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The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
The Book of Shmuel Yeshivat Har Etzion
Lecture
19: Chapter 11 (Part I)
THE
WAR AGAINST AMMON
Rav
Amnon Bazak
A. THE
HUMILIATION
Nachash
the Ammonite encamps against Yavesh-Gilad, and the people of Gilad, fearing for
their lives, turn to him in submission, saying: "Make a covenant with us, and we
will serve you" (I Shmuel 11:1). The term "brit" (covenant) does
not necessarily denote a pact between equals, but also an agreement of
surrender. The difference between the two types of "brit" finds
expression in the distinction between a brit with (im) another
party, which indicates a pact between equals (as in, for example,
Bereishit 26:28; I Shmuel 20:17) and a brit to (le-)
another party, similar to the proposal of the Givonites – "therefore now make a
covenant lanu" (Yehoshua 9:11).
Nachash
the Ammonite is willing to accept the proposed agreement, but he adds a
humiliating condition:
…On
this condition will I make it with you, that all your right eyes be put out; and
I will lay it for a reproach (cherpa) upon all Israel.
(2)
We are familiar with the practice of putting out eyes as an expression of
the humiliation of the vanquished party from other places in Scripture.
Nachash, however, seeks not only the humiliation of the people of Yavesh–Gilad,
but also the humiliation of the entire people of Israel. The "cherpa" of
which he speaks follows from the fact that nobody will dare come to the defense
of the people of Yavesh-Gilad – and it is precisely this message that he
wishes to send out. Golyat the Pelishti will one day express himself in similar
fashion: "I do taunt (cherafti) the armies of Israel this day;
give me a man, that we may fight together" (17:10). The "cherpa" lies in
the fact that nobody is willing to stand up against him.
The people of Yavesh-Gilad present Nachash with the following proposal:
…Give
us seven days' respite, that we may send messengers unto all the borders of
Israel; and then, if there be none to deliver us, we will come out to you.
(3)
This proposal is a bit surprising. In effect, the people of Yavesh-Gilad
concede to Nachash that they are incapable of standing up to his superior might,
but it is possible that somebody will come to their rescue and deliver them from
his hand, and this will be clarified within the next week. Is this not a show of
chutzpa to Nachash? Why should Nachash agree to this delay, which by its
very definition is meant to give the people of Yavesh-Gilad a chance to summon
help and emerge victorious over Nachash?!
The commentators suggest several answers to this question. According to
Ralbag, Nachash's objective from the very beginning was an all-out war against
Israel, and therefore he agreed to this proposal: "Because it was his intention
to fight against Israel and to take their land if he can." Metzudat David, in
contrast, understands that the proposal put forward by the people of
Yavesh-Gilad appealed to Nachash because of his desire to humiliate Israel: "If
the intention is to humiliate all of Israel, it is appropriate to inform them,
so that if they fail to deliver us, it will be regarded as
humiliation."
Nachash's agreement may, however, have followed from a different
consideration. The continuation of the story indicates that the people of Israel
were not very enthusiastic about coming to the aid of the people of
Yavesh-Gilad, and that Shaul was forced to take drastic measures in order to
persuade the people to follow him:
And
he took a yoke of oxen, and cut them in pieces, and sent them throughout all the
borders of Israel by the hand of messengers, saying, Whosoever comes not forth
after Shaul and after Shmuel, so shall it be done unto his oxen.
(7)
And even then the people of Israel went out after him only because of
God's intervention:
…And
the dread of the Lord fell on the people, and they came out as one
man.
There is room to think then that had the spirit of God not rested on
Shaul, the people of Yavesh-Gilad would have been left to fend for themselves
and they would have been forced to accept Nachash's humiliating terms of
surrender. It is reasonable to assume that Nachash was fully aware of this
situation, and therefore responded favorably to their request, expecting only to
add to their humiliation.
A question remains: what led to this state of affairs? Why didn't the
rest of Israel go out immediately and as a matter of course to rescue the people
of Yavesh-Gilad?
The answer might lie in the general state of the tribes of Israel at that
time. The book of Shoftim records various cases of inter-tribal
hostility. Devora criticized several tribes for not having come "to the help of
the Lord against the mighty men"; Gidon fought against the tribe of Ephraim and
against the people of Sukkot and Penuel; additional tribal conflicts stood
before Yiftach, Shimshon and others. We are left with a gloomy picture of
detachment between the different tribes and regions; there is no sense of
belonging to the people of Israel or feeling of unity between the tribes. Thus
we can explain the situation faced by the people of Yavesh-Gilad as consistent
with the general insensitivity on the part of the people of Israel during the
period of the Shoftim to the suffering of particular sectors of the
people.
