Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Judges 2-4; 6-8; 13-16 -- Part 1 : Dr. Dana M. Pike
Episode Date: May 28, 2022What does it mean that the Lord delivers people unto a covenant? Dr. Dana Pike explores the pattern of repentance, covenant making, prosperity, covenant-breaking, captivity, and then the Lord raising ...deliverers and judges in the Book of Judges. In addition, we discuss the difficulties of violence in the Hebrew Bible as well as review what has happened with the Israelites and the Divided Kingdom.Please rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive ProducersDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing & SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsKrystal Roberts: French TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-piano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study. I'm Hank Smith and I'm John by the way. We love to learn, we love to laugh.
We want to learn and laugh with you. As together, we follow him.
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I'm your host. I'm here with my mighty man of valor, co-host.
John, by the way, welcome, John, by the way,
to follow him another episode.
Only you would say that.
The audience is laughing with us as they look at me
and try to make those adjectives fit.
John, you are a mighty man of valor.
That comes from judges 612,
because we're gonna be spending our time
in the book of judges today, talking about
what happens to the kingdom of visual
after the death of Joshua.
So we needed a great mind to help us make sense of all this,
John, so who is with us today?
Yes, we are grateful to have Dr. Dana M. Pike.
And this is a face and a voice that I'm familiar with because I love watching those
roundtable discussions.
Dana M. Pike is an emeritus professor of ancient scripture and ancient near Eastern studies.
At Brigham Young University, he received his bachelor's in Near Eastern Archaeology and Anthropology from
Brigham Young University and his PhD in the Hebrew Bible and
Ancient Near Eastern Studies from the University of
Pennsylvania. And after seven years as the coordinator for the
inter-departmental Ancient Near Eastern Studies major and
four years as an associate dean of her religious education. He served three years as the chair of the Department of
Ancient Scripture and I know Hank you've told me he's done a lot of work on the
Dead Sea Scrolls. Definitely I would say the best mind in the church on the Dead
Sea Scrolls. Wow. I'll deny that. Yeah. He and his wife Jane have three children and eight grandchildren.
Our listeners might have heard us talk about the spary symposium they have every year,
and they usually compile a book.
He wrote a chapter called The Poor and the Needy in the Book of Isaiah.
That's in one of the spary symposium compilations called The Covenant of Compassion.
He's also a contributing author to a book we've mentioned here before from creation to
sign.
You wrote about the book of numbers and that one.
Also, there's a book.
I know I've got it.
Jehovah in the world of the Old Testament, where he was one of the editors.
So we're just thrilled to have such a great mind with a perfect background for what we want
to talk about today with us.
So thanks for joining us.
Thank you for inviting me.
It's nice to be here.
Dana, we are in the book of
Judges Today and I don't know, give us a bit of a preview here. Joshua dies and it sounds to me
the things go downhill. In many ways, they are presented as going downhill for sure. I listened to
Hank a comment that you made at the beginning of the video cast on Deuteronomy and you said
something like, I don't usually wake up and think I'm going to turn to video cast on Deuteronomy. And you said something like, I don't usually wake up and think,
I'm going to turn to the book of Deuteronomy for inspiration.
And I thought to myself, first, I thought, how could that be?
There's some great stuff in Deuteronomy.
And number two, wait till we get to judges.
It's a challenging book.
It's an important book in a series of books that overview Israelite
activity in the land of Canaan following Joshua and Israelite's entering into Canaan.
And there's some dramatic stories. People know Samson, people know Debra and Gideon.
There's some real challenging and troubling things here. We're not used to the violence and the
immorality and other things that are presented here.
And I think one of the great questions to always ask when we're studying scripture no matter what it is,
is why is this here? I mean, what is it supposed to be doing? What is it supposed to be telling us?
Where is it leading us? There's some good lessons along the way. I hope we can find a little
inspiration as we go along here. Did you say earlier when we were chatting that the book of Deuteronomy is kind of the lead-up
to the book of Judges? Does the writer assume you know Deuteronomy?
I would say so, yes, but let's put it this way. In a thumbnail sketch, there are two
kind of overviews of Israelite history that we have pros, narrative accounts. One is, first and second
chronicles. We don't typically spend a whole lot of time with that, and that was produced
probably in the 400s BC, after the Babylonian exile, return from exile, rebuilding the temple,
and what have you. A priestly, kind of an ideal sort of depiction of David and Solomon and temple related things
and the kings of Judah. But the one that we typically deal with, the overview that we typically
deal with is what we have in Deuteronomy through Joshua Judges, Samuel, and kings. This is an
academic term, right? Scholars have made this up. It's referred to as the deuteronomistic history.
And deuteronomistic should just flow off your tongue,
but it may not.
The suffix is stick on the end is trying to tell you
that it's deuteronomy-like.
The sense is that the teachings, the principles,
the vocabulary, even in the book of Deuteronomy, were utilized in the redaction of Joshua Judges, Samuel and Kings.
Now, redaction is another word that church members may not use a lot, but a redactor, somebody who brings together various ancient sources, combines them, puts his, his or her own voice
and produces a new literary work.
This is something that Leonard A. Saints
are very familiar with because Mormon,
in producing the Book of Mormon,
is the classic example of somebody who produces a redaction,
right?
He's giving us a historical overview.
He quotes from people.
He utilizes a variety of records.
But as we say, there was no book of Alma before Mormon produced the book of Alma.
There was an Alma.
There were records from Alma.
Mormon had access to Alma's material, but the book of Alma is Mormon's creation, not
Alma's creation.
And typically, these redactions are produced to make a point or to make some points.
There's an agenda.
Mormon tells us, I'm doing this to show what happens to Lord's people, when they left the Lord,
to bring people to Christ and what have you.
In the Bible, we have a faceless redactor, right?
We don't have somebody saying, I'm the person who put this together or we are the group
of people, and we don't have them laying out specifically what their intent is, but they use
Deuteronomy as a foundational text, an orienting text. Here we are talking about judges,
the language, the theology, the doctrinal thinking, and perspectives. Influence very heavily,
the book of Joshua, the book of judges,, to a lesser extent, Samuel, and definitely
Kings. And so that's this historical overview. And when you get to the Kings, you'll have to
talk about how somebody at the end of that historical period of centuries kind of looks back
and says, how does this all fit together? So I'm giving you the standard academic approach.
