finding faith in the darkness

Judges 7 – Gideon: Less Is More – Reliance on God

📖 Study Guide: Less Is More – Reliance on God

Bible Passage: Judges 7 (NIVUK)


🧭 Context & Overview

In Judges 7, we encounter one of the most surprising battle strategies in Scripture: God intentionally weakens Gideon’s army to demonstrate that victory comes not by human strength, but through reliance on Him. The principle is clear—less is more when God is in control.

📜 Judges 7 (NIVUK)

Early in the morning, Jerub-Baal (that is, Gideon) and all his men camped at the spring of Harod… (Full passage included above in the main section)

❓ Discussion Questions

Bible Understanding

  • Why does God reduce Gideon’s army?
  • What is the significance of the way the men drink water?
  • Why does Gideon need reassurance if God already promised victory?

Sermon Reflection

  • Which moment from Gideon’s story do you relate to most?
  • How have you seen God lead you through times of weakness?
  • What role do fear and faith play in this story?

Application

  • Are you facing a “least favourable position” right now?
  • Where is God calling you to rely on Him rather than yourself?
  • Are you alert and prepared like the 300, or distracted like the rest?

🙏 Prayer Prompts

  • Praise God for showing His strength in your weakness.
  • Confess the areas where you trust in your own ability more than God.
  • Ask God to make you spiritually alert and to trust Him in hard places.
  • Pray that you would be part of His faithful 300, courageously obedient.
finding faith in the darkness

Judges 11 – Jephthah: When Striving Breaks You

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Life Group Discussion Guide

Judges 11 – Jephthah: When Striving Breaks You

🧭 Opening Prompt

  • Share a time when you felt like an outsider or under pressure to prove yourself.
  • Or: What’s something you’ve worked hard to earn approval for—at work, in family, or even in faith?

📖 Read the Passage: Judges 11:1–11, 29–40

Context Summary:
Jephthah, the son of a prostitute, is driven out of his family and becomes a leader of outcasts. Later, the same elders who rejected him ask for his help. He agrees—after negotiating a deal—and makes a reckless vow that leads to tragedy.

💬 Key Sermon Quotes for Reflection

“Jephthah was a wounded man trying to prove himself – and it broke him.”
“If you cannot receive grace, you’ll try to earn what only God can give—and you may destroy what you love most.”
“We’re not just guilty because of what we’ve done; we carry shame for who we think we are.”

❓ Discussion Questions

1. The Root of Shame

  • How does Jephthah’s story show the deep power of shame?
  • Where do you see shame (not just guilt) shaping people’s behaviour today?

2. Performance-Based Identity

  • In what ways did Jephthah try to earn his identity or worth?
  • Where do you see performance or striving creeping into your own spiritual life?

3. Grace vs Bargaining

  • Why do you think Jephthah made a vow after the Spirit of the Lord came upon him (v. 29)?
  • What does that say about how little he understood grace?

4. Cultural Pressure

  • How might our culture (or even the church) unintentionally reinforce a “works-based” identity?
  • What are signs that someone is living out of grace vs out of striving?

5. Receiving Grace

  • What’s difficult about receiving grace rather than trying to earn it?
  • What would it look like for you to live more fully in the freedom and joy of grace?

🧠 Deeper Reflection

“Shame says: I am something wrong.
Grace says: I am deeply loved.
  • Are there any hidden areas of your life where shame still speaks louder than grace?
  • What patterns (control, perfectionism, isolation, over-achievement, etc.) might be rooted in unhealed shame?

🙏 Prayer Time

Use these prompts to pray as a group:

  • “Lord, help us see where we’re striving instead of resting in your grace.”
  • “Help us to trust Your love and stop negotiating with You.”
  • “Heal the places in us still shaped by shame.”

You might also invite people to pray silently and then share one word or image that came to mind during the silence.

🧱 Practical Application for the Week

  • Practice receiving grace this week—when you fail, when you succeed, and when you feel unseen.
  • Choose one activity you normally strive in (e.g. work, parenting, serving) and do it without trying to impress anyone.
  • Read and reflect on Romans 8:1–4 or Matthew 11:28–30 each day.

