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2. So Nabash,
contemning the multitude of the Gileadites and the answer they gave, allowed
them a respite, and gave them leave to send to whomsoever they pleased for
assistance. So they immediately sent to the Israelites, city by city, and
informed them what Nabash had threatened to do to them, and what great distress
they were in. Now the people fell into tears and grief at the hearing of what
the ambassadors from Jabesh said; and the terror they were in permitted them to
do nothing more. But when the messengers were come to the city of king Saul,
and declared the dangers in which the inhabitants of Jabesh were, the people
were in the same affliction as those in the other cities, for they lamented the
calamity of those related to them.
And when Saul was returned
from his husbandry into the city, he found his fellow citizens weeping; and
when, upon inquiry, he had learned the cause of the confusion and sadness they
were in, he was seized with a divine fury, and sent away the ambassadors from
the inhabitants of Jabesh, and promised them to come to their assistance on the
third day, and to beat their enemies before sun-rising, that the sun upon its
rising might see that they had already conquered, and were freed from the fears
they were under: but he bid some of them stay to conduct them the right way to
Jabesh.
3. So being desirous to
turn the people to this war against the Ammonites by fear of the losses they
should otherwise undergo, and that they might the more suddenly be gathered
together, he cut the sinews of his oxen, and threatened to do the same to all
such as did not come with their armor to Jordan the next day, and follow him
and Samuel the prophet whithersoever they should lead them. So they came
together, out of fear of the losses they were threatened with, at the appointed
time. And the multitude were numbered at the city Bezek. And he found the
number of those that were gathered together, besides that of the tribe of
Judah, to be seven hundred thousand, while those of that tribe were seventy
thousand. So he passed over Jordan, and proceeded in marching all that night,
thirty furlongs, and came to Jabesh before sun-rising.
So he divided the army into
three companies; and fell upon their enemies on every side on the sudden, and
when they expected no such thing; and joining battle with them, they slew a
great many of the Ammonites, as also their king Nabash. This glorious action
was done by Saul, and was related with great commendation of him to all the
Hebrews; and he thence gained a wonderful reputation for his valor: for
although there were some of them that contemned him before, they now changed
their minds, and honored him, and esteemed him as the best of men: for he did
not content himself with having saved the inhabitants of Jabesh only, but he
made an expedition into the country of the Ammonites, and laid it all waste,
and took a large prey, and so returned to his own country most gloriously.
So the people were greatly
pleased at these excellent performances of Saul, and rejoiced that they had
constituted him their king. They also made a clamor against those that
pretended he would be of no advantage to their affairs; and they said, Where
now are these men? - let them be brought to punishment, with all the like
things that multitudes usually say when they are elevated with prosperity,
against those that lately had despised the authors of it. But Saul, although he
took the good-will and the affection of these men very kindly, yet did he swear
that he would not see any of his countrymen slain that day, since it was absurd
to mix this victory, which God had given them, with the blood and slaughter of
those that were of the same lineage with themselves; and that it was more
agreeable to be men of a friendly disposition, and so to betake themselves to
feasting.
4. And when Samuel had
told them that he ought to confirm the kingdom to Saul by a second ordination
of him, they all came together to the city of Gilgal, for thither did he
command them to come. So the prophet anointed Saul with the holy oil in the
sight of the multitude, and declared him to be king the second time. And so the
government of the Hebrews was changed into a regal government; for in the days
of Moses, and his disciple Joshua, who was their general, they continued under
an aristocracy; but after the death of Joshua, for eighteen years in all, the
multitude had no settled form of government, but were in an anarchy; after
which they returned to their former government, they then permitting themselves
to be judged by him who appeared to be the best warrior and most courageous,
whence it was that they called this interval of their government the
Judges.
5. Then did Samuel the prophet call another
assembly also, and said to them,
" I solemnly adjure
you by God Almighty, who brought those excellent brethren, I mean Moses and
Aaron, into the world, and delivered our fathers from the Egyptians, and from
the slavery they endured under them, that you will not speak what you say to
gratify me, nor suppress any thing out of fear of me, nor be overborne by any
other passion, but say, What have I ever done that was cruel or unjust? or what
have I done out of lucre or covetousness, or to gratify others? Bear witness
against me, if I have taken an ox or a sheep, or any such thing, which yet when
they are taken to support men, it is esteemed blameless; or have I taken an ass
for mine own use of any one to his grief? - lay some one such crime to my
charge, now we are in your king's presence."
But they cried out, that no
such thing had been done by him, but that he had presided over the nation after
a holy and righteous manner.
6. Hereupon Samuel, when such a testimony had been
given him by them all, said,
"Since you grant that you
are not able to lay any ill thing to my charge hitherto, come on now, and do
you hearken while I speak with great freedom to you. You have been guilty of
great impiety against God, in asking you a king. It behooves you to remember
that our grandfather Jacob came down into Egypt, by reason of a famine, with
seventy souls only of our family, and that their posterity multiplied there to
many ten thousands, whom the Egyptians brought into slavery and hard
oppression; that God himself, upon the prayers of our fathers, sent Moses and
Aaron, who were brethren, and gave them power to deliver the multitude out of
their distress, and this without a king.
These brought us into this very land which you now possess: and
when you enjoyed these advantages from God, you betrayed his worship and
religion; nay, moreover, when you were brought under the hands of your enemies,
he delivered you, first by rendering you superior to the Assyrians and their
forces, he then made you to overcome the Ammonites and the Moabites, and last
of all the Philistines; and these things have been achieved under the conduct
of Jephtha and Gideon. What madness therefore possessed you to fly from God,
and to desire to be under a king? - yet have I ordained him for king whom he
chose for you. However, that I may make it plain to you that God is angry and
displeased at your choice of kingly government, I will so dispose him that he
shall declare this very plainly to you by strange signals; for what none of you
ever saw here before, I mean a winter storm in the midst of harvest,
(10) I will entreat of God, and will
make it visible to you."
Now, as soon as he had said
this, God gave such great signals by thunder and lightning, and the descent of
hail, as attested the truth of all that the prophet had said, insomuch that
they were amazed and terrified, and confessed they had sinned, and had fallen
into that sin through ignorance; and besought the prophet, as one that was a
tender and gentle father to them, to render God so merciful as to forgive this
their sin, which they had added to those other offenses whereby they had
affronted him and transgressed against him.
So he promised them that he
would beseech God, and persuade him to forgive them these their sins. However,
he advised them to be righteous, and to be good, and ever to remember the
miseries that had befallen them on account of their departure from virtue: as
also to remember the strange signs God had shown them, and the body of laws
that Moses had given them, if they had any desire of being preserved and made
happy with their king. But he said, that if they should grow careless of these
things, great judgments would come from God upon them, and upon their king. And
when Samuel had thus prophesied to the Hebrews, he dismissed them to their own
homes, having confirmed the kingdom to Saul the second time.
Footnotes
(9) Take here Theodoret's note, cited by Dr. Hudson:
"He that exposes his
shield to the enemy with his left hand, thereby hides his left eye, and looks
at the enemy with his right eye: he therefore that plucks out that eye, makes
men useless in war."
(10) Mr. Reland observes here, and proves elsewhere in his
note on Antiq. B. III. Ch. 1. Sect. 6, that
although thunder and lightning with us usually happen in summer, yet in
Palestine and Syria they are chiefly confined to winter. Josephus takes notice
of the same thing again, War, B. IV. Ch. 4. Sect. 5.
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