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Gideon obeyed the explicit command of God — he tore down the altar of Baal, chopped down the Asherah pole, and offered a burnt sacrifice to the Lord. By morning, the entire city wanted him dead. Not the Midianites. Not the pagans. The covenant community. The people of God were more zealous for a false god than for the true one, and they came as one body to the door of his father's house demanding blood — a scene that echoes Sodom in Genesis 19. In this episode, we unpack what idolatry does to a people, why every religion produces a law code and enforcers to match, and how God turned the most unlikely man — the custodian of the Baal cult himself — into the shield that protected His servant. And then we watch what happens next: the Spirit falls, the trumpet sounds, and entire tribes rally behind one man who had the courage to act. Because in an age of cowardice, courage is the rarest commodity — and when it appears, everything changes.
By Nathan F. ConkeyGideon obeyed the explicit command of God — he tore down the altar of Baal, chopped down the Asherah pole, and offered a burnt sacrifice to the Lord. By morning, the entire city wanted him dead. Not the Midianites. Not the pagans. The covenant community. The people of God were more zealous for a false god than for the true one, and they came as one body to the door of his father's house demanding blood — a scene that echoes Sodom in Genesis 19. In this episode, we unpack what idolatry does to a people, why every religion produces a law code and enforcers to match, and how God turned the most unlikely man — the custodian of the Baal cult himself — into the shield that protected His servant. And then we watch what happens next: the Spirit falls, the trumpet sounds, and entire tribes rally behind one man who had the courage to act. Because in an age of cowardice, courage is the rarest commodity — and when it appears, everything changes.