Whatever their early history was, they end up being
put together in this lengthy overview in the late 600s, definitely into the middle 500s
in Babylonian exile. And that's kind of where the Book of Kings comes to an end. Judges
is part of a bigger whole, WHOLE, right? It's about a bigger overview, influenced by the book of Deuteronomy and the
thinking, the teachings, the doctrine. But it fits. Now, I left out Ruth, I'm just going to mention,
and that's next week's assignment, I know. But Ruth in the Hebrew Bible is not up with Joshua
Judge Samuel. It's in a separate section called the writings. So that's not typically included in what's
called the Deuteronomistic Historical Overview, but it depicts people who are said to be living in
the time of the judges. So that's why in our Christian Bibles it's moved up to be with the book
of judges and you'll get to all of that when you discuss Ruth. If we're talking about the book of judges, and you'll get to all of that when you discuss Ruth. If we're talking about the book of judges as a redaction, a work that's been produced
later, looking back and trying to make sense out of this, it's clearly religious or theological
history.
And this principle shows up in the book of Mormon multiple times as well.
If we keep the covenant we've made with the Lord, if we keep the Lord's commandments,
he'll bless and prosper us.
If we don't, then certain bad things are going to happen. Some of them are promised as curses in Leviticus
and in Deuteronomy. If we violate our covenant with the Lord, this is what we can expect. We
ought to just quickly say, in case folks don't remember, there's one God, it's Jehovah. The Israelites
have made a covenant to love him and to serve only him, to be loyal to him,
and not to go chasing after other gods
that the Lord has chosen Israel to be his people,
his representatives in the world.
And that shows up again and again
in this deuteronomistic history or historical overview.
Dana, I think this is a critical skill here.
I do this in the book of Mormon all the time.
As we read, Mosiah, Alma, Helaman, I think this is a critical skill here. I do this in the book of Mormon all the time as we read
Mosiah, Alma,
Heelamann. I say, listen, we're not getting camcorder view of what happened. We're getting a
point of view from a future author, Mormon, hundreds of years in the future, looking back,
who is telling us a history, but also trying to teach us lessons. You can analyze your narrator,
saying, oh, our narrator, a redactor, you said, wants us lessons. You can analyze your narrator saying,
oh, our narrator, a redactor, you said, wants us to learn this, wants us to do that. And it
seems like this skill is crucial in reading the Bible, too. We're not getting this as it happens.
We're getting a later author looking back, trying to teach their current audience some lessons
from history. Again, we can use Mormon to help us out here,
even with the Bible study.
He keeps saying, I'm not giving you even 1% of what I could.
And the same is true in the Bible.
Think of the book of Judges.
Maybe it's a couple of centuries of time.
All kinds of things could have been included,
but what was included was chosen to help fit the depiction
that the redactors are trying to portray the lessons they're trying to teach,
how they're going to highlight and illustrate those lessons. Is the conventional wisdom that it was
Samuel who wrote this? There's an old Jewish tradition that Samuel was the author. Most people do not
think that's the case. The approach is that this was finalized sometime in the early
to mid-500s BC, right? Looking back at what happened. Kind of a, how did we get from entering
into the land and getting set up and Solomon built the temple and look at where we are now?
Again, not completely unlike Mormon's efforts to show, look at what happened to us in the Americas.
If we're getting more specific with the book itself, somebody has collected a variety of older
stories, whether they were an oral form or they had written access to them in some form. We don't
know. And there are a number of themes in the book of judges that seem to be prefiguring, we might say, David in a positive light, and the Benjaminites
and Saul and Gibbia, which was Saul's hometown in his capital, and Saul becomes the first
king of Israel further in the story, in a negative light. Some people wonder if an early addition
of the book of Judges was produced maybe during the reign of David or shortly thereafter,
after maybe after Solomon's reign,
because Dan becomes an important cultic site under Jeroboam I. After the kingdoms divide at Solomon's
death, Jeroboam I is the king of the northern kingdom, sets up golden calves and Dan and Bethel
as alternate worship places. And these are clearly viewed in the deuteronomistic historical overview. These are viewed as really negative things, right?
Way off track from what the Lord wanted.
Some of us are old enough to remember having cameras,
but we put film in the camera.
If you were born in the 1900s, right.
You finish the role of film, you have to take it out and you've got a whole
series of negatives.
And then they're developed and turned into positives.
But when you look at the negatives on their strip of say 35 millimeter film,
here's one negative and it's got a frame or a border around it.
Here's the next negative and here's the next negative, but they're held together by this border.
And that's really what I think we have going on in the book of judges.
So we have a series of accounts, series of stories,
but they're held together by this framework, which we think is later, which is influenced by the thinking
and the language of the book of Deuteronomy, this sort of undergirds, this whole historical
overview of which judges is a part.
The redactors are likely Southern Kingdom, because they're putting kind of a negative
slide on the Northern Kingdom. That's, I've never known that.
That's, that's so helpful.
It doesn't have to be a major emphasis in our study,
but if you read through it, you'll see,
Judah, the few times it's mentioned in the book of Judges,
is usually fairly positive.
And Northern tribes conquerors.
Yeah, Northern tribes and Northern locations
get portrayed in a negative light.
I'm fascinated by having the redactors purpose in mind as we read, because that's to me
that one of the great things about the Book of Mormon is keeping Mormons purpose in mind as we read.
Mormon just keeps saying thus we see we get those and we're oh that's why this is here, you know,
saying, thus we see we get those and we're, oh, that's why this is here, you know?
And I don't know if it comes as often here.
I will say it rarely comes in the Bible.
We don't have a lot of those explicit thus we see,
here's the moral to the story.
Biblical redactors we assume figured that you
could figure out what the moral to the story was.
They're gonna lay out the story.
What you bring to the text,
are you male, are you female, are you rich or poor, are you free or slave, have you been abused
as a child or not, all these terrible things and all these good things that happen to people in
a lifetime shape what they bring to the text. And so they're assuming, and I'd love, we'll get
into a couple of these stories, what do you think? What's the message here? What are you supposed to take from this?
Because they don't specifically tell you.
They're assuming you will deduce what the message is.
John, I always hate it when I learn so much
that I expose how much I didn't know.
Oh, that's every time we record for me, Hank.
Don't we believe in eternal progression?
Yeah, you're going to keep learning, right?
