THRU THE BIBLE
EXPOSITION
The Books Of
Samuel: God's Shift Of Israel From Apostasy Under The Judges To David's Reign
II. 2 Samuel: The
Reign Of David Over Israel
V. Rizpah: Nobly Responding To Great, Unfair Hardships
(2 Samuel 21:1-14)
Introduction: (To show the need . . .)
Every believer in Christ has faced some unfair hardships in life, and some believers a lot more than others:
(1) We face unfair hardships as voters: Jason Snead's story, "Voter fraud a persistent problem" (Republican-American, July 14, 2017, p. 6A) reported, "The Heritage Foundation's recently updated Voter Fraud Database" reveals "a slew of overturned elections and civil fines targeting vote fraudsters . . . in 47 states" who "steal votes, corrupt politicians and negate legitimate votes cast by eligible citizens -- effectively disenfranchising them."
(2) We face unfair hardships as taxpayers: Sadie Gurman's piece, "Huge health care scam" (Ibid., p. 1C) told how nearly 300 doctors, nurses and pharmacists have put greed ahead of their patients by illegally billing Medicare, Medicaid and the health insurance program to order painkiller opioids for addicts who were at times packed into standing-room-only waiting rooms! Meanwhile, 52,000 Americans died of overdoses in 2015 and experts think the number is climbing "'often at the expense of taxpayers'" according to U. S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Ibid.
(3) However, locally, we often hear of believers, men, women, teens and children, who have been handed very great, unfair experiences in their lives. I have often wondered what Scriptures I could share with them that they could use for special application in their lives, and we have a special one today in 2 Samuel 21:1-14 -- Rizpah's story!
Need: Accordingly,
we ask, "How does God want us to deal with very great, unfair hardships we
face?!"
I.
Saul's concubine Rizpah
faced a tremendous amount of unfair hardships in life, 2 Samuel 21:1-9 et al.:
A.
Rizpah was a
concubine, a slave who served as a mistress to king Saul, 2 Sam. 3:7; Z. P.
E. B., v. One, p. 935.
B.
Since
she was the daughter of Aiah, possibly the Aiah of 1 Chronicles 1:40 and Genesis 36:24, she was likely
a Horite, a Gentile, and foreign concubines were especially
despised in Israel, Ibid.; Ibid., v. Five, p. 121.
C.
The
presence of a concubine in the home always created stress in the marriage, and
there would have been significant tension between Rizpah
and Saul's full wife or wives if he had multiple wives, Ibid., v. One, p. 935.
D.
Rizpah had also lost
her master Saul in battle, and Philistine soldiers had dishonored his body,
decapitating it and hanging it up along with the bodies of his sons who had
fallen with him in battle, 1 Samuel 31:1-10.
E.
Saul's
general, Abner, had then either sexually appropriated
Rizpah to lay claim to Saul's throne, or the charge
that he had done so had circulated in Israel, an oppressive and humiliating
event for Rizpah, 2 Samuel 3:6-11.
F.
Then,
since Saul had violated Joshua's former oath given in God's name not to harm
the Gibeonites, what led to God's punishing Israel
with a famine, David chose Rizpah's two sons and five
others of Saul's male descendants to give to the Gibeonites
to execute and publicly hang to appease them and God, 2 Samuel 21:1-9.
G.
What
made the event even more tragic was that Joshua's former oath had been made in
violation of God's will:
1.
In
Joshua's day, the Gibeonites pretended to be from a
distant land, not from the Canaanites Israel was to destroy, so they tricked
Israel into swearing in God's name not to harm them, Jos. 9:1-15; Deut. 20:16-18.
2.
Tragically,
Joshua and Israel had not asked counsel of God before making their oath (Joshua
9:14), but had they done so, God would have kept them from making their promise
much to Rizpah's later relief.
H.
Furthermore,
the pagan Gibeonites had their own kind of justice,
not that of God's Law, so they exacted a much more severe punishment on her
sons than the Mosaic Law allowed, greatly enhancing Rizpah's
grief:
1.
The
Mosaic Law did not allow for a son to be punished for his father's sin,
Deuteronomy 24:16.
2.
Then, if
a man was executed and his body hung up for exposure in dishonor, the Mosaic
Law directed that his body be taken down by nightfall lest the land be defiled
in God's eyes, Deuteronomy 21:23.
3.
However,
the Gibeonites were wronged by a violation
of an oath in God's name, so they stood to be appeased
on their terms for the sake of
God's testimony! These pagans
then called for seven of Saul's male descendants to be given over to them that
they might kill them and hang up their bodies indefinitely in Saul's hometown
of Gibeah where Rizpah
happened to live all to dishonor Saul, 2 Samuel 21:5-6, 10b.
I.
Also, Rizpah suffered a great loss of fame and fortune with the
death and dishonoring of her master and sons:
1.
A
concubine's sons could become heirs of their father's estate together with his
sons by his full wives, Ibid.
2.
Since
her master, Saul, was Israel's king, Rizpah's welfare
and opportunity for fame and fortune as a despised Gentile concubine all relied
on the fame and fortune of her master Saul and her sons by him.
3.
