The Power of Getting Right with God
The Bible in a Year
“And as Samuel was offering up the burnt offering, the Philistines drew near to battle against Israel; but the Lord thundered with a great thunder on that day upon the Philistines, and discomfited them; and they were smitten before Israel.” — 1 Samuel 7:10
As I walk through this passage, I find myself standing with Israel at a turning point—a moment where everything hinges on whether they will truly return to God. The prophet Samuel calls them to put away their idols, to abandon the divided loyalties that had weakened them spiritually. And they respond. They gather at Mizpeh, not merely to say the right words, but to offer sacrifice and worship. The Hebrew word often associated with returning to God is שׁוּב (shuv), meaning to turn back, to restore, to return with intention. This is not surface-level repentance; it is a reorientation of the heart. I am reminded how easy it is to talk about renewal without actually engaging in it. True revival is not measured by emotion or language, but by a restored pattern of worship and surrender.
Yet, almost immediately, resistance appears. As Samuel offers the burnt offering, the Philistines advance. It is a pattern I have seen not only in Scripture but in life: the moment we begin to take God seriously, opposition intensifies. The adversary does not ignore a heart that is turning toward God. In fact, Scripture consistently shows that spiritual growth often invites spiritual conflict. The apostle Peter echoes this truth when he writes, “Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour” (1 Peter 5:8). This is not meant to discourage us, but to prepare us. When I begin to pursue God with sincerity, I should not be surprised if pressures increase. It is not a sign of failure; it is often a sign of movement in the right direction.
What happens next, however, reframes everything. As the enemy approaches, “the Lord thundered with a great thunder.” The Hebrew word for thunder here, רָעַם (ra‘am), conveys a powerful, overwhelming sound—a divine intervention that disrupts the enemy’s advance. Israel does not win this battle by strength alone; they win because God steps into the conflict. Charles Spurgeon once noted, “When we are weakest, then are we strongest, if we rely upon the Lord.” That truth becomes visible in this moment. Their repentance did not eliminate the battle, but it invited the presence of God into it. And when God moves, what seemed overwhelming becomes manageable, even winnable.
This leads to the final movement of the text: the routing of the enemy. The Philistines are not merely pushed back; they are subdued. Israel experiences a victory they had not known for some time. There is a direct connection here between being right with God and gaining strength over what once defeated them. Sin loses its grip not simply through effort, but through alignment with God. This ties deeply into the New Testament vision of transformation found in Galatians 5:22–23, where the fruit of the Spirit begins with love (ἀγάπη, agapē). Love is not just an emotion; it is the evidence of a life rightly ordered under God. When I am walking in love—patient, kind, not self-seeking as described in 1 Corinthians 13:4–7—I am no longer feeding the patterns that give sin its foothold.
There is an insightful observation here for our daily walk. Getting right with God is not a one-time event; it is a continual posture. It involves confession, yes, but also devotion. It involves turning away, but also drawing near. James captures this balance when he writes, “Draw near to God, and he will draw near to you” (James 4:8). I find that when I neglect this rhythm, I become vulnerable—not because God has moved away, but because I have drifted. But when I return, when I reestablish that connection through prayer, Scripture, and obedience, something shifts. The battles do not disappear, but they are no longer fought alone.
As I continue through this year-long journey in Scripture, this passage invites me to examine not just what I believe, but how I live. Am I truly returning to God in the areas where I have drifted? Am I willing to engage in the kind of worship and surrender that reflects genuine repentance? And perhaps most importantly, am I trusting that God will act on behalf of those who align themselves with Him? The thunder of God may not always be audible, but His intervention is real. He still disrupts the plans of the enemy. He still strengthens His people. And He still leads those who return to Him into victory.
For deeper reflection on repentance and spiritual renewal, consider this resource:
https://www.gotquestions.org/repentance-Bible.html
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