Gideon called and confirmed
God disciplines Israel for idolatry, then graciously calls and confirms Gideon, the least likely man, to begin Israel’s deliverance. Before military victory, the real issue is covenant loyalty: the LORD must be acknowledged as God, Baal’s altar must fall, and Gideon must learn that deliverance depen
Commentary
6:1 The Israelites did evil in the Lord’s sight, so the Lord turned them over to Midian for seven years.
6:2 The Midianites overwhelmed Israel. Because of Midian the Israelites made shelters for themselves in the hills, as well as caves and strongholds.
6:3 Whenever the Israelites planted their crops, the Midianites, Amalekites, and the people from the east would attack them.
6:4 They invaded the land and devoured its crops all the way to Gaza. They left nothing for the Israelites to eat, and they took away the sheep, oxen, and donkeys.
6:5 When they invaded with their cattle and tents, they were as thick as locusts. Neither they nor their camels could be counted. They came to devour the land.
6:6 Israel was so severely weakened by Midian that the Israelites cried out to the Lord for help.
6:7 When the Israelites cried out to the Lord for help because of Midian,
6:8 he sent a prophet to the Israelites. He said to them, “This is what the Lord God of Israel says: ‘I brought you up from Egypt and took you out of that place of slavery.
6:9 I rescued you from Egypt’s power and from the power of all who oppressed you. I drove them out before you and gave their land to you.
6:10 I said to you, “I am the Lord your God! Do not worship the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you are now living!” But you have disobeyed me.’” Gideon Meets Some Visitors
6:11 The Lord’s angelic messenger came and sat down under the oak tree in Ophrah owned by Joash the Abiezrite. He arrived while Joash’s son Gideon was threshing wheat in a winepress so he could hide it from the Midianites.
6:12 The Lord’s messenger appeared and said to him, “The Lord is with you, courageous warrior!”
6:13 Gideon said to him, “Pardon me, but if the Lord is with us, why has such disaster overtaken us? Where are all his miraculous deeds our ancestors told us about? They said, ‘Did the Lord not bring us up from Egypt?’ But now the Lord has abandoned us and handed us over to Midian.”
6:14 Then the Lord himself turned to him and said, “You have the strength. Deliver Israel from the power of the Midianites! Have I not sent you?”
6:15 Gideon said to him, “But Lord, how can I deliver Israel? Just look! My clan is the weakest in Manasseh, and I am the youngest in my family.”
6:16 The Lord said to him, “Ah, but I will be with you! You will strike down the whole Midianite army.”
6:17 Gideon said to him, “If you really are pleased with me, then give me a sign as proof that it is really you speaking with me.
6:18 Do not leave this place until I come back with a gift and present it to you.” The Lord said, “I will stay here until you come back.”
6:19 Gideon went and prepared a young goat, along with unleavened bread made from an ephah of flour. He put the meat in a basket and the broth in a pot. He brought the food to him under the oak tree and presented it to him.
6:20 God’s messenger said to him, “Put the meat and unleavened bread on this rock, and pour out the broth.” Gideon did as instructed.
6:21 The Lord’s messenger touched the meat and the unleavened bread with the tip of his staff. Fire flared up from the rock and consumed the meat and unleavened bread. The Lord’s messenger then disappeared.
6:22 When Gideon realized that it was the Lord’s messenger, he said, “Oh no! Master, Lord! I have seen the Lord’s messenger face to face!”
6:23 The Lord said to him, “You are safe! Do not be afraid! You are not going to die!”
6:24 Gideon built an altar for the Lord there, and named it “The Lord is on friendly terms with me.” To this day it is still there in Ophrah of the Abiezrites.
6:25 That night the Lord said to him, “Take the bull from your father’s herd, as well as a second bull, one that is seven years old. Pull down your father’s Baal altar and cut down the nearby Asherah pole.
6:26 Then build an altar for the Lord your God on the top of this stronghold according to the proper pattern. Take the second bull and offer it as a burnt sacrifice on the wood from the Asherah pole that you cut down.”
6:27 So Gideon took ten of his servants and did just as the Lord had told him. He was too afraid of his father’s family and the men of the city to do it in broad daylight, so he waited until nighttime.
6:28 When the men of the city got up the next morning, they saw the Baal altar pulled down, the nearby Asherah pole cut down, and the second bull sacrificed on the newly built altar.
6:29 They said to one another, “Who did this?” They investigated the matter thoroughly and concluded that Gideon son of Joash had done it.
6:30 The men of the city said to Joash, “Bring out your son, so we can execute him! He pulled down the Baal altar and cut down the nearby Asherah pole.”