Keep growing.
This has already made me love it so much because I love reading the book of Mormon that way.
I love reading to analyze the narrator.
And so now I can do that here.
So there's an interesting passage in judges chapter 18.
Again, showing kind of the influence here of the redactor or later editors,
if we're going to say. Judges 18 looking at verse 30 and it says that this is part of a story that's been narrated in
chapter 17 and 18. So this is kind of the end of the story. The children of Dan set up the
Graven image and Jonathan the son of Gershom the son of Manasseh and this is really meant to be
read as Moses and we can talk about this later if we get to it, but to make my point,
he and his sons were priests to the tribe of Dan
up in the north of the Galilee region,
until the day of the captivity of the land.
And most people assume that this is the seven thirties
or the seven twenties when the Assyrians take over
the northern part of the kingdom of Israel. So we got the northern kingdom.
The Assyrians take over the northern part of that in the seven thirties and then completely conquer the northern kingdom of Israel in the
seven twenties. So most people think the final form of this book is produced after the seven hundreds. And as I said, the standard approach is that the final form is produced even after the destruction of Jerusalem in the 500s, but again by southern red actors, but they're trying to say the captivity of the land the only time we really know about that.
And it's a little vague granted, but the only time we really hear about the captivity of the land is in the 700s.
There are little bits and pieces of clues about that. So Dana is the author, pro, king, and pro Jehovah?
Because they're trying to set us up for this idea of, yes, we need a king,
but over and over, I mean, if they wrote Joshua 24, 15, choose to serve the Lord.
So yeah, and I'd say Joshua, the last couple sermons that we have from Joshua,
in chapters 23, 24 of that book, very much this doodar on a mystic influence.
Jehovah is the only God. Choose him. Be loyal to him. Don't chase after other gods.
Right? As for me and my house, we're going to worship the Lord, Jehovah.
And judge is very much the same. Pro-Jehovah.
And look at all the problems when they worship other gods in addition to Jehovah.
And I'm going to mention that now. We're oftentimes, as it says, they forcik the Lord and chased after other gods. We don't think that the Israelites ever stopped
worshiping Jehovah. The problem we think historically was that in addition to Jehovah, they're
bringing in worship of other deities alongside him, complicating the problem for those who
follow the perspective and deuteronomy that there's only Jehovah and you only worship him.
Don't go running after these other gods, but in antiquity, right?
People were polytheistic primarily.
They wouldn't say, ah, forget Jehovah.
Let's worship by all.
It was, oh, we've got Jehovah.
We'll cover our bases by worshiping by all as well.
Bring them both into our little pantheonon if you want to say it that way.
Book of Judges definitely pro Jehovah, and it turns out in its final form to be, yeah, we need a
human king, not just the heavenly king. When I've done my cursory reviews of it, it's always been
Jehovah or a king. We don't want Jehovah, we want a king. And Samuel does seem to say that a little bit.
He says, look, kings are a bad idea.
Let's not do it.
Let God be your king.
Sounds book of Mormon to me that, no,
we'll have the reign of the judges,
but the judges are judging according to laws that God gave us.
God is our king.
These are his laws.
Well, and even the book of Deuteronomy
warns about future kings.
And if there is a future king,
then they ought to abide by the law of God.
They ought to read God's law regularly.
They shouldn't have lots of horses and lots of property
and all this other stuff that Deuteronomy warns
about everything that's gonna happen.
And Samuel and First Samuel 8
is gonna warn about everything that ends up happening.
He'll take your sons, he'll take your daughters.
I think I said earlier, part of the question that the book of Judges raises is,
who do we worship and then who is our king?
And if we have a human king, what kind of a human king are we going to end up having?
Think of Deborah, right?
We don't hear a lot about her, but she's depicted as a prophetess.
She's righteous.
She's faithful.
What have you?
Other judges are just
spiritual bombs. They're just completely off the rails as far as the prophetic
perspective that's portrayed in Deuteronomy and in other books. We're going to have a mixed bag.
Sadly, most human leaders have a lot of flaws and make the most of the situation, but the warning is always here.
If they'll follow the Lord, if they'll represent him,
if he's the real king behind the judge or behind the monarch, then things will go well.
And if that link is severed or twisted,
going to have problems.
That is something I've seen before. is that idea of look when the wicked rule
the people mourn, it's bad.
Okay, I feel like I have a much stronger understanding
of what we're jumping into here.
Let's do a quick overview of where we're gonna go.
So the book of judges divides nicely
into three sections, we could call them, three portions.
Chapter one, chapter two, and the first few
verses of Chapter three are really introductory material, kind of setting the stage, giving us
Chapter two gives us the program notes, and we can walk through this in a minute of what we're
going to be seeing in the play or the opera or whatever, right? We've got the program notes.
So the rest of Chapter three through Chapter 16, the core of the book of Judges. This is where we have accounts about Judges. We need to talk
about that term. And then chapter 17 through 21, those last five chapters are often called the
appendix. There isn't a judge mentioned at all in those five chapters. These are two stories that
have been appended to this collection.
Now, all of the come follow me assignment, the chapters that are part of come follow me,
are taken from that core section. Well, we get two and three, kind of the program notes,
and then most of the chapters that are from this core section reading about specific judges
and their activities. Kind of an intro. The accounts about the judges and kind of the outro as we might call it now it is.
So three separate sections, chapters one through one and two, a little portion of three,
introduction. The main section with the, is there 12 judges? Yeah, these 12. There are 12 judges,
some we hear more about than others, and I have to assume 12 is not a coincidence. This is a big number in Israel. Again, when we're talking about redactors,
maybe they said, okay, we're going to throw in a couple of verses about these,
you know, two verses about this judge, so that we'll have 12.
Yes, it's kind of simple again away, right? There may have been more, there may have been less.
I think we need to talk about a few couple of issues quickly in relation to that.
The Hebrew word is shofate. Shofate comes from the verbal root, shafat, which means to judge. And so it's a good
translation. The challenges when we look at the book of judges, most of them aren't judging,
in the way we think about judges, like arbitration and dealing with cases and rendering decisions and
what have you. The only time in the book of judges, we have that,
is in judges four, there's one half of a verse about Debra
sitting under a palm tree and people coming to her
and she renders judgment on questions or issues
that they're dealing with.
