top of page
DSC09959.JPG
EGMFishLogo.png
Image by Art Lasovsky

STAY TUNED!

NEW CONTENT

COMING SOON

Home: Welcome

Welcome to EricGilbert.org!

 

Eric's mission is to equip you with the Word of God so that you can be empowered by the Spirit of God.

 

Here on the blog site, you will find several tools to assist you in experiencing God in life-giving ways, as Eric posts weekly blogs & even hosts guest contributors each month.  You can also find discussion guides, message notes, message transcripts, and video links to all of his Sunday messages and Wednesday teachings. 

 

Don't forget to subscribe to receive the latest blog in your inbox!

Book of the Bible: 1 & 2 Samuel


The story of Samuel opens with his mother praying to God for a child. For many years, Hannah was unable to have any children. One day Hannah was praying with so much fervor that the priest, Eli, thought she was drunk. She explained to Eli that she wasn’t drunk but she was simply pouring her heart out to God. Eli then told her to “go in peace! May the God of Israel grant the request you have asked of him.”


Hannah was excited that Eli said this so she went away celebrating. By the time a year had passed, Hannah had a son and named him Samuel. Because Hannah was so thankful that God gave her a son, she dedicated Samuel to God and let him live with Eli.


When Samuel was a boy God would speak to him during the night. Eli helped him discern what God was telling him and Samuel began speaking what the Lord was telling him to say.


God was with Samuel as he grew up and he became a great influence in the nation of Israel. Samuel was a great prophet and judge that led Israel out of the era of the judges and into the era of the kings. Samuel, with God’s help, picked the first 2 kings Israel had. First Saul, then David.


The kings relied heavily on Samuel's wisdom and knowledge. Samuel would tell them what God was saying and he was always there to remind them of what God had commanded them.


Samuel is one of the greatest characters in the Bible. He is spoken so highly for several reasons. He was fair and impartial in the way he led Israel and he was always obedient to God. Unlike many significant people in the Bible, the Bible doesn’t give us an account of any moral failures in life. Samuel was faithful and obedient to God his entire life.


However, while we aren’t given an account of Samuel’s errors we know he wasn’t perfect. But there was a man who would come after Samuel who was. Jesus lived a perfect life. He was always obedient to what God was calling him to. Jesus lived a sinless life and because of that, he was able to die on the cross for all of our sins.


Key Takeaways:

  • God hears and answers our prayers

  • Listen to God when He speaks

  • Be obedient to the voice of God

Parents, 3treesKIDS will be covering “Gideon", both in-person and online this week. Be sure to check out their lesson at www.3trees.com/kids.


To find service times and locations, visit https://www.3trees.com/planyourvisit.

Book of the Bible: Judges 6-8


After Deborah’s death, Israel began to sin again. This led God to hand them over to the Midianites for seven years. The Israelites prayed to God to be rescued from Midianite control, and God sent an angel to speak to a man named Gideon. The angel told Gideon that he was a mighty hero and that God was with him. The angel also told Gideon that God was sending him to rescue Israel from the Midianites.


But Gideon didn’t believe he could do it because he was from the weakest tribe in the whole nation of Israel. But God reassured Gideon and told him that he would certainly destroy the Midianites very easily because He was going to be with him. But Gideon still didn’t fully believe, so he asked God to show him some signs that He would be with him.


Gideon asked for 2 signs. Gideon placed a fleece outside and asked God to allow the fleece to be wet with the morning dew but the ground around it to be dry. And God did it. The second sign was like the first, but the opposite. This time Gideon asked for the fleece to be dry and the ground to be wet. And God did it.


After these signs, Gideon knew that God was with him. So, Gideon gathered an army of 32,000 people and headed to battle. But God told him something very strange, He said that the army was too large and it would have to be made smaller. God told Gideon to let anyone that was afraid go home, and 10,000 people left. But God said the army was still too big. God told Gideon that whoever drinks water from the stream like a dog should be sent home. After all these tests, Gideon was only left with 300 men in his army.


Gideon had heard that the Midianites were afraid of God and Gideon so he was eager to attack them. Gideon gave each of his 300 men a ram's horn and torch and at night surrounded the camp. Once they had the camp surrounded they blew their horns and raised their torches. After seeing and hearing all of this, the people in the camp panicked and started to fight each other.


