🗺️ LESSONS OF FAITH FROM JOSHUA
⛪ Lesson 12 : God Is Faithful!
📘 12.4 The Anger of the Lord
✨ God’s wrath is the other side of His holy love
🟦 Introduction
The term “the wrath of God” makes many people feel uneasy. It doesn’t seem to fit the gentle, gracious, loving God we come to know in the Gospel. Yet an image of God that knows only love and leaves out justice does not do the Bible’s reality justice.
Joshua urgently reminds the people that God’s covenant includes not only blessing, but also serious consequences. God’s wrath is not an outburst of rage—it is God’s holy, righteous “No” to sin, and a call to His people to remain in His covenant.
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📖 Bible Study
🔍 Joshua 23:15–16 – God’s faithfulness in judgment
“Just as all the good things have come upon you that the LORD your God promised you, so the LORD will bring upon you all the evil things … until He has destroyed you from this good land …”
🧠 Commentary:
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These verses show that God’s grace and God’s judgment are inseparably connected.
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Joshua reminds them: As reliable as God’s promises of blessing were, so certain are His warnings in the case of disobedience.
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The Hebrew word for “destroy” (הִשְׁמִיד – hishmid) is the same word previously used for the destruction of the Canaanites—a stark warning: God’s judgment does not distinguish between “us” and “them,” but judges according to truth.
📖 Other Bible passages about God’s wrath:
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Numbers 11:33 – God’s wrath breaks out because of greed.
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2 Chronicles 36:16 – God’s wrath comes because Israel mocks His prophets.
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Revelation 14:10,19; 15:1 – God’s wrath as part of end-time judgments—against persistent sin, not against ignorance.
📖 The theological tension: Wrath vs. Love?
God is love (1 John 4:8)—that is God’s very nature. But in a world marked by sin, love does not mean “anything goes.”
Wrath is the response of God’s love when it sees the destructive work of sin. It is:
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Holy (Exodus 34:6–7) — rooted in God’s nature.
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Just (Psalm 7:12; 50:6) — judging according to truth.
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Predictable — announced through covenants (Leviticus 26; Deuteronomy 28).
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Not arbitrary or moody — but appropriate and purposeful.
At the center stands Christ:
“Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life; but whoever does not obey the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God remains on him.” (John 3:36)
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🗣️ Answers to the Questions
📌 Question 1: How should we interpret the descriptions of God’s wrath and retribution (Josh 23:15–16) and other passages (see also Num 11:33; 2 Chr 36:16; Rev 14:10,19; 15:1)?
Detailed answer:
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Wrath is part of the covenant framework:
– In Joshua 23, it is emphasized: God is faithful—in blessing as well as in judgment.
– Covenant-breaking has consequences. Not because God is vindictive, but because holiness and justice require it. -
Wrath is a response to sin, not to weakness:
– God’s wrath is directed not against imperfection, but against conscious, rebellious rejection of His truth. -
Wrath shows God’s seriousness about evil:
– The Bible shows that God is not neutral toward evil.
– His wrath is a shield of His love—He fights for life against everything that destroys it. -
Wrath is borne by Christ:
– At the cross, God’s holy wrath against sin was placed on Jesus (2 Cor 5:21; Rom 5:9–10).
– Whoever believes in Christ is no longer under wrath, but under grace (Eph 2:3–5; 1 Thess 1:10).
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✨ Spiritual Principles
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God is both love and justice.
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Sin brings judgment—but grace offers salvation.
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God’s wrath is holy, just, and necessary—never vindictive or arbitrary.
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Christ has borne the wrath—therefore grace is possible.
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🛠️ Everyday Application
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Take God’s warnings seriously, not only His promises.
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Recognize: grace is not a license for sin, but a way out.
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Trust in Christ, who bore the wrath—so that you can live.
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Live in reverence, but without fear—because God’s justice aims to save, not to destroy.
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✅ Conclusion
God’s wrath is not a dark secret of the Bible, but an expression of His holiness and love for truth. The God who saves is also the God who judges—and that is precisely what gives hope: because evil will not remain unpunished forever, and grace remains open to all who turn to Him.
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💭 Thought of the Day
“God’s wrath judges evil—so that His love can preserve the good forever.”
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✍️ Illustration
“When Heaven Was Silent”
The Explosion
Brisbane, Australia. Nineteen-year-old Liam Davis is driving too fast, under the influence of drugs. An accident. Two people die. He survives—and goes to prison. His world falls apart.
The Cry for Justice
The victims’ families are furious. The media condemns him. Liam experiences society’s hatred. In his cell he begins to read—first comics, then a New Testament someone had left behind.
He reads:
“The wrath of God is revealed against all ungodliness …” (Romans 1:18)
He trembles. He thinks, “I deserve this.”
A Sabbath Visit
An Adventist prison chaplain, Pastor James, visits him regularly. One day Liam asks him:
“Can God really forgive me if I killed two people?”
James answers:
“Not because you deserve it. But because Jesus bore the wrath—for you.”
The Decision
Liam reads day and night. He confesses his guilt—first to God, then publicly. He asks for forgiveness—and experiences inner peace. One morning he is baptized in the prison yard.
Freedom in Chains
After ten years, Liam is released. He leaves prison as a free man—not only outwardly.
He works for a rehab foundation and speaks in schools about forgiveness, responsibility, and God’s grace.
He says:
“I deserved the wrath of God—but He gave me Jesus.
Not to destroy me, but to save me.”
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🧠 Closing Thoughts
God’s wrath is real—but it is not the end of the story.
It is the consequence of sin, but Jesus carried that consequence. Heaven is no longer silent when people fall—it cries out through the cross: Come back!
