Military Devotion – As in the Days of Midian – January 23, 2026
23 January 2026

Military Devotion – As in the Days of Midian – January 23, 2026

WELS Military Devotions

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Based on Isaiah 9:4


As in the Days of Midian

There are some battles that are so widely known that you just need to say one or two words and most people know: “D-Day.” “The Bulge.” Or today, January 23, 1943… (how well do you know your military history?) U.S. forces seized control of… Guadalcanal.


There is a battle that was so well known among God’s people that the prophet Isaiah only needed to use one word, and everyone knew which battle he was talking about. “For as in the day of Midian’s defeat…” (Isaiah 9:4).


I’d encourage you to read about this battle in Judges chapter 7. The after action report would have said, “Despite overwhelming odds, the small company of Israelite war fighters thoroughly destroyed the warriors from the nation of Midian.”


The Midianites brutally oppressed the people of Israel. The enemy so impoverished the Israelites politically, economically, agriculturally the people cried out under its awful weight. God, through a man named Gideon, shattered that yoke, that heavy bar across their shoulders.


Isaiah predicted that God would do this again: “For as in the days of Midian’s defeat, you have shattered the yoke that burdens them, the bar across their shoulders, the rod of their oppressor” (Isaiah 9:4).


The well-known battles would be fought, not with swords or spears, not with Paladin or Patriot missiles, but with words and a will that would not be broken. The battlefield was a wilderness where the enemy failed to drive the hero to despair. The battlefield was a garden, where the hero wrestled in prayer, but in the end, willingly submitted his will to his Father. The battlefield was a cross, where the accusations of the enemy and the wrath of a holy God and the burden of guilt was laid on his shoulders, on his soul. The battlefield was a tomb that could not hold the hero’s dead body, which came back to life and lived and lives today. By his resurrection he has destroyed the grip of the grave and death over you.


These battles are so well known that you only need to say a word or two and you know it means victory for you: Gethsemane, Golgotha, garden tomb. Whatever burdens your soul today, whatever guilt you feel pressing down on your conscience, whatever sadness or grief weighs down on your heart, know that it has all been removed, crushed, destroyed – for Christ, our hero, has won the battle against overwhelming forces that fought against him and against us.


When you feel burdened by your guilt, when you feel overwhelmed by the enemy, return to these battlefield sites, walk through them, and remember what happened there: victory for you; freedom from oppression for you. And you can say, “As in the days of Midian’s defeat… so are the days of the devil’s defeat… so are the days of my sins’ defeat… so are the days of my death’s defeat…”


Prayer:


Lord God of hosts, you shattered the power of Midian and through your Son, broke the yoke of sin, death and the devil. When we feel oppressed by guilt, fear or grief, lead us again to the cross and empty tomb, that we may rest in Christ’s victory and live in the freedom he has won for us. In the name of our victorious hero, Jesus. Amen.


Written and recorded by Rev. Paul Horn, WELS National Civilian Chaplain to the Military, San Diego, California.


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