God’s grace overcomes all of our failures; Judges 15
Samson
is a great encouragement to every one of us. All of us fail at times, all of us
have sin natures that we allow to gain the upper hand at times. Hopefully few
of us run around our Christian life like Samson did, but if God used Samson,
and He did, the key to understanding it is that God used Samson in spite of
Samson’s carnality and so there was relatively little blessing that accrued to
Samson. Nevertheless God used him and it shows that there is tremendous
forgiveness, and God is a God of grace, despite all of our sin and our
failures. It is not what we are or what we do, it is based completely on who He
is and what Christ did for us on the cross.
14:8—it
is at this point that Samson is going to violate the Nazirite vow a second time
by touching the carcass of the lion and defiling himself. What we really see in
this section is a threefold sin on Samson’s part. First of all, he is forbidden
by the Mosaic law from touching a carcass. Every Israelite was. If you touched
something dead then it rendered you ceremonially unclean and you had to perform a sacrifice for
cleansing. The reason was that death was always a reminder of the penalty of
sin—the penalty of sin is spiritual death, its consequence is physical
death—and so whenever they came in contact with someone who was dead they
couldn’t go into the presence of God without a sacrifice. The picture there is
that we as believers can’t go into the presence of God when wee have been
defiled by sin. So there were hundreds and hundreds of ways a Jew could defile
himself and become ceremonially unclean. So the first sin of Samson is that as
a Jew he violates the Mosaic law. Secondly, he violates the Nazirite vow by
touching the carcass. The third thing is what he is going to do with the honey.
He is going to give it to his parents without telling them where it came from
and that causes them to become ceremonially unclean, but they are ignorant of
it. It is a sin of ignorance on their part because of what he has done.
Verse
12 – during this period in history we know that among the Greeks and among
other people in the Mediterranean area, telling riddles and proposing riddles
was a popular sport. They would sit around and try to outdo each other with
these riddles and they would bet and gamble on them: who would come up with the
best riddle that would stump everybody. So when Samson comes along and develops
this riddle we know that it fits the historical context of about twelve to
eleven hundred BC. This was a very popular thing to do at that time. This is
crucial to understanding these two chapters, everything revolves around this
riddle. The word “feast” referred to in verse 10 was the Hebrew word, mishta,
which refers to a seven-day feast of drinking and gorging. The inference is
that Samson is not sitting back in a corner watching everybody else gluttonize
and get drunk, he is right in there with everybody else having a field day
feeding his own physical appetite.
Verse
18 – “What is sweeter than honey?” The grace of God. “And what is stronger than
a lion?” The power of God. There are little hints here that Samson is violating
both, and that God is there to deliver Israel but there is a continual
rejection by the Jews of the grace of God and the power of God. Samson then
responds. He knows instantly why they were able to solve the riddle because
they had gone to his wife. He makes a statement then that is very derogatory of
her, it was considered insulting even by their standards. Once again we see
that in a pagan culture there is always a loss of respect and value for the
role of women, for the role of wives, and the role of mothers. Over and again
we have seen this gradual shift in Judges, moving from Othniel and his wife at
the beginning of the book where she is respectful and held in high honor and
there was nothing negative said about her, until we come to the end now of
Judges and women are treated as nothing more than objects for his own pleasure
and he has no respect for them. So this destruction of respect for women and
the role of women is a result of paganism, of a failure to understand what the
Bible teaches about the importance of both the man as a man and the woman as a
woman in their distinct roles in society, in marriage, and in the family.
Samson has no respect for her, he says, “If you hadn’t plowed with my heifer.”
He just comes across as an extremely crude and crass individual.
Verse
19 – immediately in contrast to that we are told that “the Spirit of the Lord
came upon him mightily.” We see that the Spirit of God is still working through
him but it is not in terms of spiritual value. The Spirit of God has a plan and
that is to disrupt this assimilation that is taking place between the
Philistines and the Jews. He then went down to Ashkelon and killed thirty
Philistines. He didn’t have the money to buy clothes for these thirty so he
goes and steals them by killing 30 Philistines. This, in turn, is going to
continue the chain of events that had been set in motion. Then we are told “his
anger burned, and he went up to his father’s house.” So he is dominated by
mental attitude sins, he is acting like a selfish spoiled child, he gets angry
because he didn’t get his way, and he leaves his fiancé and goes back to his
father’s house. And verse 20 tells us that Samson’s wife was given to his
companion, his best friend.
Chapter
15:1 – Samson visited his wife. Notice that it is in the time of the wheat
harvest. The writer makes a point of that because of what will take place in
this chapter. Apparently Samson had the idea that this was more of a concubine
marriage. The difference between a regular marriage and a concubine marriage
was that a regular marriage you moved in together and set up a home and began a
family. In a concubine marriage it had a legal status, it was not like a
prostitute or a mistress, but not on the same level of a wife. The man didn’t
live with the concubine, we saw that with Gideon, but she was legally the
man’s. But here the father won’t let it happen, but we see that this father is
treating his daughters like property here and we see once again a negative view
of women.
Verse
3 – now he is going to get involved in vengeance, he is going to take it out on
the Philistines. Verse 4 – “three hundred foxes” is not foxes, it is jackals.”
Foxes are solitary creatures; jackals run in packs. You could set up traps to
catch large numbers of jackals. Apparently there were a lot of jackals in this area but there was
also a lion. One of the things that God had promised to Israel was that if they
went into the land, and if they were obedient to Him, He would destroy all of
the wild animals and they would have peace there. But if they were disobedient
to Him then in part of the third and fourth cycles of discipline there would be
an increase in the wild animals that were in the land. So the presence of all
these jackals and the presence of the lion is another subtle reminder to the
reader that the land is under divine discipline.
