Title: Judges: Hope For Troubled Times
1JudgesHope For Troubled Times
- Chapters 71-105
- Gideons Success Failure
- Wednesday, 04 Jan 12
2Announcements
3Judges and Ruth
Week Date Topic
1 07 Dec 11 Overview Judges and Ruth
2 14 Dec 11 Israels Success and Failure Judges 11-25
3 21 Dec 11 Oppression and Deliverance Judges 26-331
4 28 Dec 11 Deborah, Gideon Judges 4-6
5 04 Jan 12 Gideons Success and Failure Judges 71-105
6 11 Jan 12 Jephthah the Judge Judges 106-1215
7 18 Jan 12 Samson and His Exploits Judges 13-14
8 25 Jan 12 Samson and Delilah Judges 15-16
9 01 Feb 12 A Levite and His Concubine Judges 17-19
10 08 Feb 12 The War with Benjamin Judges 20-21
11 15 Feb 12 Ruth and Naomi Return to Bethlehem Ruth 1-2
12 22 Feb 12 Ruth and Boaz are Married Ruth 3-4
13 29 Feb 12 Review Judges and Ruth
4Todays Objectives
- Review past lesson, Judges 4-6
- Provide an historical background and timeline for
this weeks lesson - Review historical maps of Israel and the region
- Read Judges 7 and 8, review 9 and 10
- Examine Gideons preparation for battle as a
model for Gods work in building faith in an
individual - Recognize how God desires to give us victory over
evil - Sense our own need to become more reliant on and
trustworthy in the Lord
5Last Week's Class
- Reviewed last weeks lesson, Judges 26-331
- Provided an historical background and timeline
for Judges 4-6 - Reviewed historical maps of Israel and the region
- Read Judges 4, reviewed Judges 5 and 6
- Understood Deborahs role in Israel
- Learned how God defeated the Canaanites
- Learned how God raised up Gideon to be a judge
- As Christians, sensed the need to trust and rely
more upon God and less upon our own strength
6Historical Background
- Jewish traditions states Samuel wrote Judges
- Written around 1050 B.C. and covered the period
from 1375 B.C. to 1050 B.C. - Death of Joshua to the beginning of the monarchy
- Israels form of government was a theocracy
- God alone was their King
- God raises up a series of judges between Joshuas
death and the coronation of Saul - Major and minor judges most did not rule over
all - Depressing period in Israels history
- Cycle of sin, oppression, repentance, and
deliverance - Spiritual compromise was the norm of Israel
- God sends powerful oppressors to counter
spiritual compromise
7Historical Background
- Judges 7-10 1162-1074 B.C.
- Collapse of the Hittite empire 1180 B.C.
- Gideon 1162-1122 B.C.
- Ruths story occurred around 1130 B.C.
- Abimelech 1122-1119 B.C.
- Tola led Israel from 1119-1096 B.C.
- Jair led Israel from 1096-1074 B.C.
- Samuel born around 1100 B.C.
- Tiglath-Pileser I ruled Assyria 1116-1078 B.C.
- Philistine oppression 1095-1055 B.C.