🪧 Optional Extra: Communion Reflection

As we take the bread and cup, remember—this is not a performance review.
This is God’s table of grace.
Come freely. Come joyfully. Leave your striving behind.
finding faith in the darkness

📖 Study Guide: Judges 6 – God’s Strength in Our Weakness

📖 Study Guide: Judges 6 – God’s Strength in Our Weakness

Opening Thought

“Perhaps you’re in the bottom of the winepress, you have self-doubt, you have God-doubt, you’re sometimes cynical. I’m not here to tell you to just drum up some faith. I’m here to tell you that God is going to use you anyway.”

1. Read the Passage: Judges 6:1–32

Take time to read this story slowly. Note:

  • What is the spiritual condition of Israel?
  • How does God respond?
  • What do we learn about Gideon?

2. Discuss the Cultural Context

“We are in many ways suffering a form of oppression that we created ourselves… We’ve forgotten what we are liberated for.”

  • How does the description of modern culture resonate with you?
  • In what ways do you see spiritual or emotional “oppression” in today’s world?
  • Why do you think remembering God is the first step to healing and hope?

3. Fear and the Winepress

“Threshing wheat in a winepress was like trying to barbecue in your basement—funny, but tragic. It tells us Gideon was paralysed with fear.”

  • What is your personal “winepress”? A place of hiding or fear?
  • How do fear, cynicism, or self-doubt show up in your spiritual life?

4. The Call of God

“The Lord is with you, mighty warrior.”

  • Why do you think God calls Gideon a “mighty warrior” before Gideon does anything brave?
  • How does God’s calling reframe Gideon’s self-image?
  • How might God be calling you to something that feels impossible?

5. Courage and Weakness

“Courage is not the absence of fear… it’s stepping out despite fear.”

  • Share a time when you stepped out despite fear or weakness.
  • How does God’s promise of strength change your willingness to take risks?
  • Read 2 Corinthians 12:9. How does this verse shape your understanding of power and weakness?

6. Dealing with the Past

“Gideon’s first step wasn’t leading an army—it was tearing down his father’s altar to Baal.”

  • Why do you think God starts here?
  • What inherited attitudes, patterns, or idols might God be calling you to confront?
  • How can you act with grace and courage in your home or community?

7. Church Vision & Personal Purpose

“This is not it. There is much, much, much more.”

  • What dreams or callings have you put off because of fear?
  • What next step might God be prompting you to take in faith?
  • How can your weakness become the place where God’s power is most visible?

🛐 Prayer Prompts

Remember

  • Thank God for what He has done in your life.
  • Ask the Holy Spirit to remind you of His promises.

Repent

  • Confess any fear, cynicism, or self-doubt that has held you back.
  • Ask for courage to tear down any idols in your life.

Respond

  • Ask God to give you strength in your weakness.
  • Pray for boldness to take the next step, even if it’s a “wimpish” one.
  • Pray for our church—to be a place where God’s power is seen in our weakness.
finding faith in the darkness

Judges Chapters 4 & 5





Judges Chapters 4 & 5


Judges Chapters 4 & 5

Central Themes

  • 170 years after Joshua led the people of Israel into the promised land, they still haven’t taken all the territory allocated to them by God and have even lost some of the territory they once held.
  • The people of Israel are caught in a cycle of disobedience, suffering the consequences of that disobedience, crying out to God, being rescued by God and then becoming disobedient again.
  • Many of the people of Israel have compromised so much with the local pagan tribes that they are almost indistinguishable from them.
  • Deborah – known throughout the tribes of Israel as a prophetess – announces the end of this cycle of suffering and calls Barak to his duty.
  • Barak is willing to fight but does not have confidence that the people will follow him.
  • Barak takes on a very powerful enemy, but in the end, God does all the hard work.
  • Jael takes matters into her own hands.

