Judges 16Judges 16
To "possess the gates of your enemies" means to conquer them. Samson literally possesses the gates of his enemies in this story. His tearing up of the gates, including the bars, also invokes his ultimate act at the end of his story. Also, everytime Samson comes into conflict with his enemies, a woman is involved. Thanks to his super strength, this is not a problem, until the final time it happens.
Here is the second time in Judges that treachery is linked to pieces of silver. It is a Hebraism, one that most notoriously reoccurs in the New Testament. Delilah takes up the Philistines on their offer. These hoes ain't loyal.
After three times of trying to get Samson to reveal his kryptonite, Delilah nags him enough to get him to tell her the truth. I think every man can relate at some point to being weak to a woman when you ought not be. Never show them your soft side, an evil woman will always take advantage.
Finally, the Philistines capture Samson and imprison him but not before gouging out his eyes. Pick up on the irony. Samson chose women who were "right in his own eyes" and lost them as a result. Needless to say, it was not Samson's hair that magically granted him his strength (though it would've appeared that way to the heathen) but God Himself who was Samson's strength. After flagrantly disregarding God's covenant, Law, and Nazirite vows, God leaves Samson. Then the Philistines and their lords throw a party for their god, Dagon, and set up Samson to be their party clown.
God answers Samson's prayer and grants him strength again. Samson submits to the divine will, walking by faith not by sight. Samson then takes out everybody with him. God left Samson, but not forever. He let him stumble, but not to fall. Why? Because the will of man does not change the decree of God. Not then, not now, not ever. In fact, God providentially used Samson's sinfulness to bring him close to the Philistines, and then to destroy them, just as the Angel foretold. Even when we're faithless, He remains faithful, for He cannot deny Himself. Samson is then buried with his father, who almost certainly saw the pre-incarnate Christ.
The modern state of Israel (not the biblical one) has an open-secret nuclear deterrence policy called the Samson Option. If someone were to nuke them, they would nuke their immediate enemies. They would bring the house down with them.
Infamous hair being his weakness makes an appearance here and there's some eye gouging as well
A captured Samson gets forced to go out to do an impromptu stand up comedy routine I guess
Eventually Samson takes himself out as well as all the Philistine rulers and then it ends
My thoughts on Samson: Intense, impulsive and aggressive. Yeah, the Homelander comparison is apt. But somehow sympathetic in a way as well. Maybe partly becuase of his lack of emotional regulation (as we might say in modern terms). I guess a modern Samson would probably end up in a therapist's chair.