LWWC - Judges - Session 9
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This final session in Judges (chapter 21) reveals the chaos, confusion, and consequences that come when people turn away from God and try to fix life on their own terms .
The message continues from the tragic events of Judges 19–20, where deep moral corruption led to violence, division, and near destruction of the tribe of Benjamin. In chapter 21, Israel attempts to “fix” the situation—but instead of seeking God’s direction, they rely on human reasoning, making rash vows and questionable decisions that only complicate things further.
A key theme throughout the teaching is how sin leads to disorder, and human attempts to correct it—without God—often create even greater problems. The Israelites grieve the loss of a tribe, yet their solution involves more violence and manipulation, showing how far they have drifted from God’s wisdom.
The sermon highlights a powerful truth: God has given every person a will—the ability to choose. With that will, we either:
- Trust God and follow His ways
- Or choose sin and live according to our own understanding
The book of Judges repeatedly shows what happens when people choose the latter.
The defining verse of the message captures the entire book: “In those days there was no king in Israel; everyone did what was right in his own eyes.”
This is not just a historical statement—it is a spiritual warning. When there is no authority of God in a person’s life, chaos follows. This applies not only to nations, but to individuals.
The teaching then contrasts three biblical roles:
- High Priest – meets our needs, forgives, restores
- Prophet – speaks truth and direction
- King – has authority over our lives
While many are comfortable with Jesus as Savior (High Priest) and even as Teacher (Prophet), the greatest struggle is accepting Him as King—the One who has full authority over our decisions, time, resources, and direction.
The message makes clear: When we reject Christ’s kingship, we forfeit two critical things:
- Peace
- Safety
Just as Israel descended into moral and societal breakdown without a king, individuals experience instability when they refuse to fully surrender to Christ’s authority.
The session closes with a strong call to learn from Scripture. The Bible does not hide human failure—it reveals it so we can avoid repeating it. God’s desire is not for us to live independently, but to walk in relationship with Him, trusting His ways over our own.
Key TakeawayWhen people live by their own understanding instead of submitting to God, chaos follows. True peace, safety, and direction come only when Jesus is not just Savior—but King of our lives.