| 1:1-3:6 The Time after
Joshua |
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| 1:2-21 |
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The
Faithfulness of Judah (Southern conquests)
The book begins and ends with a story about
Judah - leading up to the primacy of Judah
for the united monarchy. Here, Judah is a
positive example. They attempt to possess
the land and are mostly successful. |
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| 1:1-3 |
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Judah
was chosen to go up first against the Canaanites |
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| 1:4-18 |
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Key
victories at Jerusalem and Hebron
Daughter is given to victor at Debir |
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| 1:19 |
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One
glitch - couldn't drive out the people along
the plain |
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| 1:20-21 |
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Tribe of Benjamin failed to drive out the
Jebusites
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| 1:22-36 |
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Report
of the Northern Tribes
Despite a great beginning, one by one, each
tribe fails to drive out the Canaanites from
the land. Accounts are more compressed. |
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| 1:27-36 |
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Manasseh, Ephraim, Zebulun, Asher, Naphtali,
and the Danites were not successful in driving
out the Canaanites.
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| 2:1-5 |
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God's
response is to proclaim His faithfulness
Canaanites who remain will be adversaries
against the Israelites; their gods will snare
the Israelites. |
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| 2:6-3:6 |
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Survey
of History Starting with Joshua till Judges |
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| 2:6-10 |
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Remembering
the death of Joshua |
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| 2:11-15 |
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Upon
the death of the Joshua generation, the next
one "did
what was evil in the sight of the Lord" |
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| 2:16-23 |
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The
Lord had mercy and raised up Judges, again
and again |
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| 3:1-6 |
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Measure
of Israel's spiritual condition |
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| 3:7-16:31
Narrative and cycle of Judges |
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| 3:7-11 |
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Othniel
was the first judge
He saved them from the King of Mesopotamia.
Peace for 40 years |
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| 3:12-31 |
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Ehud
delivered them from the king of Moab
Gory details of murdering the king; Ehud's
escape
Land rested for 80 years
Shamgar delivered them from the Philistines
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| 4:1-24 |
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Deborah
and Barak
King of Canaan had commander named Sisera
Deborah was judging Israel at that time
She devised plan, went with Barak (Commander
of tribe of Naphtali)
Drew Sisera out; he was routed in battle
Fled to tent of Jael, wife of a Kenite
Jael killed him while he was sleeping
Israelites prevailed over King of Canaan;
40 years of peace |
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| 5:1-31 |
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Song
of Deborah
Ancient epic poem, gives glimpse into world
of Northern Israel
Reads like a Biblical "Who's Who"
Celebration of the work of God |
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| 6:1-24 |
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Call
of Gideon
Peace is over; Israelites in bondage to Midianites |
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| 6:1-10 |
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Describes
situation that needed resolution |
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| 6:11-24 |
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Angel
of the Lord calls on Gideon
Gideon asks for a sign
Makes a kid and a cake, angel instructs him
to place on a rock
Immediate holocaust - Gideon has his sign |
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| 6:25-40 |
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Gideon's
activities
Breaks down an altar to Baal, under cover
of darkness
Townspeople were outraged; wanted to kill
Gideon
Gideon's father chides them that Baal should
fight his own battles
Gideon musters up followers among all the
tribes
Asks God for one more sign - dew on fleece
when all else is dry
Then adds one more - dry on fleece when all
else is covered with dew
God accommodates his requests |
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| 7:1-25 |
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Gideon
delivers Israel |
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| 7:1-8 |
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Battle
is delayed because Israel has too many troops
Strategies are devised to cull out the fearful
Started with 32,000 troops; ended with 300 |
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| 7:9-14 |
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Gideon
goes down to Midianite camp; eavesdrops
Overhears a dream; interprets it to be a message
from God |
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| 7:15-25 |
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Battle
plan
Gideon gave each man a trumpet
Surrounded the Midianites at night; blew the
trumpets.
