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An Unlikely Servant - Girlfriends in God - April 2, 2019

April 2, 2019
An Unlikely Servant
Mary Southerland

Today’s Truth

The Lord answered him, ‘I will be with you. It will seem as if the Midianites you are fighting are only one man’ (Judges 6:16, NCV).

Friend to Friend

I was born to be an elementary school teacher – period. So, when a total stranger tapped me on the shoulder and said, “While you were singing, God told me you are supposed to be my Music and Youth Assistant this summer,” I felt sorry for him. He obviously needed to have his hearing checked.

I had just graduated from college with an elementary education teaching degree. A good friend was leading worship for a local church and asked me to sing a solo in the evening service. That’s all – or so I thought. When the service ended, my good friend introduced me to his good friend, the hard-of-hearing stranger, and said, “You should at least pray about his offer.” I did. And here I am – thirty years later – an unlikely servant who lives in constant amazement at God’s plan for her life.

The Bible is filled with men and women who were unlikely servants. Weak, fearful and unwilling, they fought against the call of God, offering excuses and pleading for exemption – just like we do. Gideon was such a man. (You can read the full story in Judges 6:11-16.)

Gideon was a farmer, a family man just trying to earn a living and put food on the table. Like us, he felt inadequate and unworthy to carry out God’s plan for his life. But God saw what Gideon could be, not just what he was.

The fact that the angel called Gideon a “mighty warrior” is just plain funny. Gideon didn’t look like a mighty warrior and he certainly didn’t act like one. Normally, wheat was threshed in an open area on a threshing floor by oxen pulling threshing sledges over the stalks. Not Gideon. He did his work in a winepress, hidden from the view of the Midianites. I don’t blame him. The Midianites were basically terrorists - a large and powerful army of nomadic invaders. God wanted Gideon to defeat them and set the Israelites free.

I can imagine the look on Gideon’s face and the sheer panic in his heart when God told him the plan. Gideon’s response was so human and so like our own when God calls us to do something that seems absolutely impossible and makes no human sense at all.

Are you talking to me?

You must have me confused with somebody else.

You want me to do what? Save who? Now that’s funny!

I come from the wrong side of the Manasseh tracks.

People like me don’t save nations and defeat armies.

I don’t think Gideon was being humble. I think he was scared spitless and firmly convinced that he was totally unqualified for the job God was asking him to do. I know that feeling. I tend to use my weaknesses as excuses for disobedience instead of accepting them for what they really are, opportunities for God to show up and show off in my life. God’s power shines best through obvious weakness. And just like God was with the flawed Gideon, He is with us.

God’s commitment to Gideon reaffirmed His presence with Gideon and the ease with which Gideon would have victory over the Midianites. The literal translation is “as if they were but one man.” I love it!  Here was Gideon, probably the last man anyone would choose to face the Midianites, and God is telling him the victory will be so easy it will seem like he is facing one man instead of an army of fierce invaders.

Nevertheless, Gideon’s attitude was lousy. I can almost hear him whining as he blamed God for getting the Israelites into their current mess and voicing major doubts about God’s willingness or even His desire to save them. Gideon sputtered every excuse imaginable, reminding God how weak he was, venting his anger and confusion while questioning the validity of God’s choice. Still, God insisted Gideon was the man for the job.

Making excuses is always a waste of time because God is completely aware of who we are and what we can and cannot do. When God calls us, He not only equips us, but He also empowers us to obey that calling. The Lord told Gideon to “go in the strength you have.” God was asking Gideon to step out in faith, knowing that his meager strength would not be enough for the task ahead.

The reality is that our strength is never enough for any task. That’s what faith is all about. Faith is a willingness to step out in mid-air, no safety net in sight – trusting God to be there – at the point of our greatest need. 

Let’s Pray

Father, I am just like Gideon. I am afraid to step out in faith. I want to trust You but my faith is weak. I don’t understand how You can love someone like me … and to think that You have a special plan for my life is hard to believe. Help my unbelief, Lord.

In Jesus’ Name,
Amen.

Now It’s Your Turn

Read and memorize Hebrews 11:1(NIV) “Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.”

How would you define “confidence” and “assurance” as it relates to your faith in God?

Think about the following definition of faith: Forsaking All I Trust Him.

What does “all” mean in your life?

More from the Girlfriends

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