REVIVAL IN THE DAYS OF SAMUEL
Dr. W. A. Criswell
1 Samuel 6:7-7:12
9-25-60 8:15 a.m.
All of you who listen on
the radio are sharing with us the morning service of the First Baptist Church in Dallas, and this is the pastor bringing the message entitled The Return of
Samuel, in the Book of 1 Samuel, chapter 6. And if you will find the
place in your Bible, you can easily follow along with the message: 1 Samuel,
chapter 6. Last Sunday morning, we left off speaking of the curse of God
upon the nation of Philistia, as they seized the ark of the Lord and put it in
the house of their unclean god, named Dagon. And when the Lord smote the
Philistines, in order to save themselves, they purposed to get rid of the ark
of the Lord and they did it in an unusual way.
Now we are at verse 7. They made a new cart and
they tied to that cart two milk cows, milch kine, and they said, “We
shall see whether this thing is a visitation from God or not. We are
going to take these two milk cows and tie them onto the cart. We are
going to put this ark of the Lord on top of the cart. We are going to
take the two calves of these two milk cows and shut them up, and we shall see
if God directs these milk cows away from these calves and into a strange land and
without a driver or director, see if they return the ark of God to Jehovah in
the land of Israel.”
Why, bless your heart, that’s exactly what happened:
there wasn’t any driver to drive them and their calves were shut up. Can
you imagine a milk cow striking off in a strange direction, going to a strange
country when their calves were shut up at home? It’s the natural thing
for a domestic animal to turn home whether they have a calf or a colt or not and
yet these two milk cows immediately—look at verse 12: and the kine took
the—and the cows took the straight way to the way of Beth-Shemesh in Judah, and
went along the highway, lowing as they went, they didn’t turn to the left and
they didn’t turn to the right; and they went straight to the city of
Beth-Shemesh. Now, when they at Beth-Shemesh saw it, they were reaping
their wheat in the valley. And they lifted up their eyes and were
glad. And the cart came into the field of Joshua, a Beth-Shemite, and
stood there by a great stone. And so glad and grateful were these Levites
in Beth-Shemesh, that they took the cart and clave it up into firewood. And
they took the two milk cows and offered them unto God as a burnt offering and
rejoiced in the favor of heaven upon them. And then—now, look at verse 19—and
then, instead of obeying the injunction of God who said, “You are not to touch
the ark of the covenant, it is to be borne on the shoulders of designated
priests,” those men of Beth-Shemesh not only touched the ark, but they looked
inside of it out of vain curiosity, and the Lord smote the people of the
city.
Now, you have here in the
King James Version that He smote fifty thousand and threescore and ten
men. We have wonderful ways now of textural criticism whereby we can go
back and back and by comparing many manuscripts, we can, we can veritably and
practically, know what the original autograph copy of the Scriptures was.
And from Josephus and from the Septuagint and other manuscripts, we know that
that number was seventy men. Once in a while in the King James Version,
because of the use of later manuscripts, there were things, there would be
things of human error creep in. But, we have an opportunity to find—beyond
this translation of 1611, we have opportunity to go back and back and to find
the actual Word of God: the actual Word was that it was written in the Hebrew,
and the actual Word was that it was written in the Greek—and when we look into
those ancient manuscripts and compare them, we find these things—as God’s Word
was inspired and written in that ancient and far away day.
So God smote of those men
in Beth-Shemesh, seventy of their number for looking on the inside of that ark
that was interdicted to the hands and to the eyes of humankind. Then what
do the men of Beth-Shemesh do? Then they went into the opposite direction
and they said, “Let’s get rid of this thing. We don’t want it in our
house. We don’t want it in our city. We don’t want it in our
country or in our land.” And they swung to the opposite extreme. Now that
is one of the commonest characteristics of human nature and especially in
religion, we are like a pendulum swinging from one extremity to another.
For example, at Kadesh-Barnea the children of Israel would not go up to possess
their inheritance. Then when they saw the awful, terrible judgment upon the
decision they made, then they swung in the opposite direction and said, “Yes,
we’ll go up.” And when the interdiction was voiced by Moses, “You’re not
to go up,” they said, “We’ll go up anyway, whether God interdicts it or not.”
And when they went up, of course, they fell before the Amalekites. Isn’t
it a strange thing? Simon Peter said, “Lord, You’re not going to wash my
hands and my feet.” And then a moment later, he said, “Lord, not only my
hands and my feet, but my head. Wash me all over.” Or Elijah on Mount
Carmel, fearless and unafraid before all the prophets of Baal and the king and
all of that assembled throng of idolatry, and then the next day he’s sitting
under a juniper tree, having run for his life from the face and the presence of
Jezebel. Well, we’re a funny people. One day we’re hot, and one day we’re
cold. One day we’re filled with the flame and fire of devotion, and the
next day we’re cold—like a dead, ashen ember, going from one extreme to the
other.
