Then
the Lord
said to Joshua, “See, I have delivered Jericho into your hands, along with its
king and its fighting men. March
around the city once with all the armed men. Do this for six days. Have seven priests carry trumpets of rams’ horns in front of the
ark. On the seventh day, march around the city seven times, with the priests
blowing the trumpets. When you hear them sound a long
blast on the trumpets, have the whole army give a loud shout; then the wall of
the city will collapse and the army will go up, everyone straight in.” –Joshua
6:2-5
You
have to appreciate the faith of Joshua during this moment of his life. Imagine
him standing outside the mighty walls of Jericho with the army of Israel
standing behind him. Surely the task of bringing these walls down must have
been somewhat intimidating at first. But Joshua pressed on.
Joshua
and the Israelites marched around those walls once a day for six days. Then on
the seventh day, they marched around it six times. It wasn’t until they lifted
up a shout on the seventh lap on the seventh day that the walls came tumbling
down. Imagine what must have been going through Joshua’s head towards the end
of that sixth lap on that seventh day.
He
and the army behind him had been around that wall almost a dozen times, yet
still there was no sign of breakthrough. I wonder if Joshua’s faith was tested.
I like to imagine that as Joshua began that seventh lap, he stirred up his
faith more than ever before. I imagine that during that moment when it seemed
like there was no breakthrough, no change, Joshua remembered all he had seen
God do while Moses was still alive.
I
imagine that he remembered how Moses stood up to an unyielding hard hearted Pharaoh,
and God brought him to his knees setting the Israelites free after 400 years of
slavery. I imagine Joshua remembered how when the Israelites were panicking in
the desert over not having any food, how God made manna appear on the desert
floor. I imagine Joshua remembered how when the Israelites were trapped between
the Red Sea and the fast approaching armies of Pharaoh, he saw God Himself
fight for the Israelites by splitting the Red Sea giving the Israelites dry ground
to cross over to safety.
I
imagine that as Joshua remembered all these mighty acts of God, his faith was
stirred to believe that God could do the impossible just one more time, and
that’s when he decided to take another lap. And on that last lap, he told the
Israelites to lift up a shout and the walls of Jericho finally fell.
To
Joshua and the Israelites the Walls of Jericho represented the barrier that
stood in between them and the Promise Land, their destiny. Perhaps today you
find yourself staring at a wall that separates you from the calling God has put
on your life. If you find yourself around this “wall” in your life again, don’t
get discouraged. Take another lap. You are right on the edge of your
breakthrough. Remember how God moved mightily in the past. If He did it before,
He can do it again. Stir up your faith just like Joshua did, and take another
lap. This wall is about to fall.
No comments:
Post a Comment