Verses
4, 5 – “And Samson went and caught three hundred foxes, and took firebrands,
and turned tail to tail, and put a firebrand in the midst between two
tails. And when he had set the brands
on fire, he let them go into the standing corn of the Philistines, and burnt up
both the shocks, and also the standing corn, with the vineyards and olives.” He
lights the torches and lets them into the fields. There is cut wheat and there
is still wheat on the stalks in the fields. Everything is caught on fire.
Remember what God had said to Israel.
They would be in the land, they would have grain, vineyards, groves,
olives and honey. So what God is doing is destroying the produce of the
Philistines. They don’t have a right to it because this isn’t their land. They
were uncircumcised and this the land God has given to Israel.
Verse
6 – the Philistines respond in anger. They can’t tackle Samson, he’s too tough,
so they are going to take the path of least resistance and burn up the girl and
her father. And that is going to bring about another act of retaliation from
Samson in verse 7— “Since you act like this, I shall surely take revenge on
you, and after that I will cease.” What we see is the ongoing destructive cycle
of mental attitude sins--hatred, bitterness, revenge, on and on and it just
creates more and more trouble. The thing is that God is working behind this to
bring about the separation of Israel from the Philistines.
Verse
8 – “And he smote them hip and thigh with a great slaughter: and he went down
and dwelt in the top of the rock Etam.” We don’t know how many he killed but it
was a large number. Samson’s attitude now is that it is over with, he’s done,
and he just goes off by himself to sulk. Every time he does something it is as
if it is all over with. He has no foresight, he doesn’t think beyond whatever
is going on today and he seems to be totally oblivious to the fact that God is
using him. There is no indication that he is aware that the Spirit of God is
the source of his power at all. He is totally self-absorbed.
Verse
9 – now what happens is that the Philistines come and camp in Judah. And look
at the reaction of the men of Judah. Here is the enemy coming, and we know that
they should understand this, it is not long after this, maybe in another five
years or so, there is going to be a major pitched battle. And it is in that
battle that the Philistines are going to capture the ark of the covenant and
bring it back to the temple of Dagon down in Gaza. So they know that there is
an antagonism and that the Philistines are the enemy but they are so
pacifistic. They were just going to cave in. They said they would go and find
Samson for them! The Philistines have given in to relativism, they have a relativistic
culture. They have absorbed all the surrounding and different cultures, in many
ways not dissimilar to late and early 20th and 21st century times. Once every
culture is viewed as having valid truths then all truths have an equal amount
of weight and an equal amount of value. There is not truth, then, that is
absolute, everything is relative. In relativism if everything is equally true
then everything is equally false. This leads to an ecumenical mindset that it
doesn’t really matter what we believe just as long as we all believe something
is God and we all use the same terminology, and we can all get together, and
doctrine is no longer an issue. So in this ecumenical mindset truth doesn’t
matter, the only thing that matters is whatever experience we have in common.
But if everything in life is relative then nothing is worth dying for. If
nothing is worth dying for, nothing is worth fighting for. If nothing is worth
fighting for then a major sin is going to be anybody who starts stirring up
trouble and causing war. So war becomes an ultimate sin and in order to prevent
that you disarm people so they can’t fight. That is what was going on during
the time of the judges. We know from 1 Samuel 7 that what happened with the
Philistines is they had entered into the iron age but they would not allow the
Jews to have a blacksmith, so that the Jews could not have iron weapons, and
that meant they couldn’t defend themselves and they didn’t think they could go
to war successfully against the Philistines. So we see all these indications of
extremely strange weapons at this time. For example, Shamgar used an ox goad.
David is going to use a sling. Now the men in Judah don’t have anything to
fight for anymore and so they are just going to cave in to the Philistines. So
pacifism always goes along with ecumenism. And that always goes along with
relativism because if there is nothing worth fighting for and dying for then
there is no reason to get involved with warfare. In relativism the only things
worth living for is whatever is going to make you happy at the moment. That is
where we are today in our culture, people are doing whatever makes them happy
right now, and they have no concept of living for the future and the long range
consequences of present action.
In
our time the great sin is going to be the environment. It won’t be long before
war will be thought of as the greatest evil simply because it would do such
environmental damage. So anybody who would go to war is going to be considered
an environmental criminal, and under the guise of environmental protection we
are going to start disarming.
So
the three thousand men go down to get Samson, and they say, “Don’t you know
that the Philistines are rulers over us? Why are you causing all this trouble?”
And they bound him up and took him to the Philistines. Then we are told the
Spirit of the Lord came upon him mightily so that he just broke his bonds. And
he found the fresh jawbone of a donkey which he uses as a weapon and kills a
thousand men. Then in verse 16 he has another riddle: “And Samson said, With
the jawbone of an ass, heaps upon heaps, with the jaw of an ass have I slain a
thousand men.”
In
verse 18 Samson calls on the Lord, and it seems at this point that there seems
to be something positive about Samson spiritually. Yet even in his prayer he is
more concerned with himself and seem to be giving lip service to God. But there
is a small element in Samson’s thought that he realizes that this comes a s a
result of God’s provision. He does cry out to God and God does answer his
prayer despite all of his carnality because Samson’s carnality is much smaller
than the plan of God. The plan of God is based on grace and God’s grace is
going to eventually bring deliverance to Israel. But first He has something to
accomplish with Samson.
The
principle here is that God’s grace overcomes all of our failures. No matter how
much we fail God still is a God of grace. If we are still alive God still has a
plan for our lives and God still uses us, and so the issue is that whenever
there is a problem, whenever we go through discipline, we need to realize that
God is using us for a purpose and that is to bring us back to Himself. That is
what God is doing with Samson and the Jews to get their attention back on Him.
Eventually that will happen but not under Samson’s ministry, rather under
Samuel’s ministry.