We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

Immanuel, God with us in our nature, in our sorrow, in our lifework, in our punishment, in our grave, and now with us, or rather we with Him, in resurrection, ascension, triumph, and Second Advent splendor.
C.H. Spurgeon

Bible Reading: MAR12: Judges 1-3

MARCH 12

The Book of Judges continues the story of Israel after the
death of Joshua. It is a book of defeat and disgrace. Chapter 2:10-
19 summarizes the entire book–blessing, disobedience, chastening,
repentance, and deliverance. Judges is the book of incomplete
victory; the story of failure on the part of God’s people to trust
His Word and claim His power.

In chapters 1 and 2 we see at least three failures on the
part of the nation. While verses 1-18 of chapter 1 record the early
victories of Judah and Simeon, the remainder of the chapter is a
record of repeated defeats. What began as a series of victories, led
by the Lord, ended in a series of compromises! Of course, they were
able to rationalize their failures by making slaves out of the
heathen people, but this only led to further trouble.

Besides their failure to conquer the land, they also failed
to consider the Law and this, of course, was the reason for their
repeated failures and defeats. The nation followed the Lord during
the years of Joshua and the leaders that followed him; but, when
they were dead, the nation backslid (see chapter 2:10). The people
had not even won their own children to the Lord! They had even
failed to teach them the Law! How often this happens to nations,
churches, and families. How easy it is for the “younger generation”
to fall away from the Lord, if the “older generation” is not
faithful to teach them and set the best examples of obedience before
them.

The third failure of the people was their not cleaving unto
the Lord. They forsook Him and followed other gods; and, as a
result, God forsook them. He “sold them” into the hands of their
enemies time after time. Instead of enjoying the “rest” God had
promised, the nation was in and out of slavery for hundreds of
years, with only occasional periods of “rest” from the Lord. When
the judgment became so severe that the nation finally did cry out to
God, only then would He send a deliverer. It is sad to say that the
people would turn to the Lord only when in trouble; once the Judge
was gone, the nation would fall back into sin again. How typical of
human nature!