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A daily chat with Pastor Mike and other resources to encourage listeners to connect with the Word of God and grow in their faith.

Pastor Mike Impact Ministries Michael L Grooms

    • Religion & Spirituality

A daily chat with Pastor Mike and other resources to encourage listeners to connect with the Word of God and grow in their faith.

    Joshua 8:30-35 - Remembering God's Word

    Joshua 8:30-35 - Remembering God's Word

    32 And there, in the presence of the children of Israel, he
    wrote on the stones a copy of the law of Moses, which he had written.

    The book of Joshua is teaching us that we overcome the
    obstacles in our Christian walk by faith and obedience. We learn that there
    will be victories but there will also be defeats and failures. I have often
    thought that whenever I felt like I took three steps forward, that next I
    seemed to fall back five steps. Joshua 3-4 are chapters of victory as Israel
    miraculously crossed the Jordan River. Joshua 5-6 are chapters of conquest as
    the people go through the painful suffering of preparation before the walls of
    Jericho fall down in front of them. Joshua 7, is a chapter of defeat at Ai
    because of “sin in the camp”. But now again in Joshua 8, the people experience
    victory as they by faith obey the instructions of the LORD.

     

    These chapters remind me of Romans 6, 7, 8, and 12. In Romans
    6, after our wonderful experience of salvation, we find our position of being
    baptized into Jesus Christ. Like crossing the Jordan River and conquering
    Jericho! In Romans 7, we find we still have to deal with the “old man”, our old
    nature of sin. Pride sneaks in and we experience failure because of “I”. But
    then in Romans 8, we find the Spirit filled life and become more than
    conquerors through Christ and His love! In Romans 12, we come by faith to the
    altar of the mercy of God at Calvary and present the sacrifice of our lives to
    the Lord and renew our minds daily with God’s Word. This sounds familiar as we
    study these last verses of Joshua 8.

     

    Joshua not only built an altar (Joshua 8:30-31), but he
    also wrote the Law on stones (vv. 32-33). This act was in obedience to the
    command of Moses we find in Deuteronomy 27:1-8). In the Near East of that day,
    it was customary for kings to celebrate their greatness by writing records of
    their military exploits on huge stones covered with plaster. But the secret of
    Israel's victory was not their leader or their army; it was their obedience to
    God's Law (Joshua 1:7-8). In later years, whenever Israel turned away from
    God's Law, they got into trouble and had to be disciplined. Remember what Moses
    asked in Deuteronomy 4:8, "And what great nation is there that has such
    statutes and righteous judgments as are in all this Law which I set before you
    this day?"

     

    Believers today have the Word of God written on their
    hearts by the Holy Spirit of God (Rom. 8:1-4; 2 Cor. 3). The Law written on
    stones was external, not internal, and could instruct the people but could
    never change them. Paul makes it clear in the Epistle to the Galatians that
    while the Law can convict sinners and bring them to Christ (Gal. 3:19-25), it
    can never convert sinners and make them like Christ. Only the Spirit of God can
    do that.

     

    This is now the fourth public monument of stones that has
    been erected. The first was at Gilgal Josh. 4:20), commemorating Israel's
    passage across the Jordan. The second was in the Valley of Achor, a monument to
    Achan's sin and God's judgment (7:26). The third was at the entrance to Ai, a
    reminder of God's faithfulness to help His people (8:29). These stones on Mt.
    Ebal reminded Israel that their success lay only in their obedience to God's
    Law (1:7-8).

     

    We need daily to remember God’s Word that we have written
    in our minds and hearts and by faith obey it if we are to live victorious lives
    over the devil, sin, and the world!

     

    God Bless!

    • 4 min
    Joshua 8:30-35 - A New Commitment

    Joshua 8:30-35 - A New Commitment

    For some reason today I could not help but remember Psalm
    136 as I was looking at Joshua 8. Every verse in Psalm 136 ends with, “His
    mercy endures forever”, or as in some translations, “His steadfast love
    endures forever”. I am so thankful that after all our failures, like the
    defeat at Ai (Joshua 7), the Lord because of His love, His mercy, and His
    forgiveness, He gives us the opportunity of a new beginning (Joshua 8; 1 John
    1:7-9). To find peace with God, to renew fellowship with God, to get back on
    our feet and face whatever challenges or battles that still lie ahead of us.
    God gives us a new beginning, a new guidance and wisdom, and new victories as
    we continue our journey, our pilgrimage through this world of sin.

