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<p>Here is, 1. The sin of the men of Beth-shemesh: <i>They looked into the ark of the Lord</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="1Sam.6.19" href="/passage/?search=1Sam.6.19">1 Sam. 6:19</a>. Every Israelite had heard great talk of the ark, and had been possessed with a profound veneration for it; but they had been told that it was lodged within a veil, and even the high priest himself might not look upon it but once a year, and then through a cloud of incense. Perhaps this made many say (as we are apt to covet that which is forbidden) what a great deal they would give for a sight of it. Some of these Beth-shemites, we may suppose, for that reason, <i>rejoiced to see the ark</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="1Sam.6.13" href="/passage/?search=1Sam.6.13">1 Sam. 6:13</a>) more than for the sake of the public. Yet this did not content them; they might see it, but they would go further, they would take off the covering, which it is likely was nailed or screwed on, and look into it, under pretence of seeing whether the Philistines had not taken the two tables out of it or some way damaged them, but really to gratify a sinful curiosity of their own, which intruded into those things that God had thought fit to conceal from them. Note, It is a great affront to God for vain men to pry into and meddle with the secret things which belong not to them, <a class="bibleref" title="Deut.29.29,Col.2.18" href="/passage/?search=Deut.29.29,Col.2.18"><span class="bibleref" title="Deut.29.29">Deut. 29:29</span>; <span class="bibleref" title="Col.2.18">Col. 2:18</span></a>. We were all ruined by an ambition of forbidden knowledge. That which made this looking into the ark a great sin was that it proceeded from a very low and mean opinion of the ark. The familiarity they had with it upon this occasion bred contempt and irreverence. Perhaps they presumed upon their being priests; but the dignity of the ministerial office will be so far from excusing that it will aggravate a careless and irreverent treatment of holy things. They should, by their example, have taught others to keep their distance and look upon the ark with a holy awe. Perhaps they presumed upon the kind entertainment they had given the ark, and the sacrifices they had now offered to welcome it home with, for which they thought the ark was indebted to them, and they might be allowed to repay themselves with the satisfaction of looking into it. But let no man think that his service done for God will justify him in any instance of disrespect or irreverence towards the things of God. Or it may be they presumed upon the present mean circumstances the ark was in, newly come out of captivity, and unsettled; now that it stood upon a cold stone, they thought they might make free with it; they should never have such another opportunity 19a7 of being familiar with it. It is an offence to God if we think meanly of his ordinances because of the meanness of the manner of their administration. Had they looked with an understanding eye upon the ark, and not judged purely by outward appearance, they would have thought that the ark never shone with greater majesty than it did not. It had triumphed over the Philistines, and come out of its house of bondage (like Christ out of the grave) by its own power; had they considered this, they would not have looked into it thus, as a common chest. 2. Their punishment for this sin: <i>He smote the men of Beth-shemesh, many of them, with a great slaughter</i>. How jealous is God for the honour of his ark! He will not suffer it to be profaned. <i>Be not deceived, God is not mocked</i>. Those that will not fear his goodness, and reverently use the tokens of his grace, shall be made to feel his justice, and sink under the tokens of his displeasure. Those that pry into what is forbidden, and come too near to holy fire, will find it is at their peril. <i>He smote</i> 50,070 <i>men</i>. This account of the numbers smitten is expressed in a very unusual manner in the original, which, besides the improbability that there should be so many guilty and so many slain, occasions many learned men to question whether we take the matter aright. In the original it is, <i>He smote in</i> (or among) <i>the people three score and ten men, fifty thousand men</i>. The Syriac and Arabic read it, <i>five thousand and seventy men</i>. The Chaldee reads it, <i>seventy men of the elders, and fifty thousand of the common people. Seventy men as valuable as</i> 50,000, so some, because they were priests. Some think the seventy men were the Beth-shemites that were slain for looking into the ark, and the 50,000 were those that were slain by the ark, in the land of the Philistines. <i>He smote seventy men</i>, that is, <i>fifty out of a thousand</i>, which was one in twenty, a half decimation; so some understand it. The Septuagint read it much as we do, <i>he smote seventy men, and fifty thousand men</i>. Josephus says only seventy were smitten. 