We are all on our trial. Every
one who lives is on his trial, whether he will serve
God or not. And we read in Scripture of many
instances of the trials upon which Almighty God puts
us His creatures. In the beginning, Adam, when
he was first created, was put upon his trial.
He was placed in a beautiful garden, he had every
thing given him for his pleasure and comfort; he was
created innocent and upright, and he had the great
gift of the Holy Spirit given him to enable him to
please God, and to attain to heaven. One thing
alone he was forbidden to eat of the tree
of the knowledge of good and evil; this was his trial.
If he did not eat of the fruit, he was to live, if
he did, he was to die. Alas, he did eat of the
fruit, and he did die. He was tried and found
wanting; he fell; such was the end of his trial.
Many other trials, besides Adam’s,
are recorded in Scripture, and that for our warning
and instruction, that we may be reminded that we too
are on trial, that we may be encouraged by the examples
of those who have stood their trial well and not fallen,
and may be sobered and put on our guard by the instances
of others who have fallen under their trial.
Of these latter cases, Saul is one. Saul, of
whom we have been reading in the course of this service,
is an instance of a man whom God blessed and proved,
as Adam before him, whom He put on his trial, and
who, like Adam, was found wanting.
Now the history, I say, of this melancholy
and awful fall is contained in the chapter which we
have been reading, and from which the text is taken;
and I will now attempt to explain to you its circumstances.
Saul was not born a king, or the son
of a great family; he was a man of humble birth and
circumstances, and he was raised by God’s free
grace to be the ruler and king of His people Israel.
Samuel, God’s prophet, revealed this to him,
anointed him with oil, and after he became king, instructed
him in his duty: and, moreover, put him on his
trial. Now his trial was this. God’s
people, the Israelites, over whom Saul was appointed
to reign, had been very much oppressed and harassed
by their enemies round about; heathen nations, who
hated the true God and His worship, rose and fought
against them; and of these nations the Philistines
were the chief at that time. They overran the
country, and brought the Israelites into captivity.
They tyrannized over them, and to make sure that
they should never be free, they even took away from
them the means of forging weapons to fight with.
“There was no smith found through all the land
of Israel,” says the chapter, “for the
Philistines said, Lest the Hebrews (i.e. the Israelites)
make them swords or spears. But all the Israelites
went down to the Philistines, to sharpen every man
his share, and his coulter, and his ax, and his mattock.”
Saul was raised up to throw off this heavy yoke, and
to destroy the cruel oppressors of his people.
He “chose him three thousand men, and with
a third of them Jonathan, his son, smote the garrison
of the Philistines which was in Geba.”
Upon this, as was naturally to be
supposed, these powerful enemies the Philistines became
highly incensed, and assembled together a great army
to chastise the insurgent people, their subjects as
they would call them, who were making head against
them. They had “thirty thousand chariots,
and six thousand horsemen, and people as the sand which
is on the sea-shore in multitude.” On
the other hand, Saul on his part, “blew the
trumpet through all the land,” and summoned all
Israelites to him. They came together to him
at Gilgal. And the Philistines came with their
great host, and pitched over against him. Thus
the two armies remained in sight of each other, and
then it was that Saul’s trial began.
Before Saul went to battle, it was
necessary to offer a burnt sacrifice to the Lord,
and to beg of Him a blessing on the arms of Israel.
He could have no hope of victory, unless this act
of religious worship was performed. Now priests
only and prophets were God’s ministers, and
they alone could offer sacrifice. Kings could
not, unless they were specially commanded to do so
by Almighty God. Saul had no leave to offer
sacrifice; yet a sacrifice must be offered before he
could fight; what must he do? He must wait for
Samuel, who had said that he would come to him for
that purpose. “Thou shalt go down before
me to Gilgal,” says Samuel to him, “and
behold, I will come down unto thee, to offer burnt
offerings, and to sacrifice sacrifices of peace offerings;
seven days shalt thou tarry till I come unto thee,
and show thee what thou shalt do.”
Saul, you see, was told to wait seven days till Samuel
came; but meanwhile this great trial came upon him.
The people he had gathered together to fight against
the Philistines were far inferior to them in military
qualities. They were not even soldiers; they
were country-people brought together, rising against
a powerful enemy, who was used to rule, as they were
used to subjection. And, as I have already observed,
they had no regular arms: “It came to pass,”
says Scripture, “in the day of battle, that there
was neither sword nor spear found in the hand of any
of the people that were with Saul and Jonathan.”
