Bible

 

Ban giám khảo 14

Studie

   

1 Sam-sôn đi xuống Thim-na, thấy một người nữ trong vòng con gái Phi-li-tin.

2 Người đã trở lên, thuật điều đó cho cha mẹ mình, mà rằng: Con có thấy tại Thim-ma một người nữ trong vòng con gái Phi-li-tin; bây giờ xin hãy hỏi nàng cưới cho con.

3 Cha mẹ người nói rằng: Trong vòng các con gái của anh em con và trong cả dân sự chúng ta, há chẳng có người nữ nào, mà con phải đi cưới vợ nơi dân Phi-li-tin chẳng chịu cắt bì đó sao? Sam-sôn đáp cùng cha rằng: Xin cha hãy cưới nàng đó cho con, vì nó đẹp mắt con.

4 Vả, cha mẹ người chẳng rõ điều đó bởi nơi Ðức Giê-hô-va mà đến; vì người tìm dịp tranh đấu cùng dân Phi-li-tin. Lúc bấy giờ dân Phi-li-tin quản hạt Y-sơ-ra-ên.

5 Sam-sôn đi xuống Thim-na với cha mẹ mình; khi đến vườn nho Thim-na, thấy một con sư tử tơ đến đón gầm hét.

6 Thần của Ðức Giê-hô-va cảm động Sam-sôn rất mạnh, tuy chẳng cầm vật chi, song người con sư tử đó như con dê con vậy. Nhưng người chẳng thuật lại cho cha mẹ hay điều mình đã làm.

7 Vậy, người đi xuống, nói cùng người nữ, người nữ đẹp lòng Sam-sôn.

8 Sau một ít lâu, người trở lại đặng cưới nàng; đi vòng lại xem cái thây sư tử, thấy trong xác nó có một đoàn ong và mật.

9 Người bụm mật trong tay, vừa ăn vừa đi. Ðến gần cha mẹ, người đưa cho cha mẹ ăn, nhưng chẳng thuật lại rằng mình đã thấy mật đó trong thây sư tử.

10 Cha người đi xuống nhà người nữ ấy, và tại đó Sam-sôn bày ra một tiệc. Ấy là thường tục của các gã thanh niên hay làm.

11 Vừa thấy chàng, người ta bèn mời ba mươi gã thanh niên để kết bạn cùng chàng.

12 Sam-sôn nói: Tôi sẽ ra cho anh em một câu đố; nếu trong bảy ngày tiệc, anh em giải nó ra, thì tôi sẽ thưởng anh em ba mươi cái áo trong và ba mươi bộ áo lễ;

13 còn nếu anh em không giải nó ra được, thì anh em phải nộp cho tôi ba mươi cái áo trong, và ba mươi bộ áo lễ. Chúng đáp rằng: Hãy ra câu đố anh cho chúng tôi nghe.

14 Vậy, chàng ra cho chúng rằng: Của ăn từ giống ăn mà ra; vật ngọt từ giống mạnh mà ra. Trong ba ngày chúng không giải được câu đố.

15 Ðến ngày thứ bảy, chúng nói cùng vợ Sam-sôn rằng: Hãy dụ chồng nàng giải đáp câu đố cho chúng ta; bằng chẳng, chúng ta sẽ đốt nàng và nhà cha nàng. Có phải để bóc lột chúng ta mà các ngươi thỉnh chúng ta chăng?

16 Vợ Sam-sôn khóc trước mặt người mà rằng: Quả thật, chàng ghét tôi, chẳng thương tôi chút nào: chàng đã ra một câu đố cho người dân sự tôi, mà không có giải nghĩa cho tôi. Người đáp: Kìa, ta không có giải nghĩa cho cha mẹ ta thay, mà ta lại phải, mà ta lại giải nghĩa cho nàng sao?

17 Trong bảy ngày ăn tiệc nàng cứ khóc như vậy trước mặt người. Qua ngày thứ bảy, người giải nghĩa cho nàng, bởi vì nàng làm cực lòng người. Ðoạn, nàng giải lại cho người dân sự mình.

