Today, I am reading and commenting on Judges 4-6.
As I mentioned yesterday, early Israel was governed much the way in which libertarians imagine that government should work. Today’s passage illustrates this. For all intents and purposes, Deborah was the ruler over Israel at this time, but she did not command any troops. She ruled by virtue of the fact that the people of Israel trusted her decisions and came to her to settle disputes among them. She was someone blessed by God with the ability to make good decisions. The passage does not tell us how she knew to do so, but in God’s name she ordered Barak to take men from Zebulun and Napthali and confront Sisera, who was commanding the army oppressing the Israelites at the time. Barak was unwilling to do so unless she went with him. Deborah’s response suggests that if Barak had not insisted on her going with him, he would have been on this list as one of the judges, instead of merely as a war commander. This tells us two things. First, that Deborah was probably not unique in being a woman who led the Israelites. In the cases of the other women, there was either no major battle fought while they led the nation, or the war commander they called upon to act did so without asking them to go to war with them. Second, if Barak had been willing to take Deborah’s instruction and go to war without her, he would likely have become the leader of Israel after the defeat of Sisera.
We often miss an important aspect of the story of Gideon. The passage almost glosses over it, but before it introduces us to Gideon it tells us that a prophet arose among the Israelites. The prophet called upon the people to repent of their sin and return to worshiping God. Gideon did not act in a vacuum. There was already a revival occurring in Israel when God spoke to Gideon. If you look at the history of great changes in history, almost always there had been a revival before the point typically identified as the beginning of the change. Perhaps the prophet mentioned here was to Gideon as Deborah was to Barak, except that Gideon was willing to lead without leaning on him as a crutch (it is worth noting that this prophet, who was almost certainly a man, appears to have had the role which Deborah would have had if Barak had been willing to go to war without her).
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.