So these people in the town
of Beth-Shemesh, they were so glad to receive the ark, but now say, “Hey, anybody
take it off of our hands.” So they sent messengers to Kirjath-Jearim: Kirjath,
the city; Jearim, of woods. We say, in our language: “Woodville.”
We have a Woodville in Texas, don’t we? Woodville. So they sent to
Woodville and said, “Come down and get this ark off of our hands.” So
they went down and brought the ark of the Lord, and it stayed there at
Kirjath-Jearim for over forty years. You never hear of it, except one
incidental mention, until David sends for it and brings it into the city of the
great king. It remained there, in the house of Abinadab, for over forty years
in Kirjath-Jeari. And he sanctified, he set apart Eleazar his son to watch
over it and to protect it and to keep it hallowed and sacred and holy against
the day when God should appoint a place where He would write His name and call
it His house of prayer. And there was it to be placed forever. And,
in the transgression of the people, was finally taken up into heaven. And
John saw it when he rolled back like a scroll the gates of glory: the ark, the
covenant of God.
Now, we pick up the story
of Samuel again. In chapter 7, verse 2: “And it came to pass, while the
ark abode in Kirjath-Jearim, that the time was long; it was twenty years.
Twenty years, you haven’t heard from Samuel, twenty years under the iron
hand and the mail fist of the Philistines. “And all the house of Israel
lamented after the Lord. You know? To be under the oppression of the
Philistines for twenty years would be a long time.
I think of these nations
that are under the iron fist of Soviet Russia, and the time is long; how long?
I hear some of you describe—I’ve never been in a Soviet satellite, and I’ve
never been in Russia. II have just seen people who have come out and I’ve gone
around the borders on the east and the west, but I have never been in the
country itself. But, I hear some of you describe the tragedy, and the sorrow,
and the weariness that is written in the faces of those people who are
oppressed by Soviet Russia or by Communist China.
Poor Israel She’s
oppressed under the iron fist of belligerent and heathen Philistia. And
in those days, you know, I told you that Samuel, all those twenty years, was
going from Mizpeh to Ramah to Gilgal to Bethel—all over the country—with a Book
in his hand. And he was teaching the good knowledge of the Lord, as the
Bible says it, “And after Samuel had been teaching the good knowledge of the
Lord twenty years, there broke out in the hearts of the people a great
overflowing longing for God,” a revival we’d call it. And after twenty
years, “all the house of Israel lamented after the Lord.”
Now, I want you to see what
they’d been doing:
And Samuel spake unto all
the house of Israel, saying, If ye do return unto the Lord with all of your
hearts, then put away the strange gods and Ashtaroth from among you, and
prepare your hearts unto the Lord, and serve Him only; and He will deliver you
out of the hand of the Philistines.
Then the children of Israel did put away Baalim and Ashtaroth, and served the Lord only
[1
Samuel 7:3-4].
Now, may I take a moment
here to describe for us what Israel was doing? They were not serving
Jehovah. They were serving Baalim and Ashtaroth, the pale twin gods of
the Phoenicians and now the Canaanites. The two gods were Baal, the sun
god, and Astarte—the queen of heaven. The moon god of the planet Astarte, you
call it Venus: a bright and beautiful star. The plural of Baal is Baalim,
the plural of Astarte is Ashtaroth.
Astarte is always referred
to in the plural, until the reign of Solomon. Astarte was the female
goddess of the Canaanites and of the Phoenicians. You have her name in
our language and through all the languages of the centuries; in Phoenician and
Canaanite language Astarte; in Egyptian Ester; in Greek Astēr;
in Latin Stello; in English Star. All through the centuries
and through the generations and through the languages, Astarte’s name has
always lived: Star, Astēr, Stello, Ester, Astarte.
They worshiped her: the queen of heaven. They worship the “queen of
heaven” today in image form in many, many places, here in Dallas and all over
the world: the queen of heaven. They worshiped the queen of heaven in Israel in the days of their idolatry.
Any time you bow before an
image, you are an idolater. Any time you worship a created form other
than God Jehovah, you are an idolater. And Israel was in idolatry.
Now the sign of Baal, the image of Baal was always out of stone; he represented
strength. The image of Astarte was always wood—Ashtaroth, they
call it. You have a translated “grove” in the New Testament (I mean, in
the King James or the Old Testament). I have no idea why in the world,
nor does anybody know, why they translated “grove.” It’s a wooden image,
and it represented the queen of heaven. As the sign of Baal was stone,
the sign of Astarte was wood, a sacred tree or a piece of wood carved in her
likeness. And the worship of Astarte and Baal was licentious and
abominable beyond compare: idolatry always leads down and down and down!
There’s no exception to that in any speech or in any language or in any
religion or in any nation, in all the history of humanity. God interdicts—in
His commandments written with His own finger on tables of stone—God interdicts
idolatry. And when this family of Israel began to worship idols, down and
down and down she fell into abject misery and debauchery: moral lie, social
lie, national lie, under the judgment of a holy and righteous God.
