Sunday
Morning Bible Study
January 13, 2002
Introduction
Last week we saw the Israelites facing a war with the Philistines. When they lost the first battle, they
thought they needed some help, so they brought the Ark of the Covenant from
Shiloh to their battlefield as a sort of “good luck charm”. God wasn’t too pleased with this and as a
result they people lost the battle and lost the Ark. They lost the battle at a place that would one day be called
“Ebenezer”. The Ark was taken by the
Philistines who first tried to put the Ark in the temple of their god Dagon,
but kept finding Dagon fallen down on the ground before the Ark. The Philistines were also struck with some
kind of plague involving possibly hemorrhoids and a mice infestation. As a result, the Philistines sent the Ark
back to Israel by way of a driverless ox-cart.
When the Ark arrived in a field at Bethshemesh, some of the Israelites
peeked inside the Ark, and some of them were killed as well. As a result, the people of Bethshemesh asked
for help from the people of Kirjathjearim, asking that they could come and take
the Ark off of their hands.
:1-12 Victory at Ebenezer
How did Israel turn the place of defeat into one of victory?
:2 the ark abode in Kirjathjearim
…twenty years
The Ark would actually be in Kirjathjearim for a lot longer than this, but
this was how long it was at Kirjathjearim before Samuel speaks up.
During the reign of King Saul, the
Ark would be brought to Gibeah (1Sam. 14:18), and then when David becomes king
over all Israel, he will bring the Ark to Jerusalem (2Sam. 6). It would be about a hundred years from this
time in Kirjathjearim until it lands in Jerusalem. But it would be at Kirjathjearim for twenty years before Samuel
speaks to the nation.
:2 and all the house of Israel
lamented after the LORD.
lamented – nahah
– to wail, lament; (Niphal) to go mourning after
(1 Sam 7:2 NLT) all Israel mourned because it seemed that
the LORD had abandoned them.
The people are bummed with all the
trouble that has happened in their life.
:3 If ye do return unto the LORD with all your hearts, then …
return – shuwb
– to return, turn back
strange gods – it’s not that there are some “gods” that
are strange and others that aren’t “strange”.
Anything other than Yahweh is a “strange” god.
Ashtaroth – ‘Ashtarowth
= “star”. This is the plural form,
the singular is “Ashtoreth”. This was
the main female goddess that was worshipped by just about everybody at the time
in some shape or form. She was called
Ashtoreth by the Phoenicians, Ishtar by the Assyrians, and Aphrodite by the
Greeks. She was considered the “moon
goddess” and was thought to be married to some form of Baal, the sun-god. Solomon brought the worship of her into
Israel (1Ki. 11:33), Jezebel had 400 priests dedicated to serve her (1 Ki.
18:19), and she would still be a part of Israelite culture right up to
Jeremiah’s day when she was called the “queen of heaven” (Jer. 44:25).
If we were to summarize the worship of Ashtoreth, it is everything
pornographic. They didn’t need Playboy
magazine or Internet pornography, they had Ashtoreth.
During the twenty years that the Ark is at Kirjathjearim, Samuel doesn’t
speak. But now it’s time to say
something, and when he does, it is to point out something about their
“mourning”.
Lesson
Repentance means action, not just
sorrow
The people had been upset over their spiritual condition and the fact that
it seemed that God was against them.
But they weren’t doing anything to change.
The church in Corinth was sort of Paul’s “problem child”. In Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians,
he had to write some pretty harsh things.
But his message got through.
(2 Cor 7:8-11
NLT) I am no longer sorry that I sent
that letter to you, though I was sorry for a time, for I know that it was
painful to you for a little while. {9} Now I am glad I sent it, not because it
hurt you, but because the pain caused you to have remorse and change your ways.
It was the kind of sorrow God wants his people to have, so you were not harmed
by us in any way. {10} For God can use sorrow in our lives to help us turn away
from sin and seek salvation. We will never regret that kind of sorrow. But
sorrow without repentance is the kind that results in death. {11} Just see what
this godly sorrow produced in you! Such earnestness, such concern to clear
yourselves, such indignation, such alarm, such longing to see me, such zeal,
and such a readiness to punish the wrongdoer. You showed that you have done
everything you could to make things right.
Sorrow without change is worthless.
Lesson
Victory comes from true repentance
If Israel wanted to have victory over the Philistines, they needed to get
rid of the Ashtaroth.
You can’t make half-way changes.
God wants all of your heart.
Illustration
Gentlemen:
Enclosed you will find a check for $150. I cheated on my income tax return last year
and have not been able to sleep ever since.
If I still have trouble sleeping I will send you the rest.
Sincerely, A Tax Payer
Samuel said the guys couldn’t feel sorry during church and just wish things
were better. They needed to go home and
throw away the Ashtaroth.
If you are really returning to the Lord, then make the appropriate changes.
Victory in one area of your life will affect other areas of your life. God
didn’t just promise them victory over the Ashtaroth, but victory over the
Philistines. Getting rid of the
Ashtaroth brought victory over the Philistines.
