Judges 6.docx
Notes
Transcript
Prequel to Saviors that fail: When: Israel was in slavery for
400 years. Then Moses led the Exodus into the desert. His
successor, Joshua, let them into the promised land. The 12
tribes of Israel came from Jacob’s (aka Israel) 12 sons. The
“Judges” didn’t judge in a courtroom. They were “deliverers” or
“saviors”.
The Canaanites were the people living in the promised land when
the 12 tribes of Israel got there. The various “-ites” (like
Perizzites) can be thought of as sub-tribes of Canaanites.
Last week on Saviors that fail: God saved Israel after
Canaanite oppression. Deborah sang a song.
This week on Saviors that fail: We begin the Gideon story. It
proivdes insight into the rest of Israel’s history, and the history of salvation.
Application →You will worship the Lord your
God and have no other gods before him. .... And will
someone finally tell Spain about the Light of the world???
Gideon and Abimelech Outline
Israel is hungry (6:1-10)
•
The oppression by the Midianites is bad. God reminds them of the
1st commandment.
Gideon’s call (6:11-24)
•
God calls Gideon but he doesn’t want to go. Gideon is scare of fire,
among other things.
Gideon tears down Baal’s altar (6:25-32)
•
Gideon obeys God but is scared. He gets a new name that will
haunt him.
Gideon puts out a fleece (6:33-40)
•
Gideon doesn’t want to go so he asks God to re-check and triple
check the message. Why does God play along?
Gideon’s first battle (7:1-8:3)
•
Gideon marches on the Midianites, but God re-checks and triple
checks the number of troops. Doesn’t matter because God does all
the fighting.
Gideon’s second battle (8:4-21)
•
Gideon shows his petty, emotional nature.
“King” Gideon’s becomes pagan (8:22-28)
Surprise! Israel become pagan again (8:33-35)
Abimelech, son of “King” Gideon, becomes “king” (9:1-6)
Abimelech’s little brother, Jotham, tells a story (9:7-21)
“King” Abimelech’s reign of terror and civil war (9:22-55)
God’s condemnation of Abimelech is completed (9:56-57)
Tola and Jair save/rule Israel (10:1-5)
Judges 6-8 (CSB)
Midian Oppresses Israel
6 The Israelites did what
The evil
The author has defined “the
evil” several times: following
other gods. “Evil” is
murder/theft/adultery but
“the evil” is violating the first
commandment—"I am the
Lord your God, who brought
you out of the land of Egypt,
out of the place of slavery. Do
not have other gods besides
me.” Ex. 20:1-3
was evil in the sight of
the LORD. So the LORD
handed them over to
Midian seven years, 2 and
they oppressed Israel.
Because of Midian, the
Israelites made hiding
places for themselves in the mountains, caves,
and strongholds. 3 Whenever the Israelites
planted crops, the Midianites, Amalekites, and
the Qedemites came and attacked them. 4 They
encamped against them and destroyed the
produce of the land, even as far as Gaza. They
left nothing for Israel to eat, as well as no
sheep, ox, or donkey. 5 For the Midianites came
with their cattle and their tents like a great
swarm of locusts. They and their camels were
without number, and they entered the land to
lay waste to it. 6 So Israel became povertystricken because of Midian, and the
Israelites cried out to the LORD.
Who was Midian?
Midian, original father to the Midianites, was a son of Abraham by one of
his concubines, who Abraham sent away. Joseph was taken to Egypt by
Midianite slave traders. Moses went to Midian to flee Pharaoh, and
married the daughter of a priest of Midian. Despite origins with the God of
Abraham, their paganism made them enemies of Israel, and of God.
When the Israelites cried out to him because
of Midian, 8 the LORD sent a prophet to them.
He said to them, “This is what the LORD God of
Israel says: ‘I brought you out of Egypt and out
of the place of slavery. 9 I rescued you from the
power of Egypt and the power of all who
oppressed you. I drove them out before you
and gave you their
Why does God phrase it, “Do not
land. 10 I said to you: I
fear the gods of the Amorites?”
Why didn’t he repeat “have no
am the LORD your God.
other gods?” Because of the
Do not fear the gods of
renewed covenant in Joshua 24,
the Amorites whose land
God got specific! The people
you live in. But you did
shouted agreement.
not obey me.’”
