Day 10

Abimelech Becomes King

from the Judges reading plan


Judges 9:1-57, Psalm 68:19-21, Matthew 7:15-20

BY Melanie Rainer

The book of Judges is bleak, but chapter 9 is particularly devastating. A passage like this forces us to see the devastation that bad people can wreak. Sometimes the only appropriate response to something like this is, “How long, O Lord?” That is my posture today.

Gideon died, and the people of Israel once again worshiped Baal, the fake god. When he passed, Gideon left behind seventy (yes, 70) sons. Abimelech was one of those sons, born to Gideon’s concubine, and he was bent on being king. So he killed all but one of his brothers (Jotham) and rallied the people of Shechem to make him king.

Abimelech was awful and opportunistic, a greedy and prideful man. Knowing this, Jotham gave him a warning in the form of a parable: A forest of cedar trees wanted a king, and so they asked an olive tree, fig tree, and grapevine to do the job. All three declined, and instead asked the trees of the forest to consider what it would be like to no longer produce the fruit that pleases both people and God.

Turns out the olive tree, fig tree, and grapevine knew their place and their calling; they were content in the roles given to them by the Lord. But the bramble, an opportunistic and destructive plant, said yes—he would be their king (vv.7–15). One commentary I read compared the bramble to the Southern vine kudzu, which ruthlessly takes over anything in its path. Jotham knew Abimelech would do the same.

Then “God sent an evil spirit between Abimelech and the citizens of Shechem” (v.23). A man named Gaal started a coup against him, and when Abimelech learned of the plot to overthrow him, he unleashed a violent terror against his people. He “tore down the city and sowed it with salt” (v.45), making it infertile land, destroying it not just for the present, but for generations after. To round out his wrath, he burned a tower filled with people, killing more than a thousand.

Abimelech’s anger would echo for decades. We don’t know exactly how Abimelech salted the earth, but Scripture describes just how destructive this practice might have been, leaving behind soil as a “burning waste of sulfur and salt, unsown, producing nothing, with no plant growing on it” (Deuteronomy 29:23).

This is the definition of “scorched earth,” a turn of phrase typically reserved for military strategies. It is Sherman’s March to the Sea in the Civil War and the use of Agent Orange in the Vietnam War. It is the devastation we see throughout both history and Scripture. It leaves us to cry out, “How long, O Lord?”
Sin has scorched the whole earth and all of our hearts. It leaves nothing to satisfy us. We are only refreshed, rebuilt, and renewed when we look to Jesus. He is the only One who can water a scorched earth and a hardened heart, and He does. And He will. Thanks be to God.

Post Comments (39)

39 thoughts on "Abimelech Becomes King"

  1. Rebecca Aikens says:

    ❤️

  2. Paige Holt says:

    Love your take on this

  3. Mary henderson says:

    War and destruction have always been part of our planet and always will be until Jesus returns. God is not surprised and neither should we be. We can stay in the eye of the storm, which is His presence, resting in Him.

  4. Victoria E says:

    Michelle Patire happy to hear that things are improving with your mother. mother.

  5. HL says:

    @Alison Bentley I was thinking the same thing about God using a woman in a mighty way to complete His purpose. Women were never meant to be weaker or less than men when God created us. It’s only through society that women were esteemed as less than.

  6. Alayna P. says:

    Today was a tough read. So many awful things happened. I’m so very thankful for the hope I have in Jesus.

  7. Darla Wright says:

    You will know them my their fruit. Actions speak louder than words. This passage just pressed on me an urgency to be a mom of substance and to raise men that produce good fruit.

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