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Judges and Ruth: Anarchy and Faithfulness

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  1. Lesson One
    Overview of Judges (Judges 1–3)
    19 Activities
    |
    2 Assessments
  2. Lesson Two
    Judges (Judges 4–8, 13–16)
    27 Activities
    |
    1 Assessment
  3. Lesson Three
    A Divine Judge and Anarchy (Judges 9–12, 17–21)
    20 Activities
    |
    2 Assessments
  4. Lesson Four
    Ruth the Moabite (Ruth 1–4)
    15 Activities
    |
    1 Assessment
  5. Lesson Five
    Lovingkindness in Ruth (Ruth 1–4 review)
    15 Activities
  6. Course Wrap-Up
    Course Completion
    1 Activity
    |
    1 Assessment
Lesson 1, Activity 17
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In Front | Workbook: Protection and Prosperity

1 Min
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Grab your Workbook Journal!

[Record your answers in the workbook provided at the beginning of this course.]

The disobedience and evil in a book like Judges might give us a false confidence in our own righteousness. This era in history was so bad that we can’t help but feel virtuous by comparison. The worship of fertility gods especially sounds like a sin we would never commit. But our situation is perhaps not so different. 

We’re more like the judges than we may admit. They struggled with the tension of trusting God in a difficult geopolitical moment in history. They were surrounded by enemies and strapped by limited resources. Trusting YHWH was a matter of literally trusting Him with their lives.

We fail to trust God in matters of much less gravity. It’s easy to become preoccupied with what God can do for us, rather than who He is. And when this happens we begin shopping around for better deals with other “gods.” We rely on money, jobs, status, insurance, and any number of other things to provide for us in ways that replace God’s role in our lives.

  1. Identify one or more of the things you look to for relief or prosperity instead of waiting on God to provide. What are the “fertility gods” you look to—to stand in for the promises of God?