They Don’t Stand a Chance.
The Fifth Sunday of Easter & Saude Confirmation – Pr. Faugstad sermon
Text: Judges 7:1-7, 16-21
In Christ Jesus, whose grace is sufficient for you, whose power is made perfect in weakness (2Co. 12:9), dear fellow redeemed:
The Israelites had become everyone’s doormat. They should hardly have been surprised. They lived on prime real estate in the land of Canaan—land that was the envy of all the nations around them. The only reason they had this land and the only reason they ever had peace is because the LORD God gave it to them. But as the generations passed, the Israelites did not give thanks to God or honor Him for these gifts. Instead they gave up the worship of the true God for the false gods of the nations around them. So God gave them up to their enemies.
That’s how we find Israel in today’s reading. They were currently under the thumb of the Midianites. Every time the Israelites’ crops matured, the Midianites and others “would come like locusts in number” and take whatever they wanted; “they laid waste to the land” (Jud. 6:5). The Israelites were completely impoverished. They had no way to defend themselves. And only now at rock bottom did they remember the LORD. They cried out for His mercy.
The LORD chose an unlikely savior for them. He visited a man named Gideon and told him he would deliver Israel. Gideon replied, “Please, Lord, how can I save Israel? Behold, my clan is the weakest in Manasseh, and I am the least in my father’s house” (Jud. 6:15). The first task the LORD gave him was to destroy his father’s altar to the god Baal and the monument next to it to the goddess Asherah. Gideon was so afraid to do this that he waited until the middle of night, so he wouldn’t have to face any opposition for his actions. Not exactly hero material.
It was harvest time again, so the Midianites were on the march. But this year wouldn’t be like the ones before it. The Midianites would not be taking whatever they wanted. The LORD prepared timid Gideon to stop them by giving him strength and courage. We are told that “the Spirit of the LORD clothed Gideon, and he sounded the trumpet, and [his countrymen] were called out to follow him” (6:34). Altogether 32,000 men showed up for battle. That sounds like a lot, but the camp of Midian had 135,000 men—more than four times as many! Just looking at the numbers, Israel wouldn’t stand a chance.
But that’s not how God saw it. He said to Gideon, “The people with you are too many for Me to give the Midianites into their hand, lest Israel boast over Me, saying, ‘My own hand has saved me.’” He told Gideon to send anyone home who was afraid. 22,000 left, leaving just 10,000 fighting men. “The people are still too many,” said the LORD. He devised a test to whittle down the number by how the men drank water. Of the 10,000, all but 300 knelt down to drink. The LORD chose the 300.
So it was 300 Israelites against 135,000 Midianites. No one would take those odds. Israel did not have superior armor or equipment. They had no weapon of mass destruction. But the Israelites did have one thing the Midianites did not—they had the LORD on their side. Would Gideon and his 300 trust the LORD to give them the victory?
God’s faithful people have often faced long odds. The prophet Elijah thought he was the only believer left in his day, but God had preserved 7,000 who had not bowed the knee to Baal (1Ki. 19:18). Shortly after Jesus’ resurrection, only a handful believed in Him. When persecution began against the Christians after Pentecost, their number was only at 5,000. Martin Luther had many more opponents than allies when he articulated the Bible’s teaching of salvation. And still today, our congregations are on the smaller side in our communities, and our church body hardly registers on anyone’s radar.
When we look at all that threatens us, all around us who would like to see the Church go under and go away, it is easy for us to wonder if our days are numbered. How can we as Christians stand in a society and culture that is moving further away from God’s Word and will? We are tempted to stop speaking the truth because we don’t want to face the consequences for it. We might stay silent because we don’t want to become targets of people’s criticism or ridicule or risk our good standing in the community. Like the Israelites who were “fearful and trembling” at the thought of facing the powerful Midianites in battle, we are afraid to face the world’s opposition to our faith. Do we even stand a chance?