Questions

(Probably too many, but you can pick and choose):

  • Why do you think the Israelites kept compromising with the surrounding tribes/nations?
  • Why do you think God kept allowing them to suffer the consequences of their rebellion?
  • Why do you think God sanctioned the killing of Sisera and all his troops?
  • Why do you think God chose Deborah as his mouthpiece in this story?
  • Why do you think God chose to use Barak to go up against the Canaanites?
  • Do you think God allows us to suffer the consequences of our wrongful behaviour today? | Why/Why Not?
  • Do you think you have compromised with the world in any way? (No need to share publicly)
  • Is God calling you to serve him but you don’t feel completely confident?
  • What can we learn from Deborah?
  • What can we learn from Barak?
  • Was Jael right to kill Sisera? | Why/Why not?
  • Have you got a testimony of having to face overwhelming odds and God then delivering you?


finding faith in the darkness

Breaking the Cycle – Judges 3:12–30




Study Guide – Judges 3:12–30


Study Guide: Breaking the Cycle – Judges 3:12–30

Opening Thought

Have you ever felt stuck in a cycle of sin, regret, and resolve? This passage in Judges introduces us to Ehud—a flawed, unexpected liberator—used by God to break the cycle and deliver His people.

Read: Judges 3:12–30

Take time to read the passage slowly. Observe the characters, the spiritual climate, and the turning points.

1. Understanding the Cycle

“It’s a cycle that may well be familiar to a lot of you… forgetting God, then seeking forgiveness, coming back to Jesus, finding peace before getting stuck again.”

  • What spiritual patterns do you see in the Israelites’ behaviour?
  • How is this similar to patterns we see in our own lives?
  • Why do you think these cycles are more than just personal struggles but deeply spiritual issues?

Key Insight: The Moabite god Chemosh and the Ammonite god Molech weren’t fictional—they were real spiritual powers opposing God.

2. The Root of the Problem

“Deceitful ideas that appeal to disordered desires.”

  • How do lies from the enemy gain ground in our hearts and minds?
  • What kind of messages do we hear today that mirror Satan’s “Did God really say?”
  • Which current cultural habits or temptations feel like modern expressions of idolatry or strongholds?

Application Prompt: Identify one recurring temptation you face. What lie fuels it? What truth from God’s Word can you hold on to instead?

3. Ehud: The Unexpected Deliverer

“Who is going to expect the left-handed disabled person? Nobody.”

  • What makes Ehud an unlikely hero? How does this enhance the meaning of his story?
  • Can you think of times when God has used unexpected people—or unexpected parts of your own life—for His purposes?

Key Insight: God uses outsiders, the disabled, the overlooked—even people who don’t get it all right.

4. The Sword That Cuts Deep

“There is power in the double-edged sword—the message from God.”

  • What does the sword in Ehud’s story come to represent in Scripture (Ephesians 6, Hebrews 4, Revelation 1)?
  • Why is the Word of God described as a sword?
  • How does the Word “cut into” our lives to destroy idolatry and bring freedom?

Reflection Question: Where might you need to “push the sword in deep” and allow God’s Word to confront, convict, and cleanse?

5. Moral Ambiguity and Grace

“Sometimes doing the right thing in the wrong way… a bit of a mess.”

  • Is Ehud’s act of deception and violence morally justifiable? Why or why not?
  • How should we respond when God works through messy, morally grey circumstances?

Real-Life Connection: Think of Bonhoeffer or Corrie Ten Boom. Can God use our imperfect actions when we step out in faith?

6. Group or Personal Response

  • What part of this story most speaks to your current season of life?
  • What is one area where you feel stuck in a cycle and need God to break in?
  • Who around you might be inspired or helped if you stepped out with courage like Ehud?

Prayer Prompts

  • Confession: Ask God to show you where self-indulgence, false worship, or deceitful thinking have crept in.
  • Surrender: Invite the Holy Spirit to wield the sword of truth in your life. Ask Him to cut away what’s false and enslaving.
  • Courage: Pray for boldness to act, even if imperfectly. Offer God your weakness and ask Him to use it.

“We all need a bit of Ehud in us—to rise up against the plans of the enemy, grab the sword of the Spirit and go to war, at first on ourselves and then on the rest of the world.”


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Psalm 119:114

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