What Samuel Said About Solomon
by
Frank Chodorov
"In those days,"
we are told in Judges 17:6, "there was no king in Israel, but every
man did that which was right in his own eyes."
To be able
to do that which is right in one's own eyes is to be free, and freedom
was the way of life among the Israelites before the coming of the
kings. Yet, they were not without government; they were not lacking
in those social controls that are the essence of government. The
economy of the tribesmen demanded of the individual that he adjust
himself to cooperative and regularized procedures; a man who indulged
his caprice when the tribe was on the march in search of grazing
land would be courting disaster; it was a case of hold together
or die.
Tradition supplemented
necessity in the orderly arrangement of life, for the tradition
grew out of experience by the trial-and-error method and had proved
itself beneficial. The laws of custom were sanctified because violation
of them carried its own penalties, not only to the individual, but
also to the group.
It was a conservative
society; adherence to proven principles was the only way by which
the pursuit of happiness could be furthered. That which was "right"
in the tribesman's eyes was "right" by custom, tradition and the
laws of Yahweh, to the enumeration of which the Old Testament, before
the Book of Joshua, devoted much space. Freedom is not license.
Nor was there
lack of leadership before the coming of the kings. Someone had to
plan strategy and improvise tactics for the wars the tribesmen engaged
in during their march to the Promised Land, and someone had to adjudicate
disputes so as to prevent the chaos of internecine struggles. So
came the judges, men and women esteemed for their wisdom and integrity,
the leaders provided by nature for the instruction of the rank and
file.
The evidence
leads to the conclusion that these judges ruled by natural selection
and common consent, much like the chiefs of American Indian tribes.
It was agreed that the authority of the judges was sanctified by
God, but the proof of their anointment was the manner in which they
exercised authority. They were leaders by virtue of their proven
gift of leadership.
The important
thing about the rule of the judges is that their office was not
endowed with the power of coercion. "Every man did that which was
right in his own eyes" meant that no man was compelled to do otherwise;
and, since "in those days there was no king in Israel," it must
be presumed that there was no constabulary to enforce rules of behavior.
The sole enforcement agency upon which the authority of the judges
rested was public opinion. "So said Yahweh" had the force of "so
say we all."
According to
one computation, this kind of government lasted about four centuries
– a period, incidentally, comparable to the duration of the Roman
republic. The manner of its termination is recorded in the First
Book of Samuel (chapter eight), where it is told that the elders
of the tribes came to the last of the judges and demanded that he
set a king over them. The background of this agitation for a basic
constitutional reform is worth noting.
The nomads
had by this time settled down in the hills surrounding Canaan, sheep
herding was giving way to agriculture, land tenure had achieved
an importance it did not have during the migrations. Trading, capital
accumulations and financial transactions had entered their way of
life.
Their economy
had changed. To add to their new outlook was the vision of great
wealth in the valleys; there, the pomp and circumstance of Baal
worship in glittering temples compared favorably in their eyes with
the austerity that Yahweh imposed on them, and there, all manner
of private and public problems were settled out of hand by omniscient
and omnipotent royal establishments, relieving the populace of rigorous
self-discipline. It all looked good.
The immediate
occasion for the revolutionary demand was what we would today call
an emergency. In fact, there were two emergencies. In foreign affairs
things were going badly for Israel; the Philistines had not only
beaten them roundly in battle, but also made off with the sacred
ark of the covenant.
On the domestic
front, they had lost faith in their leadership. The two sons of
Samuel, whom he had appointed as assistants, did not live up to
the high standards of their office; they had "turned aside after
lucre, and took bribes, and perverted judgment."
Samuel seems
to have been a political scientist of the first water, all the more
remarkable in that he had no books to go by, but only his wisdom
and his observation of kingship in operation. So that, when the
elders said "make us a king to judge us like all the nations," he
was displeased. The story says that he took the matter up with Yahweh,
who assured him that nothing could be done about saving the Israelites
from themselves, since they had given up on first principles.
It was because
they had forsaken the rigorous tradition of their forefathers, with
its insistence on self-reliance and personal integrity, that they
had lost the victorious touch that carried them from Egypt to the
outskirts of the Promised Land. The breakdown of the judge system
could be traced to the same lack of self-discipline. Therefore,
said Yahweh, give them what they ask for, but as a parting shot
you might "shew them the manner of the king that shall rule over
them"; and tell them also that when they realize their mistake,
it will be too late to regain freedom: "The Lord will not hear you
in that day."