Routed the enemy; Gideon and his men followed
them all the way to the Jordan River |
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| 8:1-21 |
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The
Dark Side of Gideon |
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| 8:1-5 |
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The
Ephraimites felt slighted for not being included
in battle
Gideon told them the battle had really been
the Lord's |
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| 8:6-9 |
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Gideon
pursued the Midianites
Asked for bread for his troops from Succoth
Townspeople doubted he'd return with spoils
from capture, refused
Gideon threatened to beat them upon his return
Asked for bread at the next town
Same response from townspeople
Gideon promised to return and tear down their
tower |
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| 8:10-12 |
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Captures
the kings |
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| 8:13-17 |
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Returns
to the two towns and makes good on his threats |
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| 8:18-21 |
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Kills
the two Midianite Kings |
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| 8:22-35 |
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People
wanted to make him king; he refused saying
only the Lord would rule over them
Asked for earrings of gold
Promptly melted them down and made them into
an ephod
(reserved only for high priest) and wore it
proudly, basically making himself the spiritual
leader of the people.
Israel worshiped it; went to Gideon's head
Land had peace for 40 years
But this is the first time the people did
evil in the sight of the
Lord even before the death of the judge. Deterioration
continues |
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| 9:1-22 |
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Rise
of Abimelech (son of Gideon, also now called
Jerubbaal)
Wanted to be king; slew 70 of his brothers
(only Jotham escaped)
Jotham shouts a parable to the people, warning
them of
bad leadership
Then he runs away out of fear |
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| 9:23-57 |
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Fall
of Abimelech
After a three-year honeymoon, the people of
Shechem revolted
Abimelech was killed (Good example of reaping
what you sow) |
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| 10:1-5 |
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Series
of minor Judges |
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| 10:6-18 |
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Situation
leading up to need for Jephthah
Israelites in bondage to Philistines and Ammonites |
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| 11:1-28 |
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Leaders
of Gilead choose Jephthah, also a Gileadite
The leaders had previously banished him, now
need his help
Offered to make him their head if he was successful
Jephthah tried to negotiate peace with the
Ammonites |
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| 11:29-40 |
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Ammonites
rejected peace, Jephthah's vow
Vow's to kill the first person he sees upon
his return if he
is victorious
He is victorious; first person happens to
be his only child -
a daughter
She accepts his vow, goes off with her friends
for two months to bewail her virginity. Then
he sacrifices her. |
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| 12:1-7 |
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Tribe
of Ephraim felt slighted re: previous battle
Go to war against Jephthah
This time Jephthah does not try to negotiate
(remember the Ammonites, chapter 11)
Warring among tribes is an indication of how
society
is deteriorating |
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| 12:8-15 |
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Another
list of minor judges |
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| 13:1-25 |
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Birth
of Samson
Angel of the Lord announced Samson's birth
to his
future parents
She was not to eat anything unclean or fermented
The son would be a Nazirite |
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| 14:1-20 |
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Samson
falls for a foreign woman, a Philistine (Philistines
are ruling over Israel at this point)
Demands that his parents "get her"
for him
On the way is attacked by a lion, kills it
Shortly thereafter sees bees eating from the
carcass
Goes "down" to the Philistines to
marry the woman
Makes a wager re: new clothes with newfound
companions
Tells them a riddle, and they can't solve
it
Companions convince his wife to help them
She finds out the answer, promptly tells her
"people"
They answer the riddle; Samson realizes he's
been duped
Kills 30 men, takes their clothes and pays
his wager
Leaves his bride, who is given to someone
else |
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| 15:1-20 |
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Further
vengeance by Samson |
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| 15:1-8 |
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Samson
has a change of heart re: his wife
Finds out that she is married to someone else
Takes revenge on the Philistines by tying
torches to foxes' tails and burning wheat
harvest. |
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| 15:9-17 |
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Philistines
threaten Judah, want them to hand Samson over
3000 Judahites go to Samson to convince him
to go peacefully
Samson agrees, is bound, and is led away
As they arrive at the camp, "the Spirit
of the Lord" comes upon him
His bonds "melt" and he slays 1000
men |
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| 15:18-20 |
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After
his huge victory, he's thirsty with no available
water
He prays to God; water comes out of rock |
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| 16:1-31 |
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Samson's
downfall and death |
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| 16:1-3 |
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More
women trouble |
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| 16:4-22 |
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Delilah
Philistines bribed Delilah to find the source
of his strength
Three times Samson gave her bogus responses
She pressed him greatly
Eventually he said, "It's the hair."
