Day 94 — We have been reading the Bible daily for a quarter of the year and have begun a new month. Praise God! What have you learned about God? About yourself?
Day 94 – Judges 13 – 15 (Samson, good & bad)
Chapter 13 begins with the people of Israel doing EVIL in the sight of the LORD. So, the LORD gives them over into the hand of the Philistines for 40 years.
The Philistines occupied five cities near the Mediterranean coast: Gaza, Ashkelon, Ashdod, Gath, and Ekron. It’s possible that they were oppressing Israel from the West at the same time as yesterday’s reading about the Moabites and Ammonites on the East of the Jordan River – a pincer or squeeze situation.
God raised up a Danite judge, Samson, who is probably the most familiar (and possibly the worst). His story begins with a barren woman whom the Angel of the LORD promises a son. And he is to be a Nazarite from the womb. (Numbers 6:2-8 details the Nazarite prohibitions about eating grapes, cutting hair, and touching dead bodies – all of which Samson fails.) Samson’s parents seek to train him up in a godly way, and at first, we see the LORD blessing him and stirring him to service.
In Chapter 14, Samson oddly seeks a Philistine woman as his wife. His parents object, but verse 4 reveals that this was of the LORD, as an opportunity against the Philistines. (His ways are mysterious, for sure!) On the way with his parents to make the marriage deal, a roaring lion came at Samson. Empowered by God’s spirit, he tore the lion to pieces with his bare hands. Several days later, as he returned for his wedding feast, he saw the lion’s carcass in which a swarm of bees had set up house. He swiped a handful of their honey to enjoy on his journey. Later, he thinks up a riddle to ask as a way to get “loot” from his Philistine family.
"Out of the eater came something to eat.
Out of the strong came something sweet."
None of the guests could guess the riddle, and since they didn’t want to lose 30 costly garments, they threatened his bride to find the answer. Afraid, she obeyed, and Samson was tricked. He knows what they did, and IN ANGER, with the Spirit of the LORD on him, he struck down 30 men of Ashkelon and took their spoil. Thinking Samson would not return, the bride’s father gave her to the “best man.” After all, a feast had been prepared. Can’t let it go to waste!
Chapter 15 tells how Samson returned after a cooling-off period to claim his wife and consummate his marriage, only to find his wife had been given to another. Furious, he catches 300 foxes, ties their tails together, and lights a torch between them. The foxes run wildly through the fields of ripe grain, burning it all with the olive orchards. In retaliation, the Philistines burned his wife and her father. For that he killed all of them.
Later, the Philistines came to Judah searching for Samson to kill him. The men of Judah gave him up!!! As the Philistines requested, they bound Samson with new ropes and turned him over to the enemy.
However, when they roared with glee, the Spirit of the LORD rushed upon Samson, and he burst the robes as if they were straw on fire. They melted off his hands. With those hands, he took the jawbone of a freshly dead donkey, and with it, he killed a thousand Philistines.
After all that killing, he was thirsty and called out to the LORD. Graciously, the LORD split open a rock and poured out water so Samson could drink and be refreshed.
A flawed hero, full of arrogance, but still used by God. Gives US hope, doesn’t it?