Our LibraryOther ResourcesA Guide to Bible StudyChapter 5: Israel's History from the Death of Moses to that of David
Chapter 5: ISRAEL'S HISTORY FROM THE DEATH OF MOSES TO THAT OF DAVID.
While the twelve historical books which follow the Pentateuch give
us, as we have said in a former chapter, an almost continuous
history down to the close of the Old Testament period, the study of
this history is facilitated by considering it according to the several
distinct periods into which it naturally divides itself. We chose
first, as best suiting our present purpose, the one named at the head
of this chapter, and we shall set it forth by giving outlines of the
several books in which the history is found.
1. Joshua. This book is so called, not because Joshua wrote it,
although it is possible that he did so, but because it is he who
figures most conspicuously in the transactions which it records.
The book is divided into three distinct parts. The first, beginning
where the Pentateuch left off with Israel on the east bank of the
Jordan, describes their miraculous passage of the swollen river, and
their conquests, in two great campaigns, of the whole land of Canaan,
with the exception of a few tribes who were so weakened as not to
hinder the settlement of the country by the Hebrews. This brought to a
final fulfillment the promise to Abraham that God would give him this
land as an inheritance for his posterity. This part includes the first
twelve chapters.
The second part, including chapters thirteen to twenty-two,
gives the location of the several tribes, chiefly by naming the cities
within their respective lots. These chapters might be called the
Biblical Geography of Palestine. The student should here take up a good
map and learn the location of every tribe, and of all the principal
cities, mountains, plains, and waters. The closing part, twenty-third
and twenty-fourth chapters, is occupied with two farewell addresses
delivered by Joshua, one of the civil office-holders of all Israel, and
the other to a mass meeting of the whole people, and with a very brief
account of the death and burial of Joshua, and of Eleazer the priest.
It also mentions the burial of the bones, or mummy, of Joseph, which
had been brought out of Egypt. Israel is now settled as a nation in the
promised land, and the promises respecting that land which had been
made to Abraham and repeated to Isaac and Jacob, are fulfilled.
2. Judges. This book opens with an account of the separate
actions of the several tribes in driving out the Canaanites who were
left in their territories after the death of Joshua, though it also
contains a repetition of one conquest by the tribe of Judah which had
been achieved before Joshua died. Then, in a kind of preface, the
author occupies the rest of the first two chapters with a brief
statement of the alternate apostasies and deliverances which make up
the history in the rest of the book. These two chapters may be styled
Part First. Then follows Part Second, chapters three to sixteen, in
which sometimes one tribe and sometimes many fall into idolatry; are
subdued or greatly harassed by their enemies until they repent and call
upon God; are then delivered under the leadership of a Judge raised up
by the Lord for the purpose; are kept in the fear of God until the
Judge dies, when the same round of events is repeated to the twelfth
time. There was no central government; but to answer the purposes of
such when necessity required, Judges were providentially raised up and
the accounts which we have of them here gave the name Judges to this
book.
The third part of the book, chapters seventeen to twenty-one, gives
two incidents which have been passed over by the writer to avoid an
interruption of the main thread of the history. The one shows how an
idolatrous worship which was set up at Dan, and continued there for
several centuries, was first inaugurated; and the other shows how the
whole nation came together at an early day to punish a great
crime, when the city and the tribe within which it had been committed
refused to do so.
The general design of the book of Judges seems to be to exhibit the
working of both civil and religious law during the first three or four
hundred years of Israel's experiences under it. In both respects there
had been a comparative failure, as is also true in the history of every
nation both ancient and modern; but under this divine discipline many
men and women of eminent virtues were developed.
3. Ruth. The romantic incidents of this beautiful story occurred
while the Judges ruled in Israel (Ruth 1:1), and one of its purposes, the only one that appears till the closing paragraph brings out
another, is to present a better phase of life under the Judges than we
find in the book of Judges. This it does in a most charming manner.
But at the close we ascertain that it was also intended to show that a
woman of Moab was among the material ancestors of David, and to trace
the interesting circumstances by which this was brought about. It could
scarcely have been written before the reign of David; for it was
David's reign that gave public interest to his genealogy.
