Deserting the King
70 pages
English

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70 pages
English

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Description

The book of Judges can pose many puzzles for readers today: who were the "judges"? Why was this book written, and how does it fit into the biblical narrative? And how can the story it tells--one of bloodshed, intrigue, and rejection of Yahweh's authority--change our understanding of God today?Deserting the King guides readers through the difficulties that the book of Judges can pose for readers as it traces both the evil and redemption present in Israel's approach to kingship--and, by extension, God. And while examining the book's structure and key themes, author David Beldman draws in stories from his life and the world today, showing how this Old Testament book, in its darkness and heroism, gives us a lens to see God's at work throughout history.

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Publié par
Date de parution 25 janvier 2017
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781577997771
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 2 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0360€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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DESERTING THE KING
THE BOOK OF JUDGES
TRANSFORMATIVE WORD
DAVID J. H. BELDMAN
Edited by Craig G. Bartholomew
Deserting the King: The Book of Judges
Transformative Word
Copyright 2017 David J. H. Beldman
Lexham Press, 1313 Commercial St., Bellingham, WA 98225 LexhamPress.com
All rights reserved. You may use brief quotations from this resource in presentations, articles, and books. For all other uses, please write Lexham Press for permission. Email us at permissions@lexhampress.com .
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture quotations are the author’s own translation or are from the ESV ® Bible ( The Holy Bible, English Standard Version ® ), copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Print ISBN 9781577997764
Digital ISBN 9781577997771
Series Editor: Craig G. Bartholomew
Lexham Editorial: Sarah Awa, Abby Salinger, Lynnea Smoyer, Abigail Stocker, Elizabeth Vince
Cover Design: Quincy Rouse
CONTENTS
1. Introduction
2. Judges in the Context of the Grand Story
3. Cycles, Spirals, and Circles: The Structure of Judges
4. “No King in Israel”: The Regicide of Yahweh
5. The Canaanization of a Holy Nation
6. Violence in the Book of Judges
7. The Enduring Testimony of Judges
8. Conclusion
Recommended Reading
“God is dead! God remains dead! And we have killed him! How can we console ourselves, the murderers of all murderers! The holiest and mightiest thing the world has ever possessed has bled to death under our knives: who will wipe this blood from us? With what water could we clean ourselves? What festivals of atonement, what holy games will we have to invent for ourselves? Is the magnitude of this deed not too great for us? Do we not ourselves have to become gods merely to appear worthy of it? There was never a greater deed—and whoever is born after us will on account of this deed belong to a higher history than all history up to now!… What then are these churches now if not the tombs and sepulchres of God?”
— Nietzsche’s Madman 1
1
INTRODUCTION
Imagine that a friend comes to you. Her marriage of ten years has disintegrated, and she doesn’t know what to do. She first noticed little warning signs about two years into the marriage. It was the way he looked at other women. He didn’t know that she noticed, and she initially tried to ignore it. Eventually, she confronted her husband—and he didn’t deny it. He apologized and promised to change, and things were better for a while. A number of years later, the woman noticed her husband flirting with a longtime friend at a birthday party. When she confronted him, he attributed his poor behavior to the multiple drinks he had consumed. Again, he apologized, and things went well for a while. In the last year, the husband’s business consistently kept him busy, and he spent more time at the office and on short trips away from home. A few weeks ago, the woman found some texts on her husband’s phone from one of his female employees. It was undeniable: Her husband was having an affair. The woman was deeply hurt and shocked. When she confronted her husband, he admitted that he was having an affair and confessed that he had been engaging in inappropriate behavior with other women throughout their entire marriage. This pattern of promiscuity had begun before their wedding, and although he had hoped that getting married would provide a fresh start, the old pattern soon emerged. The wife was devastated; she felt her marriage had been a sham from the beginning—that the vows she and her husband had made on their wedding day meant nothing.
This is the story that plays out on the pages of the book of Judges. Yahweh is like the faithful spouse, Israel is like the unfaithful husband, the Sinai covenant is like the marriage vows, and Israel’s persistent service to the gods of the Canaanites is like the husband’s painful betrayals of the marriage contract. Although we may get the sense that God’s people gradually slide into unfaithfulness, by the end of Judges we realize that their infidelity is deeply rooted early in their relationship with Yahweh. Did the Sinai covenant and Israel’s repeated assent to it have any meaning at all?
The book of Judges, which recounts a particular period in the life of God’s people, is by no means glamorous. It shows the tragic situation of a persistently and repeatedly unfaithful people. Judges portrays a chapter in history when God’s people, Israel, were maturing from an association of twelve tribes into a fully formed nation. But rather than living up to their calling as a holy nation and a kingdom of priests ( Exod 19:6 ), the Israelites became like the surrounding nations in their character and conduct. The consequences for themselves and the nations were drastic.
The basic message of Judges is a divine summons for God’s people to remember who they are and what King Yahweh has done for them. On that basis, they are to live out their calling as Yahweh’s representatives on earth for the blessing of the nations. This message resounds through the centuries, and it continues to summon followers of Jesus like you and me to live out our calling amidst the challenges of the 21st century .
Yet it can be easy to overlook this central message because Judges is such a complex and puzzling book. The book’s puzzling nature is reflected at times by riddles within the stories themselves. For instance, at his wedding reception, Samson presented this riddle to his guests:
Out of the eater came something to eat. Out of the strong came something sweet. ( Judg 14:14 )
Readers of Judges know that the inspiration behind Samson’s riddle is the carcass of the lion that Samson killed, which had become home to a colony of honeybees ( 14:5–9 ). But if the story did not provide that information, we would be as stumped by the riddle as Samson’s wedding guests were. This puzzle would seem impossible to solve.
Although the book of Judges contains some of the most memorable stories of the Bible—stories of bloodshed, intrigue, and heroism—it also presents readers with perplexing riddles that, like Samson’s riddle, seem impossible to solve. Its complex and sometimes bizarre situations, characters, and behavior may at points cause us to wonder how this book could possibly prompt us to say, “This is the Word of the Lord; thanks be to God.” Perhaps the most fundamental puzzle facing modern readers of Judges is: How do we attune our ears so that we might hear God speaking to us today through the book of Judges? While there are some puzzles in the book that we may never solve, Judges does provide us with unmistakable clues for understanding this perplexing—yet vital—part of the Bible.
Think of this book as a map to help you gain your bearings in the book of Judges. Maps are most helpful in places that are unfamiliar to us, but they can also help us find new areas to explore in familiar places. Most important, a map should never be an end in itself. It should always drive us back to the places it represents—to explore the riches of the terrain itself. I hope that, like a good map, this book helps you make your way through the sometimes-disorienting terrain of Judges and prompts you to return again and again to the biblical text itself.
Before we go further, it will be helpful to explore two important questions: (1) What is Judges (the book of the Bible), and (2) who are the judges (the individual leaders who appear in the book)?