6:31 But Joash said to all those who confronted him, “Must you fight Baal’s battles? Must you rescue him? Whoever takes up his cause will die by morning! If he really is a god, let him fight his own battles! After all, it was his altar that was pulled down.”
6:32 That very day Gideon’s father named him Jerub-Baal, because he had said, “Let Baal fight with him, for it was his altar that was pulled down.”
6:33 All the Midianites, Amalekites, and the people from the east assembled. They crossed the Jordan River and camped in the Jezreel Valley.
6:34 The Lord’s spirit took control of Gideon. He blew a trumpet, summoning the Abiezrites to follow him.
6:35 He sent messengers throughout Manasseh and summoned them to follow him as well. He also sent messengers throughout Asher, Zebulun, and Naphtali, and they came up to meet him.
6:36 Gideon said to God, “If you really intend to use me to deliver Israel, as you promised, then give me a sign as proof.
6:37 Look, I am putting a wool fleece on the threshing floor. If there is dew only on the fleece, and the ground around it is dry, then I will be sure that you will use me to deliver Israel, as you promised.”
6:38 The Lord did as he asked. When he got up the next morning, he squeezed the fleece, and enough dew dripped from it to fill a bowl.
6:39 Gideon said to God, “Please do not get angry at me, when I ask for just one more sign. Please allow me one more test with the fleece. This time make only the fleece dry, while the ground around it is covered with dew.”
6:40 That night God did as he asked. Only the fleece was dry and the ground around it was covered with dew.
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Context notes
This unit begins the Gideon cycle after Israel’s covenant unfaithfulness has already produced Midianite oppression.
Historical setting and dynamics
The passage belongs to the Judges period, when Israel repeatedly falls into covenant unfaithfulness and is then pressed by foreign oppressors. Midianite, Amalekite, and eastern coalitions raid the agrarian heartland, destroying crops, seizing livestock, and forcing Israelites to hide in hills, caves, and strongholds; Gideon’s threshing in a winepress reflects that desperation. The local Baal and Asherah shrine in Ophrah shows that Israel’s crisis is not only military but religious: the land is occupied by covenant-breaking syncretism, and the oppression functions as disciplinary judgment under the terms of the covenant.
Central idea
God disciplines Israel for idolatry, then graciously calls and confirms Gideon, the least likely man, to begin Israel’s deliverance. Before military victory, the real issue is covenant loyalty: the LORD must be acknowledged as God, Baal’s altar must fall, and Gideon must learn that deliverance depends on God’s presence, not human strength.
Context and flow
Judges 6 opens the Gideon narrative within the larger cyclical pattern of Judges: sin, oppression, crying out, divine response, and partial deliverance. Verses 1-10 explain the Midianite oppression and the prophetic indictment; verses 11-40 narrate Gideon’s call, reassurance, first act of obedience against idolatry, and the confirming signs. The next chapters will move from calling and confirmation to the reduction of Gideon’s army and the victory over Midian.
Exegetical analysis
The unit falls naturally into four movements. First, verses 1-10 explain the Midianite crisis as covenant discipline: Israel does evil, the LORD gives them over, and the oppression is economically devastating, not merely military. The prophetic word then interprets the crisis in redemptive-historical terms by recalling the exodus and the command not to serve the gods of the Amorites. The point is not simply that Israel is suffering, but that suffering has a covenant meaning: they have abandoned the LORD who redeemed them.
Second, verses 11-24 narrate the call of Gideon. The Lord’s messenger appears while Gideon is hiding grain, which vividly underlines his fear and Israel’s humiliation. The greeting, “The LORD is with you,” is not a description of Gideon’s present experience but a divine declaration of what will make the call possible. Gideon’s objections expose the gap between the promised presence of God and the present reality of defeat; the LORD answers that gap with the promise, “I will be with you.” The sign through the consumed offering confirms that the speaker is truly the LORD’s messenger, and Gideon’s altar name emphasizes that survival before God comes through divine peace, not human merit.
Third, verses 25-32 show that the first act of deliverance must be an act of covenant reform. Gideon is commanded to destroy his father’s Baal altar and Asherah pole and to build an altar to the LORD according to the proper pattern. The nighttime execution of the command is reported without commendation; it reflects Gideon’s fear, even though he does obey. Joash’s defense is important because it exposes the folly of idolatry: if Baal is truly god, he should defend himself. The new name Jerub-Baal marks a public challenge to Baal’s claim and becomes a lasting reminder that the conflict is fundamentally theological.
