Samson: When God Uses a Broken Man
Samson is one of Scripture's most contradictory figures — a Nazirite who touched corpses, a judge who chased foreign women, a man of God who lived like anything but. Yet Hebrews 11 names him among the faithful. Here's what his broken life reveals about grace. The Most Uncomfortable Hero in the Bible If you were designing a hero for the people of God, Samson would not make the shortlist. He is impulsive and vindictive. He breaks nearly every covenant he was consecrated to keep. He pursues foreign women against his parents' counsel and against the explicit commands of the Mosaic law. He uses his supernatural gift for personal vendettas at least as often as for national deliverance. He is manipulated by the same weakness — a woman, a question, and his own stubborn pride — not once, not twice, but three times in the book of Judges before Delilah finally succeeds where the others had come close. And yet. Hebrews 11:32 names Samson in a list of those whose faith God honored. The ...