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Even in Darkness: Judges and Ruth Simply Explained is unavailable, but you can change that!

The period of the judges was an evil one, requiring hard words for hard times. The people of Israel had rejected their God for the desire of an earthly ruler, and had rebelled against his laws. Yet even in this time of unbelief and hypocrisy, God raised up men and women to call his people back to a personal faith in the living God. The author, in taking us through the books of Judges and Ruth,...

Judges 14–16. These chapters, however, record a very small proportion of his life—namely the summer before he became judge and the last year of his life. That Samson served God faithfully is a perspective that must not be obscured even by his manifest sins, for without this perspective—as will be shown later—the meaning of Samson’s life will be seriously misunderstood (cf. Hebrews 11:32). In this study we shall focus upon the rise of this man of God to the judgeship, leaving his decline and fall
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