Friday, December 12, 2025

Cling to God:The Command to Love

  Lessons of Faith from Joshua - Sabbath School Lesson 12 - Thursday

Cling to God

In Joshua 23:11, the aged leader implores the Israelites: “Be very careful, then, to love the Lord your God.” This is not merely a suggestion—it is a call to wholehearted devotion. Joshua’s appeal echoes the words of Moses in Deuteronomy 6:5: “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength.” The repetition of this command underscores its importance: loving God is central to the life of faith.

Yet love, by its nature, cannot be coerced. Forced affection is not love at all. Genuine love requires the freedom of the heart. So how can God command love without violating its essence? The answer lies in understanding love as a choice, an active commitment of the will, not just a passive emotion. God calls us to align our hearts with His, to deliberately focus our affections, priorities, and actions toward Him.

Jesus illuminates this in the New Testament. In John 13:34, He gives His disciples a new commandment: “Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another.” This command is old in the sense that it reflects the eternal law of love found in Leviticus 19:18, which tells us to love our neighbor as ourselves. Yet it is new because Christ models a self-sacrificial, unconditional love that goes beyond mere duty—a love empowered by the Spirit and rooted in His grace. Likewise, 1 John 3:11 and 15 remind us that this love is both a calling and a reflection of our relationship with God: love is evidence that we abide in Him.

Clinging to God means allowing His love to shape our love. When our hearts are saturated with His affection, love for Him and for others flows naturally. Our obedience to the command to love is not a burden; it is the outpouring of a heart fully devoted to God. To cling to God is to let Him be the anchor of our affections, the source of our strength, and the reason for our actions.

Prayer:
Lord, help me to cling to You with all my heart, soul, and strength. Teach me to love You freely, without reservation, and to reflect Your love to those around me. Strengthen my will to choose You daily, and let Your Spirit guide my affections and actions. May my love for You and others be a true expression of Your love dwelling in me. Amen.

The Anger of the Lord: The Justice Behind God’s Wrath

 Lessons of Faith from Joshua - Sabbath School Lesson 12 - Wednesday

The Anger of the Lord

When we come across the descriptions of God’s wrath and retributive justice in Joshua—especially in Joshua 23:15–16, where Joshua warns Israel that rebellion will bring the same judgments that fell on the nations before them—it can feel unsettling. Yet Scripture consistently frames God’s anger not as a random outburst but as the response of a holy God who loves His creation too much to let evil destroy it.

Throughout the Old Testament, divine wrath appears whenever persistent rebellion and rejection of God finally reach a tipping point. When Israel complained against God’s provision, “the anger of the Lord was kindled” and judgment fell (Num. 11:33). When Judah repeatedly mocked God’s prophets, “there was no remedy,” and judgment followed (2 Chron. 36:16). In the New Testament, the imagery intensifies: those who cling to evil rather than God face the undiluted consequences of that choice (Rev. 14:10, 19; Rev. 15:1).

These scenes are not meant to paint God as harsh or unpredictable. Instead, they reveal that God takes evil seriously because He takes His people seriously. His wrath is the settled, righteous opposition to everything that destroys, corrupts, or dehumanizes. A universe without divine judgment would be a universe where justice never comes.

But Scripture never leaves us in fear. It reveals a stunning truth: no one who believes in Christ needs to face God’s wrath. “Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life… the wrath of God remains on him” only if he refuses the Son (John 3:36). By nature we were “children of wrath,” but God’s mercy intervened (Eph. 2:3). Jesus is the One “who delivers us from the wrath to come” (1 Thess. 1:10).

The cross shows us the clearest picture of both divine wrath and divine love. Sin is so destructive that it required a real reckoning. You are so valuable that God chose to bear that reckoning Himself.

Ultimately, the concept of God’s wrath teaches us that He is the righteous Judge of all the earth. “God is a righteous judge” (Ps. 7:11). “The heavens proclaim His righteousness, for God Himself is judge” (Ps. 50:6). And Christ Himself will one day judge with perfect justice (2 Tim. 4:8). This doesn’t drive us away from God—it draws us toward Him. Because His judgments are righteous, His mercy is meaningful. Because He confronts evil, He can restore all things.

