Umm…
nope.
Seems
our Sunday school teachers tended to leave out a few details. Such as the ones
that actually describe Samson’s personality, which turns out to be brutish,
temperamental, short-sighted, and cruel.
Let’s
start at the beginning. The Israelites are once again being punished for “doing
what is evil in the sight of God,” by being oppressed by the Philistines. This
is an extra-long oppression, lasting forty years. And in this time there was a
man named Manoah of the tribe of Dan whose nameless wife was barren. The angel
of God appeared to the woman and told her that even though she was barren, God
was going to give her a son who would be a Nazirite from birth (See Numbers
Chapter 6 for a discussion of what Nazirites are), so she must refrain from
strong drink and must never let a razor touch his head. Then the angel left.
The
woman went and told her husband Manoah about the angel, and then he prayed to
god for the angel to visit again. So the angel appears to the woman again, and
she brings him to her husband. There’s a repetition of pretty much the same
conversation as before, then they offer the angel a goat. They place it on
their altar stone, and when they set it alight the flame went up toward heaven
and the angel went up with it. That pretty much sealed the deal, convincing
them that they had indeed been visited by God. When the baby was born, they
named him Samson.
The
Bible skips ahead then to when Samson had grown into a young man. He comes
across a Philistine woman and falls for her, so he goes to his father and asks
him to get the woman for his wife. His parents are reluctant, because racism
was in at the time, but Samson was insistent. Also…
“Jdg 14:4 His father and mother did not know that it was from
Yahweh, for he was seeking an opportunity against the Philistines. At the time
the Philistines ruled over Israel.”
So… God
makes Samson fall for a girl he otherwise wouldn’t have in order to manufacture
an excuse to fuck with the Philistines? And as you’re about to see, the
“opportunity” thus created is so dependent on Samson behaving like a monumental
douchebag that he couldn’t have come off any worse if he’d just randomly
started attacking Philistines without bothering to fabricate an excuse.
Observe.
Samson
and his parents are on the road to Timnah where the Philistine girl lived to
talk with the woman about setting up the marriage. When they were passing among
the vineyards, a roaring lion attacked Samson. But "the Spirit of the Lord”
came upon him and he tore the lion apart with his bare hands. Somehow, though,
this escaped his parents’ notice, and he didn’t tell them about it either.
A few
days later they returned to have the wedding feast. Samson separated from his
parents for a bit to go check out the lion corpse, and found that a swarm of
bees had set up a nest in the body, and made honey. So he scraped up the honey
and continued on his way eating it. He even shared some with his parents when
he caught up to them, but didn’t tell them where it came from.
At the
wedding feast, Samson decided to make a bet with thirty of the local men. He’d
tell them a riddle. If they couldn’t answer it within seven days, they would
pay him thirty linen garments and thirty changes of clothes, but if they could
answer it then he would pay them the same. The riddle was “Out of the eater
came something to eat. Out of the strong came something sweet.”
Which is
kind of a stupid riddle, since obviously it couldn’t be answered correctly if
you didn’t already know about the lion and the honey.
Anyway,
after a few days the men couldn’t figure out the answer, so they went to
Samson’s new wife and told her that she’d better get Samson to tell her the
answer or they’d burn down her father’s house. I guess everybody back then was
kind of a dick.
So
Samson’s wife pleads with him to get the answer, and eventually he gave in and
told her. She passed the answer to the men, and they came back and told it to
Samson. He was angry, feeling that they’d cheated by getting his wife to give
them the answer. Plus he had the slight problem of not having the clothes he’d
need to pay them off. But no matter!
“Jdg 4:19 And the Spirit of Yahweh rushed upon him, and he went down
to Ashkelon and struck down thirty men of the town and took their spoil and
gave the garments to those who had told the riddle. In hot anger he went back
to his father’s house.”
That’s
right. Samson just murdered thirty men and stole their clothes to cover his
gambling debts. Still think he’s a hero?
And he
did it explicitly with the help of the “Spirit of Yahweh,” so you can’t even
argue that the Bible (and/or God) regards this as an example of a flaw in a man
otherwise used for God’s good purpose. No, this act is pretty explicitly
condoned.
Oh,
incidentally… Samson is supposed to be a Nazirite. By law, Nazirites are
forbidden contact with the dead (like might happen when you kill a dude and
loot his corpse), and are required to atone for such contact by shaving their
heads and undergoing a cleansing ritual. Samson didn’t do any of that shit –
not that hypocrisy is unexpected by this point. But back to the story.
When
Samson stormed off in a huff, the wife’s father figured she’d been rejected and
gave her to Samson’s best man instead (who you’d think would have known
better).
So a few
days later Samson comes back for his wife, and declares to her father his
intention to enter her chamber and nail her (seriously… who the fuck says
things like this to a woman’s father, even if she is your wife?). But the
father puts the breaks on it, telling Samson that he thought he’d rejected the
girl so he’d given her to his companion instead. He offers to make it up to
Samson by giving him his younger daughter (who he claims is more attractive).
Samson’s
reaction is completely rational and in no way the behavior of a temperamental sociopath.
He goes out and captures a bunch of foxes (300 are claimed, though I have a
hard time seeing how that could be done in any reasonable timeframe), sets
their tails on fire, and drives them through the grain fields and olive
orchards of the town so that they burn down the crops. Not just his
father-in-law’s crops, mind you, but fucking everybody’s. ‘Cause that’s just how he rolls.
But,
y’know, they’re Philistines, so I imagine that in the eyes of the Bible they
deserve whatever gets done to them for that fact alone.
