π±LIVING FAITH | 10.The True Joshua | 10.5 Joshua and Us | πΊοΈ LESSONS OF FAITH FROM JOSHUA
πΊοΈ LESSONS OF FAITH FROM JOSHUA
βͺ Lesson 10 : The True Joshua
π 10.5 Joshua and Us
β¨ Jesus β the true Joshua who secures our eternal inheritance
π¦ Introduction
The Bible is full of people who are so-called types pointing ahead to Jesus Christ. Joshua is one of these remarkable figures. His name means βThe LORD is salvationβ β the same meaning as the Hebrew name of Jesus (Yeshua). Joshuaβs task was to lead Israel into the Promised Land, defeat the enemies, and bring the people into the rest of God. Christ fulfills this picture in a spiritual and final way. He does not fight against human enemies, but against sin, death, and the enemy of souls β and he leads his people into the spiritual inheritance: the Kingdom of God.
This lesson shows how deep and relevant this typology is for the church today β in an age that lives between promise and fulfillment.
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π BIBLE STUDY
Joshua as a type of Christ and the Church
π§ Background: Joshua as a type of Christ
The name Joshua (Hebrew: Yehoshua) means βThe LORD savesβ β the same meaning as the name Jesus (Yeshua) in the New Testament. Joshua was Mosesβ successor and led Israel into the Promised Land. In his calling, leadership, obedience and his role as mediator between God and the people, he prophetically points to Jesus Christ, who leads his people into the heavenly inheritance.
Joshua:
β’ Led Israel from the desert into the Promised Land
Jesus:
β’ Leads the church from slavery to sin into eternal life
π‘οΈ Spiritual battles of the church β in the light of Joshuaβs battles
π 1. 1 Timothy 1:18
β…this command I entrust to you, my son Timothy, according to the prophecies made about you, that by them you may fight the good fight.β
β’ Paul sees the Christian life as a βgood fightβ connected to a calling
β’ Just as Joshua did not fight to exalt himself but under Godβs command, so do we
β’ The spiritual life is not passive waiting, but active engagement β in prayer, faith, and obedience
π 2. 2 Timothy 4:7
βI have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith.β
β’ Paulβs reflection resembles Joshuaβs reflection shortly before his death (cf. Joshua 23β24)
β’ The goal is not just the fight, but keeping the faith to the end
β’ Our βfightsβ have an eternal perspective
π 3. Ephesians 6:10β12
βPut on the whole armor of God β¦ for we do not wrestle against flesh and blood …β
β’ Unlike Joshua, our opponents are not people, but spiritual forces
β’ The armor (truth, righteousness, gospel, faith, salvation, Word of God) is our equipment
β’ Joshua had a physical sword β we have the Word of God as the sword of the Spirit (v.17)
π 4. 2 Corinthians 10:3β5
β… our weapons are not fleshly, but powerful through God for pulling down strongholds …β
β’ The battles in the Old Testament against cities (like Jericho or Ai) symbolize spiritual strongholds: mindsets, pride, doubt
β’ The spiritual battle concerns our thinking, arguments, inner world β these must be brought into obedience to Christ
π 5. Acts 20:32
β…I commend you to God and to the word of his grace, which is able to build you up and give you the inheritance …β
β’ The βinheritanceβ here is not land, but spiritual property: peace, grace, eternal life
β’ The Word of God is the means by which we grow and recognize our calling β like Joshua, who should always carry the law with him (Joshua 1:8)
β¨ The spiritual inheritance: rest and glory
π Hebrews 4:9β11
βThere remains therefore a rest for the people of God …β
β’ The conquest under Joshua was only a foretaste of the true rest Christ brings
β’ This rest is spiritual today (peace with God) β and will be fully fulfilled at Christβs coming
β’ Rest is not a place β but a state of relationship with God
π― The final fulfillment of the typology β our hope
π 1 Peter 1:4
β…to an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled and unfading …β
β’ The heavenly inheritance is eternal β not like earthly Canaan, threatened by war and idolatry
π Colossians 3:24
β…from the Lord you will receive the inheritance as your reward …β
β’ Christ himself is our reward. The inheritance is relationship, eternal life, glory with him
π Revelation 20:9
β… and fire came down from heaven and consumed them.β
β’ The last battle is not ours, but Godβs. God himself defends his people
π Revelation 21:3
β…Behold, the dwelling of God is with man …β
β’ The final rest: God himself dwells with his people β that is the true conquest!