Prayer:
Lord, thank You for being a God who takes evil seriously and justice personally. Thank You that in Your love You have provided a way for us to stand in grace rather than wrath. Help us to trust Your character, to rest in the salvation You provide through Christ, and to live with reverence and hope as we wait for the day when Your righteous judgment sets all things right. Amen.

Thursday, December 11, 2025

Clear Boundaries: Guarding the Heart

 Lessons of Faith from Joshua - Sabbath School Lesson 12 - Tuesday

Clear Boundaries
A Devotional on Joshua 23:6–8, 12–13

Joshua knew Israel’s future depended not just on military victories but on spiritual allegiance. As he approached the end of his life, he didn’t focus on strategies or policies—he focused on boundaries. His warning was blunt: if Israel began to bond themselves to the surrounding nations, their hearts would drift from God, and the consequences would be devastating (Josh. 23:12–13). Joshua understood something we often underestimate: relationships shape loyalty, and loyalty shapes destiny.

Israel’s later history proved him right. Solomon began his reign with remarkable devotion—humble, perceptive, favored by God (1 Kings 3:1–15). Yet the very relationships God warned about became the undoing of his heart. His foreign marriages eventually turned him toward idols (1 Kings 11:1–8). Solomon didn’t fall in a single moment; he drifted through slow, subtle influences. It’s a sober reminder that affection has a way of pulling the will with it.

The New Testament echoes this concern. Paul instructs believers not to seek binding relationships—especially marriage—with those who do not share their faith (2 Cor. 6:14). This isn’t about superiority; it’s about spiritual direction. Two people walking toward different centers will inevitably pull one another off-course. But Paul is equally clear that if a believer is already married to an unbeliever, the call is not abandonment but faithful, Christlike living (1 Cor. 7:12–16). Grace makes room for redemption, not retreat.

Joshua’s warning raises a bigger issue: What does it mean to live in the world without being absorbed by it? Jesus prayed not that His disciples would be taken out of the world, but that they would be kept from the evil one within it. That’s the posture we still need—engaged, present, compassionate, but spiritually grounded.

A balanced relationship with society begins with three movements:

  1. Root yourself deeply in God’s truth.
    Joshua’s first instruction was to “be very strong to keep and to do all that is written” (Josh. 23:6). Boundaries aren’t about restriction; they’re about clarity. If you don’t know who you are, the world will gladly tell you.

  2. Build relationships based on shared direction.
    We should love, serve, and bless everyone—but we must reserve our deepest bonds, the ones that shape our identity and choices, for those moving toward Christ. Influence flows strongest through closeness.

  3. Stay present without becoming patterned.
    The world needs our compassion, integrity, and witness. But we are called to mirror Christ, not the culture. That balance—engaged yet distinct—is how Jesus lived and how His people thrive.

Joshua’s message is ultimately pastoral. He isn’t trying to shrink Israel’s life; he’s trying to protect their joy. Clear boundaries don’t shut out blessing—they guard it. And when we set our hearts firmly on God, we remain open to people while anchored in truth.

Prayer:
Lord, give me the wisdom to draw clear, healthy boundaries that honor You. Help me love others deeply without losing my spiritual footing. Root my identity in Christ so that I can live with clarity, compassion, and courage in the world around me. Amen.

A Sign of Concern: The Battle is Spiritual

   Lessons of Faith from Joshua - Sabbath School Lesson 12 - Monday

A Sign of Concern

Scripture Reading: Joshua 23:1–5

Joshua, now an old man, gathers Israel’s leaders for what amounts to his farewell pastoral message. His introduction focuses on three major themes:

  1. God’s Faithfulness: Joshua reminds them that “the Lord your God has fought for you” (Josh. 23:3). Israel’s victories were never about military genius—they were gifts of grace.

  2. Their Inheritance: He points to the land that God has already given and the land still to be possessed (v.4–5). God’s past work guarantees His future help.

  3. The Call to Loyalty: By recalling all God has done, Joshua prepares Israel to understand why obedience matters. Gratitude is meant to fuel faithfulness.

Joshua’s concern is pastoral: he wants the people to stay anchored in the God who delivered them.


Victorious Living: Israel and Today

Joshua reminds Israel that “one man of you puts to flight a thousand, since it is the Lord your God who fights for you” (Josh. 23:10). That is the secret to every victory—God fights for His people.

