The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 54: Samson
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As the betrayer plied Samson with her questions, he deceived
her by declaring that the weakness of other men would come
upon him if certain processes were tried. When she put the
matter to the test, the cheat was discovered. Then she accused
him of falsehood, saying, "How canst thou say, I love thee,
when thine heart is not with me? Thou hast mocked me these [p. 566] three times, and hast not told me wherein thy great strength
lieth." Three times Samson had the clearest evidence that the
Philistines had leagued with his charmer to destroy him; but
when her purpose failed, she treated the matter as a jest, and he
blindly banished fear.
Day by day Delilah urged him, until "his soul was vexed
unto death;" yet a subtle power kept him by her side. Overcome
at last, Samson made known the secret: "There hath not come a
razor upon mine head; for I have been a Nazarite unto God from
my mother's womb: if I be shaven, then my strength will go
from me, and I shall become weak, and be like any other man."
A messenger was immediately dispatched to the lords of the
Philistines, urging them to come to her without delay. While the
warrior slept, the heavy masses of his hair were severed from his
head. Then, as she had done three times before, she called,
"The Philistines be upon thee, Samson!" Suddenly awaking, he
thought to exert his strength as before and destroy them; but his
powerless arms refused to do his bidding, and he knew that
"Jehovah was departed from him." When he had been shaven,
Delilah began to annoy him and cause him pain, thus making a
trial of his strength; for the Philistines dared not approach him
till fully convinced that his power was gone. Then they seized
him and, having put out both his eyes, they took him to Gaza.
Here he was bound with fetters in their prison house and
confined to hard labor.
What a change to him who had been the judge and champion
of Israel!—now weak, blind, imprisoned, degraded to the most
menial service! Little by little he had violated the conditions of
his sacred calling. God had borne long with him; but when he
had so yielded himself to the power of sin as to betray his secret,
the Lord departed from him. There was no virtue in his long
hair merely, but it was a token of his loyalty to God; and when
the symbol was sacrificed in the indulgence of passion, the
blessings of which it was a token were also forfeited.
In suffering and humiliation, a sport for the Philistines,
Samson learned more of his own weakness than he had ever known
before; and his afflictions led him to repentance. As his hair
grew, his power gradually returned; but his enemies, regarding
him as a fettered and helpless prisoner, felt no apprehensions.
The Philistines ascribed their victory to their gods; and, [p. 567] exulting, they defied the God of Israel. A feast was appointed in
honor of Dagon, the fish god, "the protector of the sea." From
town and country throughout the Philistine plain the people
and their lords assembled. Throngs of worshipers filled the vast
temple and crowded the galleries about the roof. It was a scene
of festivity and rejoicing. There was the pomp of the sacrificial
service, followed by music and feasting. Then, as the crowning
trophy of Dagon's power, Samson was brought in. Shouts of exultation
greeted his appearance. People and rulers mocked his
misery and adored the god who had overthrown "the destroyer
of their country." After a time, as if weary, Samson asked
permission to rest against the two central pillars which supported
the temple roof. Then he silently uttered the prayer, "O Lord
God, remember me, I pray Thee, and strengthen me, I pray
Thee, only this once, O God, that I may be at once avenged of
the Philistines." With these words he encircled the pillars with
his mighty arms; and crying, "Let me die with the Philistines!"
he bowed himself, and the roof fell, destroying at one crash all
that vast multitude. "So the dead which he slew at his death
were more than they which he slew in his life."
The idol and its worshipers, priest and peasant, warrior and
noble, were buried together beneath the ruins of Dagon's temple.
And among them was the giant form of him whom God
had chosen to be the deliverer of His people. Tidings of the
terrible overthrow were carried to the land of Israel, and Samson's
kinsmen came down from their hills, and, unopposed, rescued
the body of the fallen hero. And they "brought him up, and
buried him between Zorah and Eshtaol, in the burying place of
Manoah his father."
God's promise that through Samson He would "begin to deliver
Israel out of the hand of the Philistines" was fulfilled; but
how dark and terrible the record of that life which might have
been a praise to God and a glory to the nation! Had Samson
been true to his divine calling, the purpose of God could have
been accomplished in his honor and exaltation. But he yielded
to temptation and proved untrue to his trust, and his mission
was fulfilled in defeat, bondage, and death.
Physically, Samson was the strongest man upon the earth;
but in self-control, integrity, and firmness, he was one of the
weakest of men. Many mistake strong passions for a strong character, [p. 568] but the truth is that he who is mastered by his passions is a
weak man. The real greatness of the man is measured by the
power of the feelings that he controls, not by those that
control him.
God's providential care had been over Samson, that he might
be prepared to accomplish the work which he was called to do.
At the very outset of life he was surrounded with favorable
conditions for physical strength, intellectual vigor, and moral purity.
But under the influence of wicked associates he let go that hold
upon God which is man's only safeguard, and he was swept
away by the tide of evil. Those who in the way of duty are
brought into trial may be sure that God will preserve them; but
if men willfully place themselves under the power of temptation,
they will fall, sooner or later.
The very ones whom God purposes to use as His instruments
for a special work, Satan employs his utmost power to lead astray.
He attacks us at our weak points, working through defects in the
character to gain control of the whole man; and he knows that
if these defects are cherished, he will succeed. But none need
be overcome. Man is not left alone to conquer the power of evil
by his own feeble efforts. Help is at hand and will be given to
every soul who really desires it. Angels of God, that ascend and
descend the ladder which Jacob saw in vision, will help every
soul who will, to climb even to the highest heaven.
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