Joshua 1:1-9
is an incredibly enriching passage. These verses contain the instructions God
gave to Joshua as he assumed the leadership of Israel, and together they
prepared to possess their future. In these verses we find timeless principles
given to guide Israel and all of us who follow along “afar off” as we step into
our future with a confident, expectant spirit.
When Moses
died, the man God chose to take his place and lead the Jewish nation into the
Promised Land was not a novice. Joshua had been an aide to Moses for at least
40 years and was very likely close to 80 years old when God spoke to him and
said:
“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” (Joshua 1:2, NIV).
It is important
that we not skip over the first verses in order to get to the heart of the
instructions. The path of confidence starts in these verses! They tell us
something extremely important and if we miss it, then the rest of the passage
doesn’t take us where we want to go. They tell us that Joshua had an open and
personal relationship with God, a relationship that allowed God to speak to
him, and allowed Joshua to hear and understand His directions.
Joshua had
not simply leaned on Moses all those years of being an aide. He had learned
from Moses that he, too, could have a relationship with God. Building a
relationship is never easy; it takes time and patience; and it takes a
determination to see the relationship grow and flourish. For 40 years before
Moses assumed the leadership of the Jewish nation he was “away” learning to
walk with God, to have a relationship with Him. For the next 40 years Moses led
and Joshua learned.
So much
victory, so much success in life, in marriage, in business is squandered
because people don’t take time to build relationships. Our culture is in such a
hurry to succeed that shortcuts are invented. Instead of building
relationships, people “hook up” for mutual pleasure and then quickly move on.
Carol and I have a strong marriage because we have built a good relationship.
Joshua had a
relationship with God that had been cultivated over the years and now he was
faced with a major challenge. How would you like to wake up one morning and
suddenly have God declare, “Moses is dead and now you are in charge of this
unruly bunch; it will be your responsibility to lead them into their future”?
Joshua was ready, in large part, because he had a relationship with God and
recognized His voice.
Far too many
Christians today have such a casual relationship with the Lord that they cannot
tell when He is talking; they don’t recognize or understand His voice or His
directions. The fruit of a casual, distant relationship is never sweet!
In the late
1980’s I was in Virginia Beach, Virginia, at the 700 Club with an evangelist I
was doing work for. While the evangelist was being interviewed on live TV, I
waited in the Green Room and talked with the next guest, a Christian
psychologist. I had met this doctor years earlier when he was a pastor in Ohio.
We began to talk about current happenings in the church and the impact of
several very widely-known moral failures among prominent ministers. (The
Swaggart and Bakker scandals were in full bloom at that time.)
The
pastor/psychologist made the following comment: “Our ministry has been involved
in counseling several hundred ministers and missionaries who have gone through
moral failures. They come from all walks of life, many nationalities, and different
denominations but they all have one thing in common. At the time of their moral
failure, not one of them had a consistent personal relationship with the Lord.”
I have never forgotten that statement: “Not one of them had a consistent
personal relationship with the Lord at the time of their moral failure.” That’s
a sobering and revealing statement.
The road to
confidently possessing our future must have as its starting point, as its
cornerstone, our personal relationship with God. The seeds of our defeat in
possessing our future also lie here, because if the cornerstone is not kept in
place then the seeds of failure can sprout and take us in directions we never
intended to go. It is my personal belief that our spirit is hungry for a
relationship with God and if we do not keep the relationship with Him, and we
let it drift and become distant, then that unfulfilled hunger in our human
spirit will seek solace in other places.
“Now then, you and all these
people, get ready to cross . . . into the land I am about to give.”