7
The LORD Calls Gideon
The angel of the LORD came, and he sat under
the oak that was in Ophrah, which belonged to
Joash, the Abiezrite. His son Gideon was
threshing wheat in the winepress in order to
hide it from the Midianites. 12 Then the angel of
the LORD appeared to him and said:
“The LORD is with you, valiant warrior.”
11
“Valiant warrior”
Gideon said to him, “Please,
Let’s see how long it
my lord, if the LORD is with us,
takes for this to
why has all this happened? And
become true, and how.
where are all his wonders that
our fathers told us about? They said, ‘Hasn’t
the LORD brought us out of Egypt?’ But now
13
the LORD has abandoned
us and handed us over to
Midian.”
Gideon: I haven’t been
listening this whole time, why
hasn’t the Lord saved us?
The LORD turned to him and said, “Go in the
strength you have and deliver Israel from the
grasp of Midian. I am sending you!”
14
He said to him, “Please, Lord, how can I
deliver Israel? Look, my family is the weakest
in Manasseh, and I am the youngest in my
father’s family.”
15
“But I will be with you,” the LORD said to him.
“You will strike Midian down as if it were one
man.”
16
Then he said to him, “If I have found favor
with you, give me a sign that you are speaking
with me. 18 Please do not leave this place until I
return to you. Let me bring my gift and set it
before you.”
17
And he said, “I will stay until you return.”
So Gideon went and prepared a young goat
and unleavened bread from a half bushel of
flour. He placed the meat in a basket and the
19
Angel of the Lord
As we’ve seen already, “angel” means messenger, not some shiny dude
with wings (a “cherub”). Like with Moses and the burning bush, the angel
functions like a microphone for God. God’s words and actions are
projected through the angel.
broth in a pot. He
brought them out and
offered them to him
under the oak.
Why is God so patient with this
excuse-making coward?
The angel of God said to him, “Take the meat
with the unleavened bread, put it on this stone,
and pour the broth on it.” So he did that.
20
The angel of the LORD extended the tip of the
staff that was in his hand and touched the
meat and the unleavened bread. Fire came up
from the rock and consumed the meat and the
unleavened bread. Then the angel of
the LORD vanished from his sight.
21
When Gideon realized that he was the angel
of the LORD, he said, “Oh no, Lord GOD! I have
seen the angel of the LORD face to face!”
22
But the LORD said to him, “Peace to you.
Don’t be afraid, for you will not die.” 24 So
Gideon built an altar to the LORD there and
called it The LORD Is Peace. It is still in Ophrah
of the Abiezrites today.
23
Meat and unleavened bread in the middle of the night, an angel of the
Lord, a scared leader of an enslaved people that doesn’t have enough
to eat, we’ve mentioned Egypt twice . . . what does this remind you of?
Gideon Tears Down a Baal Altar
On that very night the LORD said to him,
“Take your father’s young bull and a second
bull seven years old. Then tear down the altar
of Baal that belongs to your father and cut
down the Asherah pole beside it. 26 Build a wellconstructed altar to the LORD your God on the
top of this mound. Take the second bull and
offer it as a burnt offering with the wood of the
Asherah pole you cut down.” 27 So Gideon took
ten of his male servants and did as
the LORD had told him. But because he was too
afraid of his father’s family and the men of the
city to do it in the daytime, he did it at night.
25
When the men
of the city got up
in the morning,
they found Baal’s
altar torn down,
the Asherah pole
beside it cut
down, and the
second bull offered up on the altar that had
been built. 29 They said to each other, “Who did
this?” After they made a thorough
investigation, they said, “Gideon son of Joash
did it.”
28
What is important to God in this section? What is important to
Gideon?
Then the men of the city said to Joash, “Bring
out your son. He must die, because he tore
down Baal’s altar and cut down the Asherah
pole beside it.”
30
But Joash said to all who stood against him,
“Would you plead Baal’s case for him? Would
you save him? Whoever pleads his case will be
put to death by morning! If he is a god, let him
plead his own case because someone tore
down his altar.” 32 That day he was called
Jerubbaal, since Joash said, “Let Baal contend
with him,” because he tore down his altar.
31
Jerubbaal
“Let Baal struggle with him” – does that mean that he is for or against
Baal? The name itself does not make that clear.
When the story is summarized in 2 Sam. 11:21, the name is changed to
Jerubbesheth, meaning struggle with shame, instead of Baal.
Gideon will embody all of these meanings.