About
to enter the land that had been promised them 600 years before, they had a
giant-sized task awaiting them.
Literally. Forty years earlier
ten spies had come back and told the Israelites that the inhabitants of the
land were so big they felt like they were the size of a grasshopper in
comparison. Fear took them captive
without a battle and sent them off as a group to wander around in a wilderness
where they took their chances against wild animals rather than face their
giants.
They
wandered so long that those who had grasshopper-sized faith died out. Forty years later their children were ready
to take the land. They were physically
no taller than their parents had been.
The enemies in the land were no smaller than before. But the Israelites’ faith muscles had
grown.
There
were two spies who had reported the land was theirs for the taking. One of
them, Joshua, is now the Israelites’ leader.
He was courageous. And God wanted
to keep him that way. So God tells him three times in the first nine verses of
the first chapter of Joshua: “Be strong and courageous.” He also reminds him “the Lord your God is
with you wherever you go.”
My
guess is you have a few giants in your life too. Some uphill battles that appear
insurmountable. A task demanding more
than you think you have to give. One too
many things on your “to do” list than you have the time or energy to do. Unemployment
is staring you down. Depression has a
grip on you. Bills have raided your bank
account and left it empty. An illness
hovers in your life like a threatening storm.
You’d rather just run and wander.
Instead,
be strong and courageous. You have a
Joshua that will lead the way. The New
Testament equivalent of the name “Joshua” is “Jesus.” And he has promised to be with you always
(Matthew 28:20).
Jesus
knows how to lead you through battles.
He had a few of his own while he was on this earth. Enemies attacking him with accusations (Mark
3:22). No home and no bed (Luke
9:58). Crowds and expectations pressing
in on him (Luke 8:45). The religious
establishment eventually insuring he was sentenced to a brutal death. (Mark
15:14).
No comments:
Post a Comment