You Will Fail!

14 “Now, therefore, fear the Lord and serve Him in sincerity and truth; and do away with the gods which your fathers served beyond the Euphrates River and in Egypt, and serve the Lord. 15 But if it is disagreeable in your sight to serve the Lord, choose for yourselves today whom you will serve: whether the gods which your fathers served, which were beyond the Euphrates River, or the gods of the Amorites in whose land you are living; but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.”
16 The people answered and said, “Far be it from us that we would abandon the Lord to serve other gods; 17 for the Lord our God is He who brought us and our fathers up out of the land of Egypt, from the house of slaves, and did these great signs in our sight and watched over us through all the way in which we went and among all the peoples through whose midst we passed. 18 The Lord drove out from before us all the peoples, even the Amorites who lived in the land. We also will serve the Lord, for He is our God.”
19 Then Joshua said to the people, “You will not be able to serve the Lord, for He is a holy God. He is a jealous God; He will not forgive your wrongdoing or your sins.

The worship of idols The people declared that they “choose the Lord” but it may have been in response to Joshua’s declaration and not wholly from the heart. And perhaps Joshua anticipated this. The people were still holding on to idols. They still had room in their hearts for faith in other Gods. In verse 14 he tells them to throw away their idols and foreign Gods so obviously he is aware that they are still holding onto them. Making this declaration has to be done in conjunction with removing all the foreign gods from among them. Maybe in today’s terms this would be like getting baptized but then continuing to put Mohammed and Buddha on the same level as Jesus. But even more relatable, its like getting baptized but trusting more in our wealth and our own ideas than God. So Joshua continues to move them to a commitment to destroy their idols, declare that they are witnesses against themselves and then take an oath to follow the written laws of a covenant that Joshua creates for the people. It seems that Joshua was taking it past their declaration to follow the Lord, because he wanted to make a point.
They really weren’t able to do it: It is obvious from Israel’s history that they weren’t able to do it. Joshua is prophesying. And perhaps it’s not even obvious to him how much he is prophesying. Israel certainly went on to struggle with idolatry. So much so that they eventually lost the land that they were entering that day to take possession of. They were truly ignorant of who God really is, and what declaring him as their God ultimately was gonna look like for their lives. Coming out of Egypt, they were just getting to know who the God of Israel is.
Joshua is a foreshadowing of Christ: How many of us have stood in the waters of baptism declaring “Jesus is Lord” and yet have not thrown out all our idols? We come into a relationship with God, and we can’t help this but we have preconceived notions of what that’s going to look like. We only know God as we are able to picture him and understand him. Even with the most enthusiastic and best of intentions, we all fail because the journey is not at all what we thought it was going to be. Having preconceived notions about God and what our life will be like as we commit to him is completely unavoidable. None of us know what lies ahead. And all we can do is base our understanding of what seems true to us in the current moment of our life.
Establishing A Point In Time: Even though Joshua predicts, they’re going to fail at remaining faithful to God what he’s doing is necessary. It is crucial to establish a day, a time, a moment or whatever that we can always go back to after we fail. A point in time that we declared to forsake all others and follow the Lord. Great marriages are not great because somehow two people have something that others don’t. They are great because two people stand by the covenant they made.The covenant that says, “for better or for worse, through sickness and health till death do us part.” They take seriously those words. So matter how bad it gets, they have a covenant that they honor that they know on this day and time in front of all their friends, family and god, they declared that this is what they’re going to be true to. It is not so sexy but that is what makes a great marriage great. Their vows are not to each other as much as they are to what they are believe in. So when they take their vows, that point in time acts as a starting point that they can return to over and over and over again.
The Battles Are Over And Just Begun: They were living a life as slaves in Egypt and then as nomads wandering the dessert. An entire generation has now passed away and a new generation is rising up. They don’t really know what they are committing to, but they think they do. The only life this new generation has known is wandering in the dessert and seizing land from those who were living there. To them, God promised the land and gave them victory in their battles. And that was pretty much who God was to them. It is easy for us, reading the bible today, to see that there is so much more to God than that. Because we know Christ and we can look back at how things took shape. They only knew that the God of Israel was not like the gods they worshiped in Egypt. But they tried pleasing Him as if He was. So it made sense to them that he went before them, destroying towns and cities and killing people.

The problem with inspired writings is that even the one doing the writing doesn’t have a very clear picture of all that God is showing him. The Law carried with it a vision of christianity. Within the laws was the heart of God. The levitical laws of not gleaning your fields a third time, leaving some of the harvest for the poor to glean, was an act of loving your neighbor more than obeying God. The laws about rashes and skin diseases were acts of caring more for the welfare of others by not spreading contagious diseases. Learning to lay down your wants, your desires, you life for the sake of others. This is all stuff that Jesus taught but was not so obvious with a surface reading of Leviticus. The law was meant to shape their hearts but they only saw it as rules to follow.

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