:4 Then the children of Israel did put away Baalim and Ashtaroth
For twenty years the people were caught in that cycle of “mourning” but
never really changing. This time they finally get it and they turn to the Lord.
:5 Gather all Israel to Mizpeh, and
I will pray …
Mizpeh – Mitspeh
– “watchtower”; also called “Mizpah”. About three miles south of where
Israel gathered last time for battle, at Ebenezer. About seven miles north of Jerusalem. It seems to be a common place of gathering the nation. This was
the place in Judges 20-21 where Israel gathered to battle against the tribe of
Benjamin. It would be the place where
Saul would be presented to the people as king (1Sam. 10:17).
:6 drew water, and poured it out
before the LORD …We have sinned against the LORD.
drew water, and poured it out – it seems that this is somehow tied
to their confession as a people. It is
like a symbol of weeping before the Lord. The Jewish Targum (a sort of
paraphrased translation) states “they poured out their heart in repentance, as
water”.
Lesson
Confession
Don’t make excuses or blame it on others.
Own your own sin. Acknowledge that
you are to blame.
Illustration
The story is told that one day Frederick the Great, King of Prussia,
visited a prison and talked with each of the inmates. There were endless tales
of innocence, of misunderstood motives, and of exploitation. Finally the king stopped at the cell of a
convict who remained silent. “Well,”
remarked Frederick, “I suppose you are an innocent victim too?” “No, sir, I’m not,” replied the man. “I’m guilty and deserve my punishment.”
Turning to the warden, the king said, “Here, release this rascal before he
corrupts all these fine innocent people in here!”
Release starts with confession.
:6
And Samuel judged the children of Israel in Mizpeh.
This is the beginning of Samuel’s
ministry as the last “judge” over Israel.
He is God’s leader, giving instruction and leadership to the nation.
:7 the Philistines heard that the
children of Israel were gathered together to Mizpeh
The Philistines aren’t going to let the Israelites have these national
gatherings. They smell trouble. They want to stop things before they get out
of hand. The enemy doesn’t want you
following God.
:8 Cease not to cry unto the LORD
our God for us
cease – charash – (Hiphil)
to be silent, keep quiet. “Don’t be
silent before God”
Samuel had told the people (vs. 5) that when they got to Mizpeh, he would
pray for them. Now they say to him,
“Whatever you do, don’t stop praying for us!!!”
Lesson
Victory comes in much prayer
God works through prayer.
(James 5:16 KJV) Confess your faults one to another, and pray
one for another, that ye may be healed. The effectual fervent prayer of a
righteous man availeth much.
Prayer is the way in which God becomes involved in the solving of our
problems.
Illustration
Why God Loves Prayer by E.M. Bounds
God has ordained prayer as a means through which He will carry out His
gracious designs on earth and execute and make efficient His plan of
redemption. Prayer is a specific divine
appointment whereby God will do things through His people as they pray that He
would not otherwise do. While we in our
weakness and poverty wait, trust, and pray, God undertakes the work. But if prayer moves God to work in this
world’s affairs, then prayerlessness leaves us the mere creatures of
circumstances. It leaves us in this
world with its tremendous responsibilities and difficult problems, and with all
of its sorrows, burdens and afflictions, without help from God.
Jesus Christ commits Himself to the force of prayer. “Whatever you ask in My name, that I will
do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If you ask anything in My name, I will do it” (John
14:13-14). And again: “If you abide in Me, and My words abide
in you, you will ask what you desire, and it shall be done for you” (John
15:7). To no other energy is the promise
of God committed as to that of prayer.
Upon no other force are the purposes of God so dependent as upon that of
prayer. Christ presses us into the
presence of God with these prayer promises, not only by the assurance that God
will answer, but that no other being but God can answer. He said:
“Most assuredly, I say to you, whatever you ask the Father in My name
He will give you” (John 16:23b).
This all-comprehensive declaration not only urges us to pray for
everything great and small, but it focuses all our attention on God – for who
but God can cover the unlimited scope of universal things and can assure us of
receiving the very thing for which we pray?
It is Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who makes demands on us to pray, and
it is He who puts Himself and all He has so fully in the answer.
Prayer puts God’s work in His hands and keeps it there. It looks to Him constantly and depends on
Him implicitly to further His own cause.
Prayer is but faith resting in, acting with, leaning on, and obeying
God. This is why God loves it so well
and why He so highly esteems people of prayer.
Problems at home – I wonder how many marriages could be turned
around if we just learned how to pray together more. I wonder how many problems with difficult children would melt
away if we could really learn to pray together and for each other. Perhaps this is just because I’m not that
great of a counselor, but I have found that often the best times when troubled
people are in my office are when people simply pray.
Yet sometimes the hardest person to pray with is the one closest to
you. Satan doesn’t want you coming to
God together on your knees. He will
make it as hard as he can.