This explanation, however, presents a certain difficulty. Already at the
end of the book of Shoftim we find a tendency toward unity among the
tribes of Israel - "as one united company" (Shoftim 20:11) – and
reciprocal responsibility for what is happening to the people of
Israel.
Under the leadership of Shmuel, the people worked in full cooperation, and there
is no hint to isolationist feelings based on tribal affiliation. It seems,
therefore, that we must seek a more specific explanation for the phenomenon
described in our chapter.
B.
YAVESH-GILAD AND BINYAMIN
The
troubles of the people of Yavesh-Gilad seem to follow from the problematic
relationship between them and the rest of Israel. At the end of the book of
Shoftim, following the war fought by the tribes of the Israel against the
tribe of Binyamin in the wake of the incident involving the concubine in
Giva, we read about the people's regrets about having sworn during the course of
war not to marry the daughters of Binyamin (Shoftim 21). The people of
Israel were very sorry about their negative attitude towards Binyamin and about
their detachment from this tribe, and they were worried what would happen with
them. The problem became particularly acute when it turned out that "the women
are destroyed out of Binyamin" (ibid. v. 16). At this stage, the people of
Israel wanted to solve the marriage problem by finding a group of people who did
not participate in the war, so that the oath did not apply to them. When it
became clear that the people of Yavesh-Gilad had not joined the war effort, the
people of Israel went into action:
And
the congregation sent there twelve thousand of the most valiant men, and
commanded then, saying, Go and smite the inhabitants of Yavesh-Gilad with the
edge of the sword, with the women and the children. And this is the thing that
you shall do, you shall utterly destroy every male, and every woman that has
lain with a man. And they found among the inhabitants of Yavesh-Gilad four
hundred young virgins, that had known no man carnally: and they brought them to
the camp to Shilo, which is in the land of Canaan… And Binyamin returned at that
time; and they gave them the wives whom they had saved alive of the women of
Yavesh-Gilad…. (ibid. vv. 10-14)
Scripture does not explain why the people of Yavesh-Gilad didn't join the
war against Binyamin, but it stands to reason that this followed from an ancient
connection between the people of Binyamin and the people of
Yavesh-Gilad.
Such a connection would also explain why the people of Israel adopted such a
severe measure with respect to the people of Yavesh-Gilad. In any event, it
stands to reason that the hostility between Yavesh-Gilad and the tribes of
Israel continued for a long time, and therefore there was little chance that one
of the tribes of Israel would rescue the people of
Yavesh-Gilad.
The
people of Yavesh-Gilad might have found empathy among the tribe of Binyamin,
which from the time of that episode had four hundred marital connections with
them. Indeed, this connection is described in our chapter:
Then
came the messengers to Givat-Shaul, and spoke these words in the ears of the
people; and all the people lifted up their voice, and wept.
(4)
Nevertheless, what could the tribe of Binyamin do? Needless to say, the
people of Binyamin were the last who could call up the other tribes to help the
people of Yavesh-Gilad. In light of Yavesh-Gilad's evasion of the war effort
against Binyamin, all that the tribe of Binyamin could do was to weep – until
Shaul came and changed the situation.
In light of this, we can understand the need for such a drastic measure
on the part of Shaul, and so too God's intervention, in order to muster the
people of Israel to join the battle in defense of the residents of Yavesh-Gilad.
In the end, however, the unification of the tribes of Israel brought about not
only the victory in war, but also closure to the tragic incident involving the
concubine of Giva.
C. THE
INCIDENT INVOLVING THE CONCUBINE OF GIVA AND THE WAR AGAINST THE
AMMONITES
This
is not the only connection between our chapter and the story of the concubine of
Giva and its ramifications. There are, indeed, many parallels between the two
stories:
1)
The
most striking similarity is the manner in which Shaul mustered the nation, which
was very similar to the way in which the concubine's husband mustered the people
of Israel:
And
when he was come to his house, he took a knife, and laid hold of his concubine,
and divided her, together with her bones, into twelve pieces, and sent
her into the whole territory of Israel. And it was so, that all that saw
it said, No such deed has been done or seen from the day that the children of
Israel came up out of the land of Egypt to this day; consider of it, take
counsel and speak your minds. (Shoftim 19:29-30)
And
he took a yoke of oxen, and cut them in pieces, and sent them
throughout all the borders of Israel by the hand of messengers, saying,
Whosoever comes not forth after Shaul and after Shmuel, so shall it be done unto
his oxen. And the dread of the Lord fell on the people, and they came out as one
man. (I Shmuel 11:7)
2)
Both stories center on the same places: The centers of action in our chapter are
Yavesh-Gilad and Giva, just as the story of the concubine in Giva is connected
to Yavesh-Gilad.