3. The terror that was struck upon the men of Beth-shemesh by this severe stroke. They said, as well they might, <i>Who is able to stand before this holy Lord God</i>? <a class="bibleref" title="1Sam.6.20" href="/passage/?search=1Sam.6.20">1 Sam. 6:20</a>. Some think this expresses their murmuring against God, as if he had dealt hardly and unjustly with them. Instead of quarrelling with themselves and their own sins, they quarrelled with God and his judgments; as <i>David was displeased</i>, in a case not much dissimilar, <a class="bibleref" title="2Sam.6.8,2Sam.6.9" href="/passage/?search=2Sam.6.8,2Sam.6.9"><span class="bibleref" title="2Sam.6.8">2 Sam. 6:8</span>, <span class="bibleref" title="2Sam.6.9">9</span></a>. I rather think it intimates their awful and reverent adoration of God, as the Lord God, as a holy Lord God, and as a God before whom none is able to stand. This they infer from that tremendous judgment, “Who is able to stand before the God of the ark?” To stand before God to worship him (blessed be his name) is not impossible; we are through Christ invited, encouraged, and enabled to do it, but to stand before God to contend with him we are not able. Who is able to stand before the throne of his immediate glory, and look full upon it? <a class="bibleref" title="1Tim.6.16" href="/passage/?search=1Tim.6.16">1 Tim. 6:16</a>. Who is able to stand before the tribunal of his enflexible justice, and make his part good there? <a class="bibleref" title="Ps.130.3,Ps.143.2" href="/passage/?search=Ps.130.3,Ps.143.2"><span class="bibleref" title="Ps.130.3">Ps. 130:3</span>; <span class="bibleref" title="Ps.143.2">143:2</span></a>. Who is able to stand before the arm of his provoked power, and either resist or bear the strokes of it? <a class="bibleref" title="Ps.76.7" href="/passage/?search=Ps.76.7">Ps. 76:7</a>. 4. Their desire, hereupon, to be rid of the ark. They asked, <i>To whom shall he go up from us</i>? <a class="bibleref" title="1Sam.6.20" href="/passage/?search=1Sam.6.20">1 Sam. 6:20</a>. They should rather have asked, “How may we make our peace with him, and recover his favour?” <a class="bibleref" title="Mic.6.6,Mic.6.7" href="/passage/?search=Mic.6.6,Mic.6.7"><span class="bibleref" title="Mic.6.6">Mic. 6:6</span>, <span class="bibleref" title="Mic.6.7">7</span></a>. But they begin to be as weary of the ark as the Philistines had been, whereas, if they had treated it with due reverence, who knows but it might have taken up its residence among them, and they had all been blessed for the arks sake? But thus, when the word of God works with terror on sinners consciences, they, instead of taking the blame and shame to themselves, quarrel with the word, and put it from them, <a class="bibleref" title="Jer.6.10" href="/passage/?search=Jer.6.10">Jer. 6:10</a>. They sent messengers to the elders of Kirjath-jearim, a strong city further up in the country, and begged of them to come and fetch the ark up thither, <a class="bibleref" title="1Sam.6.21" href="/passage/?search=1Sam.6.21">1 Sam. 6:21</a>. They durst not touch it to bring it thither themselves, but stood aloof from it as a dangerous thing. Thus do foolish men run from one extreme to the other, from presumptuous boldness to slavish shyness. Kirjath-jearim, that is, <i>the city of woods</i>, belonged to Judah, <a class="bibleref" title="Josh.15.9,Josh.15.60" href="/passage/?search=Josh.15.9,Josh.15.60"><span class="bibleref" title="Josh.15.9">Josh. 15:9</span>, <span class="bibleref" title="Josh.15.60">60</span></a>. It lay in the way from Beth-shemesh to Shiloh, so that when they sent to them to fetch it, we may suppose, they intended that the elders of Shiloh should fetch it thence, but God intended otherwise. Thus was it sent from town to town, and no care taken of it by the public, a sign that there was no king in Israel.</p>