     

    Now, in verses 30-35, of Joshua 8, we find that the people
    of Israel make a new commitment as they build this altar. At some time
    following the victory at Ai, Joshua led the people thirty miles north to
    Shechem, which lies in the valley between Mt. Ebal and Mt. Gerizim. Here the
    nation obeyed what Moses had commanded them to do in his farewell speech. “Therefore
    it shall be, when you have crossed over the Jordan, that on Mount Ebal you
    shall set up these stones, which I command you today, and you shall whitewash
    them with lime. And there you shall build an altar to the LORD your God, an
    altar of stones; you shall not use an iron tool on them. You shall build with
    whole stones the altar of the LORD your God, and offer burnt offerings on it to
    the LORD your God. You shall offer peace offerings, and shall eat there, and
    rejoice before the LORD your God. And you shall write very plainly on the
    stones all the words of this law." (Deuteronomy 27:4-8)

     

    “Now Joshua built an altar” (v.
    30). “Now”, not shortly, not later, not tomorrow, but “now” is
    always the time to make sure of our relationship and fellowship with the Lord! Joshua
    interrupted the military activities to give Israel the opportunity to make a
    new commitment to the authority of Jehovah as expressed in His law. Since
    Abraham had built an altar at Shechem (Gen. 12:6-7), and Jacob had lived there
    a short time (chap. 33-34), the area had strong historic ties to Israel.
    Joshua's altar was built on Mt. Ebal, "the mount of cursing,"
    because only a sacrifice of blood can save sinners from the curse of the law
    (Gal. 3:10-14).

     

    In building the altar, Joshua was careful to obey Exodus
    20:25 and not apply any tool to the stones picked up in the field. No human
    work was to be associated with the sacrifice lest sinners think their own works
    can save them (Eph. 2:8-9). God asked for a simple stone altar, not one that
    was designed and decorated by human hands, "that no flesh should glory in
    His presence" (1 Cor. 1:29). It's not the beauty of manmade religion that
    gives the sinner forgiveness, but the blood on the altar (Lev. 17:11).

     

    In verse 31, the priests offered burnt offerings to the
    Lord as a token of the nation's total commitment to Him (Leviticus1). The peace
    offerings, or "fellowship offerings," were an expression of gratitude
    to God for His goodness (Leviticus 3; 7:11-34). A portion of the meat was given
    to the priests and another portion to the offeror, so that he could eat it
    joyfully with his family in the presence of the Lord (Leviticus 7:15-16, 30-34;
    Deut. 12:17-18). By these sacrifices, the nation of Israel was assuring God of
    their commitment to Him and their fellowship with Him.

     

    Today, we can renew fellowship with the Lord at His altar
    of the sacrifice of Jesus Christ on Calvary! There we can confess our sins and be
    assured that, “If we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have
    fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanses us
    from all sin” (1 John 1:7).

     

    God Bless!

    • 5 min
    Joshua 8:14-29 - A New Victory

    Joshua 8:14-29 - A New Victory

    18 Then the LORD said to Joshua, "Stretch out the
    spear that is in your hand toward Ai, for I will give it into your hand."
    And Joshua stretched out the spear that was in his hand toward the city.

    26 For Joshua did not draw back his hand, with which he
    stretched out the spear, until he had utterly destroyed all the inhabitants of
    Ai.

    27 Only the livestock and the spoil of that city Israel
    took as booty for themselves, according to the word of the LORD which He had
    commanded Joshua.

    28 So Joshua burned Ai and made it a heap forever, a
    desolation to this day.

    29 And the king of Ai he hanged on a tree until evening.
    And as soon as the sun was down, Joshua commanded that they should take his
    corpse down from the tree, cast it at the entrance of the gate of the city, and
    raise over it a great heap of stones that remains to this day..

     

    We are looking at the Book of Joshua, a book that teaches
    us that victory in our Christian experience only comes by faith. Faith alone in
    our Joshua, the Lord Jesus Christ, our great High Priest, our Captain of the
    host of heaven’s armies. My friend, you can put your faith and trust in Him no
    matter what you might face each day. Every day is a new day, and it brings new
    challenges. The people of Israel had a great victory over Jericho in chapter 6,
    but then suffered a humiliating defeat in chapter 7 at little Ai.

     

    Now in chapter 8, Israel had an opportunity for a new beginning.
    God gives them a word of encouragement and a promise (vv. 1-2), He gives them a
    new strategy for the battle with new instructions (vv. 3-13), and He tells them
    how to experience a new victory over Ai (vv. 14-29). Please take the time to read
    this entire section of verses that describes in detail this battle at Ai.

     

    In verses 14-17, when morning dawned, the king of Ai saw
    the army of Israel positioned before the city, ready to attack. Confident of
    victory, he led his men out of the city and against the Jews. Joshua and his
    men began to flee, and this gave the men of Ai even more assurance of victory. It
    was careless of the people of Ai to leave their city undefended, but such are
    the follies of self-confidence. When a small army sees a large army flee
    without even fighting, it gives them a feeling of superiority that can lead to
    defeat.

