Youth
Sunday – February 27, 2011
Joshua 1:6-9 - 6 “Be
strong and courageous, because you will lead these people to inherit the land I
swore to their forefathers to give them. 7 Be strong and very
courageous. Be careful to obey all the law my servant Moses gave you; do not
turn from it to the right or to the left, that you may be successful wherever
you go. 8 Do not let this Book of the Law depart from your mouth;
meditate on it day and night, so that you may be careful to do everything
written in it. Then you will be prosperous and successful. 9 Have I
not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be terrified; do not be
discouraged, for the Lord your
God will be with you wherever you go.”
“Be Strong and Courageous”
Have
you noticed what has been going on in the world lately?!? Just this last week there was a devastating 6.3
magnitude earthquake in New Zealand and as of Friday the death toll had risen
to 113; a 26 car pile-up was reported in Missouri as a result of black ice; and
tornadoes were reported in three states.
We hear that Somali pirates hijacked a yacht sailing home, killing all
four people aboard. The conflict/war that the United States has
been involved with in Iraq and Afghanistan is now 10 years old. Our economy that went down the toilet several
years ago has shown few signs of turning around, and now more unrest in the
Middle East is threatening to make things worse. Even small town crime is on the rise.
Perhaps
what’s even more disheartening is that in all of this, we haven’t even begun
talking about the personal demons we face in our own lives. The troubled marriages that
seem to be falling apart. The
rebellious children who won’t heed the advice you give. The jobs that have been
lost or the hours that have been cut.
The stress that comes from parenting; from bills; from concern for the
health of loved ones; from the responsibility of taking care of elderly
parents; from being a single parent; from divorce; and from living in constant
pain and discomfort. Then there are the
pressures of fitting in at high school, the work load of college, and the
dating scene. Then there are the sorrows
bred from the loss of loved ones. Add to
that the turmoil of the spiritual battles we wage against our own specific sins
and it all just seems too much. And the
list could go on!
Yet,
in the middle of all this, when it seems that we are up to our eyeballs with
problems; when it seems like we are in a pit so deep we could never get out; when
we are ready to throw in the towel, our Lord, our God, comes to us with soul-soothing,
trouble-easing, worry-relieving, heart-comforting words like these: “Be
Strong and Courageous.”
The
words before us this morning were first spoken to Joshua. Now if you recall, Joshua was the man God
chose to replace Moses as the leader of the children of Israel, and it doesn’t
take a great imagination to envision some of the anxiety and stress he might
have had. For one, there was simply the
matter of replacing Moses. Moses had
been the only human leader Israel had ever known. On more than one account, the Lord had used
him to perform wondrous miracles. He had
been a tremendously faithful servant of the Lord. It would have been easy for Joshua to say
with apprehension, “I have to follow Moses!”
Then
consider the people he was to lead. While
they may not have been the same generation that Moses led, they were
descendants of that generation. That
generation had been called stubborn and rebellious! That generation wore on Moses so much that in
exasperation he once said to the Lord, “Why
have you brought this trouble on your servant…that you put the burden of all
these people on me?... I cannot carry all these people by myself;
the burden is too heavy for me. 15 If this
is how you are going to treat me, put me to death right now” (Numbers
11:11-15). It would have been easy
for Joshua to be nervous, thinking, “What if the apple doesn’t fall far from
the tree?”
Finally,
there was the land of Canaan and its fortified cities and fighting men against
whom Joshua was to lead Israel into battle.
So yes, one could say that Joshua was in need of some encouragement and
comfort. So that’s what our Lord, who
never fails to give what is needed, gives.
Three times in four Hebrew sentences God repeats the phrase: “Be
strong and courageous.” With
these words, Joshua is pointed to the Lord’s presence, power, and his promises
– all found in the Lord’s Word. You see,
it is one thing to say to a leader, “Be strong!
Be very courageous!” but something altogether different to enable him to do
it. That’s why the Lord points Joshua to
the place he would find strength and courage – to the Word. Listen to our Lord: “Be strong and very courageous… Do not let this Book of the
Law depart from your mouth; meditate on it day and night, so that you may be
careful to do everything written in it.”
It was here that Joshua would be reminded of the Lord’s power and
presence, and be assured of his promises.
The
Word was not to depart from his mouth.
He was to meditate on it day and night.
He was to do everything written in it, to obey its commands fully and
act by it. It wasn’t enough to think
highly of this book! It wasn’t enough
for the priests to guard this precious book!
Joshua was to take time to read it daily and make it a part of his inner
person. He was to cling to the written Word.
And
when the Lord speaks of the Book of the Law here, he is talking about more than
the 10 Commandments. The Book of the Law
included all that the Lord had instructed Moses to write. It included the books we know as Genesis
through Deuteronomy. And when Joshua
would go back to these books, he would receive the strength and courage the
Lord wanted him to have as he was reminded of all that the Lord had done. He would hear again about the creation of the
world and that mankind was the crown of that creation. He would be reminded that in this world there
would be troubles because of Adam and Eve’s sin, but he also knew that God had
promised a Messiah who would crush Satan’s head. He would see how God perfectly and lovingly
guided the course of history so the promise of that Messiah would not be broken
– from Adam to Seth to Noah to Abraham to Jacob and now the nation of
Israel. He would see the power of God on
display as he miraculously worked on behalf of his people in Egypt. He would once again behold his presence as he
led the people by pillar of fire and cloud.
