Cycles of Grace: Judges and the Need for Christ

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The Book of Judges can be outlined as a series of cycles of decline, revival, and then deeper decline and revival. Every time the children of Israel fall into idolatry, it leads to a kind of slavery. Then they cry out, and God sends them a judge or a deliverer, a savior, who saves them. [00:03:34]

Every time the deliverer gets more and more flawed. When you get to Jephthah, when you get to Samson, Samson's a mess. I won't go into much more detail. I mean, he's famous, of course, because of his strength, but read him. He is an absolute mess. So what's happening is all through the Book of Judges. [00:05:13]

There was no king in Israel; everyone did what was right in his own eyes. What it was saying is people were not going to follow the law of God the way they were living in Israel at that time, which was tribally, without a central monarchy, without a central king. [00:05:39]

God says, "I will never break my covenant with you, yet you have disobeyed me." Then he says, "Why have you done this? Now I will not drive the people out before you, and they will become snares for you." Right there is the essence of it. God says, "I'm never ever going to break my covenant with you." [00:06:49]

Will God unconditionally love the people even though they disobeyed him, or will he punish them and disavow them and destroy them because he's dissipated? In other words, is the covenant that God made with the children of Israel conditional or unconditional? Is it one of unconditional love, or is it conditioned on their obedience? [00:07:17]

The Book of Judges never resolves that question, and as we're going to see, it's not resolved throughout the rest of the Old Testament. It's very easy to say, "Well, God basically just loves us." That's the liberal view. Or some people say, "No, no, unless you obey, God is going to destroy you." That's the conservative view. [00:07:28]

God relentlessly offers his grace to people who do not deserve it, who do not seek it, and never appreciate it even after they've been saved by it. You see that again and again in the Book of Judges. So it really is pointing forward to God's grace, even though it doesn't really explain how God can be so gracious to us. [00:08:39]

When you get to the very end of the Book of Judges, it says there was no king in Israel; everybody did what was right in his own eyes. What it was saying is, look how bad things are. Unless we get a king, we're never really going to be okay. But of course, we know that even after God gives them a king, that won't be enough either. [00:09:16]

How can you, when you look at such a terrible husband, not think about the true husband, Jesus Christ? He didn't sacrifice us in order to save his skin; he sacrificed his skin in order to save us. Jesus is the true husband that the terrible husband at the end of the Book of Judges points to. [00:11:06]

Jesus is the real judge, the real deliverer that the bad deliverers like Samson and Jephthah point to, and the good deliverers like Deborah and Othniel point to. He's the true judge, he's the true deliverer, he's the true husband, he's the true king, and without him, there is no hope. [00:11:23]

That's what the Book of Judges says, and yet there's plenty of hope because we have Jesus Christ. So Judges is pointing forward to that, and that's good news. [00:11:45]

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