Again, we have to ask ourselves,
is the book of judges representative
of what judges did across the board?
Or has it just selected examples of judges who happen to not do much judging the way we think about it?
But they're leaders and in a number of modern translations now have chosen the word chieftain
because these people function as I don't particularly like that, but
they're military leaders. The Lord chooses a leader to help deliver the people from their
oppression. This is how they're depicted in the book of Judges. When we get to Samuel, he's called
the judge, he's a prophet and he's a leader. He even does a little bit of fighting, right? So
I guess the main point is that there's a variety among judges, and we see some people
gathering others with them to help in the fight.
Sampson goes it alone.
So even within the military leader depiction of judges, there's a certain amount of variety
that we encounter in the book of judges.
We can't harmonize all the chronological information in judges with the overall picture. And then if we bring in archaeological information and records from Egypt
and other places and try to make sense out of all of this scholars end up by saying yeah,
it probably wasn't really 480 years. It was probably a couple of hundred years. Judges, one and a half to two
centuries. Some of these we'll see in the framework of judges a lot of times
it'll say in the land rested for 40 years or the land rested for 20 which is
half of that or for 80 years which is twice that right. Most people don't think
those are meant to be taken literally but more. Yeah, it was a short time or a
long time or a really long time but but we don't know. Most people think, and I happen to agree with this, that the
judges are not sequential. When we read the book, it sounds like, okay, this guy, and then
this gal, and then this guy, and then this guy, and they come one after another. Most people
think they're not sequential, but they're probably with some overlapping. And part of the reason for that is that we don't think,
if you read the book carefully,
they're never described as universal judges
through all the land of Israel.
They often will call two or three tribes, maybe one tribe,
maybe four or five tribes, but we never hear about
all the tribes getting together and fighting together
against their oppressors and being
under the leadership of one individual throughout the book. So the general approach to this,
now it is academic approach. I'll underscore that is that these are regional judges that overlap
that probably not one after another, just the way it's laid out. But again, this is kind of a mix of the world behind the text and the world of the text trying to try to make sense out of how do we put this all together.
Oh, that's interesting. So they could have been spread out over enough land that it's not like everybody knew who the judge was at any given time, they could have been, I like what you said, regional judges. It's ironic that the only time all the tribes get together in the book of judges is in chapter
2021 where they're about to wipe out the Benjaminites because of something that happened in the town
of Gibbia. That's at the very end of the book, the way it's been formulated for us. So the rest of
the time we don't hear about them all together. Our perspective
is the teachings and the principles and deuteronomy. And look what's happening. We're using that
as our lens to look at history and evaluate and interpret history and to make points again
about, so let's just call it two centuries, right? We got two centuries of time. They could
have blown it off in a page and said, well, nothing really happened for two centuries in the same game along, right? But they
want to, they really want to forcefully bring home the point that Israelite activity produces
certain outcomes. They're going to illustrate that well in the book of Judges to show how,
again, we got from here to here. That's a good way to get into the book. When we start Judges 1, which is not in the assignment,
but it's helpful to just mention quickly.
I read the first seven verses and thought,
is it when verse seven ends,
as I have done, so God hath requested me,
did God want him to cut off toes and thumbs of all of these kings?
This is Adonis Bessik, right? So he's saying, I've done these bad things him to cut off toes and thumbs of all of these kings.
This is Adonis Bessik, right? So he's saying, I've done these bad things
and now God, generically, probably from his perspective.
This is restitution.
I did these bad things to other people
and God's made this happen to me.
I had my big, my thumbs and my big toes cut off as well.
So, judges one, verse one.
Now after the death of Joshua,
so that's our link to what we
read about at the end of chapter 24. I came to pass the children of Israel, ask the Lord, and I don't
want to beat this to death because you've probably covered this in other episodes, but Lord,
Olin, Caps, is our clue that this is the divine name Jehovah or Yahweh. It's YH. W. H. or Yodh. H. and Hebrew, the four four letters, the tetragramaton,
as we say, the four letters of the divine name of God. And rather than writing Jehovah here, or Yahweh,
they put the Lord. So we get a title in place of a name. We could just read Yahweh or Jehovah
every time we see Lord and Cap. But this is interesting. The children of Israel asked the Lord
as Jehovah saying who shall go up against the Canaanites first to fight against them?
So what questions come to your mind when you read that? They have to drive the Canaanites out of the land
Who is going to go do that?
Yes, how do they ask the Lord?
It just says oh, they asked the Lord one of the interesting things things about the book of judges is there's not only no political leader. There's no overall major religious figure in the
book of judges. Joshua's gone. There's a priest and a prophet get mentioned here and there,
an angel shows up occasionally. But there's very little explicit religious leadership that's portrayed in the book of Judges. Most people think when
it says they ask the Lord that they're using the Yermen Thumum and the Aaronic High Priest would have
been involved, doesn't say for sure, so that's a good guess. And since I said Aaronic High Priest,
this is a footnote, right? I make this regularly. Latter-day Saints here, High Priest, they often
think of High Priest, the office in the church, as restored in this dispensation. When we're reading the Old Testament,
high priest, especially from Exodus onward, which is the bulk of the Old Testament,
we're always talking about the Aaronic high priest. He's running this show in the tabernacle.
As far as the tabernacle and the ritual activity that sacrifices and other things that take place
there. Yeah. And you get a little bit of this in the beginning of Second Samuel as well. David asks,
you know, through the Yormen Thumbam, what should I go up, where should I go? So we think that that's
what's going on here. And who's going to go up first? The book of Joshua ends with a fairly
positive depiction of the Israelites coming in and taking over the land of
Canaan. But when you get to, there are some hints that that wasn't the case, but we sort of read it
that way. And then we get to Judges 1 and we get the reality check, wow, they haven't conquered the
whole land. They haven't done everything that the Lord asked them to do as far as driving out or
killing people. And so here they've got to finish the process. And there's a lot of finishing to do.
So who's going to go up first to fight against the Canaanites? And the Lord says, this is verse two, Judah will go
up first. I have delivered the land in his hand. A simian and verse three goes up with Judah and
eventually historically the tribe of simian sort of gets absorbed into the tribe of Judah,
which is interesting that they're together here. When it says Judah shall go up,
it means the tribe.
Correct?
Yes.
Yeah, the tribe, not some person named Judah.
This is all tribal related at this point.