However,
with the death of her master and the dishonoring of his body by the Philistines
coupled with the deaths of her sons and the dishonoring of their bodies by the Gibeonites, Rizpah's personal
loss was great!
J.
Yet,
most appalling, the timing of
the execution and hanging of her sons was excruciating for Rizpah:
1.
Abner's alleged
sexual appropriation of Rizpah soon after Saul's
death occurred in 997 B. C. when her sons by Saul were still young, but their executions
came 27 years later, in 970 B. C., Ibid., Vol. Five, p. 121.
2.
At their
deaths, then, Rizpah's sons had wives and children,
daughters-in-law and grandchildren to her, and to see them face the grief and
humiliation she had faced at Saul's death would have been traumatic for her!
II.
In response, Rizpah
heeded God's will and did her best to function as nobly as possible, 2 Samuel
21:10:
A.
At the
execution and hanging of her sons, Rizpah nobly accepted God's will -- the appeasing
of pagan Gibeonites on their terms to protect God's
testimony based on Joshua's ancient, tragic oath that had been made
outside of God's will. She expressed
her acceptance of God's will by taking "sackcloth" (shaq, B. D. B., A Heb. and Eng. Lex. of the O. T., p. 974), what was worn to signify
grief and repentance, and spread it on a rock near the bodies to signify the
mourning and repentance of the land, Ibid., Z. P. E. B., v. Five, p.
121.
B.
Then, spurred
by all the dishonoring trials she had been handed in her life and trying to salvage
what honor she could for her daughters-in-law and grandchildren, Rizpah kept the birds by day and the animals by night from
scavenging off the bodies from April when they were hung until October, six
months later when the rains came, signaling God's wrath had been appeased, Ryrie
Study Bible, KJV, 1978, ftn. to 2 Samuel 21:10.
C.
Remarkably,
Rizpah kept the scavengers off not only her sons'
bodies, but off the bodies of the other bodies, those of the grandsons of her
rival, Saul's wife! Rizpah fought for the honor of Saul's
whole household!
III.
God accordingly rewarded Rizpah
for how she addressed her very difficult hardships, 2 Sam. 21:11-14:
A.
David
heard of Rizpah's gallant vigil over the bodies, and he
was deeply moved by it, 2 Samuel 21:11.
B.
Accordingly,
influenced by the Holy Spirit ever since his anointing (I Samuel 16:13), David
rewarded Rizpah, giving publicly dishonored men of
Saul's family an honorable burial, 2 Samuel 21:12-14:
1.
David
retrieved the bones of Saul and his son Jonathan who died in battle with him
from where the men of Jabesh Gilead had buried their
bodies east of the Jordan River, 2 Sam. 21:12-13a with 1 Sam. 31:11-13.
2.
He also
took down the exposed bodies of Saul's seven male descendants, his daughter Merab's (not Michal's, 2 Sam. 21:8; Ibid., Ryrie, ftn. to 2 Sam. 21:8) five sons and Rizpah's
two sons, 2 Samuel 21:13b.
3.
David laid
all of these remains in the tomb of Saul's father Kish at Gibeah,
what was a normal and thus an honorable burial, 2 Sam. 21:14a,b; Roland DeVaux, Ancient Israel: Vol. 1: Social Institutions,
1961, p. 58.
4.
Rizpah and her extended
family thus gained the respect of David and her Gibeah
neighbors by her vigil over the bodies and by David's honorable burial of Saul
and his descendants in the tomb of Saul's father!
C.
God was
thus appeased, so He heeded Israel's call for rain and ended the three-year
famine, 2 Samuel 21:14c.
Lesson: Rizpah
overcame a great amount of unfair hardships in her life by first accepting
God's will for her and her sons while doing her best to function heroically given
her brutal set of circumstances, and God rewarded it.
Application: To handle great unfair hardships
in life, may we (1) first yield to the will of God to believe in His Son Jesus
Christ for salvation, Acts 17:30 with John 3:16. (2) Then, in the difficult circumstances we are
permitted by God to face, (a) may we yield to God's Biblical will in those
circumstances, as difficult as they may be, (b) while functioning as heroically
as we can to be honorably productive in those circumstances, (3) and God will
reward it.
Conclusion: (To illustrate the message . . .)
Before the communists came
to power in China, James Braga was raised there in a home by a godly mother who
was married to a godless, unsaved father.
James' father was most often away from home working with the railroad,
but he demanded that his children attend the nearby Roman Catholic parochial
school.
Scripture required
Mrs. Braga to submit to her husband, so her children had to attend that school. However, she did her best to disciple them
given the situation: when her son came home from school each day, she would ask,
"James, what did you learn today?", and when he told her, she would
undo in five minutes all the error he had heard!
James Braga grew up to
become a professor at the Multnomah School of the Bible, and he taught us how
to study the Bible, exhibiting a deep passion for digging up the nuggets of Scripture
truth! That passion, that we seek to
pass on to you, began with a godly mother who two generations ago in China faced
her marital and family hardships by focusing on getting to know God's Word for
herself that she might instill it in the minds and hearts of her children!
If facing great,
unfair hardships, may we trust in Christ for eternal life. Then, may we heed God's will and live as
honorably and heroically for Christ as we can in the circumstances we face, and
see God reward it!