Get Ready
Joshua 1:1-11
September 10, 2006
I’d like to begin by asking you a fairly heavy question:
“What would you identify as the greatest disappointment of your
life?” I’m sure there are as many answers to that question
as there are people here this morning. Though our experiences are very
different, I think most of us have experienced the pain of disappointment
at some time in our lives.
Perhaps you would identify your disappointment in terms
of your family of origin. As you look back on it now, you can see that
as a child you just didn’t get the kind of love, or nurture, or
discipline you should have received, and it’s very disappointing
to you now.
Or perhaps the family you’re now a part of is, to be totally honest,
your source of disappointment. The marriage just hasn’t panned out
the way you had hoped. Being a parent just was not what you had bargained
for.
Or maybe your career has provided the most disappointment.
You had such great plans and dreams at one time, but nothing seems to
have worked the way you dreamed it. You’re getting on okay, but
always lingering in the back of your heart is this dull feeling of disappointment.
You know, it could even be that your spiritual life has
proven to be a disappointment to you. It happens, you know. I find that
for quite a number of people, there is a huge gap between what they expected
from their Christian faith and what they actually experience.
We learn to have high expectations of God. From a steady
diet of books and sermons and testimonies, all promising triumph and success,
we learn to expect dramatic evidence of God’s work in our lives.
Then when we don’t see that evidence the way we thought we would,
we are left disappointed. Disappointment happens when the actual experience
of something falls far short of what we expect or anticipate. It’s
not uncommon. We’ve all been there before.
I think disappointment is the prevailing attitude of the
people we meet when we open up the Book of Joshua. They had very high
expectations of what God’s promise to them would mean. Things didn’t
happen nearly like they had envisioned, and they became frustrated, and
cranky, and terribly disappointed. God’s promise to them had been
very, very clear. He promised a land flowing with milk and honey, a land
to call their own, a land where they would thrive and prosper.
But it was now more than 40 years in coming. That’s
a long time to wait, by just about any standard. Now we need to know that
it didn’t have to be that long. It took 40 years to get there because
of their disobedience. They arrived at the Promised Land after only two
years, but they were so fearful of taking possession of God’s promise
that they ended up languishing in the desert another 38 years.
They were right there, right within reach of God’s
promise, but they would not trust Him and their lack of trust left them
in the wilderness. Joshua was there through all of that.
You may remember he was one of only two people who said
back there 38 years ago, “Let’s go and take what God has promised.
We can do it because God promised.”
But the others said, “No, the barriers are too great,
the risks too deep; we can’t do it; we are afraid. There are giants
in the land and we just aren’t sure God will deliver us.”
Can you imagine Joshua’s frustration? He wanted to
go in 38 years ago. He was ready to cross the Jordan and take possession
of what God promised but instead, for 38 years he had to go plodding around
the desert with these stiff-necked people.
And then, to top it all off, Moses—the leader, the inspiration,
the point man for this whole deal—died. He was gone, and the whole
nation was thrown into mourning. They just sat there, so close to God’s
promise and yet so far.
They were disappointed. Life had not turned out so good
for them. They believed God, they followed God’s anointed leader,
and look where it got them. At one point, some of them even said, “We
were better off as Pharaoh’s slaves than we are out here.”
You know it seems to me this is a pretty fair picture of
where a lot of Christians are today. Have you noticed how many Christian
people just seem to be kind of stuck in their spiritual journey? Maybe
you can identify with that personally. There could be any number reasons
for it. Perhaps there have been hurts or there have been disappointments,
and you just can’t seem to get past them.
Or maybe there have been issues of failure or sin in your
life and the guilt of it still beats you up to this day. Nearly every
week, my heart is made heavy by the story of someone who for one reason
or another find themselves in a spiritual desert. The Promised Land is
in sight, they hear and understand the promises of God for a life of joy
and peace, but they just can’t seem to cross over and take possession
of it. Can you relate to that?
As Christians we have received a life of promise. God’s
promise to us in Christ Jesus is full and abundant. Unfortunately, many
of us have backed off from the promises of God. We have chosen instead
to live lives of discouragement and disappointment; defeated by temptation
or suffering or sometimes even boredom.
I can’t really imagine what it was like for Joshua, but he and his
people must have been dealing with a major case of disappointment. But
that’s when the Lord came and spoke directly to Joshua. Just has
He had spoken to Moses in the past, now He spoke to Joshua.
“Joshua, Moses is dead.” The Lord is very perceptive.