The point here is that the conquest is continuing.
It's not a finished product at this point, right?
So the ongoing conquest or the ongoing invasion, and again, depending
on your perspective, the Israelites are coming in and taking over this place and killing
people and establishing themselves. The Bible presents that as the Lord's will for them
at this time, but there are challenges in dealing with and questions about those kinds
of issues. And some of this historical challenges, it says in 7 and 8, verse 8,
children of Judah fought against Jerusalem, took it, smoked it with the sword, set the city on fire.
We're going to read that later in Judges and even in Samuel that the Israelites do not control
the city of Jerusalem until 2 Samuel 5 when David takes it.
So does this mean they kind of went in and smashed the place and burned it and then let the
inhabitants, the Jebusites, take over again and continue to live there for a couple centuries
or is this optimistic or they had a little victory and it became a major note here.
It's hard to know.
There are just some historical questions that we
can't answer. I was going to ask you, the the Jebusites were the ones who were there at this time.
Did they call it Jerusalem or is the redactor calling it Jerusalem? No, we have even in some
Egyptian texts from this period
and a little bit earlier that referred to the city
as in a form of what we would say was the name Jerusalem.
So we don't actually hear about Jebius sites
outside of the Bible, which doesn't mean they didn't exist,
but we do have the name.
The Bible says it was called Yebus or Jebus, right?
And again, as a footnote, there's no, there's no J sound in Hebrew.
When we say Jebiusites, it would have been the Jebusites.
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yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah the inhabitants of Jerusalem, it would have been a small city state.
Again, the land, when Joshua and the Israelites come into the land, there is not one unified
Canaanite kingdom.
These are a whole series of city states, a major city controlling the villages and towns
in its area.
And these city states, as we call them, would have interacted with each other as best they
could, sometimes fighting, sometimes peacefully, right?
But Jerusalem would have been a small city, state, and small city up in the Highland country,
even when Joshua and the Israelites come. So they go up, Jude is depicted as being successful,
and then by verse 22, the focus shifts over 21 to Benjamin and 22 and following Joseph, E from a manasseh, and
much of the focus from then on out is going to be on the tribes of what end up later in
history becoming the northern kingdom tribes.
And it's saying Judah is successful, gets them out of the mountains, not out of the valley.
And it seems like the other tribes aren't able to drive these non-Israelites out of the valley. And it seems like the other tribes aren't able to drive
these non-Israelites out of the land. Is that kind of the summary here of chapter one?
They weren't able to completely govern the entire land?
Yes, very much the case is that's being depicted.
Verse 19, chapter 119, the Lord was with Judah. He is another major theme in the book of judges, but also in the Bible,
right? This concept of what we call the divine warrior, that God is the one who's fighting for,
or against, sometimes Israel, and regularly throughout the book, he drove out the inhabitants
of the mountain, but could not drive out the inhabitants of the valley because they had chariots of iron.
And this does not mean that the chariots
were all constructed out of iron, right?
There wouldn't chariots, but the wheels had iron rims.
And again, if we're doing world behind the text,
archeologically, this time period is called the Iron Age I.
Once we get the time of David,
we get into what's called the Iron Age 2, right?
But Iron Age 1 is the early use of iron in the Middle East, the Near East, as we call
it.
We hear in Samuel that the Philistines had more access to iron and iron production than
the Israelites did.
But even here, we're getting this clue that the Canaanites, some of them anyway, have
chariots with iron wheels, which meant they were sturdier.
They could go over the rocky terrain, even in the valleys, better than just wooden wheels could go.
The Israelites end up primarily in the mountains or the highlands, the hill country.
The Canaanites continue to live in, grow their crops in, be successful in maintaining control over the valleys, which generally are more fertile and more productive.
Verse 28 says, came to pass when Israel was strong that they put the Canaanites to tribute and did not utterly drive them out.
So is this saying they didn't do what God asked them to do. Yeah, and we've got several verses that are coming up that sort of reinforce this,
since they didn't do what the initial program was. Yeah, we'd rather just take a tribute from them
and drive them out. Hey, pay us taxes. Yes, and we're going to see a couple verses as we go along
that we'll highlight that reinforce this idea, not only that they weren't able to drive them out,
but then there's a
kind of a religious twist put on it that the Lord says, okay, if you're not going to do it my way,
I'll leave them there and they'll be thorns in your sides and help to prove you whether you're
going to be faithful or not. So maybe the idea is here that since you're not going to do what the
Lord asked you to do, there's going to be long-term consequences that you're going to have to deal with, which is an important life lesson.
I'm going to assume that the Lord knew this was going to be the way it turned out.
Are there children going to pay the price for this, or is it going to be them?
Well, it's them, mostly it's their children, right?
Mostly their children and their grandchildren and great-grandchildren, which brings us
to chapter 2 because there's an important verse that we want to read.
Several important verses, but we want to get to verse 10.
Chapter 2 starts, the angel of the Lord came up from Gilgal to Bohem.
Gilgal is this little site down near Jericho.
You remember in the beginning of Joshua, the Israelites camp at Gilgal when they first crossed the Jordan River into the land of Canaan
and then they go against Jericho and elsewhere. Right, so you remember this name, Gilgol already, right?
He's supposed to.
Bohem is the name of the place that they're assembled. We're going to read that how the name came about in verse 5.
But it says in verse 1, an angel of the Lord. So this is the Lord in capsoats, Jehovah, or Yahweh, an angel. Now the Hebrew word, maybe you've covered this in past
episodes, the Hebrew word is Maulach, and it means messenger. You don't know initially whether it's
a human messenger sent by the Lord or whether it's a divine messenger sent from the Lord.
And context is really the only way you can tell in our English word angel
comes from Anglos, the Greek term, which also means messenger. So angels, as we call them,
are divine messengers sent from God to deliver messages. Is this a human messenger or a divine
messenger? There's a debate over that because we don't have any really extra clues that help us know.
I don't want to beat this to death, but I want to show you something here.
So the angel comes, the messenger comes and says,
I made you to go up out of Egypt, brought you into the land which I swore to your ancestors,
and I said, I will never break my covenant with you.
So who's talking here?
It's being presented as the Lord speaking.
