There are those in media, and in work places that attach themselves to whatever, or whoever is in the spotlight. They may befriend the popular person, or wear the latest fashion. They see the rising star and attach themselves to them. A famous example of this is Don King and Mike Tyson. Don King came from a modest neighborhood in Cleveland where his desire to be a lawyer gave way to him becoming a bookie. He was denied entrance in to law, so he employed the Machiavellian principles of being feared rather being loved, into his life.
King became ruthless in his dealings as he built his promotional empire. It was in the 1980s when King met the up-and-coming Mike Tyson. King saw the potential in the young boxer and crafted matches that favored Tyson, and contracts that favored him. In the end, King and Tyson’s relationship is looked upon, at the very, least as a chaotic partnership, but to some, King is seen as the reason Tyson had the downfall in the ‘90s that he did.
It’s this idea of clinging to another’s fame, which we’ll see in our passage today as we get back to our series in First Samuel, where we’ll be picking it back up in chapter 14, verse 1. And as we open up to First Samuel 14:1, let’s look back over the last few weeks.
We began the second section of First Samuel, by being introduced to the king, who the people had requested and whom God had chosen. We saw that in Saul, there were commendable attributes, like obedience, and humility, that made his beginning promising. However, finishing well is the goal, not simply starting off well. In order to finish well, we talked about how we need to go before God to be examined, so that he may transform us into the image of the Son.
Following that, we saw how Saul was made king in front of the people of Israel. After which he won his first battle, and proved that God had called him to the position. It was after the battle, that we saw the transition from the era of the Judges, to the era of the monarchy, when Saul made the decision not to punish those that had grumbled about him becoming king. We walked away from that week with the understanding that it is God who establishes kings and kingdoms, and it is God who removes them.
In the eighth week, we read through Samuel’s farewell speech. His life was a model of faithfulness to God, one that we can look to and say, “That’s the kind of life I want to live.” Yet even though he was faithful, his sons did not follow his example, the people rejected God’s Kingship under his watch, and Saul would eventually fall as king. We walked away from that week with the understanding that, we should seek to live faithful lives, with the understanding that, though we may influence others, each of us is responsible for our own walk with the Lord.
Finally, last week, we read how Saul, facing an overwhelming military battle, allowed his worry to push him to breaking the command of God. Saul stepped into the role of priest, made a sacrifice on behalf of the people without waiting for Samuel to arrive. Due to this, Saul showed that he had become unfaithful. When Samuel showed up, he informed Saul that what could have been a lasting kingdom, was lost on that day. It was from this that we talk about how our anxieties can cause us to rebel against God, so we need to bring them before the Lord and have them dealt with through prayer and praise, so that God’s peace may rest on us.
With these last four weeks in our minds, we can move into chapter 14, where, like other parts of this summer series, the big thought here covers an entire chapter, and that chapter is very large. So we will only be covering pieces of it, and so your homework is to go back and read the chapter in its entirely.
Let’s read together the opening of chapter 14, starting in verse 1.
1 One day Jonathan the son of Saul said to the young man who carried his armor, “Come, let us go over to the Philistine garrison on the other side.” But he did not tell his father. 2 Saul was staying in the outskirts of Gibeah in the pomegranate cave at Migron.
Dropping down to verse 6, we continue to read,
6 Jonathan said to the young man who carried his armor, “Come, let us go over to the garrison of these uncircumcised. It may be that the Lord will work for us, for nothing can hinder the Lord from saving by many or by few.” 7 And his armor-bearer said to him, “Do all that is in your heart. Do as you wish. Behold, I am with you heart and soul.” 8 Then Jonathan said, “Behold, we will cross over to the men, and we will show ourselves to them. 9 If they say to us, ‘Wait until we come to you,’ then we will stand still in our place, and we will not go up to them. 10 But if they say, ‘Come up to us,’ then we will go up, for the Lord has given them into our hand. And this shall be the sign to us.” 11 So both of them showed themselves to the garrison of the Philistines. And the Philistines said, “Look, Hebrews are coming out of the holes where they have hidden themselves.” 12 And the men of the garrison hailed Jonathan and his armor-bearer and said, “Come up to us, and we will show you a thing.” And Jonathan said to his armor-bearer, “Come up after me, for the Lord has given them into the hand of Israel.” 13 Then Jonathan climbed up on his hands and feet, and his armor-bearer after him. And they fell before Jonathan, and his armor-bearer killed them after him. 14 And that first strike, which Jonathan and his armor-bearer made, killed about twenty men within as it were half a furrow's length in an acre of land. 15 And there was a panic in the camp, in the field, and among all the people. The garrison and even the raiders trembled, the earth quaked, and it became a very great panic.