     

    Conscious that the battle was the Lord's (1 Sam. 17:47; 2
    Chron. 20:15), Joshua waited for further instructions. God then told him to
    lift up his spear toward the city (Josh. 8:18). This was the signal for the
    other troops to enter the city and burn it, but the signal had to be given at
    just the right time. The men of Ai and Bethel were trapped, and it was a simple
    matter for the army of Israel to destroy them. Joshua held up his spear until
    the victory was won (v. 26), an action that reminds us of the battle Joshua
    fought against Amalek when Moses held up his hands to the Lord (Ex. 17:8-16). Ai's
    army and people were then destroyed (Josh. 8:21-29).

     

    When Ai's king was slain (Josh. 8:23, 29), his body was
    then buried under a heap of stones at the entrance of the gate of the ruin that
    had once been Ai. The previous heap of stones over Achan’s body was a memorial
    and reminder of the sin that had caused their defeat at Ai (Joshua 7:25-26).
    But this heap of stones at Ai was a memorial of Israel's victory over the
    enemy. By obeying the Word of the Lord, they had organized victory out of
    mistakes.

     

    At the close of the day there must have been a new sense of
    faith and courage in Israel; for they had won another victory. The people saw
    that not one word of God's promise had failed. The disgrace and defeat caused
    by Achan had now been erased, and Israel was well on her way to conquering the
    Promised Land.

     

    We can thank the Lord that every day gives us the
    opportunity to have a new beginning, and to by faith experience a new victory! Our
    task is simply to “trust and obey….”.

     

    God bless!

    • 5 min
    Joshua 8:9-13 - A New Strategy

    Joshua 8:9-13 - A New Strategy

    In Joshua 8, the Lord not only gave Israel an opportunity
    for a new beginning with His word of encouragement, His word of instruction,
    and His word of promise, He also gave them a new strategy to conquer the city
    of Ai.

    God is not only the God of new beginnings, but He's also
    the God of infinite variety. God changes His leaders, like He did with Moses
    and Joshua, lest we start trusting flesh and blood instead of trusting the Lord.
    God also changes His methods lest we start depending on our personal experience
    instead of on His divine promises.

     

    The strategy God gave Joshua for taking Ai was almost
    opposite the strategy He used at Jericho. The Jericho operation involved a week
    of marches that were carried on openly in the daylight. The attack on Ai
    involved a covert night operation that prepared the way for the daylight
    assault. The whole army was united at Jericho, but Joshua divided the army for
    the attack on Ai. God performed a mighty miracle at Jericho when He caused the
    walls to fall down flat, but there was no such miracle at Ai. Joshua and his
    men simply obeyed God's instructions by setting an ambush and luring the people
    of Ai out of their city, and the Lord gave them the victory.

     

    It's important that we seek God's will for each undertaking
    so that we don't depend on past victories as we plan for the future. How easy
    is it for Christian ministries to dig their way into administrative ruts that
    eventually become graves, simply because the leadership fails to discern
    whether God wants to do something new for them. The American business leader
    Bruce Barton (1886-1967) said, "When you're through changing, you're
    through."

     

    The strategy for Ai was based on Israel's previous defeat;
    for God was organizing victory out of Joshua's mistakes. The people of Ai were
    overconfident because they had defeated Israel at the first attack, and this
    overconfidence would be their undoing. "We did it before, and we can do it
    again!"

     

    At night Joshua and his army marched fifteen miles from
    Gilgal to Ai; and, using 30,000 soldiers, Joshua set up an ambush behind the
    city from the west (vv. 3-9). He put another 5,000 men between Ai and Bethel,
    which was about two miles away (v. 12). This detachment would make sure that
    the army from Bethel wouldn't make a surprise attack from the northwest and
    open another "front." The rocky terrain in the highlands around Ai
    made it easy for Joshua to conceal his soldiers, and the whole operation was
    done at night.

     

    The plan was simple but effective. Leading the rest of the
    Jewish army, Joshua would make a frontal attack on Ai from the north. His men
    would flee as they had done the first time and by fleeing draw the
    self-confident people of Ai away from the protection of their city. At Joshua's
    signal the soldiers lying in ambush would enter the city and set it on fire.
    The people of Ai would be caught between two armies, and the third army would
    deal with any assistance that might come from Bethel.

     

    Being a good general, Joshua lodged with his army (v. 9).
    He certainly encouraged them to trust the Lord and believe His promise for
    victory. The Captain of the host of the Lord (5:14) would go before them
    because they obeyed His Word and trusted His promises.

     

    The work of the Lord requires strategy, and Christian
    leaders must seek the mind of the Lord in their planning. Like Joshua, we must
    get the facts and weigh them carefully as we seek the will of God. Too often,
    the work of the Lord only drifts along on the tide of time, without any rudder
    or compass to give direction; and the results are disappointing. Our English
    word strategy comes from two Greek words that together mean "to lead an
    army." Leadership demands planning, and planning is an important part of strategy.

