DESIRE, DECEPTION, AND REVENGE
by Steve Zeisler
I was listening to a taped message on Judges in preparation for today, and
heard a joke that struck me as appropriate. It seems that the most reprobate
man in town died, a man whose misdeeds were known by all. His brother came
to the local pastor and said, "I'd like you to perform a funeral service
for my brother who died, and I want you to refer to him as a saint in your
message." The pastor said, "Your brother was the lyingest, cheatingest,
vilest man I've known in a long time! How can I call him a saint?"
The brother replied, "If you do, Pastor, I'll give twenty-five thousand
dollars to the building fund at your church." The pastor instantly
began to see things differently, and he agreed to do it. The next day the
funeral service was held, and he stood before the people who had assembled
and said, "The deceased was the vilest, cheatingest, lyingest, most
reprobate man in town, as you all know - but compared to his brother, he
was a saint!"
Sometimes it seems that the only way we can say something positive about
the individuals we encounter in the book of Judges is to compare them to
each other. You have to work at finding something good to say about them!
In chapter 16 we're going to finish Samson's story this morning. The first
verse puts us right back into the middle of this man's life:
Now Samson went to Gaza and saw a harlot there, and went in
to her.
There are three major stories of Samson's adult life. One begins with his
saying to his father, "I've seen a woman in Timnah. Get her for me,
she looks good to me." Samson's physical desire for this Timnite woman
led to the long story (in chapters 14 and 15) of his marriage, the wager
and its aftermath ending with a thousand Philistine killed by Samson with
a donkey's jawbone. The second story is this short paragraph here about
his traveling to Gaza to see a prostitute. The third and most famous story,
which we'll consider this morning as well, is the archetypal "fatal
attraction" story of Samson and Delilah. Each story is introduced with
Samson's sexual desire as his motivation to act:
Verse 2:
When it was told to the Gazites, saying, "Samson has come
here," they surrounded the place and lay in wait for him all night
at the gate of the city. And they kept silent all night, saying, "Let
us wait until the morning light, then we will kill him." Now Samson
lay until midnight, and at midnight he arose and took hold of the doors
of the city gate and the two posts and pulled them up along with the bars;
then he put them on his shoulders and carried them up to the top of the
mountain which is opposite Hebron.
The gates of Gaza had heavy beams studded with metal that were sunk into
the ground as posts to support them. Samson arose in the middle of the night
and ripped the whole gate structure out of the ground. He terrified the
guards who were stationed on every side, and marched off forty miles to
Hebron with this great weight on his shoulders. The man was extraordinary.
Everything about him was larger than life and out of control. This short
story of the night in Gaza was evidently typical of him. We're not told
much here, just enough to be reminded of the kind of life he lived.
Life Without Limits
Every time we meet Samson in any of the events of his life, he was alone;
he never had a brother or a friend. He was a man who got to do everything
he ever wanted to do in life. If he wanted a wife, he demanded that his
father get him a wife. He destroyed those who angered him for good reasons
or bad. He traveled freely among his kinsmen and his enemies with complete
fearlessness. In this story, he strode into the enemy city of Gaza, saw
a prostitute he liked, had her, and took off with the gates of the city
on his shoulders, terrifying everybody around him. No one ever forbade Samson
to do whatever he wanted. But Samson's problem was that he didn't know what
to want in life; the desires that drove him were all aimed at the wrong
things.
Does the idea of unrestricted freedom to do whatever you want seem like
a good idea to you? Perhaps you spend your days in a high stress work environment
that has no prospect of improvement. Perhaps your family has entrenched
problems that seem insoluable. Every time you turn around you're being buffeted
by some pressure, restricted by some wall, or under some burden. Over and
over again I've had conversations with brothers and sisters in this church
who feel frustrated at their inability to do the things that they wish they
could do. "Oh, I'd love to be like Huckleberry Finn some day and just
take off with no responsibilities-float down the river and have adventures,
be irresponsible, and get to do whatever I want."
Samson's story is living proof that getting to do whatever you want is a
very bad option unless you want the right things, unless you have learned
to crucify the desires and inclinations in yourself that will send you off
in the wrong direction. God places restrictions, walls, and impediments
in our lives and lays burdens on us precisely to teach us to want different
things than we otherwise would. He gives us these things to make us realize
that this world is not our home, that we are only temporarily assigned here,
and that we are being prepared for eternity. We are being taught, if we'll
listen, to become aware of the unseen realities, to long for heaven, to
care more about the presence and peace of God in our lives than whatever
circumstances can offer us. He makes it hard on us precisely to teach us
that the things we keep reaching for aren't worth having.
