"Mighty Warrior" February 23 Readings: Judges 6-10
Reading the Bible Chronologically in 2024
This year, instead of reading from Genesis to Revelation, we will read the Bible as the story flows, as it happened and was written. There are several plans out there and I have worked to combine them into a plan that lets the Bible tell its own story "as it happened." Remember, the Bible is inspired, but not in the order the books appear in our Bibles. The Old Testament is approximately 3/4 of the Bible, but we will give more emphasis to the New Testament, spending half the year in the Old Testament and half in the New.
Bible Readings: Judges 6-10
Background:
Today we read the story of Gideon, the nobody whom God made a judge. It is a story of God's power to transform and accomplish great things with the weakest of vessels who submit to his use.
Daily Devotional: Mighty Warrior
udges 6:12 is one of those great moments in history. Gideon was hiding in the winepress, threshing his grain and keeping his head down. The most unlikely of heroes, he the insignificant son of an insignificant family in the large, but largely insignificant tribe of Manasseh – he was not voted “Most Likely to Deliver Israel” during his high school years.
Yet, God used him. God appeared to him and defined him not by his past or even by his present, but by what God was planning to make of him. “The Lord is with you, mighty warrior.” Mighty warrior? There was no evidence that this was true in Gideon’s life to this point. But God tapped him on the shoulder and called him to his service, and made the promise that changes everything. “I will be with you.” With that simple promise, God sent Moses into Egypt, Joshua against Jericho, and now Gideon against the mighty Midianites. None of these men had the resources or strength to fight the battles they were called to engage. Each one knew and reminded God of his inadequacy. But God never let that be an issue. It was not about Moses’ strength, but God’s. Joshua did not face Jericho in his own power. And Gideon did not have to fight Midian with his own abilities. “I will be with you.”
A servant of God doing the work of God can depend on the powerful presence of God to accomplish the work God has assigned.
God has assigned me many difficult tasks. The biggest of all of them is gaining control over my own flesh by walking in the power of the Spirit. I have to resist the work of the Enemy. I have ministry responsibilities and challenges. So do you. Each of us faces tasks that can tend to overwhelm us.
God comes to us as he came to Gideon. It is not about my abilities or yours, our talents, or our self-image. It is about what God says we are. God deals with us not based on our own resources but based on what he is desiring to do in and through us.
As we go forward we have the same promise that God gave Gideon. "I am with you." We are not on our own here. As we become what God has determined that we will be we can rest and rely on his presence and power among us. It is not up to my ability or willpower, but the grace and power of God. He is able when I am not.
Father, I praise you for your power and thank you that you empower everything you command. I am weak, but you are strong. I fail, but you succeed. May I rely on you and your strength rather than my own abilities.
Consider God's Word:
Are you a vessel in the hands of God?
What defines you? Do you judge yourself by what others think of you or by what God says about you?
Remember that it is God's word that defines not only who you are, but who you are going to be
What defines you? Do you judge yourself by what others think of you or by what God says about you?
Remember that it is God's word that defines not only who you are, but who you are going to be
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