Obviously,
the townspeople are kind of pissed at the outright destruction of their
livelihoods. So they put together a mob and kill Samson’s wife and
father-in-law with fire. Samson fought his way free and fled to hide out in a
cave at a place called Etam in the lands of the tribe of Judah.
The
Philistines put together a posse to go chase him down, and they take off into
Judah in hot pursuit. The people of Judah are a bit nonplussed by this party of
Philistines tromping through their land, and ask them what the deal is. When
informed that they are looking for Samson because of his crimes, the people of
Judah decide to hand him over.
“Jdg 15:11 Then 3,000 men of Judah went down to the cleft of the
rock of Etam, and said to Samson ‘Do you not know that the Philistines are
rulers over us? What then is this that you have done to us?’ And he said to
them ‘What they have done to me, I have done to them.’”
So that
raises the question: is Samson lying to his own people to make himself look
better, or is he so lacking in any sense of proportion that he actually
believes what he’s saying?
After
some back and forth, Samson agrees to let them tie him up and deliver him to
the Philistines so long as they promise not to attack him themselves. So they
do, and take him to a place called Lehi to meet the Philistines. But when they
hand him over, the “Spirit of Yahweh” comes over him again. He bursts his
bonds, picks up a handy donkey’s jawbone that happened to by lying nearby, and
proceeds to beat 1,000 Philistines to death with it.
Samson
worked up a powerful thirst distributing all that death and mayhem, so he
called out to God for something to drink. God responds by opening a crack in the
ground from which water spills out so Samson can sate himself.
I guess
this got the “Don’t fuck with Samson,” message across to the Philistines, since
we don’t hear much about his life for a little while except that he “judged
Israel” for twenty years.
Then one
day Samson traveled down to the town of Gaza where, in his heroic way, he did a
prostitute. And when the people of Gaza found out that Samson was in town, they
decided to set an ambush for him at the city gates so that they could kill him
when he went to leave in the morning. But he woke up in the middle of the
night, picked up the city gates, and carried them to the top of the hill at
Hebron. Somehow, this prevented him from being ambushed, though the text never
actually explains why. Maybe we’re supposed to assume that the Gazites were so
gobsmacked by the monumental strength combined with monumental pointlessness
embodied in the act that they didn’t get around to attacking him.
But now
we finally get to Delilah. She was a woman from the valley of Sorek that Samson
fell in love with after the scene at Gaza, though apparently she didn’t really
return the affection. The Philistines found out about his infatuation, and
offered Delilah 1,100 pieces of silver if she could seduce from Samson the
secret of his great strength and how to defeat him.
“Jdg 15:6 So Delilah said to Samson, ‘Please tell me where your
great strength lies, and how you might be bound, that one could subdue you.’”
Which
doesn’t sound suspicious at all.
So
Samson tells her that if he’s bound with seven fresh bowstrings that haven’t
been dried, then he’ll be as weak as any other man. Delilah sends to the lords
of the Philistines, who provide her with the bowstrings and some men whom she
hides in her house. She ties up Samson with the bowstrings, and tests him by
shouting "The Philistines are upon you!” At the alarm, Samson easily snaps the
bowstrings, thus demonstrating that the ruse had failed.
This goes
on a couple more times, with Delilah begging to know how to make him weak, and
Samson giving her different lies about how to do it, followed by Delilah
testing him by tying him up and giving alarm, and Samson breaking his bonds. Finally,
though, Samson gives in and tells her the truth: that he can be defeated by
shaving his head.
You know…
for someone who is supposed to be a judge, Samson demonstrates a remarkable
lack of… well… judgment.
So
Delilah waits until Samson falls asleep in her lap, and has a guy come in and
shave his head while he sleeps. And when she yelled “The Philistines are upon
you!” he woke as usual, but his strength had left him and the Philistines were able
to overcome him. They bound him and gouged out his eyes, then took him to a prison
where he was forced to labor at a mill.
So now
we’re coming to the climax of the Samson story. The Philistines hold a big
party to celebrate their defeat of Samson and to praise their own god, Dagon,
for giving it to them. Because Yahweh’s followers aren’t the only ones who suffer
from the delusion that their own accomplishments are really the work of an
invisible helper. They have Samson brought out to be put on display for their
amusement, making him stand between the two pillars that are the main support
for the roof. Somehow, the Philistines had managed to pack 3,000 people into a
building small enough to be supported by two pillars that were within arm’s
reach of one another. So Samson puts his hands on the pillars and prays to God
to give him the strength to kill himself and take shitloads of Philistines with
him.
“Jdg 16:30 And Samson said ‘Let me die with the Philistines.’ Then
he bowed with all his strength, and the house fell upon the lords and upon all
the people who were in it. So the dead whom he killed at his death were more
than those whom he had killed during his life.”
Hmmm… we
have people today who pray to their gods while using their own deaths to kill
thousands of other people. Only we don’t call them “judges.”
Afterwards, Samson’s family buries him, and we’re
done with his story.
Gotta
tell you, reading the Samson story was kind of depressing. After all, he was
one of the heroes of my childhood. It may have been years since I actually
believed the supernatural stuff in the Bible was real, but I still had
recollections of the Samson story I’d been taught in Sunday school and
remembered it fondly. So sitting down and reading it as an adult… well, it was
a bit like I imagine it might be if I went back and watched old Transformers
episodes only to discover that Optimus Prime was really a relatively dim
mass-murdering psychopath and the Decepticons actually had some reasonable
justifications for having it in for him.
Ah well,
such is life. I’ll see you back next time, when we continue making our way
through the remainder of Judges. Until then, be well!
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