The Bible Recap - Day 090 (Judges 3-5) - Year 4
Episode Date: March 31, 2022SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S EPISODE: ...SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today we wrap up the introduction to the Book of Judges, and God tells us that he has left
a handful of Canaanite leaders in the land as a test for the Israelites.
Today we also get to meet the first four judges, all of whom are pretty
good by comparison to the others we'll read about.
Early on, we find out that Israel has forgotten God and are worshipping Baal and the Austroath,
and God takes credit for selling them into slavery, just like he warned them he would do when
this happened. After eight years, they finally cry out to God and he raises up the first judge
to save them. And remember that the judges
were talking about here are more like military commanders and civil leaders than someone who sits
in a courtroom with a gattle. The first judge is Othneal, whom you may remember as Caleb's nephew
slash son-in-law. The text says God's spirit was upon him and he gave him victory. Then they had
peace for 40 years. But then the Israelites decide they prefer sin over peace and they rebel again.
So God strengthens their enemy against them, King Eglond of Moab.
He gathered some allies and they attacked Israel and take back Jericho,
which was Israel's first conquest in the Promised Land.
They also take the Israelites as servants for 18 years,
until they cry out to God for rescue.
Then God appoints Ehood, the second judge, to rescue him.
If you're left-handed, you probably love this story,
even though it was gross, because left-handed people
often get a bad rap in ancient text.
But here, one of your people is the hero.
One interesting thing about this is that E-Hood
was from the tribe of Benjamin, which means
son of the right hand.
I bet E-Hood was probably teased about his left-handedness for his entire life, kind of like if you're
a vegan whose last name is Hunter.
But this left-handed warrior led a group of people in giving a gift to King Egon of Moab
as a ruse so he could stab him with an 18-inch knife.
Then he led the Israelites in killing 10,000 moabites and taking back the land, and things
are peaceful again for 80 years.
After that, we only get one sentence on the third judge, Shamgar.
Both his name and his family of origin point to Shamgar being a native canonite
who had turned to worship Yahweh.
And here he is, established as a judge over the Israelites,
leading them in victory over the Philistines to save Israel.
After Ehood and Shamgar, the people sin again and God sells them into slavery for 20 years
under Jaban, the King of Canaan.
This situation seems impossible to the people, because Jaban and his military commander
Sissera have access to 900 iron chariots, and they live in areas that are flat.
If you have chariots, you want the battles to be on flat land.
If you don't have chariots, you want the battles to be in the hills, for obvious reasons.
Chariots are super advanced, like ancient tanks.
But they don't move well across anything besides flat, dry ground.
So for these canonites to have chariots in flat land did not bode well for the Israelites.
The Israelites had been worshipping the Canaanite gods, and now they realize that those gods
are worthless to save them, and they have no hope but Yahweh, so they cry out to him.
That's when we encounter our final judge for the day, and one of the ones who occupies
the most space in the book, Debra.
Of all the judges we'll read about, she's the one who honors God the most and sticks the closest to his commandments.
Scripture describes her as a wise, bold, level-aheaded prophet who keeps her word and fears the Lord.
She's also the one judge we encounter who actually presides over legal cases, so she's a judge in the Israelites' sense, and also a judge in the Judy sense.
The one traditional role of an Israelite judge
that she doesn't step fully into
is the role of military commander.
She says God has appointed Barat for that position.
And he's on board, but he refuses to go to battle
without her.
She agrees to go with him,
but lets him know up front that a woman
will get the praise for winning the battle.
Initially, it seems like she's saying
this praise will go to her,
but this prophecy points to someone else. In the song in chapter 5 we find out that Baroque
Summoned Six Tribes to fight with him, which is the largest coalition in the whole book
of Judges. Before the fighting begins in chapter 4, we see a brief mention of a key
night man named Heber, who pitched his tent in the middle of nowhere. This is foreshadowing.
Deborah gives the heads up that today is the day for battle against Sissera and his 900 chariots,
and she reminds Baroque that God goes before them and has given them the victory.
The Israelites kill a lot of Canaanites,
but Sissera escapes on foot and winds up in the middle of nowhere at,
you guessed it, the tent of Heber the Key Knight.
Heber had a peaceful relationship with Cicera's King Jaban,
so they were on decent terms,
which may explain why Cicera went to his tent.
But there are at least two other weird dynamics going on here.
Heber was a key knight, not an Israelite,
but those two are closely related
and have a peaceful relationship.
The key knights even settled in the land with the Israelites.
So Cicera is showing up to a place
where he is both a friend and an enemy.
If you've ever been in middle school, you've probably been in a situation like this.
The other weird dynamic, according to the text, is that Cicera actually goes to Heber's
wife's tent, not Heber's tent.
Wives often had separate tents from their husbands.
Maybe he thinks she'll be more compassionate than Heber would be, I don't know, but it's still kind of sketchy. So this was probably
a pretty awkward situation for at least two reasons. It wasn't awkward for long though,
because she drives a tent peg through his temple. And once again, God and his people gained
victory over the enemy, and they wrote a whole song about it in chapter 5 praising God
and his works. Then the land had peace for 40 years.
Where did you see your God shot today?
I really loved seeing how he chose
and appointed unlikely leaders.
In our first four judges,
we start with a man from the tribe of Judah,
which is to be expected.
But then we have a left-handed man from a right-handed tribe,
a canonite to lead the Israelites and a woman.
None of those would be viewed as traditional to lead the Israelites, and a woman.
None of those would be viewed as traditional leaders in that day, and it just reminds me
of how God uses the unlikely, not to pump up their self-esteem or give them bragging rights
in front of the haters.
That's prideful at worst and fleeting at best.
He does it to reveal himself at work, to show his heart for those who are overlooked.
It's not that he sees potential in them.
He doesn't see it and it's not potential.
It's a reality and he created it.
God is establishing a track record of using people
we probably wouldn't think of as leaders.
Those we might pass over because they seem less qualified
for one reason or another.
It brings him glory and it brings us joy
because he's where the joy is.
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