Weeping Before the LORD
The
people of Israel were rightly offended by the atrocities of rape and murder that
had occurred within their borders. Brutal
acts performed by their own countrymen from the tribe of Benjamin. They weren’t going to stand for it any longer.
They knew something had to be done.
So,
they gathered together and considered the situation, took counsel with one
another, and sought the LORD. They confronted
the tribe of Benjamin and demanded an explanation for the great evil that had
taken place. They insisted that the men guilty of this crime be brought forward
and punished. But the people of Benjamin refused. Instead
they mustered their armies and gathered to battle their fellow tribes.
That’s when the
people of Israel went up and wept before the LORD. They fell on their faces and
sobbed about sin and evil and the terrible predicament they now faced. Their
prayer meeting lasted all day and into the evening.
There are many times
in Scripture that we find people weeping before God in an act of intense prayer
and questioning. Weeping – the shedding of tears – is a uniquely human method
of expressing emotions such as pain, despair, remorse, and disappointment. In this case, the people are weeping for three
reasons: (1) because of the moral degeneracy of the men of Gibeah; (2) because
of the division that has occurred between their fellow countrymen; and, (3)
because they are acutely aware that more blood is about to be shed. They don’t take this situation lightly or
enter into it impetuously. They fall on
their faces before the Lord and inquire of Him. They wanted to make sure that going
up against their fellow countrymen was the correct action to take.
These were holy
tears. Tears of remorse. Tears of repentance. Tears of heartfelt dependence
upon God. The God of all comfort keeps watch
over your weeping. He gathers up all your tears and “puts them in his bottle”
(Psalm 56:8). God marks every cry of
discomfort and pain. No matter how much of your anguish has gone unnoticed by
others, not one moment has escaped the attention of the God who neither
slumbers nor sleeps. In 2 Kings 20:25, God says to Hezekiah, “I have
heard your prayer; I have seen your tears.”
Many
of us feel ashamed of our tears, especially if others see them. In a culture
that prizes strength and grows uncomfortable with prolonged grieving, many of
us respond to our own tears with a hasty wipe of the sleeve and a quick, “Get
over it.” Not so with God, whose
fatherly compassion compels him to draw near to the brokenhearted and bind up
their wounds (Psalm 147:3). The God who said, “Blessed are you who weep now” (Luke 6:21) will
not reproach you for the tears you shed as you walk through the ruins of our
broken world.