Samson, a Judge of Israel
We read the
story of Samson’s life in Judges 13 – 16, and I personally have had a hard time
appreciating this man of God. Samson is given
honorable mention in the famous “faith” chapter (Hebrews 11) of the Bible. He
is mentioned along with many other Godly men and women down through the ages
who have all had great faith in God. (Hebrews 11:32) Samson was a one of Israel’s
judges between the years of 1085 BC and 1065 BC.
During the time period after Israel entered the
Promised Land. (1406 BC) and before Israel got her first king (1050 BC.) was a time
when God raised up “judges” to help Israel take over the land, He had promised
them and help protect Israel from the Canaanites in the land. These judges
served as spiritual, military, and governmental leaders for the people.
God would pour out His Spirit upon a judge who
then would fight an enemy who was killing the Jewish people. Or sometimes the judges would lead a battle
and drive out or kill the inhabitants of an area that the Jewish people would
take over. Othniel was the first judge (1353-1313 BC.) and Samson was the last
judge during this period. (1085-1065) Deborah
and Gideon were among several of the other judges.
God raised
Samson up as a Judge to help the Jewish people defeat the Philistines. Scripture describes the Philistines as a
nation who “devoured Israel with an open mouth.” (Isaiah 9:11,12) The Philistines are said to
have “taken captive whole Jewish communities and sold them to Edom” (Amos 1:6-8) In another Scripture we are told that the “Philistines
took vengeance and revenge with malice and with ancient hostility and tried to destroy
Judah.” (Ezekiel 25:15-17. The Jewish people were outnumbered by these cruel
warring people. Eventually God judged the Philistines and they no longer exist
as a people. (Zechariah 9:5-7)
Some liberal
Christians today do not believe the Bible where it records the history of
Israel being led by God to drive out and kill the Philistines, Canaanites and
other godless tribes. Our loving, just and fair God, who knows all things,
judged these ancient tribes and only He, their Creator, was and is in the
position to be their Judge. These ancient tribes were in such a desperately
fallen condition that evidently there was only one remedy: destroy them. Cut out the cancer so it wouldn’t spread. Many
of them sacrificed their children to Baal, burning them on the altar.
The Bible
begins telling the story of Samson In Judges 13 where an angel appears to
Manoah’s wife and tells her that she will conceive and have a son who will be a
Nazirite, or one who is set apart to God from birth. That his mission would be to begin the
deliverance of Israel from the hands of the evil Philistines. (Judges 13:5) A
Nazarite was to show that he was set apart to God by never cutting his hair or
drinking wine or other fermented drinks or eating anything that was
un-clean. Samson would be given special
Holy Spirit power to begin to deliver Israel from their neighbors, the
Philistines. Samson was born as the angel had promised, and the Lord blessed
him as he grew, and the Spirit of the Lord began to stir him (Judges 13:24-25a)
When Samson
was a young man, he saw a Philistine woman that he thought was attractive, and
he asked his parents to get her for him as a wife. It was the custom then for the parents of the
groom to talk to the bride’s father and arrange the marriage. Samson’s parents were upset and argued with Samson
that he had been set apart for God and he should marry a woman from Israel and
not a heathen Philistine woman. But
Samson insisted and the marriage took place.
During the
marriage ceremony Samson told a riddle to the Philistine guests and promised
the guests that if they could guess his riddle then he would give them thirty
linen garments and thirty sets of clothes. When the Philistine guests couldn’t
figure out Samson’s riddle, they harassed Samson’s new wife insisting that she get
the answer to the riddle out of her husband.
Day after day, Samson’s wife cried and begged Samson to tell her the answer
to the riddle. Finally, in desperation, Samson
told the answer to the riddle to his wife.
But then she quickly ran out and told the answer to the Philistine men who
came back to Samson and demanded the thirty sets of clothes he had promised if
they could guess his riddle!
Samson was furious
at the Philistines and at his wife for going behind his back and telling the
Philistines the riddle’s answer. He rushed
out and: “struck down thirty of the Philistine men, stripped them of their
belongings and gave their clothes to those who had explained the riddle to him
demanding the clothing. Burning with
anger he left his wife and stormed off to his father’s house.” (Judges 14: 19)
Since Samson
was angry and didn’t go home that night, the wife thought that he was divorcing
her. Her father immediately gave her to
another man to be his wife. A few days
later when Samson cooled off and came back to the house where he and his wife
were living, he found the wife was living with another man as his new wife.
Samson was
so angry that he caught three hundred foxes and tied them together in pairs
tail to tail. Then he put a lighted
torch on each pair of foxes’ tails and let them loose in the standing grain of
the Philistine’s many wheat fields. All of
the Philistine’s wheat that was soon to be harvested for the year was burned up
along with their vineyards and olive groves.
The
Philistines were so angry with Samson that their men set out to catch him. But Samson was too strong for that to
happen. One time the Philistines thought
they had Samson captured inside the city gates.
But Samson, with Holy Spirit strength, took hold of the doors of the
city gate, and tore it loose and carried it to the top of a hill.
Some time
later Samson, always the lady’s man, fell in love with another beautiful Philistine
woman named Delilah. The rulers of the
Philistines went to Delilah and asked her to lure Samson into showing her the
secret of his great strength. They
wanted to know how to overpower him and bring him down. They promised Delilah a fortune in silver
shekels if she would help them. Delilah
agreed to betray Samson, her new lover.
She would soon be a wealthy woman!
Day after
day Delilah begged and coaxed and teased Samson trying to make him tell her the
secret of his great strength. Finally,
tired of all the fussing, Samson gave in and told her his secret. His strength came from his God and his long
hair was a symbol that he belonged to God.
Cutting his hair would break his vow of loyalty to God. Samson fell asleep and Delilah quickly cut
his long hair and called in the Philistines to capture him.
Samson
woke up and started fighting off the Philistines, counting on his usual
strength from God. But God’s strength
was gone from Samson. The Philistines tied
him up and put Samson’s eyes out and took him to their city, Gaza, where they
bound him with bronze shackles and set him to grinding in the prison. Round and round poor Samson staggered, blind
and pushing the heavy grindstone. Round
and round, grinding corn for his enemies. But the hair on Samson’s head was beginning to
grow.
One day the
rulers of the Philistines assembled in a huge pillared building in Gaza to offer
a great sacrifice to Dagon, their god, and to celebrate capturing Samson. Thousands of Philistines came for the
festivities. While they were all in high
spirits, they called for the guards to bring Samson out of prison so he could
entertain them all. As Samson stood
there among the pillars of the building in front of the jeering crowds, he asked
the servant leading him around to lead him over to the pillars so he could lean
against them.
Scripture
says that all the rulers and 3,000 Philistines were watching and laughing at
Samson that day. Bracing himself against the pillar, his right hand on the one
pillar and his left hand on the other, Samson prayed to the Lord, “O Sovereign
Lord, remember me, Oh God, please strengthen me just once more and let me with
one blow get revenge on the Philistines for my two eyes.” Samson pushed with all his might and down
came the temple on top of the rulers and on all the people there, killing
everyone and killing Samson too. He
killed more Philistines that day when he died than while he lived. (Judges 16:28-30)
Samson had
been given great gifts from God. But he
failed to use God’s gifts to His greatest glory. Samson’s judgeship consisted of single-handed
victories over the Philistines, which disrupted their domination over
Israel. But Samson did not liberate
Israel from the Philistine oppression.
Samson’s physical strength enabled him to do exploits, but his moral
weakness led to his eventual destruction.
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