This is not the
study that I’m working on to release in September, but the ladies Bible class
that I’m a part of at church just finished a lesson on this lady. After we finished the lesson, I realized I had
done so much research that I decided I might as well turn it in into my own study.
Our September
study is still on target to be finished as planned; this is just a little
something extra … I hope you enjoy it.
Jael! Jael! Jael!
By Patsy Norwood © 2025 All Rights Reserved! Any and all commercial use of this study is prohibited!
Judges 1:16; 4:1-22; 5:24-27
Who’s Who?
Deborah: Israelite prophetess and judge
Barak: Israelite
military commander
King Jabin: Canaanite king oppressing the Israelites
Sisera: Canaanite military commander
Heber: a Kenite with close ties to the Israelites
and a ‘non-aggression’ pact with the Canaanite King Jabin
Jael: married to
Heber
Now, that we’ve
met the players, let’s begin in Judges 4 …
(This is another action-packed account so, hold on … God’s Word is never
boring or dull!)
1 When Ehud was
dead, the children of Israel again did evil in the sight of the Lord.
Ehud was the 4th judge of Israel. The Israelites were in a cycle of sin, oppression, repentance, salvation.
They would sin and turn away from God.
God would send a nation/army to oppress them.
They would cry out to God and repent.
God would send a judge to rescue them.
The Israelites repeated this cycle throughout the book of Judges.
Ehud has died and
once again the children of Israel have returned to sinning against God.
2 So the Lord
sold them into the hand of Jabin king of Canaan, who reigned in Hazor. The
commander of his army was Sisera, who dwelt in Harosheth Hagoyim.
In order to turn
the Israelites back to Himself, God allowed King Jabin, a Canaanite king, to
oppress them. Here we learn that the
commander of his army was a man named Sisera.
3 And the
children of Israel cried out to the Lord; for Jabin had nine hundred chariots
of iron, and for twenty years he had harshly oppressed the children of Israel.
For 20 years, God
allowed Jabin to ‘harshly’ oppress the children of Israel. Were the children of Israel that hard-hearted
or prideful or stubborn or maybe even rebellious that it took 20 years for them
to reach the end of their ropes and cry out to God?
Are we ever guilty
of the same thing? If we’re honest, I
think we can all humbly answer, yes. Is
there something we’re refusing to obey God over? Have we become hard-hearted, prideful,
stubborn and even rebellious over what God wants us to do?
In reality, we’re
no different than the children of Israel were, are we?
In this lesson, we've set the stage and looked at some background information. In lesson 2, we'll delve a little deeper as we inch our way toward the lady of our study. Since this is a pop-up study, I'll be posting more than one lesson per week, so be watching for the next one.
patsy @ From
This Heart of Mine
~ a place for women to
gather and study God's Word ~
Sources used for this
study:
Various
translations of the Holy Bible
Various
commentaries
Several
trusted and biblically sound online sources
Dictionary
of New Testament Background, Editors: Craig A Evans & Stanley E. Porter
Archaeological
Study Bible
All
the Women of the Bible by Edith Deen
Daughters
of Eve by Lottie Beth Hobbs
Halley’s
Bible Handbook by H. H. Halley
Guilty for sure. Thanks for sharing this.
ReplyDeleteLana, me too and you're welcome!
DeleteI’ve been looking for a book about Biblical women so I am glad your shared resources! Thanks! Matty
ReplyDeleteMatty, you're welcome!
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