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   Message 94,406 of 96,161   
   Christ Rose to All   
   Judges 18: Doctrine (Revision) (1/2)   
   10 Oct 25 07:59:16   
   
   XPost: alt.christnet.bible, alt.christnet.christnews, alt.christ   
   et.christianlife   
   XPost: christnet.bible, christnet.bible.study   
   From: usenet@christrose.news   
      
   Judges 18: Doctrine   
      
   https://christrose.news/2025/10/judges-18-doctrine.html   
      
   GOD   
      
   Judges 18 reveals that God allows man’s false religion to expose its own   
   emptiness. Though His name is invoked by Micah’s Levite and by the   
   Danites, God Himself gives no word of approval. He sovereignly permits   
   idolatry to show Israel what happens when they reject His kingship.   
   God’s silence in this passage is judgment in itself. He had already   
   spoken through His Word concerning how and where He was to be worshiped,   
   yet His people sought blessing apart from obedience. The fact that He   
   allows them to prosper temporarily under this counterfeit religion shows   
   His patience, but also His settled opposition to false worship (Romans   
   1:24). The Lord remains in control even when men twist His name for   
   their gain. He will not share His glory with idols (Isaiah 42:8).   
      
   JESUS CHRIST   
   Christ stands as the true answer to the chaos described in Judges 18,   
   where “there was no king in Israel, and every man did what was right in   
   his own eyes” (18:1). The absence of a righteous ruler mirrors the   
   condition of every heart that refuses Christ’s authority. When people   
   reject His kingship, they inevitably replace Him with idols of their own   
   making—whether images, ambitions, or self-will. Without Christ ruling as   
   Lord, religion becomes idolatry, and the soul drifts toward ruin. The   
   false priesthood and self-made worship in this chapter illustrate what   
   happens when men pursue blessing without submitting to divine authority.   
   In contrast, Christ is the rightful King who governs His people in   
   righteousness (Isaiah 9:6–7) and the true Priest who mediates access to   
   God (Hebrews 7:25–27). To trust Him is to submit to His rule; to reject   
   Him is to live as Dan did—conquering outwardly yet perishing inwardly.   
   Only by surrendering to Christ as both Savior and Lord can believers be   
   delivered from the spiritual collapse that idolatry always brings.   
      
   THE HOLY SPIRIT   
      
   The Holy Spirit is absent from this chapter’s events, and that absence   
   is deliberate. When the people walk according to their own eyes, the   
   Spirit’s empowering presence departs. The same Spirit who once came upon   
   the judges for deliverance (Judges 15:14) now withholds His power   
   because Israel seeks self-determined worship. This contrast underscores   
   the Spirit’s role in producing obedience, not self-will. In the New   
   Testament, the Spirit indwells believers to lead them into truth (John   
   16:13), convict of sin (John 16:8), and enable genuine worship in spirit   
   and truth (John 4:24). Where the Spirit reigns, worship aligns with   
   God’s Word. Where He is resisted, chaos and corruption reign.   
      
   THE BIBLE   
      
   Judges 18 demonstrates what happens when people ignore Scripture and   
   follow human invention. The tribe of Dan disregards God’s prior commands   
   concerning the priesthood (Numbers 3:10) and the central sanctuary   
   (Deuteronomy 12:5–7). Their counterfeit religion substitutes personal   
   preference for divine revelation. The absence of prophetic voice or   
   scriptural obedience in this passage highlights how the Bible’s   
   authority guards true worship. In the New Testament, all Scripture is   
   breathed out by God to equip believers for every good work (2 Timothy   
   3:16–17). The church must measure every doctrine, practice, and   
   tradition by the Word, lest it repeat the errors of Israel’s syncretism.   
      
   ANGELS   
      
   Though angels are not mentioned directly, this passage indirectly   
   teaches their contrast to idols. Angels serve God as real messengers who   
   point away from themselves to His glory (Revelation 22:8–9). The carved   
   images of Micah and the Danites are lifeless imitations that can neither   
   hear nor act. In later Scripture, angels appear as ministers of judgment   
   against idolatry (Revelation 14:6–8). Their unseen service to God’s   
   throne further magnifies His living reality over the powerless gods of   
   men. Unlike man-made figures, heavenly beings obey their Creator and   
   never accept worship for themselves.   
      
   MAN   
      
   Man in Judges 18 shows the corruption of worship when God’s authority is   
   replaced by human opinion. Each man does what is right in his own eyes   
   (18:1). The Danites seek comfort, success, and security, not holiness.   
   Micah fashions religion to suit his convenience. Humanity, when left to   
   itself, will always fashion a god it can control. This passage   
   illustrates man’s tendency toward self-exaltation and pragmatism—seeking   
   divine favor without submission to divine truth. In Christ, man’s   
   calling is reversed: he is renewed to seek God’s glory rather than his   
   own (Ephesians 1:12).   
      
   SIN   
      
   Sin manifests here as idolatry, self-will, and spiritual blindness. The   
   Danites think that possessing an idol guarantees divine blessing, but   
   sin deceives them into trusting appearances. Sin corrupts even religious   
   devotion, turning worship into rebellion. Micah’s stolen gods expose how   
   futile sin’s promises are: what kind of deity can be carried away? The   
   New Testament identifies covetousness and greed as forms of idolatry   
   (Colossians 3:5). Sin always substitutes the creation for the Creator   
   and leads to spiritual emptiness. Without repentance and faith in   
   Christ, this downward spiral ends in judgment (Romans 1:18–23).   
      
   SALVATION   
      
   Though salvation is not explicitly mentioned, its need is evident.   
   Israel’s imitation of religion leaves them without true deliverance. The   
   tribe of Dan conquers Laish but loses communion with God. This   
   anticipates the truth that external success cannot save. Salvation   
   requires a true mediator and atonement. In Christ, God offers what false   
   religion cannot—real reconciliation through His blood (Ephesians 1:7).   
   His gospel rescues those enslaved to idolatry and opens access to the   
   Father through the Spirit (Ephesians 2:18). Only in Him can the   
   emptiness of man-made religion be replaced with living fellowship with God.   
      
   THE CHURCH   
      
   The church must take warning from Judges 18. When leadership and worship   
   drift from Scripture, the result is apostasy. Like the Danites,   
   congregations today may mistake growth or success for God’s blessing   
   while neglecting His Word. The church’s duty is to guard the faith once   
   delivered to the saints (Jude 3) and to keep Christ central in all   
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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