The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 60: The Presumption of Saul
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Samuel's countenance was full of anxiety and trouble; but to
his inquiry, "What hast thou done?" Saul offered excuses for his
presumptuous act. He said: "I saw that the people were scattered
from me, and that thou camest not within the days appointed,
and that the Philistines gathered themselves together at
Michmash; therefore said I, The Philistines will come down now
upon me to Gilgal, and I have not made supplication unto the
Lord: I forced myself therefore, and offered a burnt offering.
"And Samuel said to Saul, Thou hast done foolishly: thou
hast not kept the commandment of the Lord thy God, which
He commanded thee: for now would the Lord have established
thy kingdom upon Israel forever. But now thy kingdom shall
not continue: the Lord hath sought Him a man after His own
heart, and the Lord hath commanded him to be captain over
His people. . . . And Samuel arose, and gat him up from Gilgal
unto Gibeah of Benjamin."
Either Israel must cease to be the people of God, or the
principle upon which the monarchy was founded must be maintained,
and the nation must be governed by a divine power. If
Israel would be wholly the Lord's, if the will of the human and
earthly were held in subjection to the will of God, He would
continue to be the Ruler of Israel. So long as the king and the people
would conduct themselves as subordinate to God, so long He
could be their defense. But in Israel no monarchy could prosper
that did not in all things acknowledge the supreme authority
of God.
If Saul had shown a regard for the requirements of God in
this time of trial, God could have worked His will through him.
His failure now proved him unfit to be the vicegerent of God
to His people. He would mislead Israel. His will, rather than
the will of God, would be the controlling power. If Saul had been
faithful, his kingdom would have been established forever; but
since he had failed, the purpose of God must be accomplished by
another. The government of Israel must be committed to one
who would rule the people according to the will of Heaven.
We do not know what great interests may be at stake in
the proving of God. There is no safety except in strict obedience
to the word of God. All His promises are made upon condition
of faith and obedience, and a failure to comply with His [p. 622] commands cuts off the fulfillment to us of the rich provisions of the
Scriptures. We should not follow impulse, nor rely on the judgment
of men; we should look to the revealed will of God and
walk according to His definite commandment, no matter what
circumstances may surround us. God will take care of the
results; by faithfulness to His word we may in time of trial prove
before men and angels that the Lord can trust us in difficult
places to carry out His will, honor His name, and bless His
people.
Saul was in disfavor with God, and yet unwilling to humble
his heart in penitence. What he lacked in real piety he would
try to make up by his zeal in the forms of religion. Saul was not
ignorant of Israel's defeat when the ark of God was brought
into the camp by Hophni and Phinehas; and yet, knowing all
this, he determined to send for the sacred chest and its attendant
priest. Could he by this means inspire confidence in the people,
he hoped to reassemble his scattered army and give battle to the
Philistines. He would now dispense with Samuel's presence and
support, and thus free himself from the prophet's unwelcome
criticisms and reproofs.
The Holy Spirit had been granted to Saul to enlighten his
understanding and soften his heart. He had received faithful
instruction and reproof from the prophet of God. And yet how
great was his perversity! The history of Israel's first king
presents a sad example of the power of early wrong habits. In his
youth Saul did not love and fear God; and that impetuous spirit,
not early trained to submission, was ever ready to rebel against
divine authority. Those who in their youth cherish a sacred
regard for the will of God, and who faithfully perform the duties
of their position, will be prepared for higher service in afterlife.
But men cannot for years pervert the powers that God has given
them, and then, when they choose to change, find these powers
fresh and free for an entirely opposite course.
Saul's efforts to arouse the people proved unavailing. Finding
his force reduced to six hundred men, he left Gilgal and retired
to the fortress at Geba, lately taken from the Philistines. This
stronghold was on the south side of a deep, rugged valley, or
gorge, a few miles north of the site of Jerusalem. On the north
side of the same valley, at Michmash, the Philistine force lay
encamped while detachments of troops went out in different directions
to ravage the country. [p. 623]
God had permitted matters to be thus brought to a crisis that
He might rebuke the perversity of Saul and teach His people a
lesson of humility and faith. Because of Saul's sin in his
presumptuous offering, the Lord would not give him the honor of
vanquishing the Philistines. Jonathan, the king's son, a man who
feared the Lord, was chosen as the instrument to deliver Israel.
Moved by a divine impulse, he proposed to his armor-bearer that
they should make a secret attack upon the enemy's camp. "It
may be," he urged, "that the Lord will work for us: for there is
no restraint to the Lord to save by many or by few."
The armor-bearer, who also was a man of faith and prayer,
encouragement the design, and together they withdrew from the
camp, secretly, lest their purpose should be opposed. With
earnest prayer to the Guide of their fathers, they agreed upon a
sign by which they might determine how to proceed. Then
passing down into the gorge separating the two armies, they
silently threaded their way, under the shadow of the cliff, and
partially concealed by the mounds and ridges of the valley.
Approaching the Philistine fortress, they were revealed to the view
of their enemies, who said, tauntingly, "Behold, the Hebrews
come forth out of the holes where they had hid themselves,"
then challenged them, "Come up to us, and we will show you a
thing," meaning that they would punish the two Israelites for
their daring. This challenge was the token that Jonathan and his
companion had agreed to accept as evidence that the Lord would
prosper their undertaking. Passing now from the sight of the
Philistines, and choosing a secret and difficult path, the warriors
made their way to the summit of a cliff that had been deemed
inaccessible, and was not very strongly guarded. Thus they
penetrated the enemy's camp and slew the sentinels, who, overcome
with surprise and fear, offered no resistance.
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