Living by Faith
Joshua 5:13-15
Now when Joshua was near Jericho, he looked up and saw a man
standing in front of him with a drawn sword in his hand. Joshua went up to him
and asked, “Are you for us or for our enemies?”
Neither,” he replied, “but as commander of the army of the Lord I
have now come.” Then Joshua fell facedown to the ground in reverence, and asked
him, “What message does my Lord have for his servant?”
The commander of the Lord’s army replied, “Take off your sandals,
for the place where you are standing is holy.” And Joshua did so.
Heb 11:6
And without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who
comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who
earnestly seek him.
Dealing with Strongholds
Joshua, like the gospels, is part of a
story of deliverance – a good God redeeming his people – and the way God delivered
Israel tells us a lot about how He operates.
Delivered
by miracles. Exodus tells of the Israelites in
slavery, and of the plagues brought upon the Egyptians to convince them to let
God’s people go. Frogs, flies, floods,
hailstones; each time, Moses warned, but the Egyptians didn’t respond. Do you remember ‘darkness’ as a plague
(Ex10:21) – described as a darkness so dark you could feel it, and no-one in
Egypt moved for 3 days. At the same
time, the Israelites had light. Finally,
when all other warnings failed, there was the death of the firstborn.
Destined
by promises.
The wonders changed Israel – changed their worship, changed their
attitude. They saw God keeping his promises, they rejoiced and truly
believed. In all, God made seven
promises –seven ‘I wills’ about redeeming Israel.
Sustained
by the supernatural. Camped at the Red Sea and seeing the Egyptian
army approaching, the Israelites turned to Moses, and Moses to God – who said “Why are you crying out to me?”(not what Moses wanted
to hear!) But then God gave Moses instructions, and as Moses raised his staff, a
path opened in the waters of the Red Sea.
Taking that path required trust – walking between the walls of water! Beyond that day, the Israelites were
sustained in other miraculous ways:
·
God’s directed them, pointing
out the way with clouds and fire
·
God fed them – food from heaven
for 2m people for 40 years.
·
God refreshed them with water -
from rocks
·
Their shoes never wore out
And yet, there
was unbelief. As Psalm 106 puts it, “Then they despised the pleasant land; they did not believe
his promise.” The mentality of Egypt had a strong hold on them.
By the time of our
reading (Joshua 5), we have a new generation; a new leader, new people, and new
battles to fight. They arrive at Jericho
– a city with a formidable wall that prevented their advance.
We all face
Jericho’s – sometimes they are more of an obstacle than we realize. They can shape our lives, cause daily
difficulties. It may be:
·
Relationships:
·
Chronic illness,
·
Things of the mind, such as
doubt
·
Emotions – guilt, perhaps of
past deeds, perhaps unjustly. Fear – of
the future, of the unknown.
People try to
deal with Jericho in different ways
·
By climbing over it – Basically
a ‘salvation by works’ it rarely works.
·
Sometimes they hit it and then
shrink back – perhaps blaming something/someone else for their inability to
progress
·
Some camp at the bottom and
decide to live there – them never move further on in their journey.
How does one break through?
Acknowledge
God afresh. – see the bigger God, the bigger
picture. Joshua’s big picture was a big
soldier, and he asked him the wrong question: “Are you on our side?”. But God hadn’t come to take sides, he’d come
to take over. Joshua’s response was to
worship – the only possible reaction to an encounter with a big God.
Walk
by faith again. Often we start by faith, then say ‘Thanks God, I’ve got this’ … and
it all falls apart. Whatever plan the
Israelites might have had for beating Jericho, it wouldn’t have been like Gods
plan. “the wall will come down, we just
have to walk around it every day for a week”.
It sounded crazy … but they start doing it.
Everyone can do this faithful walk once,
but repeating it when you’re not seeing results comes harder. Other thoughts and attitudes bubble up.
·
Negativism – always projecting
to the worst-case scenario. That kills
faith stone dead.
·
Criticism - - the disposition to
be pre-occupied with the imperfect
·
Skepticism – always questioning,
but never committing
·
Cynicism – never believing
human actions are unselfishly motivated
Obey
Gods word boldly. On the seventh day, the Israelites walked around 7 times, and still
it didn’t come down – until on Gods command, everyone shouted. Then, finally, the walls came down, and
Israel was free – they had freedom around, and freedom with because they knew
God was with them.
Questions
These might be good questions to discuss with a trusted friend
·
Look at your own heart and life
– are there Jericho’s there, blocking your Christian journey?
·
How have you tried to deal with
your Jericho?
·
Are you ready to walk by faith
and see the walls come down in Gods way?
·
For which part of the breakthrough
do you most need prayer?
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