Saturday, August 18, 2012

3rd Week of August 2012 Sunday School Brief, Judges Chapter 16

Judges Chapter 16

As I start this new chapter I want to say that the story of Samson is one of my favorite stories in the Bible as I'm sure the story speaks to most people. Samson was a man that was on fire for the Lord and eager to do what he could to take the yoke of the Philistines off God's people. A trait of mine is to want my heroes to be perfect. I like Alexander Hamilton and I read half way through Ron Chernow's book on Hamilton and quit reading when it got to the part about the affair Alexander had. I like my heroes to be as flawless as possible. I know this is silly, and no one is perfect except Christ Jesus.

Now we are at the part of the story where Samson flirts with the devil one too many times. You can see his slip into immorality in the things he says. This part of the story is a warning but by the end of the chapter it is  inspiring at the same time. Samson journeys down to Gaza, and we don't know why. We know once he was there, he saw a harlot and decided to go in unto her. He doesn't seem to go just for that reason, but whatever the reason was, he decided to take a sinful opportunity while he was there. The Philistines, who by this time are always looking to get the upper hand on Samson, lie in wait to catch him. Samson awakes, either by distress of his sin, warning of God, or wanting to leave before he is caught by the shame revealed in the sunlight, decides to take the doors off the gate of the city as he leaves. It was a warning to the Philistines that he was onto them and their plans.

Now we see where Samson meets another woman who catches his eye. The bible does not expressly say that she is a prostitute, but we quickly find out that her loyalty can be bought for a price. The Philistines approach her with an offer she can't refuse and she begins to temp Samson into telling her his secret of secrets. Of course at first, Samson loving a game, doesn't give her the answer she seeks. Odd that Samson never thinks to himself that if he does give up the answer, his life is in jeopardy. I refuse to believe he doesn't know about the Philistines plan to take him. He may be blinded by sin and a little by love, but he already went down this road with his espoused bride, and that ended horribly. He keeps playing her game and keeps getting further away from where God wants him. Samson doesn't give up his secret overnight, and we usually don't give up our walk with God overnight. We let it slip away day by day, hour by hour until we turn around one day and we're far, far away from the light of home.

Samson does the unthinkable, he gives away his special place before the Lord. It goes downhill fast after that, the Philistines pluck out his eyes and throw him into prison with hard labor. The Philistines also suffer from short memory disease. They forget what gave Samson his strength (you and I know that his strength is from God and his relationship with God. Put a blind man on a grindstone all day and he has nothing but time to ask for God's forgiveness), and they let his hair grow back.

Some might argue that what Samson does next is suicide; I heartily disagree. Israel was not the country it would later become under David and Solomon, but it was still this loose set of tribes that many considered one people. They were, or the tribes closest to the coast, at war with the Philistines. What happens when Samson cries out to God and asks for one final victory it just that, a victory in a war against a vowed enemy of God's people.

After this great hall comes down and kills most everyone in it, Samson's brothers come down and get his body to bury it with his father and their people. The way this happens leads me to believe that the Israelites had peace from the Philistines at least for a little while, or his family wouldn't be able to retrieve his body. The story of Samson is tragic, but also uplifting. How many of us, if we let our lives drift away from God, would like to have a great victory for Jesus at the end of our lives?

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