(Tuesday)
So poor Samson, gives in and of course it spells disaster for him. He loses his strength, he loses his sight, he is forced to do slave labor. The once great Samson, is now doing the work of a slave. How humbling can you get. Again, we see in the larger picture a snapshot of Israel in later years during the exile. They have been humiliated just as Samson has been. Having your head shaved was the mark of a person taken into exile. Lamentations 5:13 cries that in exile “young men are compelled to grind.” Things that have happened to Samson. And now in his blindness, Samson can avoid distractions around him, so that the focus can be put back on God.
I wonder how Samson must have cried out to God during that time of forced labor, walking around a grinding mill hour after hour.
But like the Israelites who were not abandoned by God, Samson has his prayers answered and God returns his strength to him, one last time. In a story where there is so many secrets and riddles, Samson in his last effort, fools the Philistines by pretending to be so weak that he needs to lean on the pillars and instead, brings down the house (so to speak) and defeats the Philistines, even at the cost of his own life.
The story of Samson shows Israel and us what it means to be so prideful and so full of yourself that you think you can do things in your own strength. As Proverb 16:18 says, “pride goes before destruction and haughtiness before a fall.” We must learn that our strength comes not from our selves – no matter how great or wonderful or powerful or mighty we might be, no our strength come from the Lord. The sooner we learn that, the better it will be.
Amen.
PK