Christians today experience the same principle on a spiritual level:

1. Victory Comes From God, Not Ourselves

Just as Israel did not win Canaan by their own strength, believers do not overcome sin through willpower. Christ has already triumphed over the rulers and powers of darkness (Col. 2:15). We fight from victory, not for victory.

2. The Battle Is Spiritual

Paul reminds us that “the weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh” (2 Cor. 10:3–5). Our real battleground is the mind—arguments, strongholds, and every thought raised against the knowledge of God. Submission to Christ is our conquering strategy.

3. We Must Wear God’s Armor

Israel had to fight trusting God; Christians must stand firm in the “whole armor of God” (Eph. 6:11–18). Truth, righteousness, faith, the Word, and prayer equip us to walk in daily victory.

Just as God went before Joshua, He goes before us. Our journey mirrors theirs—the battle belongs to the Lord, but we must choose to stand, trust, and obey.


Why Is It Still So Easy to Sin?

This is a hard question, but Joshua hints at the answer: Israel struggled not because God failed, but because their hearts wandered.

We do the same.

Even with God’s promises, we still face:

  1. The pull of the flesh.
    “The flesh desires what is contrary to the Spirit” (Gal. 5:17). The internal fight is real and ongoing.

  2. A world that resists God.
    “Do not be conformed to this world” (Rom. 12:2). Everything around us pressures us to drift from God.

  3. An enemy who schemes.
    (Eph. 6:11) reminds us that spiritual opposition is persistent.

But God does not leave us without hope. He gives His Spirit, His Word, and His promises. When we walk with Him daily, the pull of sin loses its charm and power.


Prayer

Father,
Thank You for fighting for Your people—then and now. As You gave Joshua courage and Israel victory, give us strength to follow You wholeheartedly. Remind us that our battles belong to You and that Your armor is enough for every challenge we face. When we feel the pull of sin, steady our hearts. Teach us to set our minds on Your truth, walk by Your Spirit, and trust Your faithful promises. Keep us loyal, grateful, and watchful until the day we see You face to face.
In Jesus’ name, Amen.

All Came to Pass: Faithful to the Finish

  Lessons of Faith from Joshua - Sabbath School Lesson 12 - Sunday

All Came to Pass

Joshua 21:43–45 reaches a peak moment in Israel’s story:
“Not one of all the LORD’s good promises to Israel failed; all came to pass.”
Those words paint a vivid picture of God—not distant, not inconsistent, but relentlessly faithful. He is the God who finishes what He starts. The land He pledged to Abraham centuries earlier is now in the hands of Abraham’s descendants. Every promise He made, He kept. Every word He spoke, He fulfilled.

This isn’t just ancient history; it’s theology in motion. It shows us a God whose character does not shift with circumstances. His timing may stretch us, but His faithfulness never breaks.

A Promised Land Beyond Geography

The physical Promised Land was real soil, real borders, real rest. But it also pointed to something greater. In 2 Timothy 2:11–13, Paul reminds believers that if we die with Christ, we will live with Him; if we endure, we will reign with Him. God’s faithfulness becomes the ground on which our salvation stands. Even “if we are faithless, He remains faithful.” Our failures don’t nullify His promises. Our inconsistencies don’t dissolve His covenant.

What Joshua’s generation saw in land, we now see in redemption:
God delivers what He promises—even when it looks impossible.

Confidence for the Future

If God kept every promise to Israel, why would He start failing now?
1 Corinthians 10:13 assures us that no temptation can overpower us because God is faithful, providing strength and a way of escape. 2 Corinthians 1:18–20 declares that all of God’s promises find their “Yes” in Christ.

Put simply:

  • God has never broken a promise.

  • God is not breaking a promise today.

  • God will not break a promise tomorrow.

So when He says He will return…He will.
When He says He will complete the good work in us…He will.
When He says He will wipe away every tear…He will.

You don't have to guess about your future. You can stand on it.

Prayer

Father, thank You for being the God whose word never fails. As You fulfilled every promise to Israel, fulfill Your work in us. Strengthen our trust, steady our hearts, and remind us that Your “Yes” in Christ is stronger than our fears and more certain than our circumstances. Help us walk today with confidence that everything You have promised—salvation, victory, and eternal life—will surely come to pass. In Jesus’ name, Amen.