I
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distinctly remember
the first day my brother and I moved into our new home. For eighteen long months we had worked,
preparing the house for occupancy. At
last the long-awaited day arrived. With
the help of our parents and a few friends, we moved our furniture, our clothes,
and all our belongings into the new house, cutting the apron strings with home
and taking up the reigns of home ownership.
It was exciting and frightening at the same time. During the previous eighteen months, we had
lived with our parents but our new home was across town, waiting for us to
enter and set up house keeping. During
this time we were in limbo; we lived in one place but were looking forward to
another. Although we had enjoyed living
with mom and dad, the time had come for us to move on and start a new life of
our own.
A few days after moving into the house, I received a reality
check. You know what these are, don’t you?
They are those little moments when you understand just how big the hole
you’re in is and you know the shovel you are holding isn’t large enough to dig
you out. It had never occurred to me
that the money we borrowed had to be paid back.
I had written checks to pay for the plumbing, the wiring, and all the
other needs we had. But that was the
bank’s money, not mine. Now I was faced
with the reality that I had to use my money to repay the loan. Talk about scared!
I imagine this is the way Joshua must have felt as he stood
on the threshold of the Promised Land, ready to make his entrance with the
children of Israel. For forty years they
had been wondering in the desert, walking in a great circle, paying for their
disobedience to God. The Lord was using
this situation to prepare them to take possession of the land. The wonderings
in the desert would teach them about God’s faithfulness and His trustworthiness.
Finally, the day came when they were to cross the Jordan and
enter the Promised Land. There must have
been wonderful excitement in the camp that day.
The promise made to Abraham hundreds of years before was about to be
fulfilled. God had opened the door and
had extended an invitation for His people to go into the land of promise. The responsibilities for leading the people
into the land and for conquering it fell to Moses’ servant, Joshua.
Can’t you just imagine Joshua’s fears and worries? For the past forty years, the people had
received their instructions and their leadership from Moses. This great man of God had stood before
Pharaoh, he had led them through the Red Sea ,
he had given them God’s law, and he had built the tabernacle in the
wilderness. How would Joshua ever fill
Moses’ shoes? Would the people listen to
him? Would they respect him? Would they carry out his instructions? The fear of the unknown must have plagued
Joshua and weighed heavily on his mind.
God, however, had great plans for him and gave him wonderful words of
reassurance.
In Joshua 1:1-3, God
gives these words of encouragement to Joshua, “After the death of Moses the servant of the LORD, the LORD said to
Joshua son of Nun, Moses' aide: "Moses my servant is dead. Now then, you
and all these people, get ready to cross the Jordan River into the land I am
about to give to them-to the Israelites.
I will give you every place where you set your foot, as I promised
Moses.”
There are three things we need to learn from this passage of
scripture today. First, Joshua must face
reality. Moses is dead! The people can no longer rely on his
leadership. This left the people and
Joshua with not only a sense of loss, but also caused them great anxiety. Their security blanket had been ripped right
out from underneath them. But God does
not stop here. The next sentence
demonstrates that God’s plans do not change.
Second, God tells Joshua that the people will cross the
Jordan River and take possession of the land He promised on oath to
Abraham. What wonderful reassurance this
must have been. God’s promises are not
dependent on one individual or set of circumstances. God’s promises are
dependent on Him and, therefore, can never fail.
Finally, God restates His intention. That intention is to fulfill His promise, to
be with the people as they cross over and to settle them in the land just as He
told Moses and just as He promised Abraham.
No matter how daunting the circumstance and no matter how impossible and
hopeless the situation may seem, God’s promises remain true. He will keep them all!
This morning, as we face the day ahead, we can and must draw
great strength from these verses. The
events of yesterday are gone. All of its
successes, all of its comforts, and all of its security are forever in the past. God is calling us to move forward into
territory unknown to us but very familiar to Him. He is calling us to move from where we are
into the promises He has given us. We
can not dwell in the desert when God has called us to a land flowing with milk
and honey. We must get up, move forward,
leave the past behind, enter the land, and possess it.
G
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od has opened the door
on this morning and He extends to us the following invitation: “Come on in!”
The rest is up to us. Personally,
I’m going to wipe my feet on the welcome mat and go on in! How about you?
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