     

    God bless!

    • 5 min
    Joshua 8:1-8 - A Word of Promise and Instruction

    Joshua 8:1-8 - A Word of Promise and Instruction

    In Joshua 8 after the defeat at Ai, Joshua needs and
    receives a word of encouragement from the Lord. I am so thankful that we have a
    Bible that is full of promises of God that should encourage us even after we
    feel that we have failed. I’m thinking of Elijah after the great victory on Mt.
    Carmel where he prayed down fire from heaven and had the prophets of Baal put
    to death, and the wicked queen Jezebel said she was going to kill him, and he
    flees to the mountain and becomes so discourage that he wanted to die. How God
    met with him and assured him of His presence with the “still small voice”. (1
    Kings 18-19). 

     

    Not only did the Lord give Joshua a word of encouragement
    but He gave him a word of instruction (Josh. 8:1b-2). God always has a plan for
    His people to follow, and the only way for us to have victory is to obey God's
    instructions. In his first attack on Ai Joshua followed the advice of his spies
    and used only part of the army; but God told him to take "all the
    people of war"(v. 1).

     

    The Lord also told Joshua to use an ambush and take
    advantage of Ai's self-confidence stemming from Israel's first defeat (7:1-5).
    Finally, God gave the soldiers the right to claim the spoils, but they were to burn
    the city. Had Achan waited only a few days, he could have picked up all the
    wealth that he wanted. God always gives His best to those who leave the choice
    with Him. When we run ahead of the Lord, we usually rob ourselves and hurt
    others.

     

    The Lord also gave Joshua a word of promise (Josh.
    8:1c).  "I have given"
    was God's promise and Joshua's guarantee of victory as long as he obeyed the
    instructions of the Lord. "God never made a promise that was too good to
    be true," said evangelist D.L. Moody; but every promise must be claimed by
    faith. Unless the promises of God are "mixed with faith" (Heb. 4:2),
    they accomplish nothing. Because Israel acted presumptuously in their first
    attack against Ai, they failed miserably. The promises of God make the
    difference between faith and presumption.

     

    You can never exaggerate the importance of the Christian
    soldier spending time daily in the Word of God. Unless daily we take the sword
    of the Spirit by faith (Eph. 6:17), we go into the battle unarmed and therefore
    unprepared. Spiritually minded believers are victorious because they allow the
    Word of God to "saturate" their minds and hearts. The Spirit using
    the Word controls their desires and decisions and this is the secret of
    victory.

     

    Years later after the conquest of the land of Canaan,
    Joshua in his last words to the people just before he died in Joshua 23:14 was:
    “And now I am about to go the way of all the earth, and you know in your
    hearts and souls, all of you, that not one word has failed of all the good
    things that the LORD your God promised concerning you. All have come to pass
    for you; not one of them has failed.”

     

    My friend, you can always trust in the promises of God in
    His Word!

     

    God bless!

    • 5 min
    Joshua 8:1-8 - The Voice of Truth vs. The Voice of Failure

    Joshua 8:1-8 - The Voice of Truth vs. The Voice of Failure

    In Joshua 8 Israel has the opportunity for a new beginning
    after a humiliating defeat at Ai. But even after sin has been confessed and
    dealt with, we still might feel defeated in our spirit because of our failure.
    Joshua personally must have felt like, as a leader, the defeat was his fault,
    and the voice of failure was loud in his ears. He might have sensed the glares
    and stares of the people, and maybe heard them whispering about him and
    questioning his wisdom.

     

    For us it might be when we lost our job, flunked the exam,
    or dropped out of school. It could be that your marriage went south, or your
    business went broke. We even begin to question ourselves and feel disqualified.
    Our self-worth drops to zero. But that is when we need to listen to the voice
    of truth from the Word of God. That is when Jehovah spoke to Joshua with a word
    of encouragement! (v. 1). “Don’t be afraid or dismayed. Don’t stay in the
    cesspool of self-pity but trust me.”

     

    Over the past several years one of my favorite verses has
    become Psalm 9:10; “And those who know Your name will put their trust in
    You; For You, LORD, have not forsaken those who seek You.” Joshua must have
    remembered his meeting with the Commander of the LORD’s army outside the wall
    of Jericho (Johsua 5:14). Maybe he also recalled the altar Moses built after
    they defeated Amalek in Exodus 17:15; “And Moses built an altar and called
    its name, Jehovah-Nissi. (The-LORD-Is-My-Banner).

     

    We need to remember 1 John 1:9; “If we confess our sins,
    He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all
    unrighteousness.” And in the following chapter, 1 John 2:1-2; “My little
    children, these things I write to you, so that you may not sin. And if anