Today I read the passage in Judges 16 when Samson divulged to Delilah the secret of his great strength. I was struck with how a man of great physical strength who could carry off city gates was eventually pushed over with pestering words spoken by a woman he loved. Samson had bitter and bloody feud with the Philistines, yet he loved a woman named Delilah who lived in the valley of Sorek. The Philistine lords for a long time had sought to capture Samson, and they bribed Samson's lover to discover the secret of his strength so they might neutralise it.
An interesting observation is as Delilah ramped up the pressure to share the secret of his strength, there was a softening of her request. Consider the first time she brought up the subject in Judges 16:6: "So Delilah said to Samson, "Please tell me where your great strength lies, and with what you may be bound to afflict you." This is a straightforward question with intent. If I was Samson, I would seriously wonder why she would ask such a question! Did she ask because she wanted to bind and afflict me? Samson shrugged it off with a lie. The next time Delilah made her request it was slightly different in Judges 16:10: "Then Delilah said to Samson, "Look, you have mocked me and told me lies. Now, please tell me what you may be bound with." There was no mentioning of the source of his strength, nor any reference to affliction. Again, Samson deliberately misled her. Delilah's third request was very similar to the second time with the same results.
Finally Delilah said in Judges 16:15, "How can you say, 'I love you,' when your heart is not with me? You have mocked me these three times, and have not told me where your great strength lies." Delilah made no mention of binding or affliction. Her statement is insightful, for she connected the affections of Samson's heart with responding to her request. She wanted to know where his great strength lie - conveniently not mentioning her intent to bind and afflict him. Judges 16:16-17a says, "And it came to pass, when she pestered him daily with her words and pressed him, so that his soul was vexed to death, 17 that he told her all his heart..." Day after day she pressed him, and the resolve of the mighty judge of Israel crumbled. It was not long before he was indeed bound, afflicted, blinded, imprisoned, and made the object of ridicule.
It occurred to me the progression employed by Delilah mirrors the tactics of sinful temptation. At first we are repulsed by the thing, realising the grave consequences of giving into sin. Day after day of our soul being pressed leads to us wondering what all the fuss is about. What is the big deal anyway? Curiosity chews into our resolve and we find our affections shifting from allegiance to God and drifting towards the satisfaction of our flesh. The scripture does not say, but I wonder if after Samson was bound and his eyes gouged out he regretted loving Delilah in the first place? Blind in the darkness of a Philistine prison, I imagine Samson started seeing clearly mistakes he made when he could fend off his enemies easily. It is good for us to realise the enemy of our souls is always looking to afflict and blind us, but as children of God he cannot do so without our permission. The "secret" of our strength found through trust and obedience to Jesus Christ is no secret, but we can forget to guard our hearts from illicit affections and to keep our hands clean of sin. When we give into sin's demands, we find ourselves weak as any other man.
An interesting observation is as Delilah ramped up the pressure to share the secret of his strength, there was a softening of her request. Consider the first time she brought up the subject in Judges 16:6: "So Delilah said to Samson, "Please tell me where your great strength lies, and with what you may be bound to afflict you." This is a straightforward question with intent. If I was Samson, I would seriously wonder why she would ask such a question! Did she ask because she wanted to bind and afflict me? Samson shrugged it off with a lie. The next time Delilah made her request it was slightly different in Judges 16:10: "Then Delilah said to Samson, "Look, you have mocked me and told me lies. Now, please tell me what you may be bound with." There was no mentioning of the source of his strength, nor any reference to affliction. Again, Samson deliberately misled her. Delilah's third request was very similar to the second time with the same results.
Finally Delilah said in Judges 16:15, "How can you say, 'I love you,' when your heart is not with me? You have mocked me these three times, and have not told me where your great strength lies." Delilah made no mention of binding or affliction. Her statement is insightful, for she connected the affections of Samson's heart with responding to her request. She wanted to know where his great strength lie - conveniently not mentioning her intent to bind and afflict him. Judges 16:16-17a says, "And it came to pass, when she pestered him daily with her words and pressed him, so that his soul was vexed to death, 17 that he told her all his heart..." Day after day she pressed him, and the resolve of the mighty judge of Israel crumbled. It was not long before he was indeed bound, afflicted, blinded, imprisoned, and made the object of ridicule.
It occurred to me the progression employed by Delilah mirrors the tactics of sinful temptation. At first we are repulsed by the thing, realising the grave consequences of giving into sin. Day after day of our soul being pressed leads to us wondering what all the fuss is about. What is the big deal anyway? Curiosity chews into our resolve and we find our affections shifting from allegiance to God and drifting towards the satisfaction of our flesh. The scripture does not say, but I wonder if after Samson was bound and his eyes gouged out he regretted loving Delilah in the first place? Blind in the darkness of a Philistine prison, I imagine Samson started seeing clearly mistakes he made when he could fend off his enemies easily. It is good for us to realise the enemy of our souls is always looking to afflict and blind us, but as children of God he cannot do so without our permission. The "secret" of our strength found through trust and obedience to Jesus Christ is no secret, but we can forget to guard our hearts from illicit affections and to keep our hands clean of sin. When we give into sin's demands, we find ourselves weak as any other man.