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From Rest to Chaos

From Rest to Chaos. Judges How Israel almost Lost Its Inheritance. The Setting. Israel has possessed the land of promise But there remain pockets of non-Israelite identity and culture Joshua, the last direct link with Moses and the Sinai Covenant, has died

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From Rest to Chaos

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  1. From Rest to Chaos Judges How Israel almost Lost Its Inheritance

  2. The Setting • Israel has possessed the land of promise • But there remain pockets of non-Israelite identity and culture • Joshua, the last direct link with Moses and the Sinai Covenant, has died • The Elders who worked with Joshua to shape the nation according to the Covenant have all died

  3. The Book of Judges • Introduction (promises of success, failure & judgment) (1:1-3:6) • The Cycles of the Judges (3:7-16:31) • 6 “Major” Judges: • Othniel (paradigm) • Ehud (loner, folk hero, from Benjamin, eastern enemy) • Deborah (the woman) • Gideon (Baal vs. Yahweh is the critical issue) • Jephthah (the social outcast) • Samson (loner, folk hero, from Dan, western enemy) • 6 “Minor” Judges: Shamgar, Tolah, Jair, Ibzan, Elon, Abdan • 1 “Anti-” Judge: Abimelech • Appendices (a nation fallen from Covenant faithfulness) (17-21) • Religious Confusion and Removal of Dan (600 warriors) (17-18) • Moral Decay and Removal of Benjamin (600 warriors) 19-21)

  4. Note These Things: • There is a subtle symmetry pervasive in this book: • In the first story the Israelites ask Yahweh which tribe should go up first to fight the Canaanites (1:1-2); in the last story the Israelites ask Yahweh which tribe should go up first to fight the Benjamites (20:18); each time the answer is “Judah” • There are 12 judges; half of the stories are told, half are only listed • There is social and geographical symmetry between Ehud and Samson • There is social symmetry between Deborah and Jephthah • There is religious symmetry between Gideon and his anti-judge son Abimelek • There is symmetry between the two major stories of the appendix: • A Levite passes between Judah & Ephraim across the Dan-Benjamin corridor, is violated, incites tribal unrest • Dan and Benjamin essentially lose their inheritance in the covenant community

  5. Note These Things: • The troubles during the time of the Judges are related to the curses of the Covenant (2:1-5) • The “Judges” are religious/political clan leaders, not attached to any “legal” profession • The story of Othniel (3:7-11) sets the literary paradigm for all the stories of the book: • Israel breaks covenant with Yahweh • Yahweh allows an adversary to trouble the people • The people cry out to Yahweh for deliverance • Yahweh raises up a leader to defeat the enemy and rule • There is peace for “X” years until that “judge” dies

  6. Note These Things: • All the “Judges” deliver the people from fairly close neighbors except for Gideon who typologically focuses the issue of legitimate authority in Israel • Because most of the stories of the Judges are local conflicts, the stories may overlap and are not likely to be strictly consecutive • The story of Ehud (3:12-30) is told chiastically, with the message of the dagger as its central element!

  7. Note These Things: • Deborah (woman) and Jephthah (social outcast) are symbolic of the leaderless condition of the nation (so the recurring refrain in the appendices: “in those days there was no king in Israel…”) • Gideon attacks Baal worship while his son Abimelek (“My Father is King”) reasserts it • Samson mirrors the life and character of Israel as a nation

  8. Samson & Israel:A Look in the Mirror • Both are miraculously born • Both are dedicated to God from birth • Both are unusually strong • Both are nourished by way of water from a rock • Both are constantly lured by the enticements of surrounding nations • Both call out to God only when in distress • Both are willing to compromise their commitments and defile their religious purity • Both continue to be agents of divine deliverance • Both experience times under the control of others

  9. Joshua & Judges • In Joshua the clearly appointed and prepared leader brings Israel into its “Rest” in the promised land as a community of witness to the nations of the world • In Judges Israel loses her “Rest” through covenant breaking and nearly loses her place in the land (cf. Dan & Benjamin) through failure to possess and remain true to Yahweh and live as the community of witness

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