Be Strong andCourageous
disease. It has raged, untouched, too long. Infected, unhindered, too many. Misery
bobs in its wake. Abandoned dreams, ravaged marriages, truncated hopes. Hasn’t
the malady contaminated enough lives? It is time to declare war on the pestilence
that goes by the name “I can’t.”
1. So many people are held captive by this disease.
2. Ungodly habits go unchallenged.
3. Careers are sacrificed.
4. Marriages falter and families are defeated while people mumble, “I can’t.”
B. How do you handle the difficulties you face in life? All of us face difficulties with faith
or fear. Whenever you are facing difficulty in your life I encourage you to turn to the
book of Joshua and read the first nine verses.
1. Joshua is one of my favorite Biblical personalities. My son is named Joshua.
Tami’s paternal grandfather was named Joshua.
2. The name Joshua is filled with significance.
a. In Hebrew the word “Ho-shea” meant “salvation.” When you add the covenant
name of God “YHWH” as a prefix you have “Ya-Ho=jshea” or “Joshua” meaning
“God is salvation.” In the New Testament the name “Ya-Ho-shea” becomes
“Jesus.”
3. We are introduced to Joshua in Exodus 17 where Moses told him to gather an
army from among the Israelites and fight against Amalek. From this time forward
Joshua was Moses’ servant and assistant. When Moses went upon the mountain
of God in Exodus 24, he took Joshua along for the first part of the journey.
4. In numbers 13 and 14 Joshua was one of the twelve spies sent into the land of
Canaan. Only Joshua and Caleb said, “Let us go up at once and possess the land”
(Numbers 13:30; 14:6). As a result, these were the only two men out that faithless
generation who did not die during the forty years of wandering in the wilderness
(Numbers 14:30,38).
Steve W. Reeves
stevesermons.blogspopt.com
INTODUCTION:
A. A
contemporary Christian author has written, “The time has come to attack the disease. It has raged, untouched, too long. Infected, unhindered, too many. Misery
bobs in its wake. Abandoned dreams, ravaged marriages, truncated hopes. Hasn’t
the malady contaminated enough lives? It is time to declare war on the pestilence
that goes by the name “I can’t.”
1. So many people are held captive by this disease.
2. Ungodly habits go unchallenged.
3. Careers are sacrificed.
4. Marriages falter and families are defeated while people mumble, “I can’t.”
B. How do you handle the difficulties you face in life? All of us face difficulties with faith
or fear. Whenever you are facing difficulty in your life I encourage you to turn to the
book of Joshua and read the first nine verses.
1. Joshua is one of my favorite Biblical personalities. My son is named Joshua.
Tami’s paternal grandfather was named Joshua.
2. The name Joshua is filled with significance.
a. In Hebrew the word “Ho-shea” meant “salvation.” When you add the covenant
name of God “YHWH” as a prefix you have “Ya-Ho=jshea” or “Joshua” meaning
“God is salvation.” In the New Testament the name “Ya-Ho-shea” becomes
“Jesus.”
3. We are introduced to Joshua in Exodus 17 where Moses told him to gather an
army from among the Israelites and fight against Amalek. From this time forward
Joshua was Moses’ servant and assistant. When Moses went upon the mountain
of God in Exodus 24, he took Joshua along for the first part of the journey.
4. In numbers 13 and 14 Joshua was one of the twelve spies sent into the land of
Canaan. Only Joshua and Caleb said, “Let us go up at once and possess the land”
(Numbers 13:30; 14:6). As a result, these were the only two men out that faithless
generation who did not die during the forty years of wandering in the wilderness
(Numbers 14:30,38).
5. In Numbers 27:18 God referred to Joshua
as “a man in whom my spirit dwells” and
told Moses to lay hands on him and
appoint him as his successor. Moses did so
in the presence of the congregation (a
gesture that let the entire nation know of
God’s will).
C. As
we come to the book that bears Joshua’s name we find these words in1:1-2 ,
“Now it came about after the death of Moses
the servant of the Lord, that the Lord
spoke to Joshua the son of Nun, Moses’
servant, saying, 2 “Moses My servant is
dead; now therefore arise, cross this
Jordan, you and all this people, to the land
which I am giving to them, to the sons of
Israel.”
1. How do you deal with change? For forty
years Israel’s life had revolved around
Moses. Suddenly, Moses is gone. God
said, “Moses is dead.”
2. Some people have a hard time accepting
change. When it comes to change they
live in Egypt – “de-nial.” They do not
want a different leader, a different situation, a
different schedule, a different
lifestyle or a different location.
3. If you are a person who does not like
change, the past three months have been
difficult for you. So many things have
changed.
3. Change is reality. Moses was dead. God
told Joshua it was time to step up to
the plate. He was no longer the batter
on deck. He was no longer the pitcher
warming up in the bull pen. He was at
bat. He was now on the pitcher’s mound.
4. Can you imagine how intimidating this
might be for someone in Joshua’s shoes?
Four times in this chapter (Joshua 1)
there is a phrase which Joshua needed to
hear. “Be strong and courageous,” (verses
6, 7, 9, 18). The first three of these it is
spoken by God to Joshua. The fourth is
spoken to Joshua by the Israelites.
D. The
question we face is the same one faced by Joshua. “How do we remain strong
and courageous in the midst of a changing
world?” In the remainder of this text
there
are three essential principles.
I. PROMISES
A. Joshua’s leadership was not based on his
strength but upon God’s promise.
