What we try do in the dark eventually will see the
light – and the consequences are often far-reaching in scope for generations to
come. As leaders, we are to be doubly aware that our private lives are often intertwined
with the public personas we have carefully cultivated particularly those of us
with higher callings or larger platforms to impact change. In the age of social
media, we also have discovered how unforgiving the masses can be until the next
calamity occurs and it affects them [examples:
anarchists until floods or tornadoes destroy their homes, the religious
among us who put more faith in inanimate symbols such as the American flag or
dollar bill than a living God who provides all we need as well as some of our
wants; stars caught up in extramarital affairs until an unexpected pregnancy or
sexually transmitted disease enter the picture; etc.]
Samson was such a man whose private life failed to
align with his public persona.
We all remember him in Judges 13-16 as the muscleman
who was to deliver Israel from the Philistines. His outsized physical strength
was a specific gift meant to set him apart from the crowd and serve the Lord;
however, this came with certain conditions. He could not ever cut his hair, drink alcohol, or do anything unclean to lessen
his significance among the Israelites. Samson may have been a hairy dude and
not what we would consider today our modern-day hero. Nevertheless, he was a
leader of men.
Did he lead a pure life?
No.
Do you?
I thought so. Keep reading to find out what else
comes out in the light.
Samson got drunk, ate honey from dead lions and ravished
other unclean spaces, threw tantrums, chased sluts, and eventually fell for the
wrong woman. In other words, he was a man.
Each time he stepped out of God’s covenant, he was reminded of his purpose to
lead Israel to freedom. In other words, he did most of the same things the average
man has done in his life before – and sometimes after – acknowledging his
life’s work. Yet, his twenty years of service to the Israelites were more than sufficient
for what they gave him in return. Samson was bad-to-the-bone but his personal
life had a sneaky way of derailing his awesomeness.
Understand not all women can be classified as
deceiving, but in Delilah’s case, the shoe fits. If Prada or Christian Louboutin
had a shoe store back then, she would be the one wearing the red bottom pumps
over a sleeping Samson who was unknowingly weakened after the enemy cut his
hair.
But before the fatal haircut…Delilah plotted with
the Philistine leaders to avenge Samson’s killings of at least thirty-two
people and the destruction of their wheat fields. Have him tell you where his
strength comes from, they implored Delilah. Do whatever it takes for him to
tell you then we’ll capture him and present the captive to Dagon. Delilah used
the same beauty that attracted the hero to her guile by wining and dining,
doing those freaky things to him that probably made his toes curl up like Ramen
noodles, and otherwise played up to his sympathies in an attempt for him to
spill the beans on where his strength lies. Over time, he was worn down from
breaking ropes and chains as if they were sheets of paper Mache dolls and
finally revealed to her his hair had never been cut. Once his mane was shorn of
its locks, Samson was reduced to a mere mortal just as the Philistines had
conspired to do in the first place.
Samson
did not know that the Lord had left him. – Judges 16:20
With a considerably weakened body and gouged eyes,
Samson was escorted to a banquet in Gaza where he was jeered and mocked by the
same Philistines he broke bread and laid down with as they praised their god
Dagon for his capture. A young man who was leading him by the hand was asked to
take him to the middle columns that are holding up the roof which he was
compliant. In one last gust of glory, God provides Samson with one more burst
of strength to topple the temple killing everyone inside including himself!
We all need to pay close attention to our own
private lives even as many of them parallel Samson making sure that God is at
the center of those in addition to the public lives.
The things that happen in the dark do come out in
the light.
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