ποΈ Summary
| Joshua | Jesus Christ |
|---|---|
| Led Israel into Canaan | Leads us into the heavenly Kingdom |
| Fought earthly enemies | Fights the spiritual battle against sin & Satan |
| Distributed land to the tribes | Gives every believer a share in Godβs inheritance |
| Called for covenant renewal | Brings us into the new covenant by his blood |
| Died before he could bring Israel into complete rest | Lives forever and brings us into perfect rest |
π Key statement
The conquest under Joshua is a shadow of the churchβs spiritual journey today. The true Joshua β Jesus Christ β leads us not into earthly possession, but into eternal fellowship with God.
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π£οΈ Answers to the Questions
Question 1: How do Israelβs wars under Joshua point to the churchβs spiritual battles?
β’ The wars under Joshua were necessary to enter the promised land β likewise we must fight spiritually to take possession of our inheritance in Christ
β’ Israelβs enemies symbolize spiritual enemies: sin, pride, worldliness
β’ The difference is that the New Testament battle is not fought with weapons, but with spiritual means (2 Cor 10:3β5)
β’ Our enemy is not people, but whatever separates them from God
Key texts:
β’ 1 Tim 1:18 β βfight the good fight of faithβ
β’ 2 Tim 4:7 β βI have fought the good fight…β
β’ Eph 6:10β12 β βPut on the armor of God …β
β’ Acts 20:32 β the Word builds up β spiritual growth despite battle
Question 2: What do the texts say about the final fulfillment of the Joshua typology?
β’ Our βpromised landβ is not geographical, but heavenly: the new earth, eternal life
β’ We expect βan imperishable, undefiled inheritanceβ (1 Pet 1:4)
β’ Col 3:24 speaks of βthe reward of the inheritanceβ β a clear reference to final fulfillment
β’ Rev 20:9; 21:3 describe how God will dwell among his people β as once in the promised land, but now in perfect fellowship
Question 3: How would Jesus phrase Joshuaβs question today?
Joshua asked: βHow long will you delay to take possession of the land?β
Jesus might ask today:
βHow long will you delay to receive the fullness of life that I want to give you through my Spirit?β
Or:
βWhy do you still live in fear and half-heartedness, although I have given you everything you need for life and godliness?β (cf. 2 Pet 1:3)
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β¨ Spiritual Principles
β’ The spiritual battle is real β but so is the victory
β’ Christ is the true Joshua who wants to lead us into heavenly rest
β’ Our faith must be active, not passive β we βfightβ through trust, obedience, steadfastness
β’ The Word of God is our weapon and source of strength
β’ Covenant renewal is necessary β spiritual renewal happens through daily surrender
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π Life Application
β’ Start your day by consciously βputting on the armorβ (Eph 6)
β’ Fight your βinner battlesβ β against doubt, discouragement, temptation β in prayer
β’ Read the Word regularly to understand your spiritual inheritance
β’ Realize that you are not waiting for a geographical place, but for a spiritual reality that begins now
β’ Live as an heir β full of hope, dignity and strength, because Christ has already conquered
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π§© Conclusion
Joshua was a faithful servant of God who led the people into the promised land β but Christ surpasses him in everything. He leads his church not only into a better land, but into a new world. The fight we fight is not against people, but against everything that wants to keep us from the heavenly goal. But we are not alone. We have the promises, the weapons, and the Victor himself at our side.
