Wednesday, November 30, 2016

An Unexpected Advent Part 1: Unexpected Trouble

A sermon on Judges 2:6-23 


In the Name of Jesus, our Savior, dear fellow redeemed,
The Book of Judges is unfortunately one of the more obscure books of the Bible. We don’t ever get to read it in our regular readings on Sunday mornings. Judges covers roughly three hundred years between the death of Joshua and leads up to the beginning of Israel’s kings. These were dark times in Israel. There are tons of massive battles. If you want “blood and guts Old Testament”, here it is. However, we can’t help but see ourselves as we read this book. [1]
In this reading we have an outline of the book of Judges. There’s a cycle that you can trace through almost every account recorded for us here. First, the people start worshipping other gods. Second, God gives His people over to foreign oppression. Third, the people cry out to the Lord. Fourth, God sends them a Judge to save them. Fifth and finally, the people serve God as long as that Judge lives.
This isn’t just how things happen throughout the book of Judges, but also how things sometimes happen with us. Paul describes the idolatry Israel had committed earlier in their history saying:
“Now these things happened to them as an example, but they were written down for our instruction, on whom the end of the ages has come. Therefore let anyone who thinks that he stands take heed lest he fall.” (1 Corinthians 10:11-12)
Let’s look and see how that can be.
First, Israel strays from the Lord. The people did what was evil in the eyes of the LORD. Instead of worshiping Him alone, they started worshipping Baal and Asherah—the chief god and goddess of the Canaanite pantheon. Because, hey, why have just the LORD bless you, when you can have Baal and Asherah bless you too?   
How could they do this? Don’t they know everything God had done for them?
                   Joshua entered Canaan with the children and grandchildren of those who left Egypt with Moses. Now those generations were all dead. Now we’re talking about the great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren of those who saw the plagues, Passover, and Ten Commandments. They didn’t know what God had done, so they didn’t do what God said.[2]
Are we any different? We stray from the Lord. We may not openly reject the Christian faith and run off to Buddhism or Islam, but we do it in our own way. Think about this: what idols have I set up in God’s place? Maybe it’s money or your job. Maybe it’s friends or fame. Maybe it’s sex or pornography. What am I fearing, loving, or trusting more than the God?
How could we do this? Don’t we remember that everything we have is a gift from the LORD? We worship the gift rather than the giver. Don’t we remember that the LORD has promised never to leave us for forsake us? We are afraid because we don’t think we’re going to have what we need. Don’t we remember that the LORD is faithful to us? We try trusting all sorts of other things.
So, what does the LORD do to His people who stray so often? He allows trouble to come their way. For them, it comes in the form of plunderers who plunder them. That’s what plunderers do.
However, we shouldn’t see this necessarily as punishment. The LORD specifically calls it a test. We see the same word used in verse 22 as is used in Genesis 22 where God tests Abraham by asking him to sacrifice Isaac.
What should we think when we see testing of different sorts in our lives? We know that we are sinners just like ancient Israel. But it isn’t quite the same. They had a specific warning from the LORD. We have the promise that “He does not treat us as our sins deserve or repay us according to our iniquities.” Like Israel, God may test us.  This testing doesn’t mean that we’ve rejected God—a lot of people are tempted to think that. God can test unfaithful Israel. And God can test people when they are faithful, like Job.  
                   We shouldn’t understand this as punishment because this is very much what we do to our own children. When our kids are very small, we carry them in our arms. But when the time comes, we help them crawl. A little later, we support them as they learn to walk and catch them when they fall. But when your kids grow up, you’ve got to let them be tested a little more. You’ve got to do things that stretch them. Then they will be ready.
If this is the way we treat our children, think about how the God our Father cares for us. It’s very similar. The LORD carries us. The LORD supports us. He even catches us when we fall. But there are still times when the LORD stretches us. He tests us.[3]
 Sometimes the LORD will strip everything else away from us just so that we know that we have nothing but Him. If we have Him, and Him alone, will that be enough? The LORD does not give us our trials because He knows we can handle them on our own. He gives us trials so that we turn to Him because we can’t handle them on our own. Realizing this, my friends, is faith!
When they realized their idols weren’t helping, Israel cried to the LORD for deliverance. It says, “For the LORD was moved to pity by their groaning because of those who afflicted and oppressed them.” (Judges 2:18) He was ready to hear their prayers; He was ready to save them. Despite their rebellion, Israel was still His people. He had brought them out of Egypt and given them this land. He wasn’t about to let them be destroyed.
And so, we do the same. We cry to the LORD in our trouble. God has compassion on us because we are His people. Through the waters of Baptism, we have been united with Christ in His death and resurrection. We have been made part of God’s people!
The people cry to the LORD and the LORD sends them a savior who saves them, that’s what saviors do. God called different people, placed His Spirit on them, and they went out and did wonderful things. They led the people of God into battle and the LORD won stunning victory after victory for them.
Enemies who had plundered God’s people were plundered. Idols which led Israel astray were torn down. Evil kings were killed. People saw the mighty deeds that the LORD had done for their ancestors in their own lives. Faith was rekindled and hope was renewed.
We cry out to the LORD because the LORD has already sent us a savior who saved us. That’s what our Savior did! God the Father sent Jesus and put the Holy Spirit on Him. He went out and did wonderful things!
Enemies like sickness and disability had to yield when Jesus stepped into people’s lives. Idols like our ego and money are powerless because Jesus gives free forgiveness. Death and the Devil lost their cruel grip over God’s people as Jesus went to the cross for you.
“For if while we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, much more, now that we are reconciled, shall we be saved by his life.” (Romans 5:10)
Who would die for people who had rejected Him? Who would die for someone who had replaced him with someone else? Who would die for people who couldn’t care less? Jesus would. Jesus did.
Israel was faithful to the LORD as long as the Judges lived but then fell back into their old ways. Actually, each generation was worse than the last. Again and again people failed to walk in the LORD’s ways. The cycle would start all over again.
                   The cycle throughout the book of Judges is really a downward spiral. You start off with some really great Judges: Othniel, Ehud, Shamgar (there’s one verse about him “After him was Shamgar the son of Anath, who killed 600 of the Philistines with an oxgoad, and he also saved Israel”), and Deborah. You move to guys to who make some bad decisions like Gideon (later in his life), Jephthah (who made a horrible rash vow), and Sampson (who could never get away from foreign women). Then you get to the last five chapters where everything is just an absolute mess! The book ends say, “In those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did what was right in his own eyes.”
                   No human Judge or King would be able to bring what the people needed. What we need is Jesus. Those Judges died—every last one of them. Our Savior lives! He lives forever! This is where the cycle is broken for us because Christ is risen from the dead. That’s why we walk in His commands. We have no excuse for falling away if we do. Our leader lives and loves us. Walk in His ways and watch for His coming. Just as our hymn says:

He comes to judge the nations, a terror to His foes,
A light and consolations and blessed hope to those
Who love the Lord’s appearing. O glorious Son now come
Send forth Your beams so cheering, and guide us safely home.[4]

Amen





[1] Longman III, Tremper and Raymond Dillard. An Introduction to the Old Testament: Second Edition. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2006 p. 133
[2] Franke, John R. Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture, Old Testament Volume IV: Joshua, Judges, Ruth, 1-2 Samuel. Origen “Knowing and Doing” p. 104 Downers Grove, IL: Intervarsity Press, 2005.
[3] Franke, Ancient Christian Commentary. John Cassian “Didactic Grace Works Through the Will” p. 108
[4] Gerhardt, Paul “Oh Lord, How Shall I Meet You” verse 7. Lutheran Service Book 334 

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