1. In verses 2-3 God told Joshua, “arise,
cross this Jordan, you and all this people,
to the land which I am giving to
them, to the sons of Israel. 3 Every place on
which the sole of your foot treads,
I have given it to you, just as I spoke to
Moses.” Notice the emphasis, “I am giving,” and “I
have given.”
2. In verses 4 God amplified the
promise by setting forth the specific territory that
Israel would occupy. “From the
wilderness and this Lebanon, even as far as the
great river, the river Euphrates,
all the land of the Hittites, and as far as the
Great Sea toward the setting of the
sun will be your territory.”
a. God was reminding Joshua of a
promise that He had made to Abraham long
ago. According to Genesis 12:7,
after calling Abraham to leave his home and
go to Canaan God said, “To
your descendants I will give this land.”
b. After Abraham, Isaac, Jacob,
Joseph, 450 years in Egypt (Exodus 12:40) and
40 years in the wilderness
God’s promise is about to be realized.
B. God is always faithful to His promise.
1. This was the repeated message in the
book of Deuteronomy.
2. In Hebrews 10:23 the writer
admonished, “Let us hold fast the confession of our
hope without wavering, for He who
promised is faithful.”
3. In 2 Peter 3:9 Peter wrote, “The
Lord is not slow about His promise.”
C. The difficulty we have with God’s
promises is that we want them at our time and in
our way.
1. God promised Abraham an heir through whom his descendants would be a
numerous as the stars or the sands
of the seashore. When time passed and
there was no son Abraham and Sarah
took matters into their own hands.
Abraham had Ishmael through Hagar.
Even today we see the animosity
between the descendants of Ishmael
and Isaac.
2. You and I live in a world of broken
promises. Brides and grooms promise to be
faithful, and they stray.
Politicians make campaign promises that are never
fulfilled. Our hearts are broken by
promises not kept.
3. The boldness and courage Joshua
needed could not be realized by his own
strength. He was dependent upon the
promises and presence of God. Always
remember that God will fulfill His
promises to you. You can be assured, based
on His faithfulness, that He will
do what He says.
II. PRECEPTS
A. The second essential principle for
Joshua’s courage and boldness was to keep the
precepts of God. In verse 5-8 God told
Joshua, “No man will be able to
stand
before you all the days of your life.
Just as I have been with Moses, I will be with
you; I will not fail you or forsake
you. 6 Be strong and courageous, for you shall give
this people possession of the land
which I swore to their fathers to give them.
7 Only be strong and
very courageous; be careful to do according to all the law
which Moses My servant commanded you;
do not turn from it to the right or to the
left, so that you may have success
wherever you go. 8 This book of the law shall
not depart from your mouth, but you
shall meditate on it day and night, so that you
may be careful to do according to all
that is written in it; for then you will make your
way prosperous, and then you will have
success.”
B. In His commission to Joshua, God had
spoken about His reliability. Now He
speaks of Joshua’s responsibility.
1. God’s reliability is seen in verses
5-6, “No one will stand against you.” “I
will
not fail you or forsake you.”
2. Joshua’s responsibility was
threefold.
a. Be careful to do according to
all the law (verse 7).
b. Do not turn to the right or to
the left (vs. 7).
c. Do not let it depart from your
mouth but meditate on it day and night (vs. 8).
C. If you want to be strong and courageous
in your life you must keep God’s word
within your heart.
1. Joshua had been in Canaan as one of
the twelve spies. In Numbers 13 the
spies reported that the cities were
walled and the people very large. Talk about
intimidating!
2. It was so important for Joshua to
keep God’s message in his heart and maintain
his desire to follow it without
wavering.
3. My greatest fear in this COVVID 19
crisis is that Christians will drift to the right
and the left. That we will become
content to allow a Facebook stream one hour
a week to pacify us and we will
lose our spiritual hunger. When that hunger is
lost Satan offers cheap substitutes that
delude us into thinking we are okay but
prove impotent in the difficult
challenges of life.
III. PRERSENCE
A. The most familiar verse in this text is
verse 9, “Have I not commanded you? Be
strong and courageous! Do not tremble
or be dismayed, for the Lord your God is
with you wherever you go.”
B. Have we forgotten the difference God’s
presence makes?
1. In Genesis 1 the presence of God
created something from nothing.
2. It was the presence of God that led
Abraham to Canaan and that delivered
Israel out of Egypt by parting the
Red Sea. It was the presence of God that
provided food and water for the
Israelites in the wilderness. It was the presence
of God that gave them the land. It
was the presence of God that healed the sick,
gave sight to the blind, that
brought good news of salvation. It was the presence
of God that raised Jesus from the tomb.
It is God’s presence in our life that
enables us to be strong and
courageous.
CONCLUSION:
A. In
1917 a young man named Martin Treptow left his job in a small-town barber shop
to join the army. He was sent to France to
fight in World War I. There on the western
front he was killed. On his body was found
a diary in which he had written, “I will
work. I will save. I will sacrifice. I will
endure. I will fight cheerfully and I will do my
upmost as if the whole struggle depended on
me.”
1. This weekend we honor the sacrifice of
those who gave their lives in service to
our country. They made the ultimate
sacrifice because they were bold and
courageous.
2. You and I are engaged in a battle more
important that any world war. It is a
spiritual battle that has eternal
consequences for every man, woman and child who
hears my voice. Are you prepared?
B. “Do
not tremble or be dismayed, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go!”
If
we can help you in your relationship with the Lord ple