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π Thought of the Day
βChrist is our Joshua β and he calls us today: Do not hesitate to take hold of the fullness of life I have given you!β
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βοΈ Illustration
βBorderland β The Battle for the Inheritanceβ
A journey between doubt, grace, and spiritual victory
π§© Chapter 1: The Valley of Hesitation
Julius, 27 years old, was a committed Christian. Since his youth he had been active in the church, teaching childrenβs classes, leading worship, organizing Bible retreats. And yetβ¦ something was missing. He felt it every morning when he opened his Bible. It was as if God kept asking him:
βHow long will you delay to take possession of the land I have given you?β
His βlandβ was not geographical. It was spiritual. An inner land: freedom from fear. Authority in prayer. Clarity in calling. He knew God had more for him β but he lived on the threshold. In the βborderland.β
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
π₯ Chapter 2: The City of Shadows
His greatest battle was not visible β it lived in his mind. Julius was afraid of failure. Outwardly he looked disciplined, but inwardly he was torn. He postponed decisions, let himself be directed by othersβ opinions, and struggled with hidden self-loathing.
Then came a moment in a simple home group sermon:
βMany Christians live like Israel in Canaan β they are in the promised land, but they do not fight. They tolerate their enemies instead of driving them out.β
The sentence hit him like an arrow. Julius thought:
βI have made peace with things that no longer have any right to be in my life.β
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
π Chapter 3: The Armor
Julius began to read the Bible again β not for others, but for himself. Ephesians 6 became a weapon for him. He copied it by hand. He prayed it every morning:
β’ Belt of truth: βI am who God says I am.β
β’ Breastplate of righteousness: βMy identity is not my failure.β
β’ Shield of faith: βI am not alone β God fights with me.β
β’ Sword of the Spirit: βI speak the Word against the lies.β
Something changed β slowly but noticeably. The shadows began to retreat.
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
π§± Chapter 4: Jericho in His Heart
One evening β after a long workday β Julius sat in his apartment and thought about all the inner walls that blocked him: fear of failure, guilt, old wounds. He had often tried to improve himself. Now he simply prayed:
βLord, tear down my walls. I want to believe you, not myself.β
He remembered Joshua: how the people were to do nothing but be silent and march β for seven days. He began to βmarchβ too: every morning in prayer, in silence, in trust. And at some point β very quietly β his walls began to crumble.
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
π‘ Chapter 5: The Inheritance
Julius realized that the βbattleβ is not only against something β but for something. For what God wanted to give him:
β’ Inner rest instead of drivenness
β’ Clarity about his calling
β’ Depth in his relationship with Jesus
β’ Courage to take spiritual responsibility
In a small prayer night with friends, he felt as if God was saying:
βI have not called you to be a spectator. You were not made for the wilderness, but for the promised land.β
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
πͺ Chapter 6: The Other Fighters
He began to speak about his battles β first cautiously, then boldly. Others opened up. A small community formed with one goal: not just to talk about the spiritual life, but to live it.
They read the Bible together, occasionally fasted, supported each other in temptation, listened to Godβs voice. It was not perfect. But it was real.
And Julius realized: just as Joshua did not fight alone but with the whole people, he too could be part of a spiritual army β a fighter among brothers and sisters, with Jesus at the front.
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
π Chapter 7: The Lordβs Rest
A year passed. Julius had not βarrivedβ β but he was on the way. He had learned: the spiritual battle is not a phase, it is the journey. But also: Jesus is not only the leader β he is the victor.
Godβs rest was not only a goal at the end, but a gift in the midst of the battle. When he prayed, he felt peace. When he fought, he knew Godβs strength carried him.
He had not βpossessedβ the land β but he lived trusting in the inheritance.
π¬ Closing thoughts on the story
Many Christians, like Julius, stand in the βborderland.β They know God, they know the promises β but they hesitate. The Joshua story is not a relic of the past. It is your call today:
βDo not hesitate! Life in the Spirit is waiting. The battle is real β but the victory is sure.β
Christ is your Joshua. And he calls you:
βFollow me. I have an inheritance for you β and I fight with you.β
