User:RobertC/OT Lesson 19

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Lesson 19: The Reign of the Judges

Judg 2; Judg 4; Judg 6-7; Judg 13-16

Feel free to post any comments, questions, suggestions, links, etc. on the discussion page.


Overview

  • Conquering of lands, but some Canaanites remain. In Joshua, we read about how the Israelites conquered many of the Canaanites. In Judges we read about the Israelites conquering more lands, but not driving out all the Canaanites as commanded (cf. Judg 2:2). God ceases to preserve Israel as a result.
  • Reign of judges. After Joshua died, Israel was not united under a single leader until the days of the prophet Samuel and King Saul. During this interval, 12 judges served as Israel’s rulers and military leaders. Most of their reign was tragic as Israel went through the cycle of apostasy, bondage, repentance, and delivery many times. The twelve judges are (some scholars also consider Abimelech a judge, cf. 8:33-9:57; those considered major judges are given in caps):
  1. OTHNIEL (3:7-11)
  2. EHUD (3:12-30)
  3. Shamgar (3:31)
  4. DEBORAH (4:1-5:31)—some claim Barak was the judge instead of Deborah
  5. GIDEON (6:1-8:32)—some claim Gideon wasn't technicvally a judge
  6. Tola (10:1-2)
  7. Jair (10:3-5)
  8. JEPHTHAH (10:6-12:7)
  9. Ibzan (12:8-10)
  10. Elon (12:11)
  11. Abdon (12:13-15)
  12. SAMSON (13:1-16:31)
  • Deborah, Gideon and Samson. The lesson focuses on three of the main stories in Judges: Deborah is a prophetess-judge who helps her friend Barak have faith to lead his army to victory against Sisera; Gideon is called of God to lead Israel's armies to victory with a 300-man army; Samson is blessed with incredible strength to serve Israel, but he breaks his covenant with God by letting Delilah cut his hair.


Cycle of apostacy: Judg 2

  • Forgetting God.
  • Children weren't taught. See commentary for Judg 2:10.
  • They forsook the Lord. See commentary for Judg 2:12.
  • God's wrath/jealousy. See several notes for Judg 2:13-14.
  • Cycle of judges?
  • The Anchor Bible suggests there is a deliberate cycle (archaeologists have found evidence suggesting a different historical order to the judges' reigns) between good judges (Othniel, Deborah, Jephthah) and problematic judges (Ehud's treachery, see Judg 3:26; Gideon's slow recognition of God (see Judg 6:36) and building of an idol (see Judg 8:24-27); Abimelech's aspiring to be king (see Judg 9); and Samson's not guarding his covenant with Delilah (see Judg 16:17).
  • The International Theological Commentary (p. 90) argues instead that Ehud is an exemplary judge, but Gideon and Jephtah have moral flaws (they quote Nahum Sarna's Gideon entry in the Encyclopedia Judaica).
  • J. Clinton McCann in the Interpretation: A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching series seems to take a positive view of Ehud, but a negative view of Gideon and Jephthah. On this view, the progressing moral demise of the major judges in the Book of Judges sets the stage for the the establishment of an Israelite monarchy in 1 Samuel.

Debora and Barak: Judg 4

Outline

  • Captive to Jabin (vv. 1-3). After Ehud, Israelites are wicked and the Lord "sold them into the hand of Jabin king of Canaan" (Judg 4:2).
  • Deborah becomes judge and gives charge to Barak (vv. 4-9). Deborah, a prophetess, was the judge in Israel (vv. 4-5). Deobrah asks Barak if God hasn't asked him battle Sisera (Jabin's general) (vv. 6-7). Barak says he'll go only if Deborah goes with him (v. 8). Deborah agrees to go, but declares the journey will be for God's honor, not Barak's (v. 9).
  • Barak defeats Sisera (vv. 10-16). Barak goes to mount Tabor (w/ troops) and Sisera goes out to the nearby river of Kishon(w/troops; vv. 10-13). Deborah says God will favor Barak (v. 14). Barak's men kill all of Sisera's, though Sisera flees (vv. 14-16).
  • Jael kills Sisera (vv. 17-24). Jael finds Sisera fleeing and pretends to hide him (vv. 17-20), but Jael drives a nail through Sisera's head (v. 21). Barak finds Sisera dead (v. 22). Summary: God deserves credit for victory (vv. 23-24).

Notes

  • Faith and friendship themes. SS manual questions seem to focus on faith and good friends that can help us when our faith is weak.

Gideon's faith: Judges 6-7

Outline: Chapter 6

  • Canaanites prevail against Israelites (vv. 1-7). Children of Israel were wick and Midianites prevail against them (vv. 1-2). Midianites and other Canaanites destroy Israelites' crops (and livestock? vv. 4-5). Israelites are impoverished and cry to God for help (v. 6).
  • Gideon is called by God to lead Israelites to victory (vv. 11-18).
  • An angel causes fire to come out of rocks (vv. 19-24). To prove that Gideon's calling was from God, an angel causes fire to come out of rock and devour some food.
  • Gideon destroys the altar of Baal (vv. 25-32). God commands Gideon to destroy his father's altar to Baal and build an altar to God instead (vv. 25-26). Gideon does so at night (v. 26). Gideon's father, Joash, protects his son by saying Baal should defend himself (vv. 27-31). Based on this incident, Gideon is given a new name Jerubbaal (v. 32).

Notes: Chapter 6

  • See Judg 6:11 regarding the name Gideon and "hacking down idols."
  • See Judg 6:32 regarding the name Jerubbaal.

Outline: Chapter 7

Samson's tragic story: Judg 13-16

Other passages

Judg 3: Outline

  • Intermarrying (vv. 1-7). Children of Israel intermarry with Canaanites, worship false gods, and are cursed.
  • Othniel (vv. 8-11). Othniel judges Israel. Othniel was Caleb's younger brother and married Caleb's daughter after winning her hand in marriage by capturing the land Hebron (see the [Jewish Encyclopedia entry for Caleb for more on this, and on other legends surrounding Caleb).
  • Ehud. Ehud, who's left-handed delivers Israel from Moabites by slaying Eglon, who's fat (vv. 12-30).
  • Shamgar. Shamgar succeeds Ehud (v. 31).

Judg 5: Outline of Deborah's song

(Outline taken mostly from here.)

  • Blessing God for deliverance through judges (vv. 1-9)
  • Offering oneself to God (vv. 1-2)
  • God preserved Israel in the past (vv. 3-5)
  • Things looked bleak when Deborah arose (vv. 6-8)
  • Bless the Lord refrain (v. 9)
  • The victory remembered (vv. 10-31)
  • A call to recount the great victory (vv. 10-12)
  • Which tribes did and didn't help (vv. 13-18)
  • The battle of Taanach (vv. 19-22)
  • Meroz cursed for not helping (vv. 23)
  • Praise to Jael for killing Sisera (vv. 24-27)
  • Disappointment of Sisera's survivors (vv. 28-30)
  • Final praise to God (v. 31)

Related links

  • Summaries and overviews