No wonder, under these circumstances, that many did
not come to Saul’s army at all; many hid themselves;
many fled out of the country; and of those who joined
him, all were in a state of alarm, and numbers began
to desert. “When the men of Israel,”
says Scripture, “saw that they were in a strait,
then the people did hide themselves in caves, and
in thickets, and in rocks, and in high places, and
in pits. And some of the Hebrews went over Jordan
to the land of Gad and Gilead; as for Saul, he was
yet in Gilgal, and all the people followed him trembling.
And he tarried seven days, according to the set time
that Samuel had appointed; but Samuel came not to Gilgal,
and the people were scattered from him.”
What a great trial this must have
been! Here was a king who had been made king
for the express purpose of destroying the Philistines;
he is in presence of his powerful enemy, he is anxious
to fulfil his commission; he fears to fail; his reputation
is at stake; he has at best a most difficult task,
as his soldiers are very bad ones, and are all afraid
of the enemy. His only chance, humanly speaking,
is to strike a blow; if he delays, he can expect nothing
but total defeat; the longer he delays, the more frightened
his men will become. Yet he is told to wait
seven days; seven long days must he wait; he does wait
through them, and to his great mortification and despair,
his soldiers begin to desert; day after day more and
more leave him: what will be the end of this?
Yet does he govern his feelings so far, as to wait
all through the seven days. So far he acquits
himself well in the trial; he was told simply to wait
seven days, and in spite of the risk, he does wait.
Though he sees his army crumbling away, and the enemy
ready to attack him, he obeys God; he obeys His prophet;
he does nothing; he looks out for Samuel’s coming.
At length the seven days are gone
and over, those weary wearing days, that long trial
of a week, through every hour of which he was tempted
to advance against the enemy, yet every hour had to
restrain his fierce and impatient spirit. Now
then is the time for Samuel to come; he said he would
come at the end of seven days, and the days are ended.
Now at length is the time for Saul to be relieved.
For seven days the Philistines, for some cause or
other, have not attacked him; a wonderful chance it
is; he may breathe freely; every hour, every minute
he expects to hear that Samuel has joined the camp.
But now, when his trial seemed over, behold a second
trial Samuel comes not. The prophet
of God said he would come, the prophet of God does
not come as he said.
Why Samuel did not come, we are not
informed; except that we see it was God’s will
to try Saul still further; however, he did not come,
and now let us observe what was Saul’s conduct.
Hitherto he had acquitted himself
well; he had obeyed to the letter the command of God
by His prophet. He had waited in faith though
in fear; he feared the Philistines, but had faith
in God. Oh that he had continued in his faith!
but his faith gave way when his trial was prolonged.
When Samuel did not come, there was
no one of course to offer sacrifice; what was to be
done? Saul ought to have waited still longer,
till Samuel did come. He had had faith in God
hitherto, he should have had faith still. He
had hitherto trusted that God would save him from
the enemy, though his army was scattered, in God’s
own way. God fights not with sword and bow;
He can give victory to whom He will, and when He will;
“with His own right hand, and His holy arm,”
can He accomplish His purposes. Saul was God’s
servant, and therefore he might securely trust in
God. He had trusted for seven days; he might
go on trusting for eight, nine, or ten. And let
it be observed, that this fresh trial was hardly a
greater trial than before, for this reason that
his faith hitherto had met with its reward. Though
the Philistines were in his front, and his own men
were deserting, yet, strange to say, the Philistines
had not attacked him. Thus he had had proof
that God could defend him from them. He who had
kept him so safely for seven days, why should He not
also on the eighth? however, he did not feel this,
and so he took a very rash and fatal step.
That step was as follows: since
Samuel had not come, he determined to offer the burnt
sacrifice instead of him; he determined to do what
he could not do without a great sin; viz. intrude
into a sacred office to which he was not called; nay,
to do what he really could not do at all; for he might
call it a sacrifice, but it would not be really such,
unless a priest or prophet offered it. You know
how great a crime it is for persons now to become
teachers and preachers, or to baptize or administer
the Lord’s Supper without authority; this was
Saul’s crime, he determined on sacrificing,
without being an appointed minister of God.
