LWWC - Judges - Session 6
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This session centers on Judges chapters 14–16, exploring the life of Samson — a man chosen by God, empowered by the Spirit, yet vulnerable to compromise and temptation.
The message opens by emphasizing Samson’s unique calling. His birth was foretold by God, and he was set apart as a Nazarite from birth. Unlike other judges, Samson often fought alone, relying directly on the power of the Holy Spirit rather than armies — a picture pointing forward to Christ, who would accomplish salvation alone.
As Samson begins his conflict with the Philistines, God uses unexpected circumstances — including Samson’s marriage, the lion encounter, and the riddle at the wedding feast — to stir confrontation with Israel’s enemies. Repeatedly, the Spirit of the Lord comes upon Samson, enabling supernatural victories that could never be achieved by human strength.
Yet alongside divine power runs human weakness. Samson continually places himself in dangerous situations, forming relationships that draw him closer to temptation. His involvement with Delilah becomes the clearest picture of how compromise works slowly — one small step at a time — until spiritual strength is drained away.
One of the most sobering moments in Scripture is highlighted: Samson does not realize that the Spirit of the Lord has departed from him. This reveals the danger of persistent disobedience — a gradual drifting from God that can happen without immediate awareness.
Despite Samson’s fall, God’s mercy is not finished with him. As his hair begins to grow again, it symbolizes repentance, renewal, and restored relationship. In his blindness and suffering, Samson finally cries out to God with complete dependence.
In his final act, Samson brings greater defeat to Israel’s enemies in his death than in his entire life — powerfully foreshadowing Christ, who destroyed Satan’s power fully through His sacrifice on the cross.
The session concludes with hope: God does not discard flawed people. Though sin carries consequences, repentance opens the door to restoration. Even after failure, God can still use a surrendered life for His glory.
Key TakeawayTrue strength comes from God alone. Compromise weakens spiritual power, but repentance restores it — and God’s mercy is always greater than human failure.