saul yielded at last, and the woman set before him the fatted
calf and unleavened bread hastily prepared. What a scene!--In the wild
cave of the sorceress, which but a little before had echoed with the words
of doom--in the presence of Satan's messenger--he who had been anointed of
God as king over Israel sat down to eat, in preparation for the day's
deadly strife.
Before the
break of day he returned with his attendants to the camp of Israel to make
ready for the conflict. By consulting that spirit of darkness Saul had
destroyed himself. Oppressed by the horror of despair, it would be
impossible for him to inspire his army with courage. Separated from the
Source of strength, he could not lead the minds of Israel to look to God
as their helper. Thus the prediction of evil would work its own
accomplishment.
On the plain
of Shunem and the slopes of Mount Gilboa the armies of Israel and the
hosts of the Philistines closed in mortal combat. Though the fearful scene
in the cave of Endor had driven all hope from his heart, Saul fought with
desperate valor for his throne and his kingdom. But it was in vain.
"The men of Israel fled from before the Philistines, and fell down
slain in Mount Gilboa." Three brave sons of the king died at his
side. The archers pressed upon Saul. He had seen his soldiers falling
around him and his princely sons cut down by the sword. Himself wounded,
he could neither fight not fly. Escape was impossible, and determined not
to be taken alive by the Philistines, he bade his armor-bearer, "Draw
thy sword, and thrust me through therewith." When the man refused to
lift his hand
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against the Lord's anointed, Saul took his own life by
falling upon his sword.
Thus the
first king of Israel perished, with the guilt of self-murder upon his
soul. His life had been a failure, and he went down in dishonor and
despair, because he had set up his own perverse will against the will of
God.
The tidings
of defeat spread far and wide, carrying terror to all Israel. The people
fled from the cities, and the Philistines took undisturbed possession.
Saul's reign, independent of God, had well-nigh proved the ruin of his
people.
On the day
following the engagement, the Philistines, searching the battlefield to
rob the slain, discovered the bodies of Saul and his three sons. To
complete their triumph, they cut off the head of Saul and stripped him of
his armor; then the head and the armor, reeking with blood, were sent to
the country of the Philistines as a trophy of victory, "to publish it
in the house of their idols, and among the people." The armor was
finally put in "the house of Ashtaroth," while the head was
fastened in the temple of Dagon. Thus the glory of the victory was
ascribed to the power of these false gods, and the name of Jehovah was
dishonored.
The dead
bodies of Saul and his sons were dragged to Beth-shan, a city not far from
Gilboa, and near the river Jordan. Here they were hung up in chains, to be
devoured by birds of prey. But the brave men of Jabesh-gilead, remembering
Saul's deliverance of their city in his earlier and happier years, now
manifested their gratitude by rescuing the bodies of the king and princes,
and giving them honorable burial. Crossing the Jordan by night, they
"took the body of Saul and the bodies of his sons from the wall of
Beth-shan, and came to Jabesh, and burnt them there, And they took their
bones, and buried them under a tree at Jabesh, and fasted seven
days." Thus the noble deed performed forty years before, secured for
Saul and his sons burial by tender and pitying hands in that dark hour of
defeat and dishonor.
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