Ye Shall Be
Servants
So Samuel outlined
the order of things under a king. First, there will be conscription,
replacing the system of voluntarism that had served the tribesmen
well throughout their peregrinations, and the conscription will
not be confined to military service but will include service in
the king's household. What's more, women too will be subject to
involuntary servitude. Then, "he will appoint his captains over
thousands and captains over fifties."
The term "captain"
is ambiguous, referring sometimes to men of war, sometimes to what
we would call nobles, sometimes (by the kind of work assigned to
them) to bureaucrats; it was in the reigns of David and Solomon
that "captain" took on many meanings.
And, continued
Samuel, the king will take from you the best of your lands "and
give them to his servants," thus establishing a landed aristocracy,
which the laws of Moses clearly forbade. What's more, for the upkeep
of his establishment "he will take a tenth of your seed, and of
your vineyards"; apparently, compulsory taxation was new among the
Israelites. To top it all off, "ye shall be his servants."
Death to the
Defier
But the elders
were obdurate in their demand for political authority. One could
go behind the returns and make out a case against these revolutionists;
perhaps they constituted a newly risen landowning class, and hoped
to solidify their position under a kingship. More likely, fear had
entered their hearts, as is usually the case when a people accustomed
to success are faced with adversity, and they were quite willing
to swap freedom for the promise of security under subservience.
In any event,
Samuel anointed Saul. From the very beginning of the royal establishment,
the troubles of Israel multiplied. There was the usual spate of
wars with the Philistines, with varying degrees of success, and
internal dissension, which was rare in the experience of the tribesmen,
became common. Some followed Saul, others revolted against his rule;
more exactly, they resisted the establishment of those institutions
that Samuel had warned them would come with a king.
But, as Samuel
said, there was no way of regaining freedom once the state had made
its appearance, and the judge was soon on the lookout for a new
deliverer. He sought out David, but it is significant that the new
king, though anointed by Samuel, had to fight his way to power;
he came to the throne on the wings of what we would call a revolution.
The struggle for power, embellished with moral platitudes and social-sounding
whereases, had seeped into the Israelite way of life.
There is a
story within the story of David's accession that is indeed a lesson
in political science. The story is that a young soldier who brought
David the news of Saul's death – hoping that this would be pleasing
to David, whose life Saul had been after – confessed that he had
had a part in dispatching the king, and that for his pains David
had the soldier put to death. His reason for the execution was that
the soldier had defied the office of kingship; it was a crime for
an individual citizen to lay hands on the anointed.
It Took 40
Years
It is the way
of political power to become in itself, regardless of the person
who wields it, a shrine for public worship. In modern times, we
are quick to "throw the rascals out," but it never occurs to us
that rascality is imbedded in the office or that the power invested
in it might make a rascal of an honest man.
Though the
people of Israel had asked for a king, the spirit of freedom did
not depart from them immediately upon the granting of their wish,
and Saul never really set the kingship on a solid basis. It takes
time for the myth of authority to gain general acceptance. David,
the second king, did better, for he had forty years in which to
get the tribesmen in line with the new institution; a second generation
had come to maturity during his reign and to them the exploits of
royalty were "modern," real and vibrant, while the freedom of their
forefathers sank into the limbo of a fairy tale.
Even so, something
of the past hung on, and David had to contend with frequent insurrections
and, at the end, with a war of succession. He did succeed, as we
learn from the Second Book of Samuel, in setting up the necessary
framework for the functioning of a successful state, that is, in
surrounding the kingship with a supporting caste of "mighty men,"
analogous to what we would today call a privileged class, and with
a group of efficient "servants" whose functions correspond with
those of latter-day bureaucrats. In that way he facilitated the
consolidation of power under Solomon.
The Saul-David-Solomon
story is illustrative of the gestation of the state. At first, an
aspiring chieftain fights his way to ascendancy as a lone wolf,
knocking off rivals, and concentrates in himself all the power he
can lay his hands on. This method has merit only in so far as the
area of his sovereignty is limited to personal supervision. Beyond
that, it proves to be quite inefficacious, even precarious.
As his quest
for power reaches beyond his purview, as it always does, he finds
it necessary to delegate some of his power to, and share his prerogatives
with, a supporting oligarchy – military, ecclesiastical (or intellectual)
and, in time, commercial or industrial groups – that lend themselves
to his purpose in return for the special privileges he grants them.
They serve as a moat to his castle.
In addition
to these favored blocs, he must surround his citadel with a class
of well-paid "servants" skilled in taking care of the details of
his sovereignty, so that it can function with the least amount of
friction.
The state is
not, as most political scientists would make it, an inanimate thing;
it consists of people, human beings, each of whom operates under
an inner compulsion to get the most out of life with the least expenditure
of labor. They differ from other human beings only in the fact that
they have chosen (because they believe it to be easier) the political
or predatory means of satisfying their desires, rather than the
economic or productive means.
