
The question of evil forces
by Charles Bertelsmeier
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Now the Spirit of the Lord had departed from Saul, and an evil spirit from the Lord tormented him (1 Samuel 16:14).
You may struggle with reading this verse. I did and had to do quite a bit of research to better understand it. Does God really send evil spirits to torment people?
When we first meet Saul and he is anointed as king, the Bible says that ‘… the Spirit of God came powerfully upon [Saul] …’ (1 Samuel 10:10). But as we read yesterday, Saul was not prepared to follow God’s leading in fulfilling his role as king of Israel.
So, God selected a new king, David, and took his Spirit back from Saul. Although God rejected Saul as king, he didn’t reject Saul as a person and kept working in Saul’s life to draw him back to the relationship God wanted to have with Saul. Since God’s Spirit was no longer living in Saul, he was open to being ‘tormented’ by evil forces. It wasn’t that God was calling these evil forces to torment Saul; it was something these evil forces wanted to do anyway. It was that God temporarily removed some of his protection from Saul to help him understand that when we reject God’s purposes for us, the alternative is not a nice place to experience. As we surrender our lives to God, we live under his protection against the powers of evil.
When we go further in our passage for today, we read, ‘Whenever the [evil] spirit from God came on Saul, David would take up his lyre and play. Then relief would come to Saul; he would feel better, and the evil spirit would leave him’ (1 Samuel 16:23). God had not rejected Saul as a person. God’s Spirit was in David, and when David came to Saul when he was being ‘tormented’, the Holy Spirit in David would drive the evil powers away and bring relief to Saul.
I personally take from this that we should see God working in all situations in our lives to draw us closer to him. When we observe evil in our lives and in the lives of those around us, we should not view this as punishment from God. Instead, we should open our hearts and lives to what God is doing and trust in his promise to be with us wherever he leads us.
I was struggling with a personal issue, something in my life that I knew God was not happy with, but which I seemed unable to deal with alone. Of course, I prayed about it and gave it over to God. Seemingly independently, my life was impacted by external issues that consumed much of my time, and I had to do things I knew I had to do but didn’t enjoy. Sometime later, I realised that the personal issue had lost its hold over me. God knows intimately how we tick and how best to bring about the changes he wants to happen. We just need to keep trusting in his promise that he will never stop loving us.
Awesome and loving Heavenly Father, thank you for the way you are working in my life to change me into the person you want me to be. Please help me to grow in trusting your love so that I can fearlessly follow where you are leading me. Amen.
Charles is a retired engineer who has worked on communications projects for the air force, army and navy. He lives in a retirement village in the outer north-western suburbs of Sydney with his wife, Diane. Together, they have four children and eight grandchildren, all of whom they love spending time with. Charles keeps busy caring for their pot plants and a community vegetable garden, researching his family history and volunteering in the community and at LifeWay Lutheran Church.
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