He would be reminded that not one of his promises had failed, not one of
his guarantees was broken, and not one word went without fulfillment. Knowing this, he knew that the promise of the
Messiah was as certain as being done, and that the promise of strength and
courage was his to have.
When
we go back to the Word, and not just Genesis through Deuteronomy but all of the
Word, we find the same thing. You see,
while Joshua’s problems were different than ours, in the end they really are no
different. In fact, often times our
problems aren’t any different than the ones that Christian’s have faced for
centuries. That’s because each of us are
living in a world of sin, and while we live in this world of sin we are infected
with a sinful nature.
That
causes problems. It’s sin that brings
death and destruction to this world.
It’s sin that causes pain and suffering.
It’s sin that causes sorrow and disease.
It’s because of sin that nature was frustrated and now produces natural
disasters. It’s sin that makes us
selfish and unloving. It’s sin that
creates jealousy and discord. It’s sin
that makes us fearful and anxious. It’s our
sinful flesh that causes us to fail in our fight against sin.
And
Satan wants us to throw in the towel. He
wants us to say it’s too hard to be a Christian. He wants us to say it isn’t worth it to
follow Jesus. He wants us to despair and
give up; to accuse God of evil and curse his name; and doubt God’s love for
us. He wants us to run with the wrong
crowd in high-school. He wants us to forget
about God and his Word in college. He
wants us to walk away from God whenever the going gets tough and for us to
think it isn’t fair – as if God owes us something; as if we are entitled to a
soft, pillowy, cushy life. And Satan wants to get us to do this, because
if he can, he wins!
So
yes, we need courage and strength. We
need to be fortified in our faith. And
if we are going to have any hope, any comfort, any courage, any strengthening
of faith for this life we must have something that deals with the problem of
sin. That’s exactly what our Savior
did. That’s why the Lord points us his
presence, power, and his promises – all found in the Lord’s Word.
You
see, when we go back to the Word we see what Joshua saw, and so much more. We see how the Lord directed history in just
the right way so that when the time had fully come Jesus, our Savior would be
born. We see Jesus set his face and
direct his steps to Jerusalem for the sole purpose of dying on our behalf. And just think about that for a moment. From the beginning of time God promised all
this misery for his Son and Jesus agreed that all this should take place and
happen to him. And every step of the
way, the Father ruled over history and the Son directed his own footsteps so
that not a single one of the promises God made would fail.
Who
ever heard of such a thing? To make a promise – sure.
To make a promise that was filled with torture and
ridicule and suffering and pain and to keep them when no one could force you to
keep them. To make a promise to
your own hurt when you don’t have to and then make absolutely sure that nothing
is left unfelt, un-suffered. That’s unheard
of…but that is exactly what happened. It
was promised that Jesus would come of his own free will; that he would suffer
the torments of death and hell; that he would win forgiveness for our sins; and
God kept his Word.
And
so, on the cross Jesus hung, dying that shameful death, that awful death, that
humiliating death. And yet with that death
he paid for our sins. With that death he
rectified the horrible relationship we had with our God. With that death, coupled with his glorious
resurrection, he destroyed the power of sin and the power of Satan. He dealt with the problem of sin. So that every time we go back to the cross - courage
and strength might be ours! So that
every time we go back to the Word - we hear again that our sins have been
forgiven. So that every time we go back
to that first Good Friday and first Easter, we can know that the problems of
this life can’t compare to the glory and happiness and joy of the promised land
of heaven. So that every time we
meditate on Scripture - we receive the help we need! So that every time we hear
one of his promises, we can know it is true.
And
promises he has given you! He promises
you that “Never will I leave you; never
will I forsake you” (Hebrews 13:5). So we can say with confidence, “The Lord is my helper; I will not be
afraid. What can man do to me?” (Hebrews 13:6)
He promises you that “In all
things he [God] works for the good of those who love him” (Romans 8:28). It isn’t for us to know how; it is simply
for us to trust. He promises that “He will not let you be tempted beyond what
you can bear. But when you are tempted, he will also provide a way out so that
you can stand up under it” (1 Corinthians 10:13). He promises that in him you have peace. While
it’s true that in this world we will have trouble, we can take heart because he
has overcome the world (John 16:33).
Take
a moment some day and read through the book of Joshua. You will find that the Lord did not go back
on one his promises. He did all that he
said he would do. All Joshua had to do
was look back at things like the crossing of the Jordan; to look at
Jericho. All we have to do is look at
Jesus. Because we know that if he has
kept that promise at the cross, a promise so hard and painful, a promise that
hurt only himself, then we can be sure of this: he
will keep all of his other promises to you as well. He will do what he says he will do.
That
means he will rule the world for the benefit of his believers – like you. That means you are not in a pit so deep that
you cannot get out. That means he will
see you through the pain, the sorrows, the hurts, the wants, the needs, the
anxiety, the fear. That means that he
has really prepared a home for you in heaven, and as a believer who in faith
believes in Jesus Christ as your Savior, that’s the place we long for; the
place we set our eyes on; the place of promise that can make all the problems
of this life smaller and more manageable.
So
trust him. Hold on to him. Return to the Word, his power, his promises, because
there he will make you strong and courageous.
Amen.