God Gives Israel the Land

Open Your Bible

Joshua 10:16-43, Romans 1:18-20, Ephesians 1:20-21

Should we cheer or should we grieve? I certainly cheer as I read about the nation of Israel finally entering the promised land of Canaan. What a celebration and relief for God’s people! Their forty-year-long desert detour was over! Now, these men, women, and children were free to settle down in the abundant land God had promised Abraham so long ago. 

I also cheer for Joshua, Moses’s protégé and successor. As God’s chosen man, he led the people into Canaan. However, all was not smooth sailing. After crossing the Jordan River, Israel was met with resistance. Canaan was not an empty, unsettled territory. City after city fortified itself against Joshua and his advancing Israelite army. King after king dispatched troops to fight for land and dominance. From the city of Makkedah, to Libnah, to Lachish, to Eglon, to Hebron, to Debir, our reading follows Joshua and his soldiers as they march to victory across the southern region of Canaan. 

I can almost hear Israel’s victorious battle cry, but if I’m being honest, my cheers give way to heaviness. As United States Army General Sherman soberly stated, “War is hell.” We may grieve as we recognize that Israel’s long-awaited entrance into the promised land was an invasion. We may be troubled as we remember that Joshua was not only Israel’s strong and courageous national leader; he was also its top military general. He obeyed direct orders from God to mobilize troops and strategically conquer Canaanite strongholds.

Are you wrestling with this account of God declaring war? Let’s press into ancient texts to get a better glimpse of God as a righteous warrior. For hundreds of years, the Canaanites had been increasingly sinful (Genesis 15:16). The root of their sin was idolatry: worshiping false gods instead of the one, true God. The fruit of their idolatry included brutal child sacrifice and witchcraft (Deuteronomy 18:9–12). Any person settling in Canaan would suffer from this way of life. Worse yet, all future generations would be twisted and dehumanized by such deeply entrenched sin patterns and spiritual darkness long at work in the land. 

We see that God declared war against this deadly system, but do we know what He was fighting for? Joshua experienced victory “because the LORD, the God of Israel, fought for Israel” (Joshua 10:42). By demolishing Canaanite strongholds, God uprooted destructive wickedness and prepared the land for faithful, flourishing life. He fought to protect and preserve His people.

We reflect on Israel’s conquest of Canaan with both grief and gratefulness. We grieve over the deadly seriousness of rejecting God and over the destructive powers of sin and darkness. Yet, we also gratefully rejoice as we see God declaring love for His people by declaring war on sin, both in the promised land and in our own hearts today. To Him, the fight against sin and death is worthy of the shed blood of His own Son, Jesus. Thanks be to God.

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94 thoughts on "God Gives Israel the Land"

  1. Megan L says:

    Thank you for this. I needed to know why all this death was necessary. It’s hard to read at face value, but now I understand.

  2. Priscilla Estrada says:

    Wow, the last few lines, just wow. Thanks be to God.

  3. Chelsea Little says:

    Love this!! Are we willing to be the Joshua of our world today? Are we willing to stand against all evil so that the gospel can move forward?

  4. Hannah McConnell says:

    I realize that since I’m not a Jew… I’m a Gentile. I’m a Canaanite. The punishment of sin is death. I would have been in one of those fortified cities lost in sin. But God made a way BECAUSE of His great love. Jesus bore the sins of the world and sacrificially took the punishment that was meant for US. To say that I am thankful is an understatement!

  5. Rosalyn Horn says:

    This was such a great reminder – I was having a conversation and how challenging it was to read about the endless killing but I loved how she reminded me about the reason for it, to get rid of the deeply rooted sin.

  6. Elena S says:

    “all future generations would be twisted and dehumanized by such deeply entrenched sin patterns and spiritual darkness long at work in the land.”

    Lord, let us see how we have been twisted and dehumanized by the deeply entrenched sin patterns and spiritual darkness that has long been at work in our land. Let us grieve and repent and fight with the courage of Joshua against the strongholds at work here in our county and our communities. May we rise up against the injustices, the lies, and the discord that permeate. May we pull them up from the roots.

  7. Jamie Trice says:

    Thank you God for fighting for Israel. Thank you for continuing to fight for me and my heart. I have always struggled with the war against people in the Bible, but this explained it so well. I understand it so much more now. Thank you!

  8. Lisa C says:

    Thank you❤️