So whether it's an angel or a prophet, we could say this is the principle of divine investiture, right? Somebody is speaking on
behalf of the Lord as if he is the Lord and we think it's a he. You shall not make a league or
a covenant, verse two, with the inhabitants of this land. Go in and throw down their altars,
et cetera, et cetera, the universe, too. But you have not obeyed my voice. Why have you done what
you've done? So there is kind of that rhetorical
question. Wherefore, I also verse 3, I will not drive them out from before you. If you're not going
to do a better job of putting your own efforts into this, I'm not going to be here to help you.
They shall be, the people will be as thorns in your sides and their God shall be a snare unto you.
And the people lift up their voice and weep at the end of verse 4, and the verb happens to be from Bohem. So they call this place, verse 5,
Bohem, because that's where the people are weeping. And Bohem means the weepers.
So a couple of quick points to make about this. One, again, somebody speaking as if he's the Lord.
Two, we see this over and over and over again.
It's in Joshua, it's in Judges, it's later on
in the prophetic books.
Why did the Lord deliver the Israelites from Egypt?
Well, one, he does deliver them from Egypt.
So he has the power to deliver them.
And two, he took them out of Egypt
to make a covenant and have this relationship with them.
So, deliverance and covenants are major themes that get brought up again and again and again in the
text. If you want to take a break from all the details and say, how does this relate to me?
Every Sunday, with the exception of conference Sundays, I take the sacrament, I renew my covenant
with the Lord, and I think in the fact that the Lord is delivered me.
In this case, from sin and death, right? But these themes of deliverance and covenant are spread throughout the historical and prophetic books of the Old Covenant.
It makes a wonderful way to think application wise. He did it for them, and Nephi and other Book of Mormon prophets do this.
Right? He did it for them. He can do it for me too. And he does do it. Does do it for me.
I really like that you put those together because I've never heard them put together deliverance and
covenant. I really, of course, that I really like that you put those together. So I delivered you
keep my keep the covenant. Yeah, and he's not just delivering for the sake of delivering, right?
As people, other people have said he delivers them into or unto a covenant
opportunity, which we read about at Sinai and all that took place there. And I mentioned this when
I talk about the book of Numbers and all the murmuring and everything else that goes on there,
but it works throughout the rest of the historical overview. Exodus 24 the people say we'll do everything the Lord commands us they they enter formally into a covenant
They don't do such a great job. Why do we have the sacrament every week because we don't do such a great job
I'm thinking of President Nelson say repent every day that the Lord and the prophet know that we're fallen
We have weaknesses. We're gonna make mistakes. We're gonna sin and
We need to get back into
harmony with the reconciled with the Lord and Heavenly Father. So I think it's really helpful to
watch where those themes pop up again and again, right? Deliverance. I have the power to do this,
but I did it on purpose so we could be in this relationship, make this covenant together.
Dana, I got to tell you, this sounds like my life right here. Okay, we made a deal.
I told you, I would come through for you.
And you said you were gonna come through for me.
And then you didn't come through for me.
Why?
Why?
Why didn't you do what you promised to do?
Like, I can see why the people, what, they weep.
Do you know why you're in this spot right now?
What we're talking about right here
reminds me of the first paragraph
in the Come Follow Me manual on page 101.
It says, we all know what it's like to make a mistake,
feel bad about it, and then repent
and resolve to change our ways.
But in some cases, we forget our early resolve
and when we face temptation, we find ourselves
making the mistake again.
This tragic pattern is typical
of the Israelites' experiences described
in the book of Judges. That's I think what you just described there. Influenced by the beliefs
and worship practices of the Canaanites, whom they were supposed to drive out of the land,
the Israelites broke their covenants with the Lord and turned away from worshiping him.
Anyway, it kind of sounds like a pride- cycle pattern similar to what we talk about in the book
of Mormon. Yes, and as we keep going in chapter 2, we're going to get that cycle laid out for us.
And biblical scholars don't use the word pride cycle, but cycle is regularly used to describe this
going through this cycle, as we'll see it outlined here. So yeah, good. Glad you brought that in.
The next few verses in the book of Judges chapter, we got a brief cap chapter two verse seven.
People served the Lord during the time of Joshua, saw all the works that the Lord did. Joshua died.
And then we get this verse that's often cited in chapter two verse 10.
And also all that generation were gathered unto their fathers, right?
Their ancestors. So they've died. They're put in the tomb.
And there arose another generation after them, which knew not the Lord, Jehovah,
nor yet the works which he had done for Israel.
I always struggle with this, right?
On the one hand, why didn't they know
the works of the Lord?
Well, they didn't live through them,
but you would have hoped their parents or grandparents
taught about these things.
But as time goes on, those great events,
like the red or red sea,
the wilderness, the Mount Sinai, the covenant, building the Tabernacle, Joshua coming into the land,
and the Jordan rivers said to have stopped, crossed on dry ground, as symbolic follow up to the
red sea episode. They didn't live through those. And as time goes by, generations move along,
and people that haven't had those personal experiences,
those events from the past seem to have less power in their lives.
That reminds me so much of the Book of Mormon. There was another generation that arose that
weren't there to hear the words of King Benjamin. Perfect question. Why didn't they know?
It seems like so much of what the Lord is doing in these Old Testament chapters is setting
up reminders and feasts and everything to remind them of all the things that he's done for
them.
Yeah.
So on the one hand, it reminds me, now, not only a parent, but a grandparent, I have responsibility
to my wife and I to talk to our children and grandchildren and to continue to remind them
about the great things the Lord has done in our lives, as well as further back in history as in the scriptures. But at the same time,
it reminds me that every generation, every person has their own agency. We can't control that,
but called upon his parents to do all we can to teach and to encourage.
It reminds me of Joshua 4, where they were supposed to set up the 12 stones on the other side of Jordan and over and over come to this place and your children will say,
what are these stones for? You're to tell them let your children know what God did. He foresaw this chapter 10. This next generation doesn't know.
Yes, and the generation after that.
Well, the rest of chapter 2 from verse 11 to the end. Again, this is what I call the program notes. A lot of people refer to them this way. And I don't want to get lost in the details,
but it's going to tell you what's about to happen with these cycles. So, verse 11, the children of Israel
did evil in the sight of the Lord and served Baalim, quick detail. So Baal is the Canaanite storm god
who brings the rain, which brings crops and supports life.
I don't want this to sound too negative,
but for some reason, the church's Bible dictionary,
even online as of yesterday,
still has Baal is the sun God of the Canaanites,
that is wrong.
And if you think he's the sun God,
it messes up a whole lot of stories in the Bible, right?
He's the God of rain rain and storm which then produces
fertility life for crops and people and what have you?
Baalim is the plural form
I'm saying Baal it may sound odd right they serve the Baals and the question is people a lot of times different
Manifestations of Baal well I had an experience with Baal at this town or at this town or he did something wonderful
for me over here. So we're going to call Baal Bureed and Baal Paor and we hear about this occasionally
in the biblical text. Nowadays, and I think more correctly, this is just being used as code
for they worship lots of male canonite male deities.
So lots of other gods, especially male gods.
And we're going to have the female equivalent in verse 13.
Right?
So not to leave the other side of the equation there.
So verse 12, they forsook the Lord God, brought them up out of the land, and they followed
other gods from all the peoples round about.
Verse 13, and they forsook the Lord and serve Baal here in the singular.
And Ash the Rote, that's a feminine plural form on the end of this.
Ash Toretz, as it's sometimes given elsewhere in Hebrew, we generally think that this is a starte Babylonian's called her Ishtar,
a Canaanite's a fertility goddess. But here it's in the plural form.
So the sense is, we think that the texts
is just trying to say, listen, they're worshiping
specific gods, but we can just kind of lump them all together
and say lots of other male gods, lots of other female gods,
part of the world in which they lived here.
I think a lot of people that might not remember this
in the book of Judges might remember Elijah
and the priests of Baal.
Same guy. Yes, same fertility god. First King's 18. And what do they want? There's a drought for
three and a half years. And if you think Baal's the sun god in that story, it doesn't work. They're
waiting for rain to come. And Baal can't produce the rain, but Jehovah, Yahweh, does produce the rain that ends the drought. But because he's the
God of rain, storms and rain, it was pretty easy for Israelites, we think, based on the perspective
given in the Bible, to say, well, things aren't going so well. So I've been praying to Jehovah. So
maybe I should bring all in and pray to him too. And maybe between the two of them, they can figure
out how to bring more rain
so we can fill up the cistern.
So yes, we can have a harvest of the animal's survive
so we can drink water all summer and fall
till it rains again.
So that seems to be what's going on here, right?
Again, not leaving Jehovah for sake,
really means they abandon him.
What I'm suggesting and most people think is the case,
is that they're not abandoning him.
I don't worship you anymore.
It's abandoning the appropriate way to worship him,
abandoning the perspective and deuteronomy
that you're only loyal to Jehovah, no other gods.
I'm pretty sure that was commandment one,
if I remember right, that'll shall have no other gods before me.
Well, I've got other gods. I'm just putting one as a priority right now. And that wording
makes more sense now when you're saying that they love Satan more than God. They love
God, but they love Satan more than God. But just the idea of there's still others, I think
that makes more sense with a lot of what we're reading
here. There's other gods in there. They're trying to have it both ways or many different
ways, depending on their needs. For them, it feels like it was a little fluid. I'll try
to be faithful, but if I need to bring in some help.
I love that you say for them, because that's definitely us as well, right? It's a little
fluid. I love the Lord, right? I want to
read some from Elder Oaks. He says, this is a talk from October 2013, General Conference,
called No Other Gods. Sounds biblical, yes. Yes. What other priorities are being served,
quote, ahead of God, by persons, even religious persons in our day. Consider
these possibilities. All common in our world, cultural and family traditions, political
correctness, career aspirations, material possessions, recreational pursuits, power,
prominence, and prestige. The principle is not whether we have other priorities. The
question posed by the second commandment is, what is our ultimate priority? Are we serving priorities or gods ahead of the God we profess
to worship? So I like how you said that Dana, it's kind of fluid. I love the Lord. I just was wondering if
maybe I could bring this other thing in here. And that statement from Elder Oaks is, it sounds like an updated summary of what President Kimball taught a long time ago
about modern idolatry. And he uses a lot of the same examples of how we are focused, our
time and our energy gets shifted to things that are of this world and less relevance in the long run.
Important as they may be in their own right, they can't dominate our lives.
Chapter two continues on. We've got the Lord gets angry then, so the people fall into sin, especially here,
apostasy, worshiping other gods in addition to Jehovah, and improperly worshiping him.
And oppressors going to come, the Lord sells them into the hands, verse 14, of spoilers, people who
come and plunder them, and other translation,
they're alternative, their enemies round about. This is mostly generally, they're immediate neighbors,
not coming from hundreds of thousands of miles away. Oh, they cry out to the Lord, verse 16,
the Lord raises up a judge, or raised up judges, leaders, to deliver them out of the hands of their oppressors. They wouldn't always follow the judges.
They'd go whoring after other gods or 17.
We're back to this.
I mean, there's the cycle, right?
Sin brings oppression, cry out to the Lord.
Some sort of repentance you'd like to think.
The Lord sends a deliverer.
They're delivered in their land and the people
have rest for X number of years. And then of course in their peace and prosperity, they
slide into their old ways and the cycle starts all over again. Some portions of Israel
may be more than others, some areas sooner than others.
We just hit repeat on that 12 different times for the next few chapters. I just repeat repeat repeat.
In one form or another anyway.
Okay.
And it's generalized. There's no doubt about that.
And as we can say as we go along,
why do the people
continue to fall into these ways? Well,
it's individuals making individual choices or families making family choices
and then assume that kind of infects and influences a larger group in the community and our tribe or what have you.
It's the same situation we see in modern religious history as well.
Dana, when I go back to judges one, then where it says they didn't do what the Lord asked him to do. Am I to maybe learn from this? If great grandpa doesn't do what the Lord asks him to do,
then grandpa, dad, son, grandson, great grandson are all going to suffer. John, we've brought up
Elder Holland's a prayer for the children over and over and over, right? The idea that the payments
come out of your children's and your grandchildren's pockets in far more expensive ways than you ever
intended.
You make a slight deviation, they might make it even further.
We talked about this with my family the other day where it talks about visiting the iniquity
under the third and fourth generation, and it doesn't sound like it's fair with agency,
but there's a footnote says, if the children follow the course, their fathers followed,
then they will have the same bad consequences type of thing.
I made a lot more sense to me because the children might fix it, might turn it around, which the pride cycle suggests they do.
It's not the same people doing this every time. It's going through generations.
