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These devotions are part of the Follow the Word Bible reading program at St. John Lutheran Church in Cypress, Texas. This year we are reading through the Scriptures together, listening for how God speaks through his Word day by day. I hope you will join me on this journey.
Today’s readings are Judges 18-20, Psalm 103.
Judges 20:18-26
The people of Israel arose and went up to Bethel and inquired of God, “Who shall go up first for us to fight against the people of Benjamin?” And the Lord said, “Judah shall go up first.”
19 Then the people of Israel rose in the morning and encamped against Gibeah. 20 And the men of Israel went out to fight against Benjamin, and the men of Israel drew up the battle line against them at Gibeah. 21 The people of Benjamin came out of Gibeah and destroyed on that day 22,000 men of the Israelites. 22 But the people, the men of Israel, took courage, and again formed the battle line in the same place where they had formed it on the first day. 23 And the people of Israel went up and wept before the Lord until the evening. And they inquired of the Lord, “Shall we again draw near to fight against our brothers, the people of Benjamin?” And the Lord said, “Go up against them.”
24 So the people of Israel came near against the people of Benjamin the second day. 25 And Benjamin went against them out of Gibeah the second day, and destroyed 18,000 men of the people of Israel. All these were men who drew the sword. 26 Then all the people of Israel, the whole army, went up and came to Bethel and wept. They sat there before the Lord and fasted that day until evening, and offered burnt offerings and peace offerings before the Lord.

Judges 18–20 lays bare the corruption of a kingless people. The people still speak the Lord’s name, yet live as though he were absent. Worship is reshaped to fit convenience and sullied by pagan gods. Morality collapses into brutality, and even the pursuit of justice leads to deeper destruction. Again and again they inquire of the Lord, yet their actions reveal hearts untethered from true faith and trustful obedience. What unfolds is not merely a series of tragic events, but a revealing portrait of human sinfulness – restless, self-directed, and unable to set itself right. And yet, in the midst of all this, the Lord remains – present, speaking, and unchanged – exposing both the depth of their need and the reality that their hope must come from beyond themselves.
Notice that the people do not abandon religion – they reshape it. They take what belongs to the Lord and bend it to their purposes, convincing themselves that God is with them even as they go their own way. They who were made in the image of God remake God into their own image: powerless, manipulative, unreliable and completely impotent.
And their sinful pride doesn’t stay contained. What begins as distorted worship spills into distorted living. The corruption deepens, relationships fracture, and violence multiplies. One tribe’s sin becomes the whole nation’s tragedy.
So they call out to God. Problem is, seeking God is not the same as submitting to him. They inquire of the Lord, and he answers – yet their hearts remain unchanged. They want direction without surrender, guidance without repentance – until the events in these verses. They realize how far they had wandered. The people of Israel went up and wept before the Lord until the evening.
Will it stick? Will they remain faithfully obedient? We know how this goes. But thankfully – and I mean that sincerely – thankfully, God remains present even in the face of the wavering faithfulness and untethered hearts. The Lord does not disappear. He is still there – hearing, speaking, and acting – not because his people are faithful, but because he is. God, alone, is the only constant. His ways are the only true way of life.
Their problem isn’t just that the people of Israel have no king… it’s that they have no true King. What Israel lacks is not merely leadership, but a heart rightly ruled. Their corruption exposes a deeper need – for a King who does not mirror their brokenness, but redeems it.
This is the cycle of Judges plays out: false worship leads to spreading corruption, which begets hollow seeking, played out in the shadow of God’s reliable faithfulness, pointing to our need for a true King. This cycle will repeat itself throughout the Old Testament – until the True King, our Lord Jesus comes to save us. We who are prone to wander, broken and evil (Jesus’ word to describe his own disciples) have a Savior who is faithful, broken in our place on the cross, and truly good. We have a true king! Thanks be to God!
Click on the graphic below to watch the Bible Project video summary of the book of Judges.