The fiction
that the state is an impersonal institution, something society constructs
for its own benefit, serves to hide, even from its members, the
nature of its composition.
Hiram and
the WPA
The wisdom
of Solomon was demonstrated in his capacity for consolidating state
power. In the first place, the underpinning of his reign was soundly
constructed, for we are told that his captains and his princes and
his priests and servants, the privileged classes, "lacked nothing."
He bought off
possible opposition. Then he avoided to a considerable degree the
costly and disruptive wars of his predecessors, and resorted to
diplomatic bribery to bring under his sway the petty and potentially
troublesome kings on the perimeter of his domain. His principal
concern was in the management of internal affairs, in getting a
good hold on his people by embellishing the myth of authority. The
temple he built was a stroke of political genius, for it covered
the kingship with an aura of omnipotence; so did the walled cities
and the navy he built.
These programs
brought him much public acclaim and accomplished the primary political
purpose, that of giving the state the character of a doer of great
social things. This is the prerequisite of maintaining power over
the people.
These public
works projects were financed on credit advanced by Hiram, King of
Tyre, who incidentally did the work and employed slaves. (This form
of exploitation was applicable under Hebrew law to foreigners only.)
There is also a hint that Solomon exacted tribute from neighboring
princes. But, as to taxation, we learn nothing until we come to
Second Chronicles (chapter ten), which deals with the coronation
of his son, Rehoboam.
There it is
told that "all Israel" pleaded with the new king thus: "Thy father
made our yoke grievous: now therefore ease thou somewhat the grievous
servitude of thy father, and his heavy yoke that he put upon us,
and we will serve thee."
It was, then,
by heavy taxes that the State of Israel attained the apex of its
glory under Solomon. Its opulence reflected the poverty of the people.
And so it must be. Society, it should be kept in mind, is a group
of people who cooperate with one another in order that they may
severally and individually improve their circumstances, and the
techniques by which society achieves its purpose are production
and exchange.
There is no
other way by which society can thrive. Whatever deprives the members
of society of the fruits of their labors is a deterrent of the human
purpose that brought them together; it is a desocializing force.
And among the devices that men have invented to defeat the ends
of society, none is more devastating than compulsory taxation, because
it is a constant drain of their property, tending to increase as
they show more and more enterprise.
The state,
on the other hand, thrives on what it can exact of society; its
temples are built with taxes. Its bureaucracy or enforcement agency
grows in size and arrogance by the same means. And it is with taxes
that the state buys the support of those who might otherwise turn
against it. The more taxes, the richer the state and the poorer
the people; the more taxes, the stronger the state and the weaker
the people. The interests of the two institutions are diametrically
in opposition.
The Yoke Is
Heavy
Resistance
to the state diminishes in the degree of its confiscations, and
ultimately, when the tax load becomes a yoke, subservience to the
state becomes the necessary way of life.
The designation
of taxation as a yoke is a nice piece of biblical directness. A
yoke is worn by an ox, a beast of burden, which by nature is incapable
of claiming a property right in the products of its labor.
It follows
that when a human being is deprived of that right, his status approximates
that of an ox, and if taxation takes all he produces beyond that
needed to sustain life (the wages of an ox), it can rightly be called
a yoke. The Israelites who pleaded with Rehoboam to lower the tax
load that Solomon (the state) had put on them were quite literal.
The story goes
on to say that Rehoboam rejected the plea of "all Israel," that
he in fact promised them an increase in taxes. Then it tells of
a revolt against taxes by the people of Judah, a political subdivision
that periodically rejected the suzerainty of Jerusalem: when Hadoram,
Rehoboam's chief collector of tribute, made his rounds among them,
they so "stoned him with stones, that he died."
The incident
points out another lesson in political science, namely, that the
state never achieves complete ascendancy over society (if it did,
society would disintegrate and the state would collapse from lack
of nutrition), and that there are always critics and rebels.
There were
many kings after Solomon in Israel, and all of them were plagued
with prophets who called upon the people to return to first principles.
In Second Chronicles it says, "Israel rebelled against the house
of David unto this day."
This article
first appeared in Faith
and Freedom in February 1955 (vol. 6, no. 6). It
was reprinted on Mises.org.
Frank
Chodorov (18871966), one of the great libertarians of the
Old Right, was the founder of the Intercollegiate Society of Individualists
and author of such books as The
Income Tax: Root of All Evil. Here he is on "Taxation
Is Robbery." And here
is Rothbard's obituary of Chodorov.

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