v. 1-23
This sets the scene for the rest of the passage. Saul’s son Jonathan, who was leading others into battle, gets this idea in his head to go off with his armor bearer to look at the Philistine garrison. Now reading this, I don’t know if this is the story of the garrison that Jonathan defeats, that is briefly mentioned in chapter 13 verse 3, since it is in the same area. But in all my research, I couldn’t find anyone who connected the two, so we’ll treat it as a separate instance. However, if the two are the same, then Saul’s actions in unfaithfully making the offering from chapter 13, and God’s rejection of Saul makes more sense after we understand this chapter. Either way, we see Saul’s spiral away from God.
Here, we see Jonathan as a man who has a great faith in the Lord. If Saul had not fallen, then this was the next generation of king that was to be on the throne.
In a very similar fashion to the two spies of Numbers 13, we see that Jonathan does not see human might as what wins the day, but rather Israel only wins by what God does.
So he tells the armor bearer that they will reveal themselves to the Philistines, and if the enemy calls for them to come up, that means that God is with them. And this is what happens. The two warriors reveal themselves, the Philistines call for them, and then God sends a panic among them very similar to Samuel chapter 7, and Judges chapter 7.
It is following this, starting in verse 7, that we’re told that the news got back to Saul about the panic in the Philistine camp. They make a quick count and find that Jonathan and his armor bearer were not there.
Now in a ray of hope, we see that Saul had asked the priest Ahijah to inquire of the Lord as to what they should do, but when Saul heard the news of the panic, he told the priest to, “Withdraw your hand, (v.19)” from seeking God’s guidance in what to do with the Philistines. Whether this is good nor not, we’re not told, but what we do know is that Saul’s men, the Israelites who had gone to the Philistines, and some more Israelites from Ephraim joined the battle.
This section of the passage ends in verse 23 with, “So the Lord saved Israel that day. And the battle passed beyond Beth-aven.” Proving that Jonathan was correct: it was God who won the day for Israel.
v. 24-46
However, the physical victory of verse 23 quickly gives way to spiritual defeat with Saul, in the second section of the passage. In verse 24 we read, “And the men of Israel had been hard pressed that day, so Saul had laid an oath on the people, saying, ‘Cursed be the man who eats food until it is evening and I am avenged on my enemies.’”
Notice that the oath is made because Saul wants vengeance on his enemies. Not the enemies of God, not the enemies of Israel, but his enemies. Saul’s focus is not on being a under-king, a prince of God, but rather, in the last two plus years that he has been king, Saul has usurped God’s rule and seeks his own. This is the very thing that God communicated through Samuel to Israel.
It is Saul’s oath that parallels Jephthah in Judges 11:29-40. And like Jephthah’s oath, the oath maker speaks rashly and puts his family at risk.
But Jonathan doesn’t know about the oath and its punishment and he eats honey. As he is eating the honey, Jonathan is informed of the oath and punishment, and he recognizes that it was a bad pronouncement from his father. Again, we see in Jonathan what could have been the monarchy moving forward if Saul was faithful.
