He is There Now, Just as Much as in the Past - Daily Devotions with the Dean
Tuesday • 8/2/2022 • y2p13tuu
This morning’s Scriptures are: Psalm 78:1-39; Judges 7:1-18; Acts 3:1-11; John 1:19-28
This morning’s Canticles are: following the OT reading, Canticle 13 (“A Song of Praise,” BCP, p. 90); following the Epistle reading, Canticle 18 (“A Song to the Lamb,” Revelation 4:11; 5:9-10, 13, BCP, p. 93)
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One of the “historical” Psalms, today’s Psalm, 78, reviews Israel’s history, emphasizing that Israel continually forgot Yahweh’s achievements. God’s people became oblivious to his saving hand time and again: “They had forgotten his achievements, the marvels he had shown them” (Psalm 78:11 Jerusalem Bible). Yahweh is aware. In today’s passage from Judges, Yahweh makes it clear that the glory for a victory in battle over Israel’s enemies, the Midianites, is to belong to him alone.
The troops with you are too many … Israel would only take the credit away from me. — Judges 7:2. To press home the point that the Lord himself is the only ruler and protector his people need, the Lord trims Gideon’s army from over 30,000 to a meager 300. These are Israelites who have been living and hiding in the mountains from the Midianites. These are not—the 300 included—some sort of highly trained elite fighting force. After Gideon sends home the 22,000 who admit that they are “fearful and trembling,” God instructs Gideon to have the remaining 10,000 drink water from the spring where they are camped. While they drink, nine thousand, seven hundred men remain on the alert, kneeling down and “putting their hands to their mouths.” Three-hundred are less cautious, “lap[ping] the water with their tongues, as a dog laps.” The Lord tells Gideon to send the larger group home, leaving a small force of 300 men. With the 300, the Lord says, I will deliver you.
Whenever we feel under-resourced, it’s good to be reminded, “Nothing can hinder the Lord from saving by many or by few” (1 Samuel 14:6).
… and afterwards your hands shall be strengthened to attack the camp. — Judges 7:11. The Lord knows Gideon well, and his graciousness is on abundant display when he anticipates Gideon’s fear: the Midianites are so numerous they fill the valley “like locusts.” Yahweh calls for a nighttime attack. However, in advance, he provides a sign, unasked for, that Gideon and his forces will be successful. Gideon and his servant make a secret foray into the Midianite camps and hear a man recounting a fearful dream of a Midianite tent being rolled over by an Israelite loaf of bread. The man’s comrade declares the dream is a portent of an Israelite victory.
“For the Lord and for Gideon!” — Judges 7:18. Confident, Gideon arms his company with horns and torches hidden in pitchers. Perhaps a bit … overconfident? arrogant?... Gideon tells them that during the attack they are to shout that they are fighting, not just for the Lord, but for Gideon. To this point, Gideon has been timid, but humble. Assurance of victory, however, has affected Gideon profoundly. The moment he displays courage, he also betrays pride.
One reason we have historical Psalms, like the 78th, is to remind Israel (and also our forgetful selves) of God’s power to save. They are there to keep us mindful of his redeeming love: “…so that they should set their hope in God, and not forget the works of God, but keep his commandments; and that they should not be like their ancestors, a stubborn and rebellious generation…” (Psalm 78:7-8 NRSV). We have in the Psalms, Israel’s songs, the stories of the failure of his people to appreciate him, thank him, and praise him for delivering them multiple times from enemies, famine, death, and destruction. We ourselves are not unlike the Israelites, which is why we have our own reminders through our worship, tradition, and rituals. Someone (I wish I could remember who!) once said, “Good rituals…condition all of us to take the proper attitude toward different aspects of our lives.”
My prayer for you today is that God reminds you of his saving hand in your own personal past: healings, deliverances, answers to prayers—whatever it may be that reminds you he is there and that he cares about YOU as much now as he has in the past.
Be blessed this day,
Reggie Kidd+
Image: Hult, Adolf, 1869-1943; Augustana synod. [from old catalog], No restrictions, via Wikimedia Commons