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  • March 29, 2011 by Jason Hood

    Judges: the Canaanization of Israel

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    This morning I’m teaching Judges and Ruth in an OT Intro course. Those are perhaps two of the easiest books to teach in the OT (which is why I’ve heard multiple sermon/talk series on both, a rarity for OT!): strong, central, themes that are easily seen, especially once we make the connection to our world and the life of the Christian today:

    [T]he central theme of the Book of Judges is the Canaanization of Israel.  Herein lies the key to the relevance of this ancient composition for North American Christianity, for like the Israelites of the settlement period, we have largely forgotten the covenant Lord . . . . Like the ancient Israelites we too are being squeezed into the mold of the pagan world around us.

    Evidence of the “Canaanization” of the church are everywhere: our preoccupation with material prosperity, which turns Christianity into a fertility religion;

    our syncretistic and aberrant forms of worship; our refusal to obey the Lord’s call to separation from the world;

    our divisiveness and competitiveness; our moral compromises, as a result of which Christians and non-Christians are often indistinguishable; our [male] exploitation and abuse [and neglect] of women and children;

    our reluctance to answer the Lord’s call to service, and when we finally go, our propensity to displace “Thy kingdom come” with “my kingdom come”; our eagerness to fight the Lord’s battles with the world’s resources and strategies; our willingness to stand up and defend perpetrators of evil instead of justice.  These and many other lessons will be drawn from the leaves of this fascinating book . . .

    He goes on to cite what the book teaches regarding the reality of God’s wrath and power of his grace and the constancy of his plan to build himself a people, a light to the world; “the true hero in the book is God and God alone,” even if God is repeatedly using people to show us how he is our hero.

    Daniel Block, Judges and Ruth (NAC), 71-2.

    Categories: Biblical Theology | General | Idolatry | Jason Hood | biblical studies

    Recent Comments

    • michael henry said...

      Amen. Thanks for a good post, and not making it about yourself.

      03/29/11 4:34 PM | Comment Link

    • Tim said...

      Great Commentary – I’m 220 pages in! But, where have you heard sermon and lecture series on these books? I find sermons or lectures on either to be very rare.

      03/29/11 9:20 PM | Comment Link

    • Jason Hood said...

      Hi Tim, for Ruth try “The Story of Love” by David Platt at Brook Hills. It’s a straight christological/gospel approach. You can find it on Itunes I think. Redeemer Pres in NYC has a decent sudy on Judges (mixed in w/ Daniel and Joseph) for lay folks. Other things I’ve heard on Judges aren’t online, I think.

      03/29/11 9:48 PM | Comment Link

    • Judges: The Canaanization of Israel « Already Not Yet said...

      [...] Jason Hood (via Dane [...]

      03/31/11 2:53 AM | Comment Link

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About the SAET Blog

Welcome to the SAET blog. Herein you will find the theological/pastoral ramblings of the Rev. Matthew Mason, the good Doctor Jason Hood, and Pastor Gerald Hiestand. All three write under the premise that theology and the pastorate belong together, and that (at least some) pastors must once again function as writing theologians for the wider church, for the ecclesial renewal of theology and the theological renewal of the church.

Contributors

Gerald Hiestand
Gerald has served as the SAET board president since 2006. He has been in pastoral ministry since 1999, and serves currently as the Senior Associate Pastor of Calvary Memorial Church in Oak Park, IL.

Jason Hood
Jason is a graduate of Rhodes College, Reformed Theological Seminary, Highland Theological College and the Univ. of Aberdeen. Jason works as Scholar-in-Residence and director of Christ College Residency Program at Christ UMC. He's trying to figure out the twitter thing, @jasonbhood, and sometimes writes for ChristianityToday.com.

Matthew Mason
Matthew earned an MTh at Oak Hill College, London. He is an Assistant Pastor at Church of the Resurrection, Washington D. C. (Anglican Mission in the Americas), and edits Ecclesia Reformanda, a journal of Reformed theology.

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