1 Kings 20:1-43
1 Kings 20:1-43 MSG
At about this same time Ben-Hadad king of Aram mustered his troops. He recruited in addition thirty-two local sheiks, all outfitted with horses and chariots. He set out in force and surrounded Samaria, ready to make war. He sent an envoy into the city to set his terms before Ahab king of Israel: âBen-Hadad lays claim to your silver and gold, and to the pick of your wives and sons.â The king of Israel accepted the terms: âAs you say, distinguished lord; I and everything I have is yours.â But then the envoy returned a second time, saying, âOn second thought, I want it allâyour silver and gold and all your wives and sons. Hand them overâthe whole works. Iâll give you twenty-four hours; then my servants will arrive to search your palace and the houses of your officials and loot them; anything that strikes their fancy, theyâll take.â The king of Israel called a meeting of all his tribal elders. He said, âLook at thisâoutrageous! Heâs just looking for trouble. He means to clean me out, demanding all my women and children. And after I already agreed to pay him off handsomely!â The elders, backed by the people, said, âDonât cave in to him. Donât give an inch.â So he sent an envoy to Ben-Hadad, âTell my distinguished lord, âI agreed to the terms you delivered the first time, but this I canât doâthis I wonât do!ââ The envoy went back and delivered the answer. Ben-Hadad shot back his response: âMay the gods do their worst to me, and then worse again, if thereâll be anything left of Samaria but rubble.â The king of Israel countered, âThink about itâitâs easier to start a fight than end one.â It happened that when Ben-Hadad heard this retort he was into some heavy drinking, boozing it up with the sheiks in their field shelters. Drunkenly, he ordered his henchmen, âGo after them!â And they attacked the city. Just then a lone prophet approached Ahab king of Israel and said, âGODâs word: Have you taken a good look at this mob? Well, look againâIâm turning it over to you this very day. And youâll know, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that I am GOD.â Ahab said, âReally? And who is going to make this happen?â GOD said, âThe young commandos of the regional chiefs.â âAnd who,â said Ahab, âwill strike the first blow?â GOD said, âYou.â Ahab looked over the commandos of the regional chiefs; he counted 232. Then he assessed the available troopsâ7,000. At noon they set out after Ben-Hadad who, with his allies, the thirty-two sheiks, was busy at serious drinking in the field shelters. The commandos of the regional chiefs made up the vanguard. A report was brought to Ben-Hadad: âMen are on their way from Samaria.â He said, âIf theyâve come in peace, take them alive as hostages; if theyâve come to fight, the sameâtake them alive as hostages.â The commandos poured out of the city with the full army behind them. They hit hard in hand-to-hand combat. The Arameans scattered from the field, with Israel hard on their heels. But Ben-Hadad king of Aram got away on horseback, along with his cavalry. The king of Israel cut down both horses and chariotsâan enormous defeat for Aram. Sometime later the prophet came to the king of Israel and said, âOn the alert nowâbuild up your army, assess your capabilities, and see what has to be done. Before the year is out, the king of Aram will be back in force.â Meanwhile the advisors to the king of Aram said, âTheir god is a god of the mountainsâwe donât stand a chance against them there. So letâs engage them on the plain where weâll have the advantage. Hereâs the strategy: Remove each sheik from his place of leadership and replace him with a seasoned officer. Then recruit a fighting force equivalent in size to the army that deserted earlierâhorse for horse, chariot for chariot. And weâll fight them on the plainâweâre sure to prove stronger than they are.â It sounded good to the king; he did what they advised. As the new year approached, Ben-Hadad rallied Aram and they went up to Aphek to make war on Israel. The Israelite army prepared to fight and took the field to meet Aram. They moved into battle formation before Aram in two camps, like two flocks of goats. The plain was seething with Arameans. Just then a holy man approached the king of Israel saying, âThis is GODâs word: Because Aram said, âGOD is a god of the mountains and not a god of the valleys,â Iâll hand over this huge mob of an army to you. Then youâll know that I am GOD.â The two armies were poised in a standoff for seven days. On the seventh day fighting broke out. The Israelites killed 100,000 of the Aramean infantry in one day. The rest of the army ran for their lives back to the city, Aphek, only to have the city wall fall on 27,000 of the survivors. Ben-Hadad escaped into the city and hid in a closet. Then his advisors told him, âLook, weâve heard that the kings of Israel play by the rules; letâs dress in old gunnysacks, carry a white flag of truce, and present ourselves to the king of Israel on the chance that heâll let you live.â So thatâs what they did. They dressed in old gunnysacks and carried a white flag, and came to the king of Israel saying, âYour servant Ben-Hadad said, âPlease let me live.ââ Ahab said, âYou mean to tell me that heâs still alive? If heâs alive, heâs my brother.â The men took this as a good sign and concluded that everything was going to be all right: âBen-Hadad is most certainly your brother!â The king said, âGo and get him.â They went and brought him back by chariot. Ahab said, âI am prepared to return the cities that my father took from your father. And you can set up your headquarters in Damascus just as my father did in Samaria; Iâll send you home under safe conduct.â Then he made a covenant with him and sent him off. A man who was one of the prophets said to a bystander, âHit me; wound me. Do it for GODâs sakeâitâs his command. Hit me; wound me.â But the man wouldnât do it. So he told him, âBecause you wouldnât obey GODâs orders, as soon as you leave me a lion will attack you.â No sooner had the man left his side than a lion met him and attacked. He then found another man and said, âHit me; wound me.â That man did itâhit him hard in the face, drawing blood. Then the prophet went and took a position along the road, with a bandage over his eyes, waiting for the king. It wasnât long before the king happened by. The man cried out to the king, âYour servant was in the thick of the battle when a man showed up and turned over a prisoner to me, saying, âGuard this man with your life; if he turns up missing youâll pay dearly.â But I got busy doing one thing after another and the next time I looked he was gone.â The king of Israel said, âYouâve just pronounced your own verdict.â At that, the man ripped the bandage off his eyes and the king recognized who he wasâone of the prophets! The man said to the king, âGODâs word: Because you let a man go who was under sentence by GOD, itâs now your life for his, your people for his.â The king of Israel went home in a sulk. He arrived in Samaria in a very bad mood.