Fourth, verses 33-40 prepare for military action. The Spirit of the LORD comes upon Gideon, and he summons the Abiezrites and neighboring tribes. Yet Gideon again asks for confirming signs with the fleece. The narrator does not present the fleece as a model for ordinary decision-making; rather, it shows God’s patience with a hesitant servant as he moves from fear toward obedience. The dew imagery is exceptional and should not be pressed into hidden symbolism. The main literary effect is reassurance: the same God who has spoken, confirmed, and empowered Gideon will also preserve and use him.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands squarely under the Mosaic covenant in the land. Israel’s oppression follows the covenant pattern of disobedience leading to discipline, and the prophet’s speech explicitly recalls the exodus and the command to reject the gods of the land. Gideon is raised up as a judge-deliverer, a temporary instrument of mercy who anticipates the need for a more faithful and lasting ruler. The story therefore belongs to the ongoing tension in Israel’s history between covenant unfaithfulness, divine discipline, and the promise of restoration through God’s chosen deliverer.
Theological significance
The passage reveals a holy God who disciplines covenant unfaithfulness yet still hears the cries of his people. It shows that deliverance begins not with military strength but with divine presence, covenant remembrance, and the removal of idolatry. It also exposes the emptiness of false gods and the weakness of human leadership apart from the Spirit. Gideon’s story emphasizes that God’s peace is not found in circumstances but in restored relationship to the LORD.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No direct prophecy requires special comment in this unit. The main symbolic features are the altar name, the consumed offering, the Baal altar, and the fleece; these function within the narrative as signs of divine presence and conflict with idolatry, not as a code to be overread. Gideon’s calling does, however, fit a recurring biblical pattern in which God raises a deliverer from weakness to shame human boasting and display his own power.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The passage reflects honor-shame dynamics: Gideon’s family status, his fear of public shame, and Baal’s public dishonor all matter to the narrative. The winepress-threshing image is a concrete sign of military oppression in an agrarian society. The destruction of a local cult site is not merely private piety; in the ancient Near Eastern setting it is a direct challenge to the deity’s honor and to the city’s religious identity. The prophet’s speech also functions like a covenant lawsuit, recalling redemptive history and charging Israel with breach of loyalty.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
Within the Old Testament, this chapter deepens the need for a deliverer who is not merely militarily useful but faithful to the LORD and able to bring lasting peace. Gideon is a weak, hesitant judge who can only act because the LORD is with him; that pattern exposes the inadequacy of all merely human saviors. In canonical perspective, later biblical revelation points beyond Gideon to a righteous king and ultimate deliverer who truly defeats idolatry and secures peace. Christ fulfills and surpasses that trajectory, not by repeating Gideon’s fleece or fear, but by embodying the presence, obedience, and victorious power of God in a fuller and definitive way.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God’s discipline should drive repentance, not despair. Human weakness does not disqualify a person from obedient service when the LORD truly calls and promises his presence. Real reform begins with idolatry in the home and community, not merely with outward success. Gideon’s fleece should not be turned into a normal method for guidance; the ordinary path is to trust and obey God’s clear word. The passage also reminds believers that peace comes from restored fellowship with the LORD, not from favorable circumstances alone.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive issues are the theophanic language around the LORD’s messenger and the assessment of Gideon’s fleece requests. The messenger language is best read as a genuine divine encounter in which the messenger speaks with the authority of the LORD. The fleece episodes are gracious accommodations, not a normative blueprint for discerning God’s will.
Application boundary note
Do not treat Gideon’s fleece as a standing pattern for personal decision-making, and do not flatten this judge narrative into a direct church template. The passage is rooted in Israel’s covenant history, idolatry, and land-based oppression, so application must preserve that setting rather than universalizing every detail.
Key Hebrew terms
mal’akh YHWH
Gloss: messenger of the LORD
The narrative repeatedly blurs the line between the messenger and the LORD himself, indicating a theophanic encounter rather than a merely angelic visit.
gibbôr heḥāyil
Gloss: mighty/valiant warrior
The title is intentionally ironic and gracious, because Gideon sees himself as weak and insignificant.
’ôt
Gloss: sign, confirming token
Gideon’s repeated requests for a sign show weakness of faith, yet God mercifully accommodates him in this decisive commissioning scene.
shalom
Gloss: peace, wholeness, safety
The altar name announces that Gideon survived the encounter and that reconciliation with the LORD, not Baal, is the ground of true security.
ruaḥ YHWH
Gloss: Spirit of the LORD
Gideon’s mobilizing power comes from divine empowerment, not innate leadership strength.
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