Friday, August 8, 2008

The Longest Day (original version)

Yesterday, we looked at the battle of the five kings from the perspective of Adoni-Zedek. But how did the Israelites see it?

Even though God had granted them success in peeling off one layer after another of the Canaanite onion, the five kings constituted a formidable foe. After the Lord encouraged Joshua ("Do not fear . . ."), the Israelites engaged them in one of the most dramatic battles ever recorded:

An all-night march
A surprise attack
A road pursuit
A barrage of hailstones
A poetic prayer
A sun frozen in time and space
A cave full of conquered kings
Victory.

It was the kind of victory that you remember your entire life. It was the kind of victory which is remembered across many lifetimes. Longer than the Battle of the Bulge, longer than the Battle of San Juan, longer than even Agincourt. And, as is the case with warriors, it was told by triumphant fathers to awed children. Good days or bad, it became part of the celebration of being an Israelite. Years later, a psalmist still celebrates the day:

"The Lord gives the command;
The women who proclaim the good tidings are a great host:
'Kings of armies flee, they flee,
And she who remains at home will divide the spoil!'
When you lie down among the sheepfolds,
You are like the wings of a dove covered with silver,
And its pinions with glistening gold.
When the Almighty scattered the kings there,
It was snowing in Zalmon." Ps 68.11-14 (NAS)

So, in the face of God's power, the power of earthly kings is as ephemeral as snow in desert mountains. God will bring victory to his people. And his people remember. Again and again, they relive the victory. The victors are the ones who are, after all, around to remember and relive. Those who fight God vanish from life and from memory.

Later, when the Israelites had to deal with oppression at the hands of the five kings of Philistia (Judges through 1 Sam 7), you have to believe that they were remembering the victory over five other kings, and wondering when God would act. God did. God sent a man after his own heart, and the five kings of Philistia disappear like snow on a May mountain.

But things aren't always that simple. In previous devotionals, we've talked about the reality that God doesn't always deliver victories in the way that we would want. But what is interesting is that, for his people, not only are we allowed to remember the victories which God has handed us, but we can remember the losses which he has allowed us to suffer. Losses which both test and build our faith.

But still, as faithful Israelites, we remember and hope.

Grace and peace,

Ron