Introduction<\/strong>
\nThe book of Judges records one of the worst periods of history for the Israelite nation. God\u2019s intention in bringing the nation out of Egyptian captivity into Canaan was to rule as their sole king in a theocracy. The people were to worship and serve him faithfully by living out the Covenant Law they had agreed to, both in Exodus (first generation out of Egypt) and in Deuteronomy and Joshua (second generation). Instead, Judges tells the story of a people who repeatedly refused to live up to their end of the covenant.<\/p>\nIn reality, this book should never have been written because the story it contains should never have occurred. During the approximately three hundred years of the judges, the nation went through a \u201cspin cycle\u201d where Israel sinned (failure), God judged them with a foreign nation (punishment), Israel repented (repentance), and God delivered them with one or more judges (deliverance), who then ruled in peace for a period of time. This repetition of grace in the face of rebellion is the glimmer of light in a dark theme. Sadly, the two verses that best sum up this book are 2:19 and 21:25.<\/p>\n
\u201cWhen a leader died, the next generation would again act more wickedly than the previous one.\u201d (Judges 2:19)<\/p>\n
\u201cIn those days Israel had no king. Each man did what he considered to be right.\u201d (Judges 21:25)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Chapter two<\/strong> contains a rare public appearance of the \u201cLORD\u2019s angelic messenger\u201d (a Christophany