Tag Archives: promise

At the Edge of Promise

As we become more effective for Christ, we will confront increasingly hardened hearts and overwhelming odds. This can happen even at the cusp of stunning victory. This is a vital lesson we must learn from Joshua 11 to live in today’s troubled world.

Beginning at the Red Sea, the Israelites experienced victory after victory which later included Jericho, Ai, and the forces of the five kings led by Adoni-bezek. At one point, God even allowed Joshua to command the sun and moon to stand still.

You would think that their enemies would have “gotten the message”—that a God more powerful than their gods stood with the Israelites, not with them. But they didn’t “get it,” except for the Gibeonites. At this point, we are told, God “hardened their hearts”—a sure sign of imminent judgment. 

To defeat the Israelites and Israel’s God, the enemies sent an army of “as many people as the sand on the seashore” (the Jewish historian Josephus records an army of 300,000), plus horses and chariots which Israel’s foot army did not have. In the natural, the Israelites appeared overwhelmed by this superior force.

But God told them, “Do not fear, Trust me.” The Israelites had stumbled many times before, but by this time, they had learned their lesson—no more wilderness wandering, no Achans to spoil it for everybody. The Israelites won a stunning victory, 100% destroying the enemy. Now, they could take the Promised Land given by God to Abraham and his descendants.

Don’t we also have a great promise of the Lord, both corporately and personally, of a world “filled with the knowledge of the glory of God as the waters cover the sea” (Habakkuk 2:14)? This does not mean just head knowledge but experiencing God in every area of life. Ponder what this staggering promise means for you, your family, community and nation!

Over the past 200 years or so—around the dawn of the modern missionary age—we have seen the rise of mighty opposition overpowering that of any previous age. Think of the multitude of “isms” that have reaped folly, havoc and heartache for millions if not billions of people worldwide. We all know the “isms”—secularism, materialism, Darwinism, Marxism, communism, fascism, militant Islamism, Hindu nationalism, plus many more.

These heart-hardened forces hate God and possess formidable natural resources we can’t match. As if it were their birthright, they ruthlessly seize control of governments, schools, families, economies, arts and entertainment and every other part of our cultures. Even many churches have meekly surrendered to the “isms”.

How easy for us to think, “We are grasshoppers in their sight!” How many of us declare, like Caleb and Joshua, “They will become bread for us?” 

The God of Joshua has not changed. He still says to us as He said to the Israelites, “Do not fear, I am with you.” We have resources today (i.e., the cross, the indwelling Holy Spirit and His gifts, the keys of the kingdom) that Joshua lacked. If Joshua and the Israelites won such a stunning victory with less, what manner of victory awaits us when Christ gives us more?

The victory for our Promised Land may be closer than we imagine—if we will take it! Let us not needlessly wander in wildernesses of our own making!

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When God’s People Stand in His Way

Sometimes God’s worst enemies are His own people. Joshua 5 underlines this troubling truth. To understand this, we must remind ourselves of a vital principle:

God’s words of blessing and covenant to us are sure. That is, as long as we fully agree to them, trusting God to do what He has promised. 

The Israelites utterly failed to trust God. Forty years earlier, at the last moment, they got cold feet and threw away everything God intended for them.

Recall from Numbers 13-14 how twelve spies entered Canaan, their Promised Land, and ten spies reported of the Canaanites, “We are grasshoppers in their sight!” Only two, Joshua and Caleb, declared, “Trust God! He is on our side, and our victory is sure!” 

The Israelites believed the ten naysayers. They came close to stoning Joshua and Caleb, groaning, “What are we doing here? LET US RETURN TO EGYPT!!” In short, they believed the Canaanites were stronger than God. They believed this even after they witnessed the ten plagues that got them out of Egypt, the Red Sea miracle and experienced God’s help in defeating the Amorites. 

They displayed sheer unbelief after witnessing overwhelming evidence that God was with them.

This unbelief denied the Israelites’ entry into the Promised Land until that unfaithful generation died off (except for the faithful Joshua and Caleb). They needlessly remained homeless slaves in a trackless wilderness for 40 years, never realizing God’s promises. What a total tragedy!

