Judges Chapters 9 & 10
When Leadership Is Chosen Without God and When God’s Mercy Still Pursues His People..
As we continue into Book of Judges chapters 9 and 10, we encounter one of the darkest and most sobering sections of Judges. After the powerful victory through Gideon, we might expect Israel to remain faithful. Instead, we see how quickly the people drift away from God.
These chapters reveal:
- The danger of leadership without God
- The consequences of ambition and pride
- The destructive nature of human sin
- God’s justice and sovereignty
- God’s persistent mercy despite repeated failures
These chapters also expose something deeply human: when God is forgotten, chaos follows.
Judges 9 — Abimelek: Leadership Without God’s Calling
Chapter 9 introduces Abimelek, Gideon’s son through a concubine from Shechem.
Unlike Gideon, Abimelek is not called by God. Instead, he appoints himself as leader. This is important. Throughout Judges, God raises leaders. But here, Abimelek raises himself. This marks a dangerous shift.
Abimelek convinces the leaders of Shechem:
“Which is better… seventy men… or just one man?” (Judges 9:2)
They choose Abimelek. But to secure power, Abimelek does something shocking: He murders seventy of Gideon’s sons (Judges 9:5). Only Jotham escapes.
This is the first time in Judges where leadership comes through violence, ambition, and pride, not divine calling.
Jotham’s Parable — A Prophetic Warning
Jotham delivers a powerful parable: The trees seek a king. They approach:
- Olive tree
- Fig tree
- Vine
Each refuses. Finally, they choose the thornbush. This symbolizes Abimelek. This parable teaches: When godly leadership is rejected, harmful leadership emerges. The thornbush offers no protection — only danger. This reflects a timeless truth: When people reject God’s leadership, destructive leadership follows.
This connects to:
- 1 Samuel — Israel demanding a king
- Jesus Christ warning about false leaders (Matthew 7)
God Brings Justice
After three years, conflict erupts between Abimelek and Shechem. Scripture says:
“God sent an evil spirit…” (Judges 9:23)
This does not mean God creates evil, but God allows conflict to bring justice.
Eventually:
- Shechem is destroyed
- Abimelek is killed by a woman dropping a millstone
This fulfills Jotham’s prophecy. Scripture concludes:
“Thus God repaid the wickedness…” (Judges 9:56)
This reveals God’s character: God is:
- Just
- Sovereign
- Righteous
Even when evil seems to prosper, God ultimately brings justice.
Judges 10 — The Cycle Continues
After Abimelek’s death, God raises two judges:
- Tola
- Jair
These leaders bring stability, though little detail is given. This shows: Sometimes God’s work happens quietly. Not every leader has dramatic stories — but faithfulness still matters.
Israel Turns Away Again
Then we read the familiar and tragic words:
“Again the Israelites did evil…” (Judges 10:6)
But this time, the list is longer: They worship:
- Baals
- Ashtoreths
- Gods of Aram
- Gods of Sidon
- Gods of Moab
- Gods of Ammon
- Gods of Philistines
This shows deep spiritual decline. Israel is not just drifting — they are fully abandoning God.
This reveals: Sin progresses when left unchecked.
God’s Response — Justice and Mercy
God allows oppression again. Israel suffers for 18 years. Eventually, they cry out. God responds with something different:
“Go and cry out to the gods you have chosen…” (Judges 10:14)
This is sobering. God is confronting their insincerity. But then something beautiful happens. The people repent:
“We have sinned… do with us whatever you think best…” (Judges 10:15)
Then Scripture says:
“He could bear Israel’s misery no longer.” (Judges 10:16)
This is powerful. Even after repeated rebellion, God’s heart is moved. This reveals God’s compassion.
What These Chapters Reveal About Human Nature
Judges 9–10 reveals:
- People choose leaders based on convenience
- Ambition leads to destruction
- People forget God quickly
- Repentance often follows suffering
This reflects human nature today. We:
- Drift from God
- Seek control
- Turn back when suffering comes
Yet God continues to pursue.
What These Chapters Reveal About God’s Character
1. God is Just
He brings judgment on Abimelek.
2. God is Sovereign
He allows events to unfold for justice.
3. God is Patient
He continues responding to Israel.
4. God is Compassionate
He cannot bear their misery.
5. God is Faithful
He never abandons His people.
What This Means for Us Today
These chapters challenge us:
- Are we choosing leaders based on God’s will?
- Are we drifting spiritually?
- Are we remembering God in good times?
- Are we genuinely repenting?
Judges reminds us:
God’s mercy is greater than our failures — but He calls us back to Him.
Deeper Reflection
Judges 9 shows leadership without God.
Judges 10 shows God’s mercy despite failure.
Together, they reveal:
- Human leadership fails
- God’s mercy remains
These chapters point forward to the need for a perfect leader — fulfilled in Jesus Christ.
Reflection Questions
- Are you allowing ambition or pride to guide decisions?
- Have you seen God’s mercy after failure?
- Are you drifting spiritually?
- How can you remain faithful to God?
Closing Prayer
Heavenly Father,
Thank You for Your patience and mercy. Even when we fail, You continue to call us back.
Help us choose humility over pride and faithfulness over compromise. Guard our hearts from drifting away from You.
Teach us to trust Your leadership and walk in obedience. Thank You for Your compassion and love that never gives up on us.
Lead us back to You daily.
In Jesus’ name,
Amen.