This is a crime often denounced in Scripture, as in
the case of Korah, and Jeroboam, and Uzziah.
Korah was swallowed up by the earth on account of
it; Jeroboam had his hand withered, and was punished
in his family; and Uzziah was smitten with leprosy.
Yet this was Saul’s sin. “And Saul
said,” in the words of the text, “Bring
hither a burnt offering to me, and peace offerings;
and he offered the burnt offering.” Now
observe what happened immediately afterwards.
“And it came to pass, that as soon as he had
made an end of offering the burnt offering, behold,
Samuel came, and Saul went out to meet him, that he
might salute him.” You see, if he had waited
but one hour more, he would have been saved this sin;
in other words, he would have succeeded in his trial
instead of failing. But he failed, and the consequence
was, he lost God’s favour, and forfeited his
kingdom.
Let us observe what Samuel said to
him, and what he answered; “And Samuel said,
What hast thou done? And Saul said, Because I
saw that the people were scattered from me, and that
thou camest not within the days appointed, and that
the Philistines gathered themselves together to Michmash;
therefore, said I, The Philistines will come down now
upon me to Gilgal, and I have not made supplication
unto the Lord: I forced myself, therefore, and
offered a burnt offering.” Such was his
excuse; and now hear what Samuel thought of it:
“And Samuel said to Saul, Thou hast done foolishly:
thou hast not kept the commandment of the Lord thy
God, which He commanded thee: for now would the
Lord have established thy kingdom upon Israel for
ever. But now thy kingdom shall not continue:
the Lord hath sought Him a man after His own heart,
and the Lord hath commanded him to be captain over
His people, because thou hast not kept that which
the Lord commanded thee.” Such was the
end of Saul’s trial: he fell; he was not
obedient; and in consequence he forfeited God’s
favour.
How much is there in this melancholy
history which applies to us, my brethren, at this
day, though it happened some thousand years ago!
Man is the same in every age, and God Almighty is
the same; and thus what happened to Saul, the king
of Israel, is, alas! daily fulfilled in us, to our
great shame. We all, as Saul, have been raised
by God to great honour and glory; not, indeed, glory
of this world, but unseen spiritual glory. We
were born in sin, and the children of wrath; and He
has caused us to be baptized with water and the Spirit
in the Name of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; and as
Saul, by being anointed with oil by Samuel, was made
king of Israel, so we, by baptism, are made kings,
not kings of this world, but kings and princes in the
heavenly kingdom of Christ. He is our head,
and we are His brethren; He has sat down on His throne
on high, and has been crowned by His Eternal Father
as Lord and Christ; and we, too, by being made His
brethren, partake His unseen, His heavenly glory.
Though we be poor in this world, yet, when we were
baptized, we, like Saul, were made strong in the Lord,
powerful princes, with Angels to wait upon us, and
with a place on Christ’s throne in prospect.
Hence, I say, we are, like Saul, favoured by God’s
free grace; and in consequence we are put on our trial
like Saul we are all tried in one way or
another; and now consider how many there are who fall
like Saul.
1. How many are there who, when
in distress of any kind, in want of means, or of necessaries,
forget, like Saul, that their distress, whatever it
is, comes from God; that God brings it on them, and
that God will remove it in His own way, if they trust
in Him: but who, instead of waiting for His time,
take their own way, their own bad way, and impatiently
hasten the time, and thus bring on themselves judgment!
Sometimes, telling an untruth will bring them out of
their difficulties, and they are tempted to do so.
They make light of the sin; they say they cannot
help themselves, that they are forced to it, as Saul
said to Samuel; they make excuses to quiet their conscience;
and instead of bearing the trial well, enduring their
poverty, or whatever the trouble may be, they do not
shrink from a deliberate lie, which God hears.
Or, again, in like circumstances, they are tempted
to steal; and they argue that they are in greater
want than the person they injure, or that he will
never miss what they take; and that they would not
take it, were not their distress so great. Thus
they act like Saul, and thus they tempt God in turn
to deprive them of their heavenly inheritance.
Or further, perhaps, they both steal and lie also;
first steal, and then lie in order to hide their theft.