:9 And Samuel took a sucking lamb, and offered it for a burnt offering
wholly unto the LORD:
sucking lamb – a lamb that is still nursing, literally a
“milk lamb”
burnt offering – a picture of complete dedication to the Lord. With other sacrifices, only certain parts of
the animal were burnt on the fire, and the rest was eaten by those bringing the
sacrifice. But with the burnt offering,
the complete animal was burnt, the complete animal was given to the Lord.
Lesson
Victory comes with complete
dedication
(Rom 12:1-2 KJV) I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the
mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy,
acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service. {2} And be not conformed
to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may
prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.
Illustration
In 1954, a man named Robert Boyd Munger wrote a little booklet/tract
called, “My
Heart Christ’s Home”:
In the story, he describes what it’s like after you invite the Lord Jesus
into your life. He talks about Jesus
coming to settle down and make Himself at home in our lives like a guest
staying in our house.
As a guest, Jesus visits different rooms in the house, such as when He goes
into the “study”. Munger writes,
“In a sense, it is the control room of the house. He
entered with me and looked around at the books in the bookcase, the magazines
upon the table, the pictures on the walls. As I followed His gaze I became
uncomfortable. Strangely, I had not felt self-conscious about this before, but
now that He was there looking at these things I was embarrassed. Some books
were there that His eyes were too pure to behold. On the table were a few
magazines that a Christian had no business reading. As for the pictures on the
walls - the imaginations and thoughts of the mind - some of these were
shameful. Red-faced, I turned to Him and said, “Master, I know that this room
needs to be cleaned up and made over. Will You help me make it what it ought to
be?” “Certainly!” He said. “I’m glad to help you. First of all, take all the
things that you are reading and looking at which are not helpful, pure, good
and true, and throw them out! Now put on the empty shelves the books of the
Bible. Fill the library with Scripture and meditate on it day and night. As for
the pictures on the walls, you will have difficulty controlling these images,
but I have something that will help.” He gave me a full-size portrait of
Himself. “Hang this centrally,” He said, “on the wall of the mind.””
Then Mr. Munger describes Jesus going through other rooms, the “dining
room” where all his appetites and desires are met. Jesus then goes into the “Living Room”, a quiet secluded place
where he and Jesus spend time together in the morning, until Munger finds
himself too busy and starts neglecting his guest. Then Jesus goes into the “Work Room” and the “Rec Room”, cleaning
up other parts of his life until He gets to the “hall closet”, where a foul
odor is coming from. That’s where we
hide things from Jesus, pretending they don’t exist in our lives. But Jesus wants to clean out the
closet.
Jesus wants free reign in the whole house.
Complete dedication. The burnt
offering.
:9 Samuel cried unto the LORD … and the LORD heard him
God heard Samuel’s prayers. God
will hear your prayers.
David wrote,
(Psa 34:6 KJV) This poor man cried, and the LORD heard him,
and saved him out of all his troubles.
David also wrote,
(Psa 32:6-7 KJV) For this shall every one that is godly pray
unto thee in a time when thou mayest be found: surely in the floods of great
waters they shall not come nigh unto him. {7} Thou art my hiding place; thou
shalt preserve me from trouble; thou shalt compass me about with songs of
deliverance. Selah.
:10 And as Samuel was offering …
the Philistines drew near
The Philistines don’t want to give the Israelites a chance to get their
army together and they attack while Samuel is in the middle of offering up his
sacrifice.
Lesson
The enemy loves to distract you.
He loves to interrupt this message with thoughts of what you have to do
when church is over. He loves to
interrupt your prayer time with phone calls, things to distract you.
:10 the LORD thundered with a great
thunder … discomfited them
discomfited – hamam – to
move noisily, confuse, break, consume, crush, destroy, trouble
God stepped in because of Samuel’s prayers and God started the victory.
:11 And the men of Israel went out of Mizpeh, and pursued …
There are going to be times that God will bring the victory all by
Himself. But there are also going to be
times that we have a part in the victory, in “chasing those Philistines” out of
our life.
:11 until they came under Bethcar.
Bethcar –Beyth Kar –
“house of the ram” or “house of the lamb”. They had sacrificed a lamb. Now they pursue the Philistines as far as
the “house of the lamb”
Lesson
Victory in the Lamb
It may not seem to make sense that something as harmless as a Lamb could
ever bring victory to anyone.
Satan will be defeated by the Lamb.
(Rev 12:10-11 KJV) And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven,
Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power
of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which accused them
before our God day and night. {11} And they overcame him by the blood of the
Lamb, and by the word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives unto
the death.
The antichrist and his kingdom will one day be defeated by the Lamb.
(Rev 17:14 KJV) These shall make war with the Lamb, and the
Lamb shall overcome them: for he is Lord of lords, and King of kings: and they
that are with him are called, and chosen, and faithful.
Victory comes from Jesus. He is the
Lamb.
:12 called the name of it Ebenezer,
saying, Hitherto hath the LORD helped us.
Ebenezer – ‘Eben ha-‘ ezer –
“stone of help”
Lesson
Remember the Lord’s victories
Let today be one of those markers.
Let today be the day when you make a choice to follow the Lord and allow
Him to give you victory.