Thursday, August 4, 2011

Joshua: Obedience Leads to Victory




What do these three pictures have in common? I’ll help you out a bit and label them. Picture (a) is a cancer cell; (b) is an ancient army going into battle; and (c) is a “Where’s Waldo?” puzzle.

Guesses, anyone? No worries, we’ll come back to it. First, let’s do a little heart diagnostic.

The Issue: You feel defeated. You are trying to be close to God, but it seems impossible. At one point, you could clearly hear His voice and you are sure of what He told you then, but now you are frustrated and confused.

Time for a story (Josh. 6-7).

The year is somewhere between 1406 and 1220 B.C. You’re a soldier in the gigantic army of Israel, under the leadership of this fierce warrior named Joshua, and are protected by the power of a supreme and all-powerful God. Every city around you for miles is terrified of you and your God. One day Joshua tells you that you’re going to conquer an ancient and well-fortified city called Jericho, with it’s high walls and brave men, by walking around it seven times and blowing trumpets. Maybe you think this is crazy, but you obey Joshua (who is obeying his Lord) and walk. On the seventh day as the horns sound, the walls of this city miraculously come crashing down, and you and your fellow soldiers rush in to kill everyone and take the city captive. Victory complete!

At the end of the day, the army praises the Lord for giving it the city. God commands Joshua, who in turn commands you, not to take any of the spoil from the city, but to dedicate the things of worth to His temple. Since you’ve just come out of battle victorious and are celebrating, this doesn’t seem like a hard command to follow.

The next battle is against a smaller city, this one called Ai. Joshua leads only a few of you into combat, but instead of taking an easy win, you are defeated and run home with your tail between your legs. Joshua inquires of God what happened, and the Lord points out that one of you has disobeyed His command, and had stolen something from the riches of Jericho. Although it was just one man (named Achin) out of the ENTIRE population of Israel, they would not be right before the Lord until this thing was taken care of.

The Application:

Okay, back to the pictures.

First, we can apply them to the story. Picture (b) is the army of Israel— that one’s kind of a given. Picture (c) is looking for the disobedience (difficult to spot). And picture (a), the cancer cell, is the outcome: one little cell, one little sin, is what spreads to cause the most damage after the victory.

Now we put the pictures and the story together and apply it to the real issue at hand.

Think back to the last time you were “on the mountaintop” with God. Maybe it was at a summer camp or a conference, maybe it was at youth group one night, or maybe it was just praying in your room. Whenever it was, you were close to the Lord— you heard His voice, you knew His promises, and you were secure in the knowledge that He would give you victory in some area of your life (picture (b)). With that, though, came a command: dedicate what is holy to Me. Obey My commands and follow Me, and I will give you the victory.

It’s so easy to jump up and say, Yes, I will obey You and Your commands! We have just tasted His goodness and are on a spiritual high. What we don’t realize is that this is when we are the most vulnerable to attack— it may not be obvious, but it comes in the test of the little things. All it took to defeat Israel was the disobedience of one man (Achin) out of the multitudes. As a result, they couldn’t even defeat smaller obstacles because they weren’t righteous before God. What was required of Israel is also required of us: we must search ourselves and find the area in which we have sinned or have refused to submit, hidden as it might be (picture (c)). It only takes one small cell to multiply into something uncontrollable and life threatening, and the only thing to do is to put it under submission and cut it out (picture (a)).

The Lord is just, and He is forgiving, and His promises are unchanging. But He is molding us into sons and daughters through obedience in every area of our lives, no matter how great or small they may seem to us, and the test of it is very often after the victory. In the story of Israel, Joshua and the community took Achin out and stoned him to death. It is just as important to put to death the area of disobedience in within us!

After Israel had repented, the Lord gave them victory at Ai. Obedience to God in the little things leads to a right relationship with Him, and the ultimate victory.

By: K
Underground Grad

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Just Thinking Out Loud...

1. You shall have no other gods before Me.(T.V, Facebook, American Idol, Career, Family, and friends)
2. You shall not make unto thee any graven image. (Tattoos, Trophies, and Degrees)
3. You shall not take the name of the Lord God in vain. (Self Explanatory)
4. Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy. (Where did this go?)
5. Honor your father and your mother. (A thing of the past; fathers are missing in the home.)
6. You shall not murder. (Even children do it now)
7. You shall not commit adultery. (Divorce is on the rise)
8. You shall not steal. (Even the Government is doing it)
9. You shall not bear false witness. (Everyday on every news channel)
10. You shall not covet. (MTV Cribs, Magazines, Movies & Neighbors)

•Side note: America was started by believer's who wanted to be a "city on the hill" for Jesus. Yet, this is what we have become. I was at a friends house last week and from the other room I heard the news say "As America chooses its next idol, we will give you up to date coverage". That phrasing caught me by surprise. It's not just that show alone but our culture in general. However, the name of American Idol couldn't be any more offensive... Could it?

Another name could be "America Breaks the 1st & 10th Commandment" Airs on Wednesday Nights @ 8pm. You don't want to miss it!

P.S. I am Proud of Scotty McCreery for winning and giving God the glory.


Just Thinking out loud...

Friday, January 21, 2011

Youth Leader Summit Notes:

Recently I attended a youth leader summit in Lima, NY with a good friend of mine. I wanted to share a few notes with you that I took while there. The following notes are from my first night. Jeanne Mayo was the speaker:

In the Crucible

Crucible: container for melting something. 2) bottom of furnace. 3) testing circumstances. 4) ordeal

•What is the crucible in your life?
•God is not punishing you, He’s educating you. It’s not punishment; it’s training.
•Ask Him not to take you out of the crucible but enlarge your pain capacity.
• A true leader will grow through the crucible.

What are the traits of a crucible?
•Crucibles make you ask the hard questions. I.e., Am I really called to do this? Did God really give me this vision?
•Crucibles are inevitable where people play for high stakes. Heaven & Hell!
•Crucibles are conquered by those who think and act differently when times call for it. (will do what needs to be done)
•Crucibles can come by failure or cause failure.
•Crucibles are a turning point. You are different than you were before the crucible...

The tipping point is the awareness of knowing that you are affecting peoples lives by how you come out of a crucible. (Made me think of the Chase family during Sam’s battle)


Be diligent with the church you have and not the one you want. Jesus died for one person at a time. One is just as valuable as 1000.

•Take charge of the narrative of the story. The choice is always yours. You are the story teller.

•A crisis always introduces a person to themselves.

•If the crucible causes anger to come out, don’t blame the person who caused the crucible...the anger was always there, the crucible just brought it out.

• Leaders often find their voice in the crucible. They face the obvious risk, and choose to be optimistic.

• Sometimes God removes our dreams to give us our destiny.

•Greatness often comes at the intersection of pain & passion.