She had his hair shaved while he slept
Philistines rushed in, paid her the money
and captured Samson
Gouged out his eyes |
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| 16:23-31 |
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Death
of Samson
Philistines gathered to worship their god,
Dagon
Brought in Samson to make sport of him
Unbeknownst to them, his hair had grown back
Samson prayed, brought down the house (literally)
3000 Philistines as well as Samson died that
day
Samson had ruled for 20 years |
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| 17:1-21:25
Epilogue, the Time after the Judges |
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| 17:1-13 |
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The
Idolatry of Micah
Micah, (from tribe of Ephraim) stole money
from his mom
Finally confessed. Returned it to her
In her joy she offered the money to the Lord,
in the form of
an idol
Micah had already set up a shrine and had
installed his son
as priest
One day a Levite showed up at his door, looking
for "whatever"
Micah offered to give him room and board if
he'd stay and be his
own "personal priest"
The Levite was only too happy to oblige |
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| 18:1-31 |
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The
tribe of Dan is unsatisfied over their inheritance.
They
want what they feel is rightfully theirs
Dispatched five men to espy out the land
Happened upon the house of Micah
Recognized the Levite, asked him about the
success of
their journey
He told them what they wanted to hear
Danites found land way up north (beyond the
Promised Land)
Occupied by a peaceful culture
Troops were gathered, stopped by Micah's house
and convinced
Levite to join them, bringing along all of
Micah's idols
Micah gave chase, realized he was no match
for the Danite army
Danites routed the peaceful settlers, rebuilt
the town
Established their own shrine, complete with
their own
priesthood |
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| 19:1-20:48 |
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Story
of the Levite and his Concubine
This story is the epitome of the breakdown
of society. The
people of God are fighting among each other
and doing
unthinkable deeds. It says "there was
no king in Israel" - they
had no monarchy, but they had no loyalty to
the Lord either. |
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| 19:1-10 |
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a
Levite's concubine returned to her father's
home
After four months, the Levite returned to
take her home.
The father showed great hospitality - feasting
and drinking for
days |
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| 19:11-15 |
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The
journey home begins
They have no place to rest |
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| 19:16-24 |
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They
decide to spend the night in Gibeah, in Benjamin
An old man offers to put them up for the night
The townspeople want to "know" the
Levite
The Levite gives them his concubine instead |
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| 19:25-30 |
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By
morning she was dead
The Levite dismembered her, sending a piece
to each tribe |
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| 20:1-7 |
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The
Israelites respond to this call to arms |
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| 20:8-17 |
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Israelites
demand the tribe of Benjamin hand over men
of Gibeah |
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| 20:18-25 |
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Benjamites
refuse, Judah goes first but is unsuccessful |
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| 20:26-28 |
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Israelites
pray to God
God responds |
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| 20:29-48 |
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Benjamin
is defeated, Gibeah is burned
(Notice any major similarities with story
of Sodom and
Gomorrah?) |
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| 21:1-25 |
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Restoration
of Benjamin
Apparently all the women of Benjamin were
killed in the fray |
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| 21:1-4 |
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Israelites
take an oath not to give any of their daughters
to Benjamites
Then they have second thoughts |
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| 21:5-15 |
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Solution
is to ravish city of Jabesh Gilead and take
their unmarried daughters. All others are
killed. 400 virgins are
captured |
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| 21:16-24 |
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Numbers
are insufficient.
Benjamites are encouraged to steal virgins
from Shiloh, which
they do |
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| 21:25 |
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"In
those days there was no king in Israel; every
man did what was right in his own eyes."
Can't get much worse than this |