10 min 6 mths

๐ŸŸฆ Introduction

At the end of his life, Joshua gathers the people of Israel one last time to lead them toward a conscious decision for the Lord. The place, the words, and the timing are deeply meaningful: God has fulfilled His promises โ€” now it is Israelโ€™s turn to respond. This is not about forced obedience, but about voluntary devotion rooted in reverence and gratitude. Joshuaโ€™s appeal is clear and challenging: Choose today whom you will serve. He reminds them that true faithfulness is always a personal decision, but also a shared responsibility. This lesson calls us to take a stand โ€” for God and His way.

๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ

๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ LESSONS OF FAITH FROM JOSHUA
โ›ช Lesson 13 : Choose This Day!


๐Ÿ“˜ 13.1 You Were There!
โœจ Godโ€™s story is also ours โ€” we stand before Him together


๐ŸŸฆ Introduction

At the end of his lifeโ€™s journey, shortly before his death, Joshua gathers all Israel in Shechemโ€”the place where Abraham first entered the promised land and worshiped God. It is not only a historical locationโ€”it is a spiritual crossroads of remembrance, grace, and decision.

Joshua takes Israel on a journey into the past. โ€œI tookโ€ฆ I ledโ€ฆ I gaveโ€ฆโ€โ€”God Himself is the One acting in Israelโ€™s story. And now, at the end, the question arises: How will the people respond to this story?

This lesson reminds us that we were there too. We stand in the spiritual heritage of those who experienced God. And every generation must decide anew: Will I follow the God of history today?

………….. ๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ …………..

๐Ÿ“– Bible Study

๐Ÿ”Ž Joshua 24:1 โ€” The Covenant at a Holy Place
Shechem is not a random location. Here:

  • Godโ€™s promise to Abraham was given (Genesis 12:6โ€“7)

  • Jacobโ€™s household was called to repentance (Genesis 35:2โ€“4)

  • And now: Israel is called to covenant faithfulness.

Commentary:
Geography becomes theology: God has not only made historyโ€”He has filled places with meaning. The call to decide happens not in a vacuum, but on the ground of history.


๐Ÿ”Ž Joshua 24:2โ€“13 โ€” Godโ€™s Review of His Faithfulness

God Himself speaks. And He tells not of Israelโ€™s deeds, but of His own works:

  • โ€œI took Abrahamโ€

  • โ€œI brought you outโ€

  • โ€œI gave you the landโ€

Israel is a recipient, not the author. This is the theology of grace: What you are, you are because of Godโ€™s intervention.

Commentary:
It is as if God were saying:

โ€œBefore you speak about your decision, remember: without Me, you would not exist as a people.โ€

The repeated shift between โ€œtheyโ€ (ancestors) and โ€œyouโ€ (the present generation) emphasizes:
Past experiences also belong to you. You are part of Godโ€™s story.

………….. ๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ …………..

๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธ Answers to the Questions

๐ŸŸข Question 1: What is the main point of Godโ€™s speech in Joshua 24:2โ€“13?

Answer:
The central message is: Everything you are, you are because of Me.

  • Israel did not come into the land by its own strength.

  • It was God who led, saved, provided, fought, and gave.

  • This past calls for a response: to give God the honorโ€”with your whole life.

Summary:
Godโ€™s faithfulness in history is the foundation for our decision in the present.


๐ŸŸข Question 2: How can we as a church develop a stronger sense of collective responsibility?

Answer:
The Bible never thinks individualistically. Whole generations, families, and peoples are addressed again and againโ€”not because everyone is guilty, but because everyone is connected.

Practical ways:

  • Use more โ€œweโ€ language instead of โ€œIโ€ language: โ€œHow are WE doing with God?โ€

  • Carry responsibility for one another (Galatians 6:2): โ€œIf one falls, we all suffer.โ€

  • Practice shared repentance and intercessionโ€”like Nehemiah, Ezra, or Daniel

  • Connect generations: the young listen to the older, and the older bless the young

Spiritually, church means community:

โ€œWe stand together before Godโ€”as one people.โ€

………….. ๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ …………..

โœจ Spiritual Principles

  • Godโ€™s story with your life begins long before you.

  • Remembering is a spiritual actโ€”it leads to gratitude and devotion.

  • Decisions for God are rooted in His actions, not in your feelings.

  • Shared faith is not the sum of individual piety, but a shared inheritance.

………….. ๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ …………..

๐Ÿ› ๏ธ Everyday Application

  • Tell your family or youth group how God has led youโ€”be part of the communityโ€™s memory of faith.

  • Avoid the temptation to see your faith as purely privateโ€”you are part of something bigger.

  • When you doubt, remember Godโ€™s deedsโ€”in your life or in the lives of others.

  • Celebrate milestones (baptisms, answered prayers, testimonies) intentionally togetherโ€”like Israel in Shechem.

