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The
Book of Judges
The Book of Judges was taught by Dr. James Modlish
Judges
15:1-20
I. The
deception of the Philistines (15:1-5)
The
devil majors in leading the Christian to believe that the
world has the answers to life. Samson had pursued this
line of reasoning, only to be deceived.
Foxes:
Jesus called
Herod one - (Lk. 14:31,32) Herod is a type of the
antichrist.
Foxes spoil
the fruit - (Song of Sol. 2:15). This is the devil's
work.
Samson, with
the empowerment of the Spirit of God, uses the devil's
tools against him. (1 Jn. 2:13)
II. The
survival of the brethren (15:6-13)
Sometimes
the brethren can be like sharks (Gal. 5:15). One of the
most difficult duties of the believer is to love the
brethren. (1 Jn. 3:14-16). We are, however, reminded that
tough love is occasionally required. (1 Cor. 11:16-19;
Tit. 3: 10; Phil. 2:14; 1 Cor. 10: 9-11).
III. The use
of what's available (15:14-17)
Even
though the Spirit of the Lord came mightily upon Samson,
he must have humanly felt very outgunned with nothing but
a jawbone. Excalibur was unnecessary because of (1 Cor.
1:27-29).
IV. A great
thirst - great revival (15:18-20)
The
water came from a source that would have been totally
overlooked - the weapon that God had given Samson.
Our thirst
will be satisfied by our weapon, the sword of the Spirit
- (Eph. 6:17). A great thirst is predicted for the last
days --- the evidence is that the people are drinking
something, but it does not satisfy. (Amos
8:11-13)
Judges
16:1-31
Introduction:
(vs. 1-20)
Samson
had already gotten into trouble with one pagan woman, but
now he tries again, this time traveling deep into enemy
territory to Gaza. Again, God warned him by allowing the
enemy almost to catch him; but Samson refused to repent.
It was then that Delilah came into his life and led him
to his doom.
The obvious
is that Samson has more than a problem with the flesh -
he seems to be mesmerized by the general atmosphere of
the world and the entire pagan system. The rest of the
story shows the tragic end of the believer who will not
let God have His way with his life. From now one, Samson
does nothing but lose.
I. The
losses of Samson (vs. 21-24)
A.
His hair - this is the symbol of his Nazarite dedication
(Num. 6:5).
B.
His strength - we are reminded in Phil. 4:13 that any
real strength comes from God. It's easy to see that
separation and strength go hand in-hand.
C.
His light - for they put out his eyes. When David
confesses his sin he refers to lack of light in his eyes
(Psa. 38: 10). "Light is sown for the righteous." (Psa.
97:11)
D.
His liberty - for they bound him with fetters of brass.
"... where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty."
(2 Cor. 3:17) It seems that so many Christians are dying
to lose their liberty to sin (1 Cor. 8:9) or to legalism
(Gal. 2:4; 5:1,13).
E.
His usefulness to the Lord - for he ended up grinding
corn instead of fighting God's battles. All of this began
when Samson despised his blessings and defied his
parents! (1 Cor. 1:28)
F.
His testimony - for he was the laughingstock of the
Philistines. Their was given all the glory, not the God
of Israel.
II. Last
opportunities can be best (vs. 25-31)
Apparently,
Samson repented of his sin for God gave him one more
chance to act by faith (Heb. 11: 3 2). Samson finally
redeems the time for his days were evil. (Eph.
5:16)
III. The
summary of a tragic life:
Samson
illustrates the man who has power to conquer others, but
who cannot conquer himself Instead of leading the nation,
he preferred to work independently; and as a result, left
no permanent victory behind. He was remembered for what
he destroyed, not for what he built up. He lacked
discipline and direction; without these, his strength
would accomplish little.
It remained
for Samuel and David in later years to finally defeat the
Philistines. Samuel by one prayer accomplished more than
Samson did in twenty years of fighting. (1 Sam.
7:9-14)
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Judges
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