Rahab: A Faith That Chose God
Rahab’s story is one of the most surprising examples of faith in the Bible. She was not an Israelite. She lived in the wicked city of Jericho. She even had a sinful background as a harlot. Yet God transformed her life because she believed Him when others refused to.
Her story reminds us that faith is not about having a perfect past. It is about choosing to trust God and act upon that trust.
Rahab’s Story
Rahab appears in Book of Joshua 2. As the Israelites prepared to enter the Promised Land, Joshua sent two spies into Jericho. The king of Jericho learned they were there and sent men to arrest them.
Rahab hid the spies on her roof under stalks of flax and protected them from capture.
She then explained why she helped them:
“For the Lord your God, he is God in heaven above, and in earth beneath.” — Book of Joshua 2:11
Rahab had heard about how God delivered Israel from Egypt and defeated their enemies. While the people of Jericho hardened their hearts in fear, Rahab responded with faith.
Her faith was not merely intellectual. She acted on it. She risked her own life to side with God’s people.
Because of this, Rahab and her family were spared when Jericho fell.
Rahab and Faith in James
Rahab becomes an example of living faith in the New Testament.
James wrote:
“Likewise also was not Rahab the harlot justified by works, when she had received the messengers, and had sent them out another way?” — Epistle of James 2:25
James is not teaching salvation by works. He is teaching that genuine faith produces action.
Rahab believed God was real, but her faith became visible because she acted courageously. If she had claimed to believe yet handed the spies over to the king, her actions would have contradicted her words.
Faith changes behavior.
That is why Rahab is also included among the great heroes of faith in Epistle to the Hebrews 11:
“By faith the harlot Rahab perished not with them that believed not, when she had received the spies with peace.” — Hebrews 11:31
God honored her faith, not her past.
Rahab and the Difficult Question of Deception
One challenging part of Rahab’s story is that she deceived the king’s men in order to protect the spies.
This raises an important ethical question Christians have wrestled with for centuries: Is deception always sinful in every situation?
The Bible clearly condemns dishonest, selfish, and malicious lying. Satan himself is called “a liar” in Gospel of John 8:44. God values truth because His character is truthful.
Yet Scripture also contains situations where protecting innocent life involved concealment or deception against evil authorities.
For example:
- The Hebrew midwives in Egypt deceived Pharaoh to save Hebrew babies (Exodus 1:15–21).
- Rahab concealed the spies to protect God’s people.
- Christians throughout history have hidden persecuted believers and smuggled Bibles into hostile nations.
- Many people concealed Jews during World War II and lied to Nazi authorities in order to save lives.
- Others hid escaped slaves during American slavery and refused to cooperate with unjust systems.
These examples force believers to think carefully about higher moral responsibilities. Scripture consistently places enormous value on protecting innocent life and resisting evil oppression.
Rahab’s story does not glorify deception itself. Rather, it highlights courageous faith that aligned with God instead of a corrupt society. Her loyalty shifted from Jericho to the Lord.
What Rahab’s Story Means for Us
Rahab teaches several powerful lessons:
1. No One Is Beyond God’s Grace
Rahab’s past did not disqualify her from salvation. God can redeem anyone who turns to Him in faith.
2. Faith Requires Action
True faith is more than words. Rahab risked everything because she truly believed.
3. God Looks at the Heart
The religious leaders of Jesus’ day often looked righteous outwardly while lacking genuine faith. Rahab had a broken past, yet her heart trusted God.
4. God Can Completely Rewrite a Life
Rahab eventually became part of Israel and even appears in the genealogy of Jesus in Gospel of Matthew 1:5.
A woman once known for sin became part of the Messianic line because of faith.
That is the power of God’s grace.
Prayer
Heavenly Father,
Thank You for the story of Rahab and the reminder that no life is beyond Your grace. Help us to have courageous faith that trusts You even when obedience is costly. Teach us to stand for what is right in a world filled with compromise and fear.
Strengthen us to act upon our faith and not merely speak about it. Give us wisdom in difficult situations and hearts that value truth, justice, mercy, and the protection of others.
Thank You that You can redeem broken people and give them a new future. May our lives, like Rahab’s, become testimonies of Your transforming power.
In Jesus’ name, amen.
More on: Lesson 8 Having Faith




