Skip to content
Pen Speakers
  • Home
  • Articles
  • Videos
  • Contact
Menu
  • Home
  • Articles
  • Videos
  • Contact
Search
Close
Pen-speakers-logo-white
  • Home
  • Articles
  • Videos
  • Contact
Menu
  • Home
  • Articles
  • Videos
  • Contact
Search
Close
  • The Nation

When the Innocent Pay for Political Ambition

  • By Oluwagbemileke Amoo
  • June 16, 2026
  • 7:31 am
  • No Comments
A single verse tucked inside Judges 9 describes a political tactic so familiar it could have been written yesterday. With elections approaching and innocent lives still being taken, it is time to name this ancient evil for what it is.
An extreme close-up of an ancient chess-like game board, worn and cracked. In the centre, a single simple clay figurine of an ordinary person, a traveller with a small bundle, surrounded at a distance by elaborately carved pieces representing kings, commanders, and political figures. The ordinary figure is lit from above by a single shaft of light. Everything else is in deep shadow. Shot from directly above, macro lens. Mood: the innocent as political currency, the human being reduced to a game piece, the ancient and ongoing evil of weaponising civilian lives for power.

There is a verse in Judges 9 that is easy to skip over. It sits between the drama of Abimelech’s rise to power and his eventual downfall. But once you truly see it, you cannot unsee it.

“In opposition to him these citizens of Shechem set men on the hilltops to ambush and rob everyone who passed by, and this was reported to Abimelek.”

Judges 9:25

Read it again slowly. The leaders of Shechem wanted to undermine Abimelech’s authority, to make him look weak and unable to maintain order. So they planted robbers on the roads to attack innocent travellers. Not soldiers. Not Abimelech’s supporters. Not people with any stake in their political dispute. Just ordinary people trying to get from one place to another.

These travellers were robbed, possibly killed, certainly traumatised, all so that Shechem’s leaders could score a political point about Abimelech’s inability to keep the peace.

The innocent suffered so the ambitious could advance.

If this sounds familiar, if it sounds like something you have read about in this week’s news, in reports of kidnappings, in accounts of coordinated attacks on communities ahead of elections, that is because it is. This evil is ancient. And it is still happening today.

“Political actors funding violence against civilians to destabilise their opponents. Creating chaos so they can position themselves as the solution. This tactic was not invented in the modern era. It has been in operation since Bible times.”

Nothing new under the sun

Judges 9:25 is not an isolated incident. It is one entry in a long and consistent biblical record of political leaders who deliberately sacrificed innocent lives to gain or maintain power. This is not collateral damage, the unintended consequence of conflict. It is collateral damage by design.

Ecclesiastes 1:9 says what is has already been, and what has been done will be done again. The tactics of political evil have not evolved. They have simply been recycled across millennia, wearing different names in different generations.

God recorded it. God repaid it.

Here is what needs to be said clearly about Judges 9: both Abimelech and the leaders of Shechem died violently for their wickedness. Neither escaped. The text is deliberate about this.

The leaders of Shechem, the very men who planted robbers to harm innocent travellers, eventually took refuge in the tower of El-Berith’s temple. Abimelech surrounded it and set it ablaze with everyone inside. About a thousand men and women burned alive. The fire they had started, politically and literally, consumed them.

Abimelech himself fared no better. Advancing on the next city, a woman dropped a millstone from the tower above and cracked his skull. Even in his final moments, pride consumed him: he begged his armour-bearer to run him through so it could not be said that a woman had killed him. The man who murdered seventy brothers to seize a kingdom died ashamed of how he was dying.

The innocent travellers sacrificed on those roads? God recorded their suffering in Scripture. The wicked who sacrificed them? God ended their lives violently and preserved their wickedness as a permanent record. Both sides died. The pattern holds across the whole of Scripture: those who harm the innocent for political gain face judgement. Herod died consumed by disease. Pharaoh’s firstborn died, then his army drowned. Haman was hanged on the very gallows he had built for Mordecai.

Justice may be delayed. Some wicked leaders live long lives and appear to escape consequence. But God sees, God records, and God repays.

“Do not fret because of those who are evil or be envious of those who do wrong; for like the grass they will soon wither… A little while, and the wicked will be no more; though you look for them, they will not be found.”

Psalm 37:1–2, 10

Enter your email above to receive our articles when published.

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on pinterest
Pinterest
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Oluwagbemileke Amoo

Oluwagbemileke Amoo

Leke is a world-class, passionate teacher and writer. He is an inspiration to many children, their parents and other teachers. He is a loving husband & father.
All Posts »
PrevPreviousShe Gave Him Milk. Then She Killed Him.

Leave a Comment Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Pen-speakers-logo-white
Facebook
Twitter
Youtube
Instagram
Linkedin
  • Mr Leke
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Videos
  • Discipleship
  • Contact

Subscribe to emails from Leke

© Copyright 2020 Penspeakers. All Rights Reserved | Web Design
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms of use
  • Contact

Penspeakers Newsletter

Leke Amoo

Sign up to our newsletter

  • Home
  • Discipleship
  • Compliment Cards
  • The Nation
  • Mr Leke
  • Everything Motherhood
  • Contact
  • Smart Book
  • Shop
Menu
  • Home
  • Discipleship
  • Compliment Cards
  • The Nation
  • Mr Leke
  • Everything Motherhood
  • Contact
  • Smart Book
  • Shop
Facebook
Twitter
Youtube
Instagram
Linkedin