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William MacDonald

But God hath chosen

William MacDonald teaches that God intentionally chooses the weak and unlikely to demonstrate His power and bring about His purposes.
In this sermon, William MacDonald explores the theme of God's sovereign choice to use the weak and unlikely to accomplish His divine purposes. Drawing from the book of Judges, he highlights biblical examples where God empowered seemingly insignificant individuals to achieve mighty victories. MacDonald emphasizes that these stories reveal God's glory and encourage believers to trust in His power rather than their own strength.

Text

“But God hath chosen…the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty.” (1 Cor. 1:27) If a carpenter can take waste, scrap lumber and make a splendid piece of furniture out of it, it brings more credit to him than if he uses only the finest of materials. So when God uses things that are foolish, worthless and weak to accomplish glorious results, it magnifies His skill and power. People cannot attribute the success to the raw materials; they are forced to confess that it can only be the Lord who deserves the credit. The book of Judges provides repeated illustrations of God using the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty. Ehud, for example, was a lefthanded Benjamite. The left hand in Scripture speaks of weakness. Yet Ehud brought down Eglon, king of Moab and won rest for Israel for eighty years (Judg. 3:12-30). Shamgar went into battle wielding an oxgoad, and yet with this unlikely weapon he slew 600 Philistines and delivered Israel (3:31). Deborah was a member of the “weaker sex,” yet by the power of God she won a smashing victory over the Canaanites (4:1; 5:31). Barak’s 10,000 foot soldiers were a poor match, humanly speaking, against Sisera’s 900 chariots of iron, yet Barak swept the field (4:10, 13). Jael, another member of the “weaker sex,” killed Sisera with such a non-weapon as a tent pin (4:21). According to the Septuagint, she held the pin with her left hand. Gideon marched against the Midianites with an army that the Lord had reduced from 32,000 to 300 (7:1-7). His army is pictured under the figure of a cake of barley bread. Since barley bread was the food of the poor, the picture is one of poverty and feebleness (7:13). The unconventional weapons of Gideon’s army were earthenware pitchers, torches and trumpets (7:10). And as if that were not enough to insure defeat, the pitchers had to be broken (7:19). Abimelech was felled by a woman’s hand hurling a piece of millstone (9:53). The name Tola means a worm, an inauspicious title for a military deliverer (10:1). When we first meet Samson’s mother, she is a nameless, barren woman (13:2). Finally, Samson killed 1000 Philistines with nothing more lethal than the jawbone of an ass (15:15).

Sermon Outline

  1. I
    • God chooses the weak to display His power
    • Human weakness highlights divine strength
    • Success is credited to God, not human ability
  2. II
    • Examples from Judges illustrate God's use of unlikely heroes
    • Ehud's left-handedness and victory over Moab
    • Shamgar's oxgoad and deliverance of Israel
  3. III
    • Women as instruments of God's power: Deborah and Jael
    • Barak's small army defeating a superior force
    • Gideon's reduced army and unconventional weapons
  4. IV
    • Other examples of weakness used mightily: Abimelech, Tola, Samson
    • God's glory shown through human inadequacy
    • Encouragement to trust God's power in personal weakness

Key Quotes

“But God hath chosen…the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty.” — William MacDonald
“When God uses things that are foolish, worthless and weak to accomplish glorious results, it magnifies His skill and power.” — William MacDonald
“People cannot attribute the success to the raw materials; they are forced to confess that it can only be the Lord who deserves the credit.” — William MacDonald

Application Points

  • Trust God to work through your weaknesses rather than relying solely on your own strength.
  • Recognize that God can use anyone, regardless of status or ability, to accomplish His purposes.
  • Take encouragement from biblical examples that God’s power is made perfect in weakness.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean that God chooses the weak?
It means God deliberately uses those who seem insignificant or powerless to accomplish His purposes, highlighting His strength rather than human ability.
Why does the sermon focus on examples from Judges?
The book of Judges provides vivid biblical examples of God using weak and unlikely people to deliver Israel, illustrating the sermon's core message.
How can this message encourage believers today?
Believers can find hope knowing that their weaknesses do not disqualify them from God's use; rather, God can work powerfully through their limitations.
What is the significance of the left hand in this sermon?
The left hand symbolizes weakness or less favored status, yet God used left-handed Ehud to achieve a great victory, showing God's power in weakness.
Are women highlighted in this sermon?
Yes, women like Deborah and Jael are emphasized as examples of God's use of the 'weaker sex' to accomplish mighty deeds.

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