By God’s grace, a new generation of Israelites arose to receive another chance. But first, they had to renounce the unbelief of their parents and grandparents before they could move forward. They had to take tangible steps (circumcision) to demonstrate they were still true covenant people of God, not infidels like their forebears. They partook the same Passover meal eaten by their parents before they left Egypt.

Only then did they cast off the spirit of Egyptian slavery that still haunted them because of their parents’ unbelief. Only then could they expect God to lead them to victory over the Canaanites. Now, the Israelites learned their lesson. Now, the captain of the Lord’s host (Jesus?) appeared, ready to assist their victory with angelic power.

Joshua 5 is both a promise and a warning to us. If God’s chosen people could fall into gross unbelief, what about us? Whatever our level of spiritual maturity, each of us is conceived in sin, easily subject to doubts and unbelief. 

Unbelief takes many forms, even deceptively spiritual ones. We live in troubling, violent, times. We face personal difficulties. Do we become easily shaken by these things? Even dearly held theological convictions may result because current events appear stronger than the eternal Word of God and His personal promises to us.

We all do well to come often before God to renew our covenant with Him, even forsaking subtle forms of unbelief passed on to us by beloved parents and grandparents. We all do well to pray along with David, the man after God’s own heart, “Try me, and see if there be any wicked way in me” (Psalm 139:24).

May we all renew our minds before God so that we will cling to the promises God has given us, bringing blessing to us and to multitudes in our generation. A blessed Christmas to you!

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Made for More

silhouette-of-person-walking-1046896God made us for more than we imagine!

We glimpse this in Psalm 8 where David writes, “…you [God] crown him with glory and majesty! You make him to rule over the works of your hands; you have put all things under his feet…” This repeats God’s mandate in Genesis 1.

This dominion mandate has never been fulfilled because sin and death entered into the world—death to our physical bodies and also death to our spirits. Our spirits are the part of us designed for fellowship with God and to fulfill His grand design.

Sin destroyed our ability to fellowship with God. We became indifferent to God. We became hostile to God. We underestimated God. We ignored and disbelieved God. We suppressed the truth about God. We did not take God into account. We did not fulfill our mandate, and the whole universe has suffered. We are no longer in harmony with God, our purpose for being, the world around us, our own bodies, or other people.

Sin has taken a terrible toll on our minds. No longer in tune with God and our purpose for being, we are limited only to those things we perceive with our five senses, to our own limited reasoning capacities. A thing may seem right to us, but it leads to death. We may have high ideals and moral standards, and enjoy the arts, but we still fall pitifully short because we no longer have God’s perspective or power.

The Good News is that God has never revoked His dominion mandate. Through Jesus Christ, He entered the world in Bethlehem to set things right through His life, death and resurrection. Through Christ, He regenerates our dead spirits and sends His Holy Spirit. We become part of His heavenly family, for we are told He is not ashamed to call us His brothers and sisters. One day, His dominion mandate will be 100% fulfilled through us who trust Him.

In the meantime, we must renew our minds with these things. Once crippled by the limitations of sin, our minds, through the Holy Spirit, are now capable of perceiving something of what God has designed for us.

George Muller, the great man of prayer and faith, wrote in his autobiography, “I saw more clearly than ever that the first great and primary business to which I ought to attend every day was to have my soul happy in the Lord. The first thing to be concerned about was not how much I might serve the Lord, or how I might glorify the Lord; but how I might get my soul into a happy state, and how my inner man might be nourished… Now what is the food for the inner man…but the Word of God.”

The Word of God leads us to the promises of God. As we regularly partake of His promises in trust, our minds are renewed. To the regenerate person, renewed by the Holy Spirit, the promises of God provide the impetus to pray more effectively and glorify Him. We begin to walk in the Spirit, live in power and bear fruit.

Every day, more of India’s unreached peoples are learning these vital truths. Let us join together to insure all of India hears this great news!

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