Verses 1–2
Introduction
In Judges 3 we get acquainted with the first three judges and their performance. Of all three we read something that gives their person a lower appearance. Othniel is a younger brother of Caleb, Ehud is left-handed and Shamgar uses an oxgoad in battle. In general, such men do not get the most votes in an election. It makes it clear that they are men of God’s choice and not of the people, of man. This choice belongs to the ways God goes in broken situations, when the shine of the beginning has faded.
Just look at the origins of the church with its great apostles and verify this with the later situation, that of decay. In the beginning, the Spirit can work mightily as an answer to the glorification of Christ. After the onset of decay, the instruments are also characterized by certain forms of weakness. Luther and Calvin, Darby and Kelly, all great men of God in their time, did not climb the height of a Paul and a Peter. Yet God wanted to use them for His purposes, in the reformation of the sixteenth century and in the revival of the nineteenth century. In this way God always wants, even today, to use weak, limited and insignificant people for the liberation of His people.
Generally speaking, the reformation is the liberation from the yoke of Rome, the ritualism; the reveille is the liberation from the dead orthodoxy, the rationalism, in the Protestant churches. The liberation needed today is the liberation of the spirit of Laodicea, the spirit of complacency, the desire to have a spiritual life without life from the Spirit. It’s about the experience: what do I feel good about?
The things of God are judged according to our taste and feelings and not according to the Word of God. The fact that these enemies are particularly active today does not mean that the old enemies, ritualism and rationalism, have been defeated forever. These enemies will constantly try to get God’s people back in their grip. This state of affairs means that we have to deal with these enemies over and over again and act as a judge.
Be Taught War
Judges 3:1-Joshua : of this chapter belong to the previous chapter. They describe other reasons for which God has left the enemies in the land. God never does something without intent. He has His own reasons for all His actions. Sometimes He even has multiple purposes in mind. He can work several things with a certain action or a certain word. The ultimate goal of God is to glorify Himself in the happiness and blessing of man in general and of His people in particular. The reason mentioned here is that God through the presence of the enemies wants to teach His people war.
When a man is prosperous, his life is going well and without hardship, it is not so clear what is present in his heart for God. Prosperity does not take away the unfaithfulness present in the heart. If everything goes well, there are no exercises and struggles to learn Who God is and how to use His power to overcome hardship. It is not God’s intention that we allow ourselves to be overcome by the enemy, by evil, but that we overcome evil in His power.
God knows what is in man, but through the enemies left behind man will discover this for himself. His reaction to evil shows what is in his heart. If there is a real connection with God, he will go to God when danger threatens.
What is created by unfaithfulness – the people have been unfaithful and have failed to eradicate all enemies – is used by God for good. The spared enemies serve to teach generations who did not participate in the conquest of Canaan to fight for the blessings God has bestowed. By the presence of the enemies they can show if they appreciate the land of God.
Whoever appreciates what God has given, will not allow the enemy to take possession or keep that gift of God. He will fight for it. What is thus taken from the power of the enemy will have an extra valuable meaning. In daily life this is also the case. After all, it adds value to our property if we have worked for it ourselves, isn’t it? It is much more our property. We enjoy it more intense than things that have been fallen into our laps.
Times of decay are times of struggle for one who wants to be faithful to the Lord. In the second letter to Timothy, which describes the time of decay in Christianity, reference is made several times to struggle (2 Timothy 2:3-Numbers :; 2 Timothy 4:7). In these texts the individual is called upon to remain faithful in the midst of decay. Battle reveals winners (Revelation 2:7; Revelation 2:11Revelation 2:17; Revelation 2:26Revelation 3:5; Revelation 3:12Revelation 3:21).
In all this, we must always remember that our struggle is in the heavenly places and is not a struggle against flesh and blood. The peoples who remained are a picture of the flesh within us. The flesh is not left within us so that we may serve it, but so that we may learn to judge it. These peoples can also be a picture of a “thorn in the flesh” as Paul had it (2 Corinthians 12:7). The purpose of that thorn was not to paralyze him in his service to God, but to keep him humble and dependent.
In this way there can be things in our lives that we would like to get rid of, but that we still have to carry with us. These are not sins, for these we must condemn. It mostly is about unpleasant matters which, in our opinion, limit our functioning. But God has allowed these things to keep us humble so that we can function better for Him.