3)
Both stories describe the shame that hovers over Israel. The incident involving
the concubine is defined as:
Wantonness
and vileness in Israel. (Shoftim 20:6)
And parallel to this, Nachash's objective in his proposal to put out the
right eyes of the residents of Yavesh-Gilad is:
A
reproach upon all Israel. (I Shmuel 11:2)
4)
In both stories mention is made of the weeping of the
people:
And
all the people went up, and came to the house of God, and wept.
(Shoftim 20:26)
And
all the people lifted up their voice, and wept. (I Shmuel
11:4)
5)
In both places the assembly of the people is described with the same expression.
The common term in the war against Binyamin is "as one
man":
Then
all the children of Israel went out, and the congregation assembled as one
man… And all the people arose as one man… So all the men of Israel
were gathered against the city, as one united company. (Shoftim
20:1-10)
This expression is also found in our chapter:
And
the dread of the Lord fell on the people, and they came out as one man.
(I Shmuel 11:7)
6)
After they were promised help, the people of Yavesh-Gilad turn to the Ammonites
and present themselves as if they were ready to submit to Nachash and accept his
terms:
And
the men of Yavesh said, To-morrow we will come out unto you, and you
shall do with us all that seems good unto you.
This wording is very reminiscent of the proposal of the elderly host from
Mount Ephraim to the people of Giva in the incident of the
concubine:
Behold,
here is my daughter a virgin, and his concubine: them I will bring out
now; ravish them, and do with them what seems good to you:
but to this man do not so vile a thing. (Shoftim
19:24)
7)
When the people of Israel heard about the incident involving the concubine in
Giva, they demanded of the Ammonites:
Now,
deliver us the worthless men (benei
beliya'al), who are in Giva that we may put them to death, and put
away evil from Israel. (Shoftim 20:13)
This demand is rejected by the people of Binyamin:
But
the children of Binyamin would not hearken to the voice of their brothers the
children of Israel. (ibid.)
In parallel fashion, a similarly worded demand is heard at the end of the
story of the war against Ammon:
And
the people said unto Shmuel, Who is he that said: Shall Shaul reign over us?
bring the men, that we may put them to death.
(I Shmuel 11:12)
It should be added that this demand refers to the people mentioned in the
previous chapter, where they were described by the same term as that used by the
people of Israel to describe the people of Giva:
But certain worthless
men (benei beliya'al) said, How shall this man save us? And
they despised him, and brought him no present. (ibid.
10:27)
And here too it was a representative of Binyamin who refused the
demand:
And
Shaul said, There shall not a man be put to death this day; for today the Lord
has wrought deliverance in Israel. (ibid. 11:13)
We can now examine the question: What is the significance of this
similarity?
The book of Shoftim concludes with a description of the debased
state which the people of Israel had reached, which included sins of idol
worship (Shoftim 17 – the idol of Mikha), sexual offenses (ibid. 19 – the
concubine in Giva), and bloodshed (ibid. 20-21 – the war against Binyamin). This
difficult situation is explained by the verse which repeats itself: "In those
days there was no king in Israel, but every man did that which was right in his
own eyes" (17:6; 21:25; and see 18:1; 19:1). As part of this terrible situation,
we can include the dreadful incident involving the concubine in Giva, the
shocking device that her husband was forced to use in order to gather Israel so
that they would judge the sinners, and the civil war that
followed.
Our chapter closes the circle. The great hope for a king over Israel,
which finds expression in the stories related at the end of Shoftim, is
realized in these chapters in the figure of Shaul. Chapter 11 is the most
positive one from the perspective of Shaul's kingdom, and it describes the
beginning of the fulfillment of the hopes regarding the monarchy. Among other
ways, Scripture expresses this through the total contrast between the two
stories.
The mustering of Israel is no longer done by cutting up a corpse and
sending it throughout Israel, but rather through the cutting up of a yoke of
oxen. When the people break out in tears, there will be somebody who will
deliver them from their troubles. There will no longer be wantonness and
vileness in Israel; on the contrary, when someone attempts to humiliate Israel,
the king will thwart his plans. The people of Israel gather "as one man" not to
embark on civil war, but in order to wage battle against and defeat an external
enemy. Outsiders will no longer be told to do as they please with the people of
Israel as submission toward the wicked in Israel, but as a cunning maneuver on
the way to victory over the wicked of the nations of the world. If the wicked in
Israel are not punished, it will not be because their partners in crime will
refuse to punish them, but because of a royal decision not to strike at the
wicked on the day that God delivered Israel.
There
is a king in Israel. No longer does every man do what is right in his own
eyes, and no longer can a foreign king put out the eyes of the people
of Israel.
(Translated
by David Strauss)
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