Have you ever seen toddlers when they're learning to walk, kind of careening
around trying to take their first steps? All the adults in the room do everything
they can to remove the obstacles, don't they? If a toddler is about to step
on a tennis ball, you quickly get the tennis ball out of the way. If he
is about to crash into a wall, you turn him to the side. A toddler who doesn't
know how to walk needs the adults in his life to remove the obstacles so
that nothing bad happens to him. Samson had always been a spiritual toddler.
God had always removed the consequences from his life, until the day finally
came that he offended his Lord seriously enough that all of the consequences
descended at once. So it's not a bad thing for the Lord to build restrictions
into our lives, it's a good thing.
Garth Brooks has a song in which he thanks God for unanswered prayers. It's
the story of a man who in high school had fallen in love with the most beautiful
girl in the school, and prayed every night that God would let him marry
her. As the song goes on, however, it turns out that he's back at a high
school reunion with his wife, whom he loves and has made a wonderful life
with. He sees the beautiful girl and realizes what an awful experience it
would have been to have married her and gotten what he had wanted in high
school. The refrain of the song is:
I thank God for unanswered prayers.
Just because he don't answer doesn't mean he don't care.
And we'll see that Samson's life of unrestricted opportunity was a devastation
to him.
Fatal Attraction
In verse 4 we meet Delilah:
After this it came about that he loved a woman in the valley
of Sorek, whose name was Delilah. And the lords of the Philistines came
up to her, and said to her, "Entice him, and see where his great strength
lies and how we may overpower him that we may bind him to afflict him. Then
we will each give you eleven hundred pieces of silver."
Delilah was the first individual with whom Samson created a relationship
that made him vulnerable. It says he loved her, and that word is not used
of him anywhere else. His life of sexual adventures and short-term relationships
had finally weakened his thinking process to the point that he was not only
attracted to this woman, but now he had become emotionally enthralled by
her. She was as cold-blooded and calculating a person as you could find.
She was utterly uninterested in Samson's welfare. The five men who were
heads of the major cities of the Philistines, were sick and tired of Samson
ripping gate posts up, terrorizing the countryside, and killing everybody
who got in his way. They wanted him done away with, they offered her an
extraordinary price if she would use her emotional control of this man to
find out how he could be taken advantage of. She had no qualms whatever
about going along with their plan. Verse 6:
So Delilah said to Samson, "Please tell me where your great
strength is and how you may be bound to afflict you."
I hope she was a little more clever than that in the expanded version, but
if not, then Samson was even dimmer than it appears at first blush! She
probably managed to convey something like, "You're my lover and I'm
yours. In the safety of our cocoon of intimacy, tell me your deepest secrets.
Tell me why you're so extraordinarily, frighteningly strong." But he
lied to her.
And Samson said to her, "If they bind me with seven fresh
cords that have not been dried, then I shall become weak and be like any
other man." Then the lords of the Philistines brought up to her seven
fresh cords that had not been dried, and she bound him with them. Now she
had men lying in wait in an inner room. And she said to him, "The Philistines
are upon you, Samson!" But he snapped the cords as a string of tow
snaps when it touches fire. So his strength was not discovered.
The Philistines hid in an inner room to see if it was going to work; they
didn't want to risk their lives by being there when she ran the experiment.
She tied him up just as he said. Of course, as soon as she woke him up and
said, "The Philistines are upon you!" he snapped the cords, and
presumably the Philistines slipped out the back door and high-tailed it
down the hill.
So she repeated the experiment. "Oh, Samson, you kidded me the first
time. Now really tell me the secret." So they went through the charade
again. He told her another lie. And again the Philistines were hiding in
the back room and took off when it didn't work.
Then a third time: "Samson, this is really getting tiresome. Please
tell me, because I love you and you love me. Your muscles are so big and
strong." We can imagine her batting her eyelashes at him. And he lied
to her for the third time. But he was weakened; he began to talk about his
hair, although he didn't tell her the truth.
Delilah's Persistence
Finally, however, the Philistines gave up on the deal because it didn't
look like it was going to work. They left her behind. But she remembered
the fifty-five hundred pieces of silver that had been promised her, and
she wasn't going to give up on the project. She began to turn up the heat
of her pleading. Verse 15 carries on the story:
Then she said to him, "How can you say, 'I love you,' when
your heart is not with me? You have deceived me these three times and have
not told me where your great strength is." And it came about when she
pressed him daily with her words and urged him, that his soul was annoyed
to death. So he told her all that was in his heart and said to her, "A
razor has never come on my head, for I have been a Nazirite to God from
my mother's womb. If I am shaved, then my strength will leave me and I shall
become weak and be like any other man."
Delilah realized that this time God's name had been brought into the story,
and she could tell by Samson's countenance that he had finally told her
the truth. Verse 18:
When Delilah saw that he had told her all that was in his heart,
she sent and called the lords of the Philistines, saying, "Come up
once more, for he has told me all that is in his heart." Then the lords
of the Philistines came up to her, and brought the money in their hands.
And she made him sleep on her knees, and called for a man and had him shave
off the seven locks of his hair. Then she began to afflict him [perhaps
tickle him or punch him], and his strength left him. And she said, "The
Philistines are upon you, Samson!" And he awoke from his sleep and
said, "I will go out as at other times and shake myself free."
But he did not know that the LORD had departed from him.
Samson had been the instrument of God from his mother's womb. God had chosen
him to be the fearful opponent of the Philistines, a wicked, violent, destructive
people who deserved everything they ever got from Samson. They were idolaters
who hated the cause of the living God. God continued to use Samson, and
the power of the Spirit of God would come upon him, enabling him to do extraordinary
things. Throughout his life we can imagine the Lord waiting for Samson,
urging him, wooing him, wanting him to respond not just as an instrument
of God's power, but as someone who had a relationship with him. But this
was the last straw. What Samson did here was give the story of his Nazirite
beginnings into the hands of a Philistine courtesan, making himself completely
vulnerable to her. And the Lord finally departed from Samson. When his hair
was shaved and the last vestige of the vow that he was to keep was gone,
God's patience with Samson was at an end.
I was at a beautiful wedding yesterday. The bride, whom I know, is a lovely
girl, and she was given by her family to an honorable young man. It was
an occasion to rejoice over. I enjoyed watching the bride and her father
dance together at the reception, seeing all the indicators that a family
had brought up their child to have values that were worth having and to
begin a new life that was worth living. In reading Samson's story, I find
myself wondering how many of the children of this church will be able to
have that kind of wedding day.
Samson made choices over and over again that reduced him. He was a man whose
sexuality in particular led him to relationships that took away his strength,
his manhood. Nothing would ever destroy Samson from the outside; he was
invulnerable to attack. But he could destroy himself. So we find him having
lost his ability to know or to choose what was right, and he began to make
choices that were destructive. Delilah was as bad a partner as you could
pick. She lived for herself, and she was willing to sell him down the river
at a moment's notice.
Agape Love
Why would you pick such a bad partner? Or a better question is, how do you
become a good, honorable marriage partner? Conversely, how do you find someone
who is worth marrying? If we make the choices to go along with our culture,
to sell out as Samson did, we're extraordinarily vulnerable to falling into
the kind of relationship that is not worth having at all, like this one.
It was the accumulation of the choices Samson had made that brought him
to the point where he found himself wanting to be with a woman who wanted
nothing but to use him. Now, look carefully at why Samson chose Delilah:
He was trying to use her as he had always used women. Women were there for
his pleasure, for his amusement, for parties. Women were there to sleep
with. They existed to serve him, and she was just the current one. He was
more emotionally attached to her, but he was using her, nonetheless.
Yesterday at the wedding ceremony Ted Wise articulated in a wonderful way
the truth of 1 Corinthians 13, saying to the bride and groom, "You
need to learn sacrificial love for each other, to care more for the person
you're married to than for yourself. You need to learn to lay down your
life and bless the one you're marrying." If Samson had been the kind
of a man who approached Delilah with sacrificial love and reached out to
her in her hardness, if he had tried to understand her and the hurts she
had suffered that made her the way she was, then he would not have been
so vulnerable to being used by her. But his interest was all selfish. He
was going to use Delilah to his advantage, but the trouble was that she
was a better user than he was. Because he hadn't learned to love sacrificially
and to enjoy giving in a relationship, he was a taker who got taken. Samson
was playing in the big leagues of self-interest when he met Delilah. He
couldn't keep up.
If we never let God shape our desires and our character; if we aren't learning
the lessons of humility, trusting God, and giving rather than taking; then
we are apt, as Samson was, to choose to be with someone who is operating
on exactly the same basis we are. Two users using each other is a vicious
cycle to be in. I sometimes wonder about people who are onto their fifth
or sixth marriage. Why do they keep choosing bad relationships? It is because
most of the time they're looking for someone to use to fill a void in themselves,
and they unwittingly become victims of another user.