18 Vậy, ngày thứ bảy, trước khi mặt trời lặn, người trong thành đến nói cùng chàng rằng: Có gì ngọt hơn mật, có chi mạnh hơn sư tử? Sam-sôn bèn đáp: Nếu các ngươi không cày ruộng bằng bò cái tơ ta, thì các ngươi không giải được câu đố ta.

19 Bấy giờ Thần của Ðức Giê-hô-va cảm động người; người đi xuống Ách-ca-lôn, giết ba mươi người, cướp lấy áo xống của chúng nó, thưởng cho những người giải được câu đố; đoạn, người nổi giận phừng phừng trở về nhà cha mình.

20 Vợ Sam-sôn bị gả cho một người trai trẻ mà chàng đã chọn làm bạn.

   

Komentář

 

Happiness From Living Usefully

Napsal(a) Bill Woofenden

Rider Attacked by a Jaguar, by Eugène Delacroix

"Out of the eater came forth meat, and out of the strong came forth sweetness." Judges 14:14

Additional readings: Luke 24:16-53, Psalms 107:1-13, Psalm 108

This text is known as Samson's Riddle. It may be called "The Riddle of Life." The Scripture setting of our text is found in the fourteenth chapter of Judges: "Then went Samson down...to Timnath...and, behold, a young lion roared against him. And the Spirit of the Lord came mightily upon him, and he rent him as he would have rent a kid.... And after a time he returned...and he turned aside to see the carcass of the lion: and, behold, there was a swarm of bees and honey in the carcass of the lion… And Samson said, 'I will now put forth a riddle unto you… "Out of the eater came forth meat, and out of the strong came forth sweetness."'"

The Word in the letter throughout is wonderful. Through our knowledge of the letter of the Word the Lord speaks to us. Through our reading of it the Lord's presence and power come into our lives.

The stories of Samson have a strong appeal. They are among the best known of the Bible stories, and are often quoted. Samson is a synonym for strength. His many feats are a marvel—the slaying of the lion, the carrying away of the great gates of Gaza, the pulling down of the temple of Dagon.

We should note carefully that Samson did not perform these deeds in his own strength, for it is written that "the Spirit of the Lord came mightily upon him." We are familiar with examples of remarkable endurance and of physical strength in apparently weak persons in emergencies and under stress of emotion. And there is this statement in the writings: "Man's thought from his will produces all the strength of his body, and if it were inspired by the Lord through His Divine truth, man would have the strength of Samson" (Arcana Coelestia 10182). It is unwise to set limits on what the Lord can accomplish through the human form brought into the Divine order. We are today very far from what is possible for us in physical as well as in spiritual powers. The literal accuracy of the Samson stories has been questioned, but we should not be among the questioners.

Samson was called a Nazarite, as he took the vows of Nazariteship, and the life and deeds of Samson are prophetic of the Lord's work in His early youth and manhood. As a Nazarite Samson represented the natural humanity of the Lord which, armed with the Divine truth, battled with the hells and overcame them.

Samson's strength is said to have been in his long hair. This is representative. The hair is the outmost of the body, external even to the skin, and represents the very outmosts of our life, the life that is directly in contact with the world.

Translating this relationship to things of the mind, the hair represents our thoughts which we carry out into actions, and in a particular sense the literal meaning of the Divine Word which is its outward sense. Truth is strong and effective when it is brought out and applied directly to the doings of our outward life.

We may entertain many ideas of what is allowable for us to do, but when we consult the commandments, the truth confronts us in the plain practical form of self-denial. And we can devise no ingenious argument which will break the practical force of these laws of conduct. "Whosoever shall fall on this stone shall be broken: but on whomsoever it shall fall it will grind him into powder" (Matthew 21:44). In fact the word Nazarite means self-denying. Said Hannah of her son Samuel, "I will give him unto the Lord all the days of his life, and there shall no razor come upon his head" (1 Samuel 1:11).