But we must not forget who is on our side. In God’s holy Church, where something appears to be weak, that is often where He shows His strength. And where something has the appearance of strength, that is often where you find weakness. The first chapter of First Corinthians lays this out clearly: “God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong; God chose what is low and despised in the world, even things that are not, to bring to nothing things that are, so that no human being might boast in the presence of God” (1Co. 1:27-29).
Think of how God adds members to His holy Church. He does it through simple water and Word in the Sacrament of Baptism, and typically the ones brought to the font are little infants! How can helpless babies endure against the spiritual enemies arrayed against them? When our youth are confirmed, they renounce the devil and all his works and all his ways, and they promise to remain faithful to the pure teaching of the Bible until death. But how can they be so sure they will? They don’t know what life will throw at them and what challenges they will face in the future.
The devil, the unbelieving world, and our sinful flesh look disdainfully at us weak Christians and say, “They don’t stand a chance.” But they are forgetting something. Look at Gideon with his 300 facing an army of 135,000. The Israelites did have a plan for confusing the Midianites by dividing into three companies and then blowing their trumpets, breaking their jars, and holding their torches high in the dark of night. But that alone does not account for so few defeating so many.
Right after today’s reading it says, “When they blew the 300 trumpets, the LORD set every man’s sword against his comrade and against all the army” (7:22). It was the LORD who did this, the LORD who defeated the great Midianite army, the LORD who gave victory to Gideon and his fellow Israelites. The task seemed impossible, but not for God. He delights in making the seemingly impossible, the humanly impossible—possible. “For nothing will be impossible with God” (Luk. 1:37).
The angel Gabriel said those words to the virgin Mary the day the Christ was conceived in her womb. As He grew up, almost no one would have picked Jesus to be a Savior, just as they would not have picked Gideon to lead so many years before. And if the odds were stacked against Gideon, they were stacked even more against Jesus. Gideon had 300 men for his mission. Jesus had 12, and they deserted Him right when He was at His lowest point. The Jewish religious leaders carried out their scheme, the Roman soldiers flexed their muscles, and Jesus was nailed to a cross. Everyone who passed by agreed: He didn’t stand a chance.
But why did Jesus on the cross talk like He wasn’t losing? “Father, forgive them,” He said. “Today, you will be with Me in Paradise.” “Father, into Your hands I commend My spirit.” His enemies must have been perplexed. He talked like someone who was in control, who was not suffering against His will. This is because Jesus was no regular man hanging on the cross. He was the Son of God in the flesh! He predicted very clearly leading up to His crucifixion, “I lay down my life that I may take it up again” (Joh. 10:17). He did lay down His life on the cross, and He did take it up again on the third day when He left His tomb empty. No one could stop Him. No one could keep Him from doing what He came to do.
This is why you have great courage, even as your enemies surround you and you seem hopelessly overmatched and outnumbered. The crucified and risen Lord is on your side. He paid for each of your sins and rose again for your justification, for the declaration of your righteousness and innocence before God. Jesus won it all for you. And He gives His victory over sin and death to you right now. He gives it to you by the power of the Holy Spirit. In the Holy Gospel for today, Jesus said that the Holy Spirit “will guide you into all the truth… for He will take what is Mine and declare it to you” (Joh. 16:13,14).
This is how you are able to stand against your many and formidable enemies. On your own, relying on your own strength, you would be crushed. But with Jesus contending for you, you cannot lose. At your Baptism, you “put on Christ” (Gal. 3:27); you were joined to Him. In Holy Communion, He gives you His own body and blood to eat and drink for your forgiveness and life. He is the one who fortifies you and fights for you.
With your confidence and trust in Him and not in yourself, you can look disdainfully at all your spiritual enemies—your sinful flesh that would betray you, the devil who would destroy you, death which would swallow you up—you can look at them in the courage of the Holy Spirit and say, “They Don’t Stand a Chance.”
As true as God’s own Word is true,
Not earth or hell with all their crew
Against us shall prevail.
A jest and byword are they grown;
God is with us, we are His own;
Our vict’ry cannot fail. (Evangelical Lutheran Hymnary #375, v. 3)
Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost; as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, forevermore. Amen.
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(picture from stained glass window at Saude Lutheran Church)