4. First Samuel. This book begins with the last of the
Judges and closes with the death of the first king. It contains,
therefore, an account of the change in the form of government. It shows
how the political and religious degeneration, which had been going on
in the latter part of the rule of the Judges, sank to its lowest point
in the moral corruption of the priesthood, when the people came to
abhor the sacrifices of Jehovah on account of the wickedness of the
priests who offered them. It shows also that political degradation
reached its lowest point with the degradation of religion; and that
then the ark of the covenant, which was the symbol of God's presence
with Israel, was captured and taken away by their old enemies, the
Philistines. This introduced an irregularity in the worship on the part
of those who continued to serve God, and it led to a demand on the part
of the people for a king to rule over them. This demand was treated as
a sin of the people, because it was their own sins, and not an inherent
defect in the form of government which God had given them, that brought
about the failure. Nevertheless, God had foreseen this result, and had
provided beforehand for it, and consequently he gave them a king in the
person of Saul the son of Kish. In the meantime the prophet Samuel
had brought about a great religious reformation among the people, and
if Saul had proved to be a faithful servant of God, the affairs of the
whole nation would in every way have been greatly improved. But though
Saul was a skillful warrior, and fought many victorious battles, he
turned away from God in many things, and his career ended in death on
the battlefield. His reign closed, as did the rule of the Judges, in a
defeat which left the people once more in subjection to the
Philistines, once more illustrating the rule that righteousness
exalteth a nation, while sin is a disgrace to any people. This is the
lesson most strikingly taught by this portion of Israel's history. The
book also shows how God prepared another man in the person of David to
take the place of Saul, and to reign more worthily than he did. It also
strikingly exhibits the career of the greatest prophet who had thus far
appeared in Israel since the days of Moses; for Samuel was not only an
eminently good man, but he was also a successful ruler, and even a
king-maker, seeing that under God he selected and anointed as kings
both Saul and David; and until his death, which was mourned by the
whole nation, both these men and all the people looked to him for
counsel in every great crisis. From this time forward the special
officers raised up from time to time to represent God are prophets, as
under the preceding period they had been Judges.
5. Second Samuel. In the Hebrew Bible our two books of Samuel are
but one; and in the English the history goes on from the one into the
other without a break. The division was made for convenience in making
references and in finding particular passages. Neither of them bears
the name Samuel because Samuel wrote it; but because he figured so
largely in starting the course of events which they record. He died
before the events in First Samuel had all transpired. The present book
opens with David's accession to the throne, first over Judah, and after
a seven-years war, over all Israel. The history had now reached the
point at which another of the ancient promises of God began to be
fulfilled; for it was promised to Jacob, "A nation and a company of
nations shall be of thee, and kings shall come out of thy loins"
{Genesis 35:11}; and Judah had been pointed out as the son of Jacob through whom this promise should be fulfilled; for in Jacob's dying prophecy
about his sons he had said, "The sceptre shall not depart from Judah
till Shiloh {2} come" {Genesis 49:10}. In fulfillment of this promise, David, a descendant of Judah by the genealogy recorded in the book of
Ruth, was now a reigning king, and his posterity were to reign in
succession after him. To show this was a leading design of the book.
It also shows, by the career of David, even more strikingly than was
seen in the career of Saul, that prosperity attends a king while he
serves God, and adversity comes with disobedience; for this book, from
the point at which it finds David on the throne, is divided into two
very distinct parts, which may be styled, The Prosperous Part of
David's Reign (chapters fifth through tenth), and David's Adversity
(the twelfth through twenty-fourth chapters). The two parts are
separated by the great sin which has been associated with David's name
from the day it was exposed until now. The same great lesson is taught
in the careers of many men prominently connected with David. This makes
the second book of Samuel one of the most profitable for reading and
reflection of all the books of the Old Testament.
This book also brings out the fact that the reign of David was a
period of decided literary activity in Israel, for it publishes
several of David's poems, and it connects the history with the contents
of the book of Psalms, many of the poems in which were composed by him.
We learn also from the book of Chronicles, that the prophets Samuel,
Nathan and Gad, were authors of works which jointly included all the
acts of David, "first and last" (1 Chronicles 29:29,30). It is highly probable that at this period the books of Ruth and Judges, and much of the book
of Samuel were written. The book of Jasher too, which is mentioned only
twice, once to state that it contained an account of Joshua's command
to the sun and moon to stand still, and once to say that David's
lamentation over the death of Saul was written in it, was probably
written at this time, seeing that it is not mentioned in connection
with any later event. It was evidently a book of great value and
authority, though it was allowed afterward to perish.
During David's reign the reader should not fail to observe that
God's chosen messengers to declare his will from time to time, in
matters both of government and of morals, continued to exercise
authority even over the king. This was especially true of Nathan and
Gad, of whom we know little besides this.
{2} The word rendered "Shiloh" is obscure. It may mean "Peace." Somewhat better renderings are "Till he come to Shiloh" (Joshua 18:1) or "Till he to whom it belongs shall come."--W.