The Bible Recap - Day 086 (Joshua 16-18) - Year 5
Episode Date: March 27, 2023SHOW 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 - Win a trip to Israel! - Che...ck out WayFM’s Prayer Wall FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Map: Land Allotment for Israel - Genesis 17:1 - Deuteronomy 6:6-9 - Deuteronomy 12 - 2 Chronicles 6:6 - Image: Topographical View of Jerusalem - Visual: Heart Diagram - TBR Resources 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! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
We've been walking through land allotments for the 12 tribes and today we start out with
the land for the descendants of Joseph.
If you recall, Joseph Stadjake aboramely adopted Joseph's two sons, Ephraim and Manasseh,
so they essentially took over Joseph's place
in the distribution of the inheritance.
Then, at some point, the tribe of Manasseh split in half
and became two half tribes.
One half of them wanted to live east of the Jordan River
as part of the trans-Jordan tribes.
We'll call them East Manasseh,
and the other half inherited part of the original promised land
across the Jordan.
We'll call that West Manassa.
But during a division process for the land, the people who will become West Manassa get
slumped in with Ephraim and they complain about it.
They want to be split off from each other and get land that reflects the size of each
tribe.
I'm picturing one of those scenes in the movies where siblings share a bedroom and put
tape down the middle so they can mark out their own spot.
Joshua agrees to their request for division.
He hands them the tape and tells them that they're responsible for clearing the land and
driving out the people in it, even though they seem to be bigger and stronger than them.
The land they get is west of the Jordan River in the Promised Land.
And just like we learned about their brothers in Eastman-Assay yesterday, they don't drive
out all the Canaanites from the land.
Since the Canaanites refused to leave, they make them do manual labor.
We also encountered the five daughters of Zalofa had again today.
The last time we saw them, they were marrying their cousins, which was part of the agreement in order for them to get their part of the land inheritance, so the land can stay in the tribe. They approached Joshua and Eliasar about that land agreement, and maybe they're nervous
because Moses was the one they had originally talked to, and he's dead and gone now, and
this new guy Joshua is in charge.
But just as God had said, they were given the land they originally requested.
Again, we've included a general map of the tribal allotments in today's show notes
if you want to see how all this lays out.
In Chapter 18, all the tribes gathered together at a place called Shiloh, where they set
up the tabernacle.
This is the first place the tabernacle is erected in the Promised Land.
There are still seven tribes waiting to hear about which land they're getting, and they're
probably getting antsy.
Joshua sends three men from each of those tribes
on a mission to check out all the remaining territory
in report back to him.
When they return, he divvies up all the land accordingly.
We end with a description of Benjamin's land allotment.
It's far more detailed than the others in this list
with the exception of Judah's allotment.
There's some special stuff going on with Judah, as you know,
and there's also some special stuff going on with Benjamin. Benjamin gets the land that includes Jerusalem,
and Judah borders it on the south as well. At the risk of ruining things for you, I'll
tell you that Jerusalem ends up being the capital, the place where God will establish
his tabernacle permanently. You may have already known this, but that's part of why it's
a big deal that they haven't driven out the Jeb Yusai to currently live there. But Jerusalem is a
hard city to take. It's a hill surrounded by three deep valleys surrounded by more
hills, so the people in the city always have the military advantage.
The description of Benjamin's allotment is where I saw my God shot today, but it takes
a bit of explaining
if you've never seen the city with your own eyes.
There are three valleys outside the city
that converge to form an interesting shape.
It looks like a sideways number three,
or if you're a trekky,
it kind of looks like the Vulcan salute.
In Hebrew, it's clearly the letter Shin,
which is regarded as a sacred letter among the Jews.
Why would they show honor to a letter?
Shin is the first letter of the word Shaddai, which means God Almighty.
It's how God identifies Himself to Abraham in Genesis 171.
So the Hebrew people regard this letter as God's initial.
They stamp it on all their mazuzas, which you may recall are the boxes they put on the
doorposts of their homes with scripture in them in accordance with the command in Deuteronomy 6.
In Deuteronomy 12, God told the people three times in verses 5, 11, and 21 that his chosen
place of worship when they enter the Promised Land, where the Tabernacle would be located,
is a place where he will put his name.
And later, in 2 Chronicle 6, 6, he says,
I have chosen Jerusalem that my name may be there. Could he have only been speaking figuratively
and spiritually? Sure, that's totally possible. But given the topography of Jerusalem,
there's reason to believe he was also speaking literally.
If you have a topographical view of the city of Jerusalem, it almost looks like God stamped
his initial on it.
He monogrammed it, if you will, with the letter, shin.
He monogrammed things you own, things you want to be identified with.
If you want to see this visual for yourself, we'll link to an image in the show notes.
And if you want to take this idea a step further, some people have even pointed out that
the same shape is part of the design of the human heart.
We'll include a visual for that as well in case you're curious.
Long before Ariel photos existed, God chose a city marked with the letter His people would
regard as His initial.
He came down to dwell with them there.
The people marked by his name in the city marked by his name.
And here we are today, thousands of years later,
marked by the same name.
The people he has chosen to adopt into his family
despite our sins and shortcomings.
He's where the shin is, and he's where the joy is.
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