Overcome By The World... Judges 1-2
Judges is a book
of beginnings… the beginning of a new nation… a nation appointed
by God to fulfill His purpose. Israel did not just happen… they did
not burst onto the map as a well-oiled of theocratic system.
Furthermore, Israel were not a converted people filled with the Holy
Spirit… setting the nation up was messy… sometimes violent…
conflicted… contradictory… our approach to reading the record of
their exploits can only make sense through a mindset of faith.
Faith: I
believe and am convicted that God is true and just. I weigh and
assess all knowledge and information through this simple looking
glass.
Judges is a
selective record of stuff that happened at Israel’s beginning…
events, reports, records. Sometimes we are allowed insight into the
motivations of the persons involved but most often we are left to
figure that out for ourselves. We often look at the scriptures
through 21 century eyes and exclaim “how can this be of God”…
“how is this just”, “how is this fair”.
We learn from
scripture through faith: a presupposition that God is true and just.
Or, put another way, we believe Him… and we trust Him... then we
seek to understand.
Judges begins with WAR
Israel sets off
to wage war apparently at the command of God… Where is the mercy of
God? How can God take ownership of this outrageous mess? How does
this square up with the millennial goal that humanity beat their
plowshares into pruning hooks and learn the ways of war no more? How
does Israel become a blessing to all nations by crushing and
destroying them? How can I “worship” a god who advocates
genocide?
Faith does not
say: God commands war therefore war is good and acceptable. Faith
says: God is true and just so there must be a true and just
reason for His command to drive out the Canaanites with warfare.
Why Does God Declare War on Canaan?
God did not pick
sides in a pre-existing conflict between Israel and the Canaanites.
The war was God’s idea.
So let’s ask… why Canaan?
Genesis 15:16
Judges begins 400+ years after Abraham had lived in Canaan when God
had promised to give it to him… Canaan had changed, it was more
populated, more cities, more petty kings, more people… a developed
civilization and culture. It had also deteriorated morally and
spiritually. At the time of Abraham the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah
were around so there was gross sin even then… but also Melchizadek
was active in Canaan and must have provided some sort of witness to
Godly truth. [perhaps that made the Canaanites more accountable]
Note: read
verse 19 to define Canaan
From what little
we can glean from scripture Canaan’s sins were gross sexual
perversion [Lev 20], coupled with horrific idolatry directed toward
Molech and Ishtar with child sacrifice, other human sacrifice, and of
course even more weird pseudo-spiritual sexual fertility rites.
Whatever righteous influence Melchizadek might have offered was gone.
In short, the sins of the Canaanites were filled to the brim and God
was ready to punish. The instrument of His just punishment would be
Israel.
The punishment of
Canaan would accomplish multiple ends:
-
Fulfill God’s promise to Abraham [to posses the land]
-
Position Israel for influence and impact [center of nations]
-
Fulfill God’s righteous justice through retribution for sin [Canaanite sin]
In the same way
God would use other nations like Assyria and Babylon to exact
righteous judgment on Israel when they fell into sin and would not
give it up. Israel too would be driven from the land.
Judges 1:1-18
Judges begins
with wars of retribution with Israel serving as the justice of God.
Judah goes first…
we are introduced to Adonai-Bezek, a Canaanite king who lorded it
over 70 lesser kings using physical mutilation to keep them under
control. The men of Judah dish out the same humiliation to him.
Two perspectives:
-
Justice is being served in that Adonai-Bezek is being treated as he treated other and punished for his crimes
-
The men of Judah while acting as God’s duly appointed sword of justice… begin to adopt the patterns of behavior they see among the Canaanites. In other words they go beyond the straightforward execution of divine justice. Ungodly behavior committed by someone tasked with executing God’s orders does not condone the ungodly behavior. Remember this key principle when you read the history of Israel… it is also a key principle in dealing with bad behavior among God’s appointed ministers, elders, other church leaders.
Caleb and his family
Caleb and his
people are Kenites. Which means… they are Canaanites! Some like to
characterize the war to drive out the Canaanites as a form of
genocide, ethnic cleansing, or racial war… how could a righteous
God be such a racist?
Caleb was a man
who identified strongly with what the nation of Israel was all about.
He understood God was setting up a model society… based on
universal principles of righteousness [the commandments] then applied
to operating an actual nation [laws, statues, judgments etc.]…
Caleb is perfect example of a man who caught the vision and wanted to
be a part of it. Note: He was so into it that he was selected as the
representative of the birthright tribe [Judah] on more than one
occasion.
Israel was always
intended to be a standard for all peoples and races… it was not
ever meant to be confined to a single race of people. Even Canaanites
could be part of the solution if they wanted to.
