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Samuel the meeting-point of Israel and GodSamuel begins to act, by his testimony, upon the conscience of the people, and to put away that which weakened them by dishonouring God. He tells them that, if they will turn to Jehovah with all their heart, they must put away the strange gods, and serve Jehovah alone. A mingled worship was intolerable. Then would Jehovah deliver them. The prophet Samuel is now the meeting-point between the people and God. God now acknowledges him alone. The true place of the ark
The ark is not found again in its place until the king chosen of
God is established on the throne; it is only placed entirely in
God's order when the son of David rules in peace and in strength at
Jerusalem.* It is consulted once (1 Sam. 14:18-19), but its
presence is without effect and without power. It exists, but in
connection with those in whom faith and integrity were no longer
found, so that nothing resulted from it. It the rather proved that
God was elsewhere, or at least that He wrought elsewhere. Samuel at Mizpeh: his intercession and God's blessingBut we will pursue the history. At Samuel's call the strange gods are put away. The people gather around him, that he may pray for them. They offer no sacrifice; they draw water and pour it out upon the ground in token of repentance (see 2 Sam. 14:14); they fast and confess their sin. Samuel judges them there. But if Israel assembles, even for humiliation, the enemy at once bestirs himself in opposition; he will tolerate no act which places the people of God in a position which recognises Him as God.
The Israelites are alarmed, and have recourse to Samuel's
intercession. Samuel offers a sacrifice,* token of entire
surrender of self to the Lord, and of the people's relationship with
Him; but it is not before the ark. He entreats Jehovah, his prayer
is heard, and the Philistines are smitten before Israel. And it was
not an exceptional case, although they lost nothing of their
formidable character, or of their hatred for Israel. Samuel brings
down God's blessing upon the people, and the hand of Jehovah was
against the Philistines all the days of Samuel. Samuel the support and upholder of the peopleThe cities of Israel were restored. There was peace between Israel and the Amorites. Samuel judged Israel at Ramah and built an altar there. All this is an exceptional and extraordinary position for Israel, in which they depended entirely on Samuel, who, while living himself as a patriarch, as though there were no tabernacle, becomes, through his own relationship with God, by faith, the support and upholder of the people, who in fact had no other. |
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