Samson's Superstition
Samson finally gave up the last vestige of whatever he had been taught about
separation unto God. He gave it away to Delilah, and at that point the Lord
departed from him. Beyond looking at the way Samson related to women, perhaps
the most important thing we can ask about Samson is, what did he believe
about God? That is ultimately what determined what he did, where he went,
and how he lived. And what he believed was that God was filled with superstition.
His hair was a rabbit's foot, a talisman, some kind of magic dust that kept
him protected in all circumstances. When in verse 17 he finally told Delilah,
"If [my hair] is shaved my strength will leave me." he seemed
to believe that the strength of his body would drain itself out of his head
as the locks of his hair were chopped off.
But look closely at verse 20:
"And he awoke from his sleep and said, 'I will go out as
at other times and shake myself free.' But he did not know that the LORD
had departed from him."
It was not magic in his hair that ultimately departed from him. It was the
Lord God himself. That's what Samson never understood. Do you see how sad
that is? The presence of God in his life had just been removed, and he didn't
know it because he had never been sensitive to the personal God who cared
for him. He had assumed that his strength was there by superstitious refusal
to cut his hair, that it was magic. Thus he became vulnerable to what would
follow next.
It is critical that we have a relationship with God that is personal, living,
and vital. We live in a world that is getting crazier by the day. Dangerous
and unstable times make people-- even those with Christian backgrounds --
suscepetible to the powers of superstition. Gurus with strong personalities
and an air of mystery gain ascendency. Individuals find themselves doing
odd little rituals, reading secret books, learning chants, and doing all
kinds of other silly, superstitious things because they're so desperate
and afraid.
Conversely, if religion doesn't become superstition in hard times, it will
become legalism; rules, boundaries, and walls will be drawn up, and everybody
will be bent on external conformity.
Neither superstition nor legalism is a protection in a society that is going
down the drain. The only real protection is personally knowing the living
God who will teach us to follow him day by day and grant us wisdom if we
will ask for it.
(But if any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God who gives
to all men generously and without reproach, and it will be given to him.
James 1:5)
Who will steer us through the mine fields of life, and from whom can we
draw strength when we need it? Only the living and personal God. Samson
had a superstitious religion and he lost everything, as we will see.
Verse 21:
Then the Philistines seized him and gouged out his eyes; and
they brought him down to Gaza [he had humiliated the Gazites once, and now
they took him to Gaza to be humiliated] and bound him with bronze chains,
and he was a grinder in the prison. However, the hair of his head began
to grow again after it was shaved off.
Now the lords of the Philistines assembled to offer a great sacrifice to
Dagon their god, and to rejoice, for they said,
"Our god has given Samson our enemy into our hands."
When the people saw him, they praised their god, for they said,
"Our god has given our enemy into our hands,
Even the destroyer of our country,
Who has slain many of us."
It so happened when they were in high spirits, that they said, "Call
for Samson, that he may amuse us." So they called for Samson from the
prison, and he entertained them. And they made him stand between the pillars.
Then Samson said to the boy who was holding his hand, "Let me feel
the pillars on which the house rests, that I may lean against them."
Now the house was full of men and women, and all the lords of the Philistines
were there. And about 3,000 men and women were on the roof looking on while
Samson was amusing them.
The Temple of Doom
We probably ought to imagine this temple as having a ground floor crowded
with Philistines, Samson in some kind of open place, and then an upper story
or roof that was creaking under the weight of thousands more Philistines.
It was supported by a pair of pillars in the middle, and Samson would pull
those out. The roof would fall, and the people above would die in the fall,
and those underneath would die by being crushed.
Then Samson called to the LORD and said, "O Lord GOD, please
remember me and please strengthen me just this time, O God, that I may at
once be avenged of the Philistines for my two eyes." And Samson grasped
the two middle pillars on which the house rested, and braced himself against
them, the one with his right hand and the other with his left. And Samson
said, "Let me die with the Philistines!" And he bent with all
his might so that the house fell on the lords and all the people who were
in it. So the dead whom he killed at his death were more than those whom
he killed in his life. Then his brothers and all his father's household
came down, took him, brought him up, and buried him between Zorah and Eshtaol
in the tomb of Manoah his father. Thus he had judged Israel twenty years.
