May 7, Day 127 – This Is How Men Should Act
- Dr. Eric Stricker

- 2 days ago
- 4 min read

In Judges 4, we see that “the Israelites once again did evil in the eyes of the LORD, so the LORD sold them into the hands of Jabin, a king of Canaan” (verses 1-2). In the book of Judges, we will see this as a pattern that recurs over and over again. After twenty years of Jabin’s oppression, the Israelites “cried to the LORD for help” (verse 4). We wonder … why did they wait so long before they cried out to the Lord for help? Here, we see an important principle by which God operates: When men refuse or fail to accept their rightful responsibility for proper leadership, God will raise up and bless a woman to carry out His assignment. “Deborah, a prophetess, was leading Israel at that time” (verse 4), and she summoned Barak to take an army of ten thousand men to put down Sisera, the commander of Jabin’s army. However, Barak is hesitant, he questions Deborah’s leadership, and he refuses to go to war without her, so the Lord will give the honor for this operation “to a woman” (verse 9). Deborah trusted the LORD to give Sisera into her hand (i.e., she simply took God at His Word). Again, Barak’s timidity is evident, and Deborah must challenge him a second time to rise to the task (verse 14). In the end, the Lord delivers Sisera, and He honors and blesses the woman – Jael – whose faith and courage is similar to Deborah’s. Jael’s action of using a tent peg to pin Sisera to the ground resulted in victory and 40 years of peace (cf., Judges 5:31) – twice as long as Jabin’s period of oppression. In chapter 5, we see the Song of Deborah, which is a poetic account of what life was like in Israel at that time. Deborah’s “heart was with Israel’s princes” (Judges 5:9). The “princes in Israel [were expected] to take the lead,” and when they did, “the LORD was praised” (Judges 2:5). Deborah’s song reflects life in Israel at that time. Notice, “in the days of Shamgar … the roads were abandoned … village life ceased … and war came to the city gates” (verses 6-8). Conditions in Israel had deteriorated because of Israel's evil in the eyes of the LORD. Thus, the people eventually turned to Deborah (verse 12), and God utilized her. She extolls Jael as the “most blessed of women” (verse 24). When men refuse to act like men, God raises up and honors faithful women who are capable of doing the job.
Psalm 57:1-6 begins with David’s cry for mercy – “Have mercy on me, my God.” Like David, I personally find myself constantly in need of God’s mercy and grace, so I am thankful that the Bible teaches us to ask God freely for these blessings. God extends mercy to us by withholding from us the punishment that we actually deserve. He extends grace to us by supplying us with blessings that we do not deserve. David could ask for and expect to receive God’s benefits because he trusted God fully, literally, and implicitly – “for in You I take refuge” (Ps 57:1). David compares his enemies to “lions and ravenous beasts – men whose teeth are spears and arrows – whose tongues are sharp swords” (verse 4). Nevertheless, David “exalts God above the heavens” and calls for “His glory to be over all the earth” (verse 5). This is how men should act.
Both divine mercy and special grace flow eternally from God’s unfailing love for us, and we see these benefits extended in John 4 and 5. In John 4, we see Jesus talking with the Samaritan woman at the well in Sychar, and their conversation related to water. Uncharacteristically and cross-culturally, Jesus asked her for a drink – not a very common way to begin an evangelistic outreach. But Jesus shows us that people can be reached by the most unusual methods. This woman was deeply intrigued by His request and the direction in which it led. As they talked, Jesus brought the woman to the point where she asked Him for a drink of the living water that He offers to all of us. In the end, her initial faith in Christ led “many of the Samaritans in her town to believe in Him because of her testimony” (John 4:39). Again, we see how God raises up and blesses a woman to achieve his purposes. Then, in verses 43-54, we see that Jesus heals “the son of a royal official at Cana” (verse 50). In chapter 5:1-15, we see the man healed on the Sabbath at the pool in Jerusalem. We recognize that neither of those individuals who were healed actually deserved to be healed (i.e., because of their sin, they deserved judgment), but each received both mercy and grace – judgment withheld and healing applied. This is exactly what God does for all of us; the key verse for today is John 4:50 — “The man took Jesus at His Word.” This is how men should act.




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