So, Samuel says, “If you’ll
come back to the Lord, come back to God, and put away these strange idols from
among you and serve the Lord, God will deliver you out of the hands of the
Philistines.” Isn’t that a lesson for us today? God will deliver you out
of the hands of the Philistines. He didn’t say, “Build the great armies
of Israel.” And He didn’t say, “Construct great navies for Israel.” All He said was, “You come back to God. You get right with the Lord,
and God will deliver you from the hands of the Philistines.”
I’m not a pacifist, as you
well know. The first big altercation that swirled around me as pastor of
this church was over universal military construction. I believe in
keeping our nation prepared. I believe in keeping our nation
strong. I believe in the men who defend our country with their blood and
their lives, who fly in our skies to protect us from the bombs that could rain
upon us from heaven, who fly, and who sail underneath the seas in their
submarines to deliver us from those launching pads and those terrible missiles
that could come next door to any of our cities and any of our shores. And
I believe in our armies who are stationed and deployed over the face of the
earth in order to protect the outposts that guard our nation. I believe
in those things. According to the Book, I believe in those things.
There are no pacifists in the Bible. I believe in those things. But
at the same time that we’re building nuclear submarines and at the same time
that we’re learning how to protect our skies and our shores with our armies and
our men in uniform, I still avow that the ultimate decision will not lie in the
submarine or in the missile or in the bomb. But the ultimate decision
will lie in the imponderables of God. And a nation that will bow before
the Lord and ask God’s blessing and God‘s help, a nation that will bend, a
nation that will humble itself in prayer, that nation, God’s strong arm will
preserve.
Now, I want you to see that
here, “And Samuel said, Gather all Israel to Mizpeh, and I will pray for you
unto the Lord.” First prayer, then the ministry of the Word: that’s the
way it is in the sixth chapter of Acts and the eighth verse: “And we will give
ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the Word.” Prayer and preaching;
prayer and worship; prayer and service to God; always first asking God’s
blessings: “I’ll pray for you,” he says, “unto the Lord.” So, they gathered all
Israel together to Mizpeh, and they drew water and poured it in front of the
Lord. That was an outward sign of their weakness. And they said, “We
have sinned against the Lord.” And Samuel took a suckling lamb—Why a
suckling lamb? It was a picture of the weakness and the humility of
Israel, God’s people. “He took a suckling lamb, and he offered it, a burnt
offering unto the Lord,” pleading the merits of the blood.
Now, while they were doing
that, what did Philistia do? What does the Devil always do? He’s
not sitting idly by, seeing God’s people appertain, seeing God’s people knock
at the door of heaven, seeing God’s people win victories for God.
Whenever there is a great revival and a great work and a great stirring among
the people of the Lord, there will also be activity in Satan—always,
always.
I remember one time I went
to resurrect a little country church that was so vitally needed in a great
community, a large community. And when I went over there and started
preaching in that church, why, the Devil raised up a whole group of people
there who didn’t want a church in their midst. And they got on horses and
while I was preaching went around and around and around and around the church
house riding those horses and hooping and hollering and carrying on.
Well, didn’t I tell you, I’m not a pacifist, bless your heart. We stopped
that. We stopped that; but, that’s the Devil. That’s the Devil.
“And when the Philistines
heard that the children of Israel were gathered together at Mizpeh, the lords
of the Philistines went up against Israel.” You don’t need to worry about
the Devil, not if you’ve got God’s ear. You don’t need to be afraid, and
you don’t need to tremble. When you take it to God and leave it in God’s hand,
look what happened: And when Samuel offered that burnt offering before
the Lord, “the Philistines drew near to battle.” Now, look at that! Here’s
God’s people in worship, looking up to heaven, and these warlike Philistines
come to slay and to destroy. “But God,” verse 10, “but God, but the Lord,”
I one time heard of a man who preached a sermon on that text, “But the Lord,
but God.” And, “He thundered with a great thunder upon Philistia and they were
smitten before Israel.” And out of gratitude for what God had done,
Samuel called the people together and placed there a stone and called it:
Here I raise mine Ebenezer,
hither by Thy help I'm
come.
And I hope by Thy good
pleasure
safely to arrive at home.
Here I raise my Ebenezer,
hither by Thy help I've
come
[“Come
Thou Fount of Every Blessing”; Robert Robinson, 1757]
“Hitherto
hath the Lord helped us.” [1 Samuel 7:12]
Dear people, it’s a great
thing to win a victory in prayer. It’s a great thing to win a victory
looking unto God. Oh, bless us, as every milepost in your lives is an
Ebenezer, Hitherto may God help us. This is a sign and a monument that
God answers prayer and the next time I preach, that’s what I’m going to preach
about: Ebenezer, the stone of health—the prayer-answering,
heaven-delivering, all gracious—God, our Lord and our Savior.
Now, while we sing this
song, somebody this morning to give his life to Jesus; somebody to put his life
with us in the fellowship of the church, on the first note of this first
stanza, you come. If the Lord opens the door and bids you here, would you
make it now? Would you make it this morning, while we stand and while we
sing?