The people that didn’t fight tried to escape but Gideon and his small army were able to run them down and Gideon defeated the Midianites. Gideon, with an army of 300 was able to defeat over 100,000 Midianites not alone, but with God’s help.


The story of Gideon shows us that God wants to use all kinds of people. Gideon didn’t think God would want to use him because his family was small and weak. But God used Gideon in a great way and it led to a lot of people being saved. The story also shows us that God wants all the glory. There’s no way 300 people could have beaten 100,000 by themselves. But with God, all things are possible.


We even see that with Jesus. Jesus grew up in a small little town called Nazareth. No one expected anything good to come out of Nazareth, but God was with Jesus and Jesus listened to everything God told him. And because of his relationship with God, Jesus was able to offer everyone salvation if they would just believe in him.


Key Takeaways:

  • God can do a lot with a little

  • God’s plan may seem strange

  • With God, all things are possible

Parents, 3treesKIDS will be covering “Gideon", both in-person and online this week. Be sure to check out their lesson at www.3trees.com/kids.


To find service times and locations, visit https://www.3trees.com/planyourvisit.

Book of the Bible: Judges 13-16


Who was Samson?

  • He was a judge of Israel

  • He was a Nazarite meaning:

    • He couldn’t drink alcohol, eat unclean food, or cut his hair

  • God had given him super strength


Before Samson was born, an angel appeared to his parents and told them that they would have a son and he would begin to deliver the nation of Israel from the hands of the Philistines. When Samson was born he was dedicated as a Nazarite and God blessed him as he grew. God gave Samson superhuman strength that he used to save himself in many situations.


Cool Things Samson Did:

  • Killed a lion with his bare hands

  • Caught 300 foxes, tied their tails together, and set them on fire to destroy the Philistines’ crops

  • Killed 1,000 Philistine men with a donkey jawbone

  • Constantly broke free after the Philistines tried tying him up

  • Broke the doors of a metal gate that the Philistines had trapped him in


During this time, the Israelites were under heavy oppression from the Philistines. But, God used Samson to fight back and he began to free the people from the Philistines. However, Samson started hanging out with the wrong people and it got him in trouble.


Samson became friends with a Philistine woman named Delilah. Samson liked Delilah, but he didn’t know she was secretly working with the Philistine army. Delilah’s job was to find out how Samson received his super strength and if it was possible for him to lose it.


Delilah begged Samson over and over again how he received his strength and he eventually told her. He told her that if his hair was ever cut then he would lose all his strength. Delilah then told the army that if they cut his hair, they could defeat him. So they snuck in his room while he slept and they cut his hair and captured him since he had no strength.


The Philistines gouged Samson’s eyes out and they made him their slave. One day when Samson was tied up, he prayed that God would give him strength one last time. God answered Samson’s prayer and he tore down the whole Philistine temple, killing 3,000 people. In this act, Samson killed more Philistines than he ever did in his life, but he also died when the temple came down.


We can learn many things from Samson, but what we learn most is the consequences of having bad friends. God was using Samson in great ways, and God wanted to continue to use him. But Samson chose a bad friend and that relationship got in the way of his relationship with God and it caused him to lose his strength, be captured, and eventually die.


Samson reminds us of another guy God used in the Bible, Jesus. But unlike Samson, Jesus chose good friends and never let anyone get in between his relationship with God. Jesus was able to fulfill everything God had called him to do because he stayed focused and always listened to what God was telling him to do.


Key Takeaways:

  • Choose Your Friends Carefully

  • Stay Focused

Parents, 3treesKIDS will be covering “Samson", both in-person and online this week. Be sure to check out their lesson at www.3trees.com/kids.


To find service times and locations, visit https://www.3trees.com/planyourvisit.

Subscribe Form

Home: Subscribe
EGMFishLogo.png

Eric Gilbert Ministries

PO Box 490 | Columbia, KY 42728

Home: Contact
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram

Click Below to Visit:

EGMFishLogo.png

©2023 by 

  • facebook
  • instagram
EGMFishLogo.png
EGMwrittenLOGO.png
bottom of page