2. Again, how many are there
who, when in unpleasant situations, are tempted to
do what is wrong in order to get out of them, instead
of patiently waiting God’s time! They
have, perhaps, unkind parents, and they are so uncomfortable
at home, that they take the first opportunity which
presents itself of getting away. They marry irreligious
persons, not asking themselves the question whether
they are irreligious, merely from impatience to get
out of their present discomfort; “Any thing but
this,” they say. What is this but to act
like Saul? he had very little peace or quiet
all the time he remained in presence of the enemy,
with his own people falling away from him; and he,
too, took an unlawful means to get out of his difficulty.
And so, again, when persons have harsh masters and
employers, or troublesome neighbours, or are engaged
in employments which they do not like, they often forget
that all this is from God’s providence, that
to Him they must look up, that He who imposed it can
take it away, can take it away in His good time, and
without their sin. But they, like Saul, are impatient,
and will not wait. And, again, are not some
of us tempted to be impatient at the religious disadvantages
we lie under; and instead of waiting for God’s
time, and God’s prophet, take the matter into
our own hand, leave the place where God has put us,
and join some other communion, in order (as we hope)
to have clearer light and fuller privileges?
3. Again, how many are there
who, though their hearts are not right before God,
yet have some sort of religiousness, and by it deceive
themselves into an idea that they are religious!
Observe, Saul in his way was a religious man; I say,
in his way, but not in God’s way; yet
His very disobedience he might consider an act
of religion. He offered sacrifice rather
than go to battle without a sacrifice. An openly
irreligious man would have drawn up his army and fallen
upon the Philistines without any religious service
at all. Saul did not do this; no, he wished
that an act of worship and prayer should precede the
battle; he desired to have God’s blessing upon
him; and perversely, while he felt that blessing to
be necessary, he did not feel that the only way of
gaining it was seeking it in the way which God
had appointed; that, whereas God had not made him
His minister, he could not possibly offer the burnt
offering acceptably. Thus he deceived himself;
and thus many men deceive themselves now; not casting
off religion altogether, but choosing their religion
for themselves, as Saul did, and fancying they can
be religious without being obedient.
4. Again, how many are there,
who bear half the trial God puts on them, but not
the whole of it; who go on well for a time, and then
fall away! Saul bore on for seven days, and fainted
not; on the eighth day his faith failed him.
Oh may we persevere to the end! Many fall away.
Let us watch and pray. Let us not get secure.
Let us not think it enough to have got through one
temptation well; through our whole life we are on
trial. When one temptation is over, another comes;
and, perhaps, our having got through one well, will
be the occasion of our falling under the next, if
we be not on our guard; because it may make us secure
and confident, as if we had already conquered, and
were safe.
5. Once more, how many are there,
who, in a narrow grudging cold-hearted way, go by
the letter of God’s commandments, while they
neglect the spirit! Instead of considering what
Christ wishes them to do, they take His words one
by one, and will only accept them in their bare necessary
meaning. They do not throw their hearts upon
Scripture, and try to consider it as the voice of
a Living and Kind Lord and Master speaking to them,
but they take it to mean as little as it can.
They are wanting in love. Saul was told to wait
seven days he did wait seven days;
and then he thought he might do what he chose.
He, in effect, said to Samuel, “I have done
just what you told me.” Yes, he fulfilled
Samuel’s directions literally and rigidly, but
not in the spirit of love. Had he loved the
Word of God, he would not have been so precise and
exact in his reckoning, but would have waited still
longer. And, in like manner, persons now-a-days,
imitating him, too often say, when taxed with any
offence, “Why is it wrong? Where is it
so said in Scripture? Show us the text:”
all which only shows that they obey carnally, in the
letter, and not in the spirit.
How will all excuses, which sinners
now make to blind and deaden their consciences, fail
them in the Last Day! Saul had his excuses for
disobedience. He did not confess he was wrong,
but he argued; but Samuel with a word reproved, and
convicted, and silenced, and sentenced him.
And so in the Day of Judgment all our actions will
be tried as by fire. The All-knowing, All-holy
Judge, our Saviour Jesus Christ, will sit on His throne,
and with the breath of His mouth He will scatter away
all idle excuses on which men now depend; and the secrets
of men’s hearts will be revealed. Then
shall be seen who it is that serveth God, and who
serveth Him not; who serve Him with the lips, who with
the heart; who are hypocrites, and who are true.
God give us grace to be in the number
of those whose faith and whose love is without hypocrisy
or pretence; who obey out of a pure heart and a good
conscience; who sincerely wish to know God’s
will, and who do it as far as they know it!