And we are backed up for a couple of centuries and watching it happen. Is that fair?
Yeah, yeah, it's so. This is like reading the book of
Hegelman. Yeah, it's like, Pride cycle, Pride cycle. God's coming to people struggling to live in the
world, right? So all all times in all places, look at chapter two verse 20, just to wrap up the
chapter two, the anger of the Lord was hot against Israel. This is a great idiom, right? Because in Hebrew it says, the nose
of the Lord was hot against Israel. This is a standard line that his nose got hot. He said,
because this people have transgressed my covenant, which I offered this opportunity to you, which I
commanded your ancestors. They haven't harkened to my voice. I also will not henceforth drive out any
before you of the nations which Joshua left when he died.
Verse 22, that through them I may prove Israel, whether they will keep the way of the Lord to walk
therein as their ancestors did, or not. The word prove or test or try, because those are
alternative translations of the verb here, show up multiple times in the book of Judges. You might think of Genesis 22
1, right? So the Lord was going to test or try Abraham with the sacrifice of his son. You could think
of Abraham 3, right? We'll send them down and prove them now. But there's a lot of proving that
goes on. And in this case, the Lord's saying, I'm going to use the Calif over Canaanites as a way
to prove the Israelites. Can they live in the world, but not be part use the calyft over Canaanites as a way to prove the Israelites.
Can they live in the world, but not be part of the world?
And we know the story.
Things don't go so well for many of them.
But sometimes people are proving the Lord.
Gideon's going to say, I need a sign before I can go forward.
I'm a little shaky here.
Give me a couple of signs.
And so is the Lord really going to be with me?
And so it's interesting in the biblical text
that can go in both directions.
The Lord proves us, but sometimes people are said
to have proved the Lord.
Will he be faithful no matter what?
And of course the answer from our perspective is,
yes, he's always faithful no matter what.
That's the biblical depiction as well.
But if we go into chapter three, verse one,
these are the nations which the Lord left to prove Israel by them.
We'll show up a few more times. So yeah, they don't drive them all out.
So he doesn't help them finish the charge. And now this is what we're left with, verse chapter three, verse four.
They were there to prove Israel, whether they would follow the Lord or not.
Can we do verse chapter three, verse seven? I want one more thing about Canaanite gods here.
This is chapter three, five, six, and seven.
Right, the children of Israel dwelt among the Canaanites
and all these otherites that are just,
for our purposes, their subsets of the general
overall Canaanite population.
They took their daughters to be their wives,
so Israelite, man, or Mary, and Canaanite women
and gave their daughters to their sons and vice versa and served their wives. So Israelite, man, or Mary, and Canaanite women and gave their daughters to their
sons and vice versa and served their gods. And the children of Israel did evil in the sight of
the Lord and forgot the Lord their God and served Baalim and the groves. Baalim we've already mentioned
the plural form of Baal probably just gods in general, other gods. And then the groves, this will show
up multiple times in the next few weeks, reading as well.
And I hope if your viewers aren't used to regularly looking at the footnotes,
and I still use paper a lot, so it's easy just to glance down at the bottom of the page.
If you're on your phone or your tablets, you have to click the link.
It's not as quickly visible, but I was noticing as a reread judges, there
are a number of occasions. Almost every page, there's one, if not two or three annotations
in our footnotes, it's a H-E-B, right? Hebe for Hebrew. The Hebrew means this or the Hebrew
says this. So they're trying to help you deal with the King James English, which sometimes
is less than accurate, or
as we say things differently nowadays than they did long ago.
So I would encourage folks to regularly look or glance at the notes to get a little help
along the way, especially as you're reading King James.
So back to verse 7, the Baalim and the Groves.
Groves is the rendition here as tells you in the footnote for 7D. Hebrew is
Asher Rote, which is the plural of Asher Ra. Asher Ra is a Canaanite goddess as well, mother goddess
associated with fertility and other things. So sometimes we see the grove because Asura was associated, one of her symbols was a tree.
Tree with branches typically life.
There are occasions where we have depictions of a tree.
Canaanite remains, material remains showing a tree with lions
or animals, ibexes around it.
We think it's, again, the mother goddess giving life to creatures.
Canaanite goddess Asherah,
Hebrew, the word the noun is Asherah, but it's rendered here as groves, Septuagint picks
up on the tree ideas. So the trees shrines to her. So she's often depicted by the symbol
of a tree or a post or pillar or something artificial tree or a real tree.
And we're going to see even examples as we go along. They cut down the ashrah, they burn the ashrah
or whatever, right. So the Israelites as well as Canaanites are using a stylized tree. It sounds
like putting it near altars to help them focus on ashrah as well as Baal or Jehovah or other deities.
So here again, there's a plural form of that. So again, we're thinking, okay, Shira as well as Baal or Jehovah or other deities.
So here again, there's a plural form of that. So again, we're thinking, okay, just the gods
and the goddesses, right, of these other peoples.
I wanna sum up here that the Lord is,
look, you didn't keep your covenant,
look, you're serving other gods.
So I'm going to not punish you so much as to you've got some
important lessons that you're going to have to go through and they're going to be somewhat
painful. That's what it feels like to me is we're setting up for some very painful lessons.
Some testing and trying is going to take place. And we hear, which is often the case in the news, not
just in the scriptures, the negative element tends to get a lot of the attention. So when
I read Judges, I'm always going to be thinking, this isn't talking about every single Israelite
as way off the rails. We can use, for thinking the Latter-day Saints, now it is, right? There
are some that are very faithful, that are some that are sort of faithful, that are some that come occasionally, and keep most of the commandments, that
are some that are fighting against the Lord and the Prophet.
We don't have secularism and antiquity, but we have alternatives to religious approaches,
as we've already said, right? And some people are more in harmony with this perspective that Deuteronomy
and the prophets present,
and some people are less in harmony with that.
But they're always good people.
When we think of Ruth,
here's a family and a town of Bethlehem
that what happens to be the town
from which David will come from eventually.
But here is a family,
and they're a good people trying to lead good lives
and trying to worship the Lord.
We get a pretty negative view as we go through judges.
But I would say keep in mind, this is not all folks, but this is, unfortunately, becomes
a lot of people.
And whether it's the majority or not, I can't tell.
But eventually, we have to reconcile the fact that the negative aspects are getting depressed.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
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