I mean, isn’t that kind of stating the obvious? Of course Moses
was dead, that’s why they were all so depressed! But maybe what
the Lord knows is that sometimes you have to name right out loud what
the disappointment is so you can get past it. “Moses is dead. That’s
not going to change. So there’s no use in sitting around and grieving
any longer. You’ve had your time of grief, now Joshua; it’s
time to move on.” And that’s when the Lord spoke the gospel
to Joshua: “Get ready to cross the Jordan river, you and all these
people, into the land I am about to give to them.” The promise was
nothing new. They’d lived with this promise for 40 years, and more.
But God spoke His promise to them again, in the midst of
their disappointment, and because God renewed the promise, it created
limitless potential in the lives of these defeated people.
If ever a group of folks were stuck in the mud it was these
folks. But God did not leave them there. His response was to come to them
and to come to their new leader and say, “Alright, enough already,
it’s time to move on! The promise still holds. I don’t care
what the disappointments have been, I don’t care what the defeats
have been, I don’t care if it doesn’t feel very exciting anymore,
the promise still holds. Now get up, dust yourselves off, and get ready
because you, after 40 long years, are about to cross over and enter the
Promised Land.”
Oh, you know what? I really believe God would like to say
that to many of us today. I just believe there are several of us here
today for whom God would like to slip in alongside of us and put His arms
around us and say,
“Son, Daughter—I know things haven’t gone
well. I know about your hurts and I know about your disappointments. But
child, my promises to you still hold. But you can’t receive the
promise as long as you hold on to the past.
“Son, Daughter—it’s time to get up and
get ready. It’s time to leave the past behind and cross over into
the promise. It’s time, child, it’s time to learn how live
your life with your back to the past.”
Can I ask you this morning, how long are you going to allow
your future to be defined by your past? How long are you choosing to stay
in your disappointment? It is a choice, you know. Some of you have been
stuck far too long. It’s time to get up and get ready. It’s
time to cross over. It’s time to learn how to live life with your
back to the past.
Well, Joshua heard that message from the Lord and he received
it. He quit his mourning and he quit feeling sorry for himself. He got
up immediately and he began to challenge and organize the people. He told
the leaders, “Go through the camp and tell the people, ‘Get
ready, get ready. We’re going to cross over into the promise of
God.’”
You may say, “Pastor, I really want to move on. I
really don’t want to be stuck in my past and I don’t want
to be mired in my disappointment. But I just don’t know how to move
on.”
Well, God gave to Joshua and to the people some pretty specific
instruction for how to get ready. First, he told them they must be immersed
in the Word of God. Did you hear that? Verse 8: [read]
But immersion alone is not enough; it must be accompanied
by obedience. Verse 7: [read]. In order to move beyond our past, God requires
total obedience to His truth. This is not a pick and choose religion.
God calls for an absolute and total surrender to His lordship.
That is the only way you will ever move out of what has
you stuck spiritually. Too many Christians have the “Yeah . . .
but” syndrome. They hear the clear promises of God and their response
is, “Yeah, that’s nice, but . . .
—that can’t apply to me.”
—my situation is different.”
—you don’t understand what I’ve been through.”
Well, if I can use a very precise, theological word: baloney!
You have a choice to make. Are you going to keep on allowing your life
to be defined by the past and what others have done to you or what you
have done, or are you finally going to take God at His word, believe what
is true about what He offers you, and move on? It is your choice to make.
By His grace God will enable you to live in the truth, but if you refuse
to move on, don’t you dare blame God for your spiritual sickness.
As we walk through this story of Joshua, we are going to
discover some pretty amazing things God does to bring His people into
His promises.
Don’t misunderstand. This is not a “God helps
those who help themselves” kind of deal. That’s not in the
Bible. But God will never force upon us what He offers us in Christ. He
calls us to surrender the past, surrender our own efforts, and move on
into the new thing He wants to do in our lives.
The apostle Paul said it very well. And he said this at
a time in his life when he could have easily languished in disappointment.
He was in jail. Things were not going particularly well for him.
And yet he said, “Forgetting what is behind and straining toward
what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God
has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 3:13-14).
Loved ones, I say to you what the Lord told Joshua to tell
his people, “Get ready. Get ready to cross over. It’s time
to leave the past and move on into what God has for you.”
That’s true of each of us individually. It’s
also true of us a church. We have a rich history, but we can’t live
there alone. It’s time to move on. It’s time to move forward
into all God has for us.
And it’s our choice to make. We can linger in the
past or we can get ready for the future. One is a life of disappointment.
The other is a life.
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