………….. ๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ …………..

โœ… Conclusion

Joshuaโ€™s message to Israel is also ours:

โ€œYou were thereโ€”because Godโ€™s story includes you.โ€

If you live today, breathe, believeโ€”then you are part of His story. Your response is neededโ€”not out of duty, but out of reverence. Choose todayโ€”not detached from the past, but rooted in Godโ€™s faithfulness.

………….. ๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ …………..

๐Ÿ’ญ Thought of the Day

โ€œThe past with God is the invitation to fully trust Him today.โ€

………….. ๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ …………..

โœ๏ธ Illustration

โ€œThe Oath of Shechemโ€
An awakening in the heart of a lost grandson


Chapter 1 โ€“ Return to Kalbarri

As Daniel passed the rusty town sign of Kalbarri, a small town on Australiaโ€™s west coast, he felt an inner resistance. He hadnโ€™t been here for 17 years. Back then, at 14, he had moved away with his parentsโ€”away from the small Adventist church, away from faith, away from the village that reminded him too much of what he had lost.

Now, at 31, he was backโ€”only because his grandfather had died. Albert Lasker, former church elder, a preacher on his motorcycle, the man who walked from house to house every Sabbath morning handing out invitations.

โ€œCome to the covenant renewal,โ€ it said on one of the old leaflets Daniel found by chance among the estate.


Chapter 2 โ€“ The Old Verse

That evening Daniel rummaged through his grandpaโ€™s dusty house. Between books and notes, he discovered a framed parchment on the wall:

โ€œChoose for yourselves this day whom you will serveโ€ฆ But as for me and my house, we will serve the LORD.โ€
โ€“ Joshua 24:15

His eyes lingered on it. Why had his grandfather quoted it again and again? As a child it had annoyed him. Nowโ€ฆ it sounded like an echo catching in his heart.


Chapter 3 โ€“ Shechem in Australia

On Sabbath morning Daniel went for a walkโ€”not to church, but to the old campsite by the river. Thatโ€™s where his extended family used to spend Sabbaths, sing songs, and hold communion services.

That was where he had been baptized. At 12, without understanding much, but with one sincere desire: โ€œI want to belong.โ€

Now he knelt there again. His grandfatherโ€™s Bible lay beside him. He opened it. And again: Joshua 24.

But this time he read more carefully. Not only verse 15, but verses 1โ€“13โ€”Godโ€™s review: โ€œI tookโ€ฆ I ledโ€ฆ I gaveโ€ฆโ€

Daniel wept. He recognized himself in the story. He hadnโ€™t believed God was with him. But now he saw: โ€œHe was the One who led me, even when I didnโ€™t recognize it.โ€


Chapter 4 โ€“ Decision by the Fire

That evening, the small church in Kalbarri held a memorial service for Albert. The church was full: old friends, members, grandchildren, young people.

Daniel stayed quiet until the preacherโ€”a young man from Perthโ€”suddenly said:

โ€œJust as Joshua gathered his people in Shechem, so we stand here today. You were not there in the wilderness, you were not at Jerichoโ€”but by faith you are part of the same story.โ€

Then he challenged the congregation:

โ€œIf you want to make a decision for God todayโ€”not out of duty, but out of reverenceโ€”then stand up. Show heaven: Iโ€™m in.โ€

Daniel stood. Not emotionalโ€”but steady. In that moment he understood:
Faith was not a nostalgic memory, but a living call into the present.


Chapter 5 โ€“ The Oath

After the service Daniel went for a walk with the preacherโ€™s granddaughterโ€”Rachel. She had studied theology in Perth and had volunteered to come back to keep the small church alive.

She showed him an old wooden board where church members of past decades had engraved their โ€œoath.โ€ Like in Shechem. Year after year.

He took his grandfatherโ€™s pocketknife, went to the board, and wrote:

โ€œDaniel Lasker โ€“ 2025. I choose today.โ€

Rachel asked quietly, โ€œWhat convinced you?โ€
He answered:

โ€œI thought God was done with me. But today I realized: Iโ€™ve been part of His story the whole time.โ€


Chapter 6 โ€“ The New Heritage

A year later Daniel was a deacon. He led the youth group. He told his storyโ€”not as a hero, but as a witness of Godโ€™s faithfulness.

He learned that spiritual heritage does not mean living in the past, but carrying it forwardโ€”through your own decision.

And again and again he told the young people the same sentence his grandfather had said:

โ€œChoose todayโ€”for you were there too.โ€

………….. ๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ …………..

๐Ÿง  Final Thoughts

This story reminds us:

  • You are not too late.

  • You are not too far away.

  • You are not forgotten.

Godโ€™s story has room for your nameโ€”if you are willing to choose today.

Visited 83 times, 1 visit(s) today