The Bible Recap - Day 094 (Judges 13-15) - Year 5
Episode Date: April 4, 2023SHOW 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 - Win a trip to Israel! - Win... a TLC Book Bundle from Hope Media Group! - Check out WayNation FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Judges 10:17 - Numbers 6:1-21 - The Bible Recap Priority Time Toolkit PDF 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! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today we beat our 12th and final judge, Samson.
He may be the only one you've heard of before.
He's definitely the most famous.
In part because his story is the most detailed in the book, but also, it might have something
to do with the fact that he feels like the closest thing Christian culture has to a traditional
superhero.
I hope today's reading helped paint things a little more clearly because he's probably
the worst and most wicked of all the judges in the book.
Not only that, but he probably doesn't actually have big muscles like we usually imagine.
I'll tell you why tomorrow when we wrap up this story.
As for today, the people of Israel have fallen into sin again and are oppressed by the Philistines for 40 years. And according to 1017, this is all probably happening simultaneously as to the
stuff we read about yesterday. Yesterday's battle with the Ammonites was happening in the Transjordan
east of the Jordan River, and this stuff with the Philistines is happening along the Mediterranean
coastline of Israel, west of the Jordan River. First, we with the Philistines is happening along the Mediterranean coastline of Israel, west of the Jordan River.
First, we meet a man named Manoa, and the angel of the Lord, who is likely God the Sun, shows up to tell Manoa's barren wife that she's going to have a son.
He says, her son will play a role in helping rescue Israel, and that she should raise him to live under the Nazarite vow. You may remember the Nazarite vow from number six.
The rules of the vow included not drinking any alcohol
or even eating any part of a grape,
not cutting your hair, and not touching anything dead.
If you recall, the Nazarite rules were an even more ramped-up version
of some of the rules for the Levites.
Most people took this vow temporarily and voluntarily,
but Samson was assigned this role, and his assignment was lifelong.
And God even said it doesn't start when he's born, it starts when he's in the womb.
So, Manoa's wife has to follow the Nazareth vow during her pregnancy, as if giving up coffee isn't hard enough on its own.
It seems like Manoa and his wife really believed this prophecy. They're earnest about it. They beg God for instructions and advice
from the angel of the Lord.
And when they're referencing the prophecy,
they say, when this happens, not if this happens.
They offer a burnt offering to God and worship Him,
the one who works wonders as the text calls Him.
After Samson is born,
God the Spirit begins to send him promptings
about his calling at some
undetermined age. God blesses him and chapter 13 ends beautifully. In chapter 14, the first decision
Samson makes seems to be wicked and foolish. He's demanding to have a certain Philistine woman
as his wife. But the text is clear that underneath this demand is a plan Samson is working out and
that it was set in motion by God.
Samson is a secretive man who operates fairly independently of everyone else.
So what his parents don't know is that he's secretly making an in-road to overthrow Israel's
oppressors, the Philistines.
Another secret he keeps is that he killed a lion with his bare hands with the help of
God the Spirit.
I used to think he didn't tell anyone because he was just being humble, but there's no evidence of humility elsewhere.
My guess is that he kept it a secret because, as a Nazarite, this would have almost certainly
been a sin. He wasn't allowed to touch dead bodies. Though to be fair, some people think
that rule only applied to dead human bodies, but if it did apply to all dead things, and
I'm inclined to think it did,
then not only did he touch the deadline when he killed it, but he also touched it a few days
later when he scooped honey out of its carcass. This is where we're starting to see outright
that Samson makes a lot of foolish decisions. He's prideful and entitled, driven by lust and
impulsive desires, and he also seems to break every single rule of his Nazarite vow.
His pride begins to rear its head at his wedding feast, which, by the way, almost certainly
involved lots of alcohol that he wasn't supposed to drink but most likely did.
He taunts 30 Philistines with a riddle, which he made up based on his likely sinful encounter
with the lion, and when they can't solve it, they coerce his wife into getting the answer
from him.
This is where we see his first sign of weakness, women.
When the guys tell him the answer to his riddle, he's furious and embarrassed.
Not only did he lose the bet, but he was betrayed by his new wife during his own wedding
feast.
So he decides to kill them and take all their clothes, which certainly involves touching
their dead bodies.
One of the strangest parts of today's
text is that it says God the Spirit equips him for this task. But while he's away slaughtering the
Philistines, his father-in-law gives his brand-new bride to his best man. Later, when Samson returns and
tries to consummate the marriage, her dad tells him the bad news, but offers him the consolation
prize of marrying her sister instead.
So Samson does what any of us would do in that situation. He catches 300 foxes, ties their tails together and lights them on fire, then sends them into a field to burn all the crops.
We've all been there, right? No, this is bonkers, but he probably chose this option because it was
the one way to get back at them while remaining innocent in regard to his Nazareth out against
touching dead things. He was clever, I'll give him that.
The Philistines get their revenge on him by burning his wife and father-in-law to death.
So Samson either kills more Philistines or beats them up in retaliation, the text isn't
really clear here.
The back and forth between Samson and the Philistines continue when they attack the tribe of Judah.
Judah decides to capture Samson, their own judge,
and turn him over to the Philistines as a bribe.
Judah, you're better than that.
When they bring Samson to make the exchange
with the Philistines, Samson breaks free and kills a thousand men,
presumably all Philistines, but who knows?
And he did it with the jawbone of a donkey,
which also constitutes touching the dead.
And so does killing people, probably. We're not even really to the story he of a donkey, which also constitutes touching the dead. And so does killing people, probably.
We're not even really to the story he's known for
and you can already see what a rebel he is.
One of the things you may have picked up on
is that the other judges fought with armies.
Samson didn't.
Samson was the army.
He does his own stunts.
Every Philistine who died on his watch, died by his hand.
He's not a leader at all.
He's a solitary vigilante.
It's hard not to be impressed by him, though,
and we definitely see God at work
initiating and sustaining Samson's calling.
But it can be a really challenging text
to work through theologically.
So what was your God shot?
The thing that stood out to me like a flashing neon sign
was the way God empowers sinful people with wicked motives to accomplish his righteous plan.
He was using Samson's pride and rage to defeat Israel's enemy in a time when they were oppressed.
For lack of a better term, Samson was the lesser of two evils.
When God's spirit empowers Samson to do something, he's not endorsing Samson's sin, but sometimes
he's using Samson's sinfulness to defeat a greater enemy. I know we talk about this
all the time, but sinners are all God's God to work with. None of us deserve to be used
by him, and when we are, you can bet something is still going to be off track in us somewhere.
Only a sovereign God could bend our sin to serve His purposes. And that is a huge comfort to me, because it's easy for me to feel like my sin or someone
else's sin has ruined everything.
I'm not big enough to ruin everything.
He's bigger.
That sets me free.
I'm so glad I can't ruin his plan, because he's where the joy is.
Not everyone's quiet time looks the same, sometimes they aren't quiet at all.
I actually refer to my quiet time as priority time, because that's what helps me remember
the place it holds in my schedule and in my life.
If you're new to this or if you just want to add more tools to your toolkit in case you
find them helpful, I'd love to share more about what my priority time looks like.
We've built out a PDF that we're offering for free, and if you want to get access to our
free priority time toolkit, all you have to do is go to thebibelorecap.com-forward-slash-time
and submit your email address.
That's thebibelorecap.com-forward-slash-time, like quiet time, but without the quiet.
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