The Bible Recap - Day 091 (Judges 6-7) - Year 3
Episode Date: April 1, 2021SHOW 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 SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: I...nstagram | 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.
Yesterday, we learned about Israel's first four judges, and they were all pretty good
by God's standards, especially the last one, Deborah.
Forty years after Deborah, the Israelites fall into Senegal and are oppressed by the
Midianites, who are their distant relatives through Ketura. That's the woman Abraham married after Sarah died.
The Israelites were so oppressed and afraid that they hid in caves to escape the Midianites.
And the Midianites also ate all their food supply, not cool.
After seven years, as things went from bad to worse, the Israelites cried out to God.
Maybe they expected him to send a judge again, a military leader to to worse, the Israelites cried out to God.
Maybe they expected him to send a judge again, a military leader to rescue them like he had
in the past.
But God doesn't owe them that, and he knows they need something different at this point.
He sends a prophet, someone to speak truth and call out their sin.
We have no idea how they responded to this when it happened, because the text immediately
takes us to the next scene. Cut to a man named Gideon. Hard at work, beating out wheat in a wine press,
which is an unusual place to do that kind of thing, by the way.
It's kind of like when you put the Girl Scout cookies in your sock drawers so the kids can't find them.
Much like you, Gideon was trying to hide the wheat from the Midianite food stealers.
Meanwhile, the Angel of the Lord shows up, and this appears to be God the Son.
God the Father also seems to show up here disembodied.
It's kind of a confusing text to navigate,
but it seems likely that God the Father
and God the Son are both on the scene.
God the Son tells Gideon that God is with him.
Gideon's response is something
we've probably all thought before.
He basically says, oh really, God is with me?
That's funny, because my life is a disaster.
I actually feel pretty forsaken and forgotten by him.
The great irony is that Gideon was questioning the presence of God to the very presence of
God.
God tells Gideon that he's the man to deliver Israel from this oppression, but Gideon
pushes back.
He's from the weakest clan in his tribe, and he's the least important person in that
clan.
God promises to be with him, but Gideon still doesn't know its God he's talking to at this
point, and he's skeptical.
Gideon obviously knows this man as someone important, possibly a prophet, because he offers
to bake him some food.
That's an especially big deal given the scarcity of food at this time.
Gideon asks for a sign and offers the food.
Then God the Sun cooks it with his firestick and disappears.
Okay, finally Gideon recognizes who he's dealing with
and he panics.
God the Father tells him not to be afraid
to receive his peace.
Then in an act of worship, Gideon builds an altar there and calls it,
the Lord is peace, Yahweh Shalom.
God also tells him to tear down his father's altar
of Baal and his Asherah and to build an altar to God there.
Then he's supposed to use the wood from the Asherah
to offer a sacrifice to God.
As the least of his family,
this is probably not going to earn him any brownie points
with his dad. He obeys God, but he does it in the middle of the night so he doesn't get caught.
But he does get caught, and the mid of the town plan to kill him.
But in an unexpected turn of events, his dad stands up for him.
Maybe his dad really thinks Baal will act to defend himself,
but it seems more like he's admitting that this pagan God he's been worshipipping is powerless. In all of this, God is preparing them for war here.
By ridding them of idols and culling them to worship him,
he's aligning their hearts with the truth before the battle.
Meanwhile, the Israelites' enemies are stacking up against them,
but God's spirit clothes giddy in, and his clandestides to follow him.
They also rallied
other people from their tribe and from other tribes to join them in pushing back the enemy.
Gideon is still afraid though, his fear is always with him. And he decides to test God's plan by
asking him for a sign, twice. He knows this is forbidden under Mosaic law, plus he's already received
a direct call from God when he spoke with him face to face.
So this is doubly disappointing.
But God is patient with him, because he knows the man he has appointed for this task is
given to fear.
He doesn't rebuke him or punish him for acting faithlessly.
After God's double confirmation, Gideon and his men set out for war, all 32,000 of them.
But God tells Gideon his army is too big, which is something
no one ever says. He has Gideon send home anyone who is afraid, and anyone who drinks water
in a certain way that seems to indicate they might be easier to attack or something.
After all that, Gideon is left with 300 men, less than 1% of his original army.
God decreases their army so he can increase his glory.
In this instance, it seems that he wants to get glory
from the miraculous, not the logical.
Gideon, on the other hand, is not excited
about the miraculous.
In fact, he's probably extra afraid now,
but God still doesn't review him.
Instead, he decides to give him even more confirmation.
He tells him to go spy on the Midianite
so he can hear what they say.
Because of course, God knows what they'll say.
God had given a Midianite soldier a dream
and God would prompt another Midianite soldier
to interpret it.
And God had arranged the timing of that conversation
to happen at the very moment
and in the very spot where Gideon approached the camp.
And what God brought Gideon there to over here
is the dream's interpretation that Israel would prevail over Midian. So Gideon preps his
soldiers with their weapons, right? Nope. He makes a trip to Hobby Lobby to pick up
some jars, candles, and trumpets, then passes them out to his guys. At 10 PM,
they station themselves around the camp and make all kinds of noise. Some of
the Midianites flee, but some get so confused that they accidentally
start killing each other,
which is a good thing because these 300 Israelites
don't even have swords, remember?
Gideon calls on the people from other tribes
to capture and kill the Midianites who fled,
and in tomorrow's reading we'll find out
that 120,000 Midianites died in this battle.
And that's the story of one of the strangest military victories
in all of history,
led by a craft-loving coward and a mighty God.
What was your God shot today? I found it so compelling that Gideon doubts God a lot,
and God never gets angry with him for it. God meets him in his questions. He's never
impatient with Gideon's doubts and fears. He comes alongside him to embolden him, and he knows that what Gideon needs to hear most of all is who God is.
God doesn't say, no, Gideon, you're awesome, you got this! Believe in yourself! You may be the least in your family, but it's just because they're all jealous of you.
God doesn't counter Gideon's doubt by puffing him up with positive self-taught. He tells him, I am with you.
And he's with you.
And he's where the joy is, you guys.
He's where the joy is.
Okay, Bible readers, it's time for our weekly check-in.
How are you doing?
And by the way, if you're using our printout plan
or if you got the official journal for the Bible recap, you got to turn a page today on the schedule.
That's huge.
It's clear that God has granted you a desire to know him more, so don't be discouraged
if you're not on the exact schedule you'd hope to keep.
We will never do things perfectly, even when we have good intentions and a growing desire.
That's one reason why the cross is such a gift to God's kids. Keep coming back to the word, keep asking him to help you and to give you wisdom.
I know he will.
James 1.5 says that's a prayer he always answers with yes.
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