The Bible Recap - Day 083 (Joshua 5-8) - Year 3
Episode Date: March 24, 2021SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: -... Genesis 12 - Deuteronomy 24:16 - Deuteronomy 11:29 SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
The Israelites have just set foot in the Promised Land as a nation for the first time.
This is the partial fulfillment of something God promised them approximately 750 years
earlier when he first called Abraham and Genesis 12.
More fulfillment will come when they take the land,
but at this point, their enemies
the Canaanites still live there.
The first city they plan to take is Jericho,
a town near the eastern border of the Promised Land.
But before they do that,
God wants them to be fully prepared.
In God's economy, preparing for battle
has very little to do with sharpening your weapons.
It has everything to do with preparing your heart.
He wants to make sure their hearts are surrendered to him and aligned with his own heart before
they go face the enemy.
The first thing they have to do is circumsize all the Israelite males that allow them time
to recover.
After every male is circumsized, they celebrate Passover.
The timing of this
is beautiful. It's kind of a second Exodus, exactly 40 years after the first one. Their
hearts need to celebrate Passover, because it will reinforce their faith. It serves as
a reminder to them that God has protected and provided for them through the years.
Then in 512, we get a little sentence that speaks volumes.
It says, the man is ceased on the day after they ate the produce of the land.
What?
This is incredible.
This is God's precise provision on display.
He gave them miracle foods six days a week for 40 years, and the man at even follows them
into the promised land.
But then it stops on the day after they have access to the
local food. There are no gaps in God's provision.
Next, Joshua has a strange encounter with a man holding a sword. Obviously, this could
be super scary given the fact that they're in enemy territory. So Joshua wants to know
if this man is an Israelite, that he just doesn't happen happen to recognize or if he's a canonite. And the man basically says, guess again, I'm God.
How do we know he's God?
First of all, he receives Joshua's worship.
God select angels don't allow people to worship them.
They reject it because they know they don't deserve it.
Second, the angel of Yahweh also tells Joshua to take off his shoes.
Just like God had told Moses to do when he appeared in the burning bush,
because he was standing on holy ground.
The presence of angels doesn't make things holy. Only God can do that.
In this conversation, many people suggest that God is refusing to take sides in the battle,
since God doesn't give Joshua a straight answer. But we know from the surrounding text that God
has aligned himself with the Israelites.
So what's going on here?
God's reply to Joshua suggests more that Israel is on his side than that he is on Israel's side.
Meanwhile, Jericho is shook. They probably know what's coming.
This terrifying army is camped outside their city, so they hold up in their houses.
God tells Joshua that Jericho is theirs for the taking, because he's giving it to them.
But he has some super weird instructions on how to accomplish this.
Don't march around it carrying the ark once a day for six days,
while seven priests blow trumpets.
Then on the seventh day, they'll march around seven times, and on that seventh trip,
all the people will shout.
And then the walls will fall, and they'll have an opening to go inside and devote everything
to destruction, everything except for Rahab and her family.
Joshua tells the two spies who met her that they're in charge of saving her.
And it all happens just like God commanded.
They defeat a Jericho with exactly zero military strategy, just by trusting and obeying
God's weird commands. Joshua pronounced a curse on anyone who rebuilds Jericho, so heads up,
it's been rebuilt. We'll get to that later, but just remember this curse.
Another thing Joshua emphasized before they took the land was that the Israelite soldiers
aren't allowed to take any plunder for themselves. Any plunder they take is supposed to be set apart and devoted to God,
kind of like a first-fruits offering from their first conquest in the Promised Land.
So, bad news, a guy named Aiken secretly took some stuff for himself.
Some commentators estimate the value of this stuff to be approximately the amount
a worker would earn in his entire life.
Meanwhile, Joshua makes a classic leadership mistake.
He's probably overconfident from their defeat of Jericho,
for getting that they won because they walked in obedience to God's commands.
So he sends his people to go take over another city,
but without consulting God first.
So the Israelites go to take over the city of I,
and not only did the Israelites lose,
but about 36 men died in the process.
Joshua is overcome with grief, and he begins to doubt God, thinking God had betrayed them.
He appeals to God in much the same way Moses used to when they were in trouble,
but God points the finger back at the Israelites, all of them.
Since God views the Israelites as a unit, one man's sin has impacted the whole.
Aiken is personally responsible for his spiritual adultery, but the whole community is affected.
God is angry at them all, and he tells Joshua how to deal with the guilty party.
And since Aiken's sin represents spiritual adultery against God, not just death, it requires
the death penalty.
The next morning, God supernaturally identifies Akin from the tribe of Judah as the man
who has committed the sin.
Even though Akin is from the most esteemed tribe, he's rejected from the people of Israel
because his heart isn't devoted to God.
This is important.
We're already seeing through the rescue of Rahab the Canaanite and the rejection of Akin
the Israelite that being a part of God's
people, the Israelites, has nothing to do with race or genes and everything to do with your heart.
Those whose hearts are devoted to Yahweh are welcomed into his family, even if they're
strangers and foreigners, and those whose hearts reject Yahweh, even if they're Israelites by
birth, are not counted among his people. God's family is made up of people with
new hearts, not similar DNA. Aiken and his family are stoned for his adultery, and because
Deuteronomy 2416 tells us that children aren't to be put to death for their father's sins,
it seems to indicate that his family may have played a role in his sin or in concealing it.
God takes this stuff seriously. After all this happens, God commands them to try again at defeating
I, because this time they'll win, and this time he says they can take the plunder. How
ironic is that for Aiken, if only he had waited.
Using a clever military strategy, they defeat the city, keep its livestock and plunder for themselves, then set it on fire.
And again, it's important for us to remember that when they destroy these cities, it's serving the purpose of God's judgment on its inhabitants for their wickedness, as well as providing the promised land for the Israelites.
After the battle, Joshua builds an altar to God and follows the instructions God gave them back in Deuteronomy 11, speaking
the curses from Mount Evil and the blessings from Mount Gerazeem.
Then Joshua renews the covenant with the people by reading it to them aloud.
We covered a lot of ground today, so where did you see your God shot?
Mine was as they were taking their first six trips around the city of Jericho.
They'd get up, make their circle, a few of them would blow some trumpets, then that go back
to the camp and do it all over again the next day.
All this walking around seems like such a waste of time.
If I were in that army, I would probably be like, what is the point of this?
We're accomplishing nothing.
Maybe if we're honest, we feel like that some days in our reading plan, or in prayer,
or in Sabbath, or fill in the blank.
But God's doing something.
Sometimes what God does in our hearts through obedience is beyond our capacity to understand.
Sometimes He's teaching us to trust Him for the outcome instead of trying to achieve
it on our own.
He is at work, even on the so-called nothing days, when obedience feels like we're just walking
in circles. You've probably already seen evidence that your obedience feels like we're just walking in circles.
You've probably already seen evidence that your obedience to him is him at work in your life,
drawing you nearer to him.
It's the best place to be, even when we don't fully understand,
because he's where the joy is.
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