This is Spoken Gospel. We’re dedicated to seeing  Jesus in all of scripture. In each episode, we see what’s  happening in a Biblical text and how it sheds light on Jesus and his gospel. Let’s jump in. Israel is descending deeper  and deeper into darkness. Jephthah’s leadership is marked by the ominous silence of God. Israel prays, but God refuses to answer. Even though Israel makes a show of shelving their idols, God refuses to raise up a new deliverer. Instead, Israel debates among  themselves who will lead them. They eventually land on the  son of a prostitute, Jephthah. Armed with a reputation as a warrior and a bandit,   Jephthah agrees to defeat the Ammonites in exchange for the right to rule over Israel. Israel agrees and Jephthah immediately proves himself a gifted diplomat and wordsmith. Israel’s enemies, the Ammonites, claim Israel initiated an aggressive takeover of Ammonite land and want it back. But full of political savvy, Jephthah  diplomatically explains Israel’s innocence. Cunningly, Jephthah reminds the king of Amnon that it was Israel who was attacked unprovoked and won the land in fair combat. Jephthah’s words prove Israel is innocent  of aggression and rightfully rules the land. But the king of the Ammonites refuses  Jephthah’s diplomacy and prepares for war. Jephthah marches toward the battle and he tries to manipulate God. He gives God his word that he will offer a costly sacrifice if God gives him victory. But God remains silent, and Jephthah’s  words end up coming back to haunt him. Jephthah’s only child is killed because  of his foolish “word” to the Lord. Jephthah’s final act as “deliverer” is to spark a civil war with Ephraim and slaughter 42,000 of them. As Jephthah dies we see another break in God’s pattern; there is no peace after Jephthah’s deliverance. [music] God is silent during Jephthah’s rule. Their sin has gone too far, their idolatry is too deep to warrant another word from God. He has left his people to the gods and  leaders they’ve chosen for themselves. And the foolish “wordiness” of Israel’s leaders is a fitting judgment for a people whose words to God have been disingenuous and manipulative. You might feel God’s silence too. You might have even said a prayer like Jephthah’s—something like, “God, if you will help me I’ll do whatever you want.” But you don’t have to manipulate God that way. Jesus doesn’t need hypocritical words or quickly made promises to rule in your favor. All he needs is your trust that he is a good Judge— and an honest confession that you have done wrong. If you want to escape the silence of God, you  need to trust the silence Jesus experienced. On the cross Jesus cries out, “My God,  my God, why have you forsaken me?”. God’s silence toward Jesus was a sign that he has taken on the hypocrisy and manipulative words we so easily speak. So, when we trust in Jesus,  the silence of God ends. Instead of being trapped by what we say,  we are set free from the consequences of our words  by Jesus’ final words that our sin “is finished.” Jesus now speaks a better word  than the bloodshed of Jephthah.   We are sons and daughters whom he will not forsake or kill. God’s Word made flesh speaks into the silence our sin deserves and tells us that we are instead righteous, pure, holy, loved—   and that nothing will silence God’s love toward us again. May the Holy Spirit open your  eyes to see the God who is silent. And may you see Jesus as the one who experiences God’s silence, so we might hear God’s voice.