Judges: The Book
Judges appears among the Old Testament books that come after the Pentateuch (Genesis–Deuteronomy) and before the poetic books (Job–Song of Songs). This section (which includes the books of Joshua, Judges, Ruth, 1-2 Samuel, 1-2 Kings, 1-2 Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther) is commonly referred to as the historical books—not because the other books are not historical but because these books offer an account of Israel’s history from the conquest of the land until the time following the return from exile. Judges covers the period after the conquest of Canaan (in Joshua) and before the rise of monarchy in Israel (1-2 Samuel). It accounts for the time in Israel’s history when the Israelites settled in the promised land. This period is often called the “settlement period,” though sometimes it is referred to as the “period of the judges” because during this time the Israelites were governed by judges. Judges is by no means exhaustive in its treatment of this period; it doesn’t relate all of the events of the settlement period. However, it does give a general overview of Israel’s history during this time. The book is selective in its content, but the events that do appear highlight what is essential about this period.
OUTLINE

Judg 1:1–3:6
Introduction
Judg 1:1–2:5
Israel’s Unsuccessful Mop-Up Campaign
Judg 2:6–3:6
The Announcement of the Cycle of the Judges
Judg 3:7–16:31
The Cycle of the Judges
Judg 3:7–11
Othniel
Judg 3:12–30
Ehud
Judg 3:31
Minor Judge: Shamgar
Judg 4:1–5:31
Deborah, Barak, and Jael
Judg 6:1–9:57
Gideon and His Son Abimelech
Judg 10:1–5
Minor Judges: Tola and Jair
Judg 10:6–12:8
Jephthah
Judg 12:8–15
Minor Judges: Ibzan, Elon, and Abdon
Judg 13:1–16:31
Samson
Judg 17:1–21:25
The Conclusion
Judg 17:1–18:31
Micah’s Idol and the Danite Migration
Judg 19:1–21:25
The Atrocity at Gibeah and the Resulting Israelite Campaign against the Tribe of Benjamin
We should bear in mind that history writing in general is never a mere chronicle of one event after another. Historians carefully research, select, arrange, and craft their narrative of the events of history into something meaningful and coherent. This is also true of the historical accounts we find in the Bible. John testifies to this reality near the end of his Gospel. In John 21:25 , he says that the whole world would not be able to contain all the volumes he could have written about the life and times of Jesus, and in John 20:30–31

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