Because the power of literal truth is represented by the hair, Elijah and John the Baptist, who taught obedience to the laws of God, are particularly represented as hairy men. If we keep the precepts of the Word in our outward lives, the Lord can inflow and give us power. No power is exerted by holding truth in the memory and not letting it operate in our lives. It is in the doing of the truth that the Lord's power is manifested in us.

It was not in his own strength that Samson slew the lion. It is written, "And the Spirit of the Lord came mightily upon him, and he rent him as he would have rent a kid." When Samson suffered his hair to be cut, his strength left him. If we take away the outward deeds in which power is embodied and acts, we deprive good and truth of the instrument or means by which they can exert their power.

There is a lesson for us in Samson's slaying the lion. In a good sense the lion, as the king of beasts, represents the mighty power of truth fighting against evil, and especially the mighty power which is in the letter of the Word of God. In this good sense the Lord is called "the Lion of the tribe of Judah" (Revelation 5:5). But when, as in this story of Samson, the lion is used in a bad sense, it represents the power of truth perverted and turned into falsity, that power within us which wages war against the spirit of Divine truth and stands in our way to prevent our doing what is good in practical life. This lion is the demand to conform to the natural-mindedness and self-seeking of the world. It represents the terrible power of the natural mind when it is working for self-advantage, the destructive power which we see so active in the world today. Such lions are frequently mentioned in Scripture. "They gaped upon me with their mouths, as a ravening and a roaring lion" (Psalm 22:13) and "My soul is among the lions" (Psalm 57:4).

There is a time when we should learn the truth and do it simply because it is the truth. A soldier is not made just by giving him equipment. He must learn to use it and to obey. The armor of the spirit has to be proved. And we are assured that if we learn and keep the precepts of the Word because they are from the Lord, He Himself will be with us and give us the victory.

When Jesus sent the seventy forth to preach the Gospel, they returned again with joy saying, "Lord, even the devils are subject unto us through thy name" (Luke 10:17). "And he said unto them, I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven. Behold, I give unto you power to tread on serpents and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy: and nothing shall by any means hurt you" (Luke 10:19). Sometimes evils seem too strong for us. They are indeed too strong for us always, but they are not too strong for the Lord, The Spirit of the Lord can come upon us mightily as it came upon Samson.

On his return, Samson came upon the carcass of the lion. Using its skeleton as a hive, bees had made honey within it. Then Samson put forth his riddle: "Out of the eater came forth meat, and out of the strong came forth sweetness." None could guess this riddle.

It is a riddle to many today. They say, "How can I be happy by doing always what is true and right? How can I gain delight and pleasure by denying myself, by restraining my desires and curbing my passions?" This is a riddle and will always be a riddle to the natural man.

But self-denial does not mean the giving up of the affections and desires with which the Lord has endowed us, but only that we use them as they were meant to be used. Only so can we really enjoy them and only so can the Lord bless us through them. When we cease to misuse and abuse our faculties, when we have put away evil from our doings, we find that we have not lost anything. Our affections remain, and they have been purified and sweetened. The natural affections that stood in the way of our regeneration will be increased in power and allowed full freedom once the desire for evil has been slain.

This is a great truth, namely, that when heavenly love, love to the Lord and to the neighbor, inflow into our affections, cleansing and purifying them, we come into the fullness of life. No good thing does the Lord ever wish to withhold from us. No evil man can possibly be happy. That is why the Lord came into the world to make clear the way of life and to give the power to overcome evil. Evil may promise happiness, but its promises are false; in the end it will curse and not bless. Happiness is the result of overcoming evil.

Of those that walk in the way of the Lord, of those that keep the commandments and precepts of the Word in their outward acts it is written: "No lion shall be there, nor any ravenous beast shall go up thereon... And the ransomed of the Lord shall return, and come to Zion with songs and everlasting joy upon their heads: they shall obtain joy and. gladness, and sorrow and sighing shall flee away" (Isaiah 35:9-10).