The sermon "Good and Faithful Servant" by Norm Wells focuses on the account of Gideon in Judges 8, illustrating themes of leadership, divine victory, and human rebellion. Wells emphasizes that Gideon and his 300 men, though victorious in battle, did not seek personal glory, understanding their triumph was solely by God's grace. He highlights key moments, such as Gideon's encounter with the towns of Sukkoth and Penel, where they refused to aid him, reflecting a lack of faith in God's deliverance. Specific Scriptures, including Judges 8:22-23 where Gideon declines kingship, affirm the Reformed belief that God is ultimately the sovereign ruler. The practical implications of the sermon center on recognizing God’s sovereignty and the dangers of misplaced faith in human leaders or idols, drawing parallels to Israel's cyclical rebellion against God.
“They cannot, nor would they want to take credit for this battle that they have just been involved in. Number one, they cannot because it wasn't them. And secondly, they wouldn't want to because they knew exactly who the victor was.”
“The Lord shall rule over you. You know, in the days of the Lord Jesus on this earth… they said, we have no king except Caesar. What a statement about their own belief that Caesar was their ruler, Caesar was their king, not God.”
“What makes you better than us? And you're still pursuing, and the war's not over, and all the excuses they begin to give.”
“So we find that with the Lord, with God, in the end, he will take care of those who refuse, those who rejected, those who had no interest.”
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