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Thursday, March 12, 2015

THE UGLIEST CHAPTERS


The last 3 chapters of the book of Judges are ---- disturbing.   And relevant.  And more disturbing because they are so relevant.

In chapter 19 a woman cheated on her husband, a preacher (Levite).  Then she left him, and moved back in with her father.    Her father not only took her back but when the reverend arrived to speak kindly to her and bring her back, Big Daddy got him drunk and tried to keep them from leaving (Judges 19: 1-9).

Unfaithful spouses, unequal yoking, indulgent and enabling parents of adult “children.”  Sin followed by more sin.  That was the culture in Old Testament Israel, post-Joshua.   And it got worse. 

On their way home no other Jew would offer the preacher and his wife the customary hospitality, except one nice old man coming home from work in a Benjamite village (19: 16-21).   That night men descended on the nice old man’s house and tried to sexually assault the preacher (Judges 19:22).  These weren’t pagans.  They were “good” Jewish men descended from Israel’s youngest and most cherished son. 

When they couldn’t get to the Levite himself, they gang-raped his wife.  The attack was so brutal that she died. (19: 25-28)

Her husband had a mental breakdown, carried his wife’s brutalized body home, and cut her up into 12 pieces which he mailed to each of the tribes of Israel.  (19: 29-30)

Let’s just pause there for a second so you can form the appropriate mental images.


Representatives from every tribe, except Benjamin, met, but they didn’t know what the crap to do. 

And so it was that all who saw it said, “No such deed has been done or seen from the day that the children of Israel came up from the land of Egypt until this day. Consider it, confer, and speak up!” (Judges 19: 30)

Eventually they assembled the combined army and demanded justice--- justice in the national interest. 

Deliver up the men, the perverted men who are in Gibeah, that we may put them to death and remove the evil from Israel! (Judges 20:13)

Crickets were heard in Benjamin.  

There would be no punishment, no trial, no investigation.   Benjamin basically said, “And?  What you gonna do about?”

 

So they went to war, tribe against tribes, Jew against Jew.  In 3 days, more than 65,000 died on both sides.   (Judges 20; 21)

One sin, followed by more sin, followed by inhumanity, followed by brutality, lead to confusion, protest, resistance, and war.

Where do wars and fights come from among you? Do they not come from your desires for pleasure that war in your members?  (James 4: 1)

The Disturbing Relevance
Early this morning  in Ferguson, MO,  during a protest in support of a federal report finding racial injustice in policing, two police officers were shot.   

Sin, followed by more sin, followed by inhumanity, followed by brutality, lead to confusion, protest, resistance, and war.

Human beings in America in the 21st century are fundamentally the same as human beings in Israel 1300 years before Jesus was born.    We are prone to the same patterns, subject to the same national tragedies unless we consider: Where do wars and fights come from among you?

Sin, followed by more sin, followed by inhumanity, followed by brutality, lead to confusion, protest, resistance, and war.

Do they not come from your desires for pleasure that war in your members?

On one side, extremists will use the attack on the Ferguson police officers to validate racism and police brutality.  On the other side, extremists will use the attack to inspire more and worse violence against police and civil authority.    They’ll demand that everybody choose one side or the other.

The children of Israel said, “Who is there among all the tribes of Israel who did not come up with the assembly to the Lord [against Benjamin]?” For they had made a great oath concerning anyone who had not come up to the Lord at Mizpah, saying, “He shall surely be put to death.” (Judges 21: 5)

But side-taking only makes things worse.

War comes from our insistence on what we want over all other concerns.  War is averted when we want righteousness over all other concerns.    That means we won’t lie to win.  We won’t steal or defraud “for the cause.”  We won’t treat others less than we would want to be treated, even if it requires us to go against our own tribe.

One Last Disturbing Thing.
The book of Judges is not written in chronological order.  (See timeline.).  The events in the last 3 chapters actually happened first, BEFORE anything else in the book. 

The nation of Israel, living in the Promised Land, experienced 3 centuries of depravity, depression, and oppression under the Moabites, Philistines, Jebusites, Amorites, etc., etc.  And it all began with their failure to stop the cycle of disturbing events in Judges chapters 19-21.

So now, what are we going to do?

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

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