- 20th Egyptian dynasty (Ramses III XI)
- End of the New Kingdom and Egypt splits
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10Key People in Todays Lesson
- Gideon also known as Jerub-Baal
- Midianites decedents of Midian, son of Abraham
- Ishmaelites interrelated with the Midianites
- Ephraimites Israelites, decedents of Joseph
- Zebah and Zalmunna Gideon kills these two
Midianite kings - Abimelech Gideons son by a concubine
- Jotham Gideons youngest son who survives
Abimelechs slaughter
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12The Lord Thins Gideons Ranks (71-8a)
- Gideon transitions from timid to courageous
- Gideon (Jerub-Baal) and troops establishs camps
- Spring of Harod located in Jezreel Valley
- Midianites camped near hill of Moreh
- God tells Gideon he has too many men
- Orders Gideon to reduce the size of his force
- So Israel would not think they won the battle
- Gideon allows timid soldiers to depart (22,000)
- 10,000 remained
- God still considers the army too large
- Paired down to 300 by observing those who drank
from the spring of Harod
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14The Lord Prepares Gideon and His Men (78b-18)
- Gideon attacks the Midianite camp
- Gideon wonders how he will defeat such a large
force - God directs Gideon to take his servant and spy on
the Midianite camp (710) - Gideons apprehensions would disappear (711)
- Gideon and his servant spy on the camp and
overhear conversations (712-14) - Interpretation of a Midianite soldiers dream
- Gideon is doubt is erased (715)
- Gideon plans and rehearses the attack (716-18)
15Gideon Defeats the Midianites (719-25)
- Attack
- Attacks during the changing of the guard (719)
- Blowing trumpets and lit torches carried by every
man - Confusion spread throughout the camp
- Midianites began to fight one another (722)
- Midianites flee
- Midianites flee initially south to Beth Shan
- Then towards the safety of the desert across the
Jordan - Near the towns of Tabbath and Succoth
- Gideon pursues
- Ephraimites capture the princes Oreb and Zeeb
16Gideon Encounters Resistance (81-12)
- Gideons army grows weary
- Continue to chase the Midianites into the
Transjordan - Stops at Succoth and Peniel and asks for food
- Both towns refuse to feed Gideons army out of
fear - Gideon pronounces judgment on them
- Gideon ambushes Zebah and Zalmunna
- At Karkor between Damascus to what is now Mecca
- Large number of soldiers had died (120,000 of
135,000) - Gideon defeats the remaining army
- Captures Zebah and Zalmunna
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18Gideon Punishes His Opponents (813-21)
- Gideon heads west with Zebah and Zalmunna
- Returns to Succoth to show them the two kings
- Identifies 77 elders whipped or dragged over
thorns - Returns to Peniel
- Destroys the tower of the city and executed the
men - Gideon executes Zebah and Zalmunna
- Gideon asks his eldest son, Jether, to kill them
- However, he was too young and fearful
- Gideon kills the two kings
19Gideon Makes and Ephod (822-27)
- Grateful Israelites
- Israelites invite Gideon to be king
- Gideon declines
- Stressed that God was their king
- Gideon requests the people to give him an earring
from the plunder - Weighed between 35 and 75 pounds
- Gideon makes a golden ephod
- Displayed in Ophrah
- Became an object of worship
- Ultimately traps Gideons family into sin
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21The People Return Disobedience (828-35)
- Israel enjoys 40 years of peace
- Lasted as long as Gideon was alive
- Gideon returned to Ophrah and lived like a king
- Wives bore him 70 sons
- Concubine bore him a son named Abimelech
- Gideon dies and his buried in Ophra (tomb of
Joash) - Israel again worships idols
- Baal-Berith or lord of the covenant
- Temple dedicated at Shechem (94) or El-Berith
- Israelites became disloyal to Gideon and his
family
22Judges 91-105 Overview
- Abimelech named king of Shechem and Beth Millo
- Abimelech murders all of his brothers except
Jotham, Gideons youngest son - Jotham uses a parable to rebuke the people
- After three years of rule, people become
dissatisfied - Gall tries to turn the people against him
- Abimelech attacks Shechem and kills all in the
city - Destroys Shechem
- Abimelech killed at Thebez (millstone then sword)
- Tola and Jair judge Israel for 23 and 22 years
23Review
- Reviewed past lesson, Judges 4-6
- Provided an historical background and timeline
for this weeks lesson - Reviewed historical maps of Israel and the region
- Read Judges 7 and 8, reviewed 9 and 10
- Examined Gideons preparation for battle as a
model for Gods work in building faith in an
individual - Recognized how God desires to give us victory
over evil - Sensed our own need to become more reliant on and
trustworthy in the Lord - Next week - Judges 106-1215