Samson was captured by the Philistines in his weakness, blinded, brought
to Gaza, and used as an amusement piece. He was set to do women's work with
a mortar and pestle grinding grain, humiliated in his captivity. Then at
the festival, they brought him out to ridicule him in public; to amuse themselves
with the indignities they hurled on him. It's very clear, however, that
the context in which this ridicule was taking place was praise of Dagon
and denouncement of Yahweh. "Our god has defeated their god,"
the leaders said, and the people repeated it. This is an arena in which
the God of Samson was being mocked, not just Samson himself.
The events that took place the day he died are the reasons that he is mentioned
in the New Testament as a man of faith. Now, God's grace was at work immediately
upon his capture. Even before Samson learned any lessons, his hair began
to grow back. You can imagine Samson in his captivity beginning to think
of all that he'd done, all that he'd been, and the life that he'd lived,
and realizing as he touched his head that God still cared about him, that
his hair wouldn't stay shaved forever. So he had been reflecting on his
life, and then in this moment when the name of God was being ridiculed,
he called out in prayer, "Lord, please strengthen me one more time
and avenge me for my eyes." I'm convinced that he understood at this
point that the loss of his eyes was intended to mock the God of Israel.
He was asking not only for personal vengeance, but that the name of God
be upheld in the temple of Dagon. For that reason we see him as a man of
faith.
Remember the prayer he prayed at the end of chapter 15: He had just killed
a thousand men, he was thirsty, and he yelled at God, "Shall I die
of thirst and fall into the hands of the uncircumcised? Do something!"
But this prayer is very different. He said, "Lord, please..."
There's contrition and humility in it-it's a request. He had no certainty
that it would be granted; God had the right not to grant requests if he
chose. Every other time Samson killed Philistines, it was because he was
mad at them. They got in his way, they killed his wife, or they did something
else that made him furious. But here God was being mocked, and because of
this, we can assume that Samson for the first time began to care about something
other than himself. So he called out for strength to act.
The Need for Christ
As we conclude, let's review: We misunderstand the reason for difficulties
in our life at times, don't we? We wish that life would be easier so we
could get what we want, but getting what we want leads to a life of fleshliness
and ultimately to the sort of spiritual weakness that characterized Samson.
We don't ever learn to want what's right, to seek the things of God, if
we get what we want all the time. Samson's out-of-control life stands as
a testimony to our need to be restricted so that we'll learn.
Another observation we can make in review is that sin accumulates, especially
sexual sin. As it accumulates, it weakens us and makes us less capable of
giving and more insistent on getting, to the point that we're not able to
understand that in our desire to use another, we're very likely to get used
in return. It takes away all the possibility of sensitivity to the other
person that a relationship ought to have.
Finally, God is gracious even in the hardest circumstances. When Samson
lost everything, his hair grew back and he learned to pray and focus on
the things of God as he hadn't before.
The very last sentence out of Samson's mouth was perhaps the most important
of all. Having asked for strength and feeling the pillars crumble, as the
roof began to fall on him, he said, "Lord, let me die with the Philistines!"
Samson's life had become a burden to him. There are many people whose sicknesses
and sufferings have become so great that they don't want to live anymore.
Samson, with his eyes gouged out and the humiliations he had suffered, had
come to that point. He had no family to live for and nothing else to do.
He was a man who would presumably be blind for the rest of his life. He
didn't want to live anymore. So we can understand his saying, "Let
me die!" But what he said was, "Let me die with the Philistines!"
And the point of that prayer was to say to God, "I'm no different than
the Philistines. I've been as far from you as any worshipper of Dagon is,
and my heart is as dark as any other heart. I don't deserve gracious treatment.
I don't deserve to live. So let me die with the Philistines." Samson
had finally come to the end of loving and defending himself, and he was
willing to die, not just because he was sick of life, but because he accounted
himself the same as those who had offended God all their lives.
We need to have exactly the same attitude: I'm just like everybody else.
My life is offensive enough that I deserve to die with the Philistines.
I have acted in ways perhaps not as debauched as Samson's, but I'm just
as rebellious, self-seeking, hardhearted, and likely to use people. I have
taken the things of God and used them to my advantage; I've promoted myself.
I don't deserve mercy or advantage in life. Only instead of saying, "Let
me die with the Philistines!" the privilege of Christians is to say,
"Let me die with Christ!" We have a Savior who died in our place.
Remembering his life given up for us, we apply its advantages to ourselves.
May we acclaim with the apostle Paul, "I've been crucified with Christ,
and it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me."
Catalog No. 4317
Judges 16:1-31
Twelfth Message
Steve Zeisler
March 22, 1992
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