Value for Value ⚡️
Episode Summary
Context: In this episode of Lifespring! One Year Bible Rewind we hear the story of Samson from Judges 12-16, a man set apart for God whose physical strength outpaced his spiritual discipline.
Why this matters: Samson’s life shows how compromise slowly erodes calling, and how even at the end God answers the prayer of a repentant heart.
Entities: Samson, Delilah, Manoah, Philistines, Israelites, Nazirite vow, Judges 12–16, John Milton, John Wesley, Thomas Coke, Robert Moffat, Edmund Allenby, Jerusalem, Dagon, Lifespring! One Year Bible Rewind.
Today’s Reading
Judges 12
Judges 13
Judges 14
Judges 15
Judges 16
Read along with today’s passages at
Judges 12-16 on BibleGateway.
Episode Summary – More Than A Haircut
Samson’s story begins with a miracle. In Judges 13 the angel of the Lord appears to Manoah and his wife and announces that this long awaited child will be set apart as a Nazirite from birth. No wine, no uncleanness, and no razor on his head. God Himself is marking out Samson as a man devoted to His purposes.
As we move through Judges 14 and 15, we watch the tension between calling and compromise. Samson is empowered by the Spirit in remarkable ways. He tears a lion apart with his bare hands, poses a riddle at his wedding feast, and strikes back against the Philistines when they burn his wife and her family. Yet at the same time he repeatedly follows his appetites, chooses Philistine women, and treats holy things lightly. The strength is real, but the heart is divided.
In Judges 16 that conflict reaches its breaking point. Samson falls for Delilah, and he toys with the secret of his strength until he finally gives it away. His hair is cut, the Lord departs from him, and the Philistines blind him and put him to work at the mill. Only then, in weakness and humiliation, does Samson finally cry out to God with a whole heart.
Steve reflects on how Samson’s final prayer in the Philistine temple is more than a last burst of strength. It is a moment of renewed dependence. God hears, grants one more act of power, and uses Samson even in his death to strike a decisive blow against Israel’s enemies. The tragedy is that so much potential was lost along the way because Samson treated his consecration as a costume instead of a calling.
For us, Samson is both a warning and a comfort. He reminds us that small compromises can quietly shave away our spiritual strength long before we notice. He also reminds us that when we turn back to God in honest repentance, even after failure, God still hears and still works through redeemed, surrendered people.
Key Takeaways
Calling is a gift, not a guarantee. Samson’s Nazirite status did not prevent him from wasting years of his life. Our gifts are meant to be guarded by obedience.
Compromise usually comes quietly. As Charles Spurgeon observed, the enemy often “shaves the locks” while we sleep, and the loss of power can surprise us when the crisis comes.
God can redeem even the ruins. Samson’s final act comes after failure, blindness, and chains. God still hears his prayer and accomplishes His purposes.
Stay spiritually awake. Regular prayer, time in Scripture, and honest repentance help us notice when our hearts are drifting before the crash arrives.