But Canaanite
culture was to be eliminated completely… as divine punishment for
their past deeds… and so they would not corrupt the perfect vision
of a new society under God the creator A King and ruler.
Judges 1:19-36
Now we get to
what I consider the real message of Judges… failure and compromise…
a record of people overcome by the world around them rather than
overcoming that world. I hope the parallel lesson for you and me is
loud and clear.
Grabbing the Easy Victories
Militarily Israel
had stormed into the territory and quickly claimed the high ground
[hill country]. They quickly established strong points in the hill
country all over the territory. For the time being they were not able
to take all the territory… namely the flat spots which gave the
Canaanites technological advantage [iron chariots]. Exodus 23:28
this was the plan. It would not all be accomplished in a day, rather
the Canaanites would be pushed out inch by inch, day by day.
This mopping up
operation would require Israel to be strong in their conviction. They
could not sit back and simply enjoy the good stuff they had gained.
They would need to keep the end game of victory in mind.
Personal
conversion is often of the same nature. We can quickly claim the high
ground of Sabbath observance, holy day keeping, tithing, stop
fornicating, lying, etc. But then we must get around to the mop up
operations… spiritual self examination to find areas we have not
properly applied the Godly principles we profess [honesty, purity,
neighborliness, respect]… eradicating stubborn problems like
sensual desire, greed and envy.
Finally there is
the challenge to persevere in the face of trial… stick with the
game plan in face of temptation… to pass through the testing of our
faith. Keeping the goal, the vision in mind… convicted of its
necessity, its righteousness, knowing we want to be a part of it.
Israel Fails
Scripture doesn’t
tell us their thoughts, all we have is a record of what they did.
When Israel became strong enough they did not push the remaining
Canaanites out… when they were stronger they enslaved Canaanites…
when they were not strong they assimilated. NOT GOD’S PLAN.
-
Perhaps Israel lost the vision of who they were… seeing themselves as just another nation among many trying to get along… instead of the standard bearer of human dignity, and God revealed law and religion.
-
Perhaps they just wanted to avoid conflict and enjoy the fine cities and fertile land they had won.
You are Israel in
Canaan… blending in to the prevailing culture is not God’s plan
for you either.
Judges 2:1-5
Israel Cuts Deals With the Canaanites
They made peace…
they made slaves… either was a settlement with the people of
Canaan. Instead of pushing them out and removing all traces of their
debased culture and religion Israel made deals allowing the
Canaanites to live side by side with them. Israel sought to take
advantage of them but began a process where they would be culturally
and religiously overwhelmed by the sensual pleasures of Canaan.
When confronted,
they wept, they sacrificed… but they didn’t really change. Were
they upset because of how they had fallen short of the vision? Or,
because of fear they had put the physical blessings at risk? We don’t
know.
God didn’t give
up on them. Nor does He give up on us when we fail. But God doesn’t
whitewash the failure… and doesn’t over-ride the consequences.
God would still work with Israel… there would be successes and
failures. God would be gracious and help them BUT Israel was making
their lives harder by the choices they were making. They would
suffer.
And so it is with
us. God gives us His favor, His grace, but we often choose paths that
make our lives harder. We are forgiven, but still grind our way
through the consequences. Your problematic habits of thought and
behavior do not disappear when you rise up out of the water of
baptism… but you receive the power to face them and endure.
God Provides Guidance Through Leaders
Judges 2:6-19
The original design of Israel did not provide for elected officials,
or hereditary offices, each person was equally and directly subject
to God through His express will codified in the commandments, laws,
statues. The priests taught this law, the administered the sacrifices
of atonement but they did not run the country.
However, Israel
never achieves much except when there is a stern, capable, religious
leader.. a Judge [one who administers justice]. Scripture fills us in
on the failings of judges like Barak, Samson, Gideon, Jepthah… such
that you might find yourself asking… how can these people be agents
of God’s plan? How can they be considered faithful men of God?
The instruments
God uses may be flawed but the purpose they are set to is not. We are
frivolous people if we make light of the idea that any person can be
an instrument of God by zooming in on their personal weaknesses. To
say that is to say no one can stand for a purpose greater than
themselves.
It is a
perspective we must remember especially when considering leadership
within the church.
God’s Work Moves Forward Because He is Gracious & Forgiving
Whatever good
comes out of the period of the Judges begins with God’s compassion
and desire for their good. But God had to move Israel forward… by
letting them suffer and feel pain. We see the same process at work in
our lives.
We can look with
eyes that see only the suffering and pain and ask “where is God”.
Or we can move forward keeping the goal in mind, convicted of its
necessity, it necessity and determined that we want to be a part of
it.
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