Today, I am reading and commenting on Judges 9-10.
I really want to comment on the parable about the king of trees which Jotham told when the people of Schechem crowned Abimelek king, but I don’t see quite see how it connects to Abimelek. I guess the connection comes from the fact that Gideon, the father of both Jotham and Abimelek, had refused to be king when the Israelites asked him to take that role. Which brings me to what I see as the point of Jotham’s parable. I see two possible points to this parable, and possibly both were intended. First, those who have demonstrated their ability are more valuable to society doing what they are already doing than in ruling over others. Second, generally, those who are willing to take the job of ruler, let alone those who seek it, should not be allowed to have it. The reason for this is that, if they have the talent to be a good ruler they will recognize that using that talent for something else will be more valuable to society than using it to rule over others. Once more this passage reinforces my thought that Israel in the years before King Saul was a nation which functioned according to libertarian ideals.
Ultimately, here, and throughout the Book of Judges, we are shown that a libertarian government only works when the people it governs are godly.
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.