Back in chapter 13 we saw how the people did not follow Samuel's lead, which was with God, but instead, they went with their choice of king, Saul. It is in verse 31 that we see how far Saul’s choices have led the people to rebel against God. We read in verse 31, “They struck down the Philistines that day from Michmash to Aijalon. And the people were very faint. The people pounced on the spoil and took sheep and oxen and calves and slaughtered them on the ground. And the people ate them with the blood. (v.31-32)”
Since Saul was rash in his oath, the people were so hungry by the end of the battle that they ripped into the meat without draining the blood. Saul’s rashness in oath, led to his son’s life being in jeopardy and the people rebelling against God’s command not to eat meat with blood in it. (Gen 9, Lev. 17, Deut. 12:23)
Saul knows this is wrong and for a brief moment comes to his senses and orders the people to bring their food that it might be slaughtered properly. It is also here that Saul builds his first alter to God.
Then in verses 36-46, we see that, once the sin of eating meat with blood in it is dealt with, Saul wants to finish the job by attacking the Philistines at night. It is here that the priest directs Saul to seek God. However, when they do, God doesn’t answer. This leads Saul to believe there is sin in Israel that needs to be dealt with. So Saul divides the people into two groups: the leaders of the people of Israel who represent the masses, and Saul and Jonathan who represent the monarchy. They cast two stones, one called the Urim and the other the Thummim. The lot points to the monarchy. So again the stones are cast and the lot falls to Jonathan. And we get this interaction between Jonathan and his father in verse 43, “Then Saul said to Jonathan, ‘Tell me what you have done.’ And Jonathan told him, ‘I tasted a little honey with the tip of the staff that was in my hand. Here I am; I will die.’ And Saul said, ‘God do so to me and more also; you shall surely die, Jonathan.’(v.43-44)”
The glimmer of hope in Saul who called the people away from the sin of eating meat with blood in it, fades with his intention to kill his son. Yet the people protest, and we’re told that they ransomed Jonathan. In other words, they had to pay Saul in order to keep him from killing his son.
v. 47-52
The chapter ends with a recognition that Saul fought many enemies through out his tenure as king of Israel and he did so valiantly. But it’s in the last verse that we see something curious. The last verses reads “There was hard fighting against the Philistines all the days of Saul. And when Saul saw any strong man, or any valiant man, he attached him to himself. (v.52)”
Though Saul himself was considered valiant when fighting, it seems that he was not a military minded man, and instead relied heavily on Abner his army commander, and other strong and valiant men. There’s a hint of how Saul clings to those warriors who act valiantly in war, instead of clingy to the Lord.
Yet through this whole passage, we can see that even those who are in rebellion against God, can still be used by him to accomplish God’s plans. God has purpose through Saul and even though Saul ended up rebelling, God still worked it out through others, like Jonathan.
It doesn’t excuse Saul’s unfaithfulness, but it shows that God works even through our unfaithfulness.
This moment in Saul’s life leads into the next chapter where he gets a talking to by Samuel, and we learn about how Saul’s unfaithfulness has led to his downfall.
But its here that we can walk away with a couple of lessons. First, we need to see the Lord as our Victory Maker. There is a long history of God’s people seeing God as the one who brings victory to a situation. Deuteronomy 20:4 reads, “for the Lord your God is he who goes with you to fight for you against your enemies, to give you the victory.”
Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 15:57, “But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.”
We are called to recognize that we do not win victories, the Lord does.
However in that same line of thinking, we are also called to be faithful. In the situation in which Moses speaks of God bringing the victory in Deuteronomy 20:4, the context shows that the Israelites still had to go out to the battle. God calls us to the moment of battle, that we might walk in it faithfully. Through that faithfulness God works to bring about victory, whether through us, or someone else. God won the battle against the Philistines, but Saul wasn’t faithful, it was Jonathan.
God is calling us to faithfulness so that we may fully reap the benefits of his victory.
My challenge for you today is this: there is a banner in the bulletin. Take that and place it where you will see it everyday. Each time you see it, say a prayer like this, “Lord you win the victories, help me to faithfully walk with you that I may see and enjoy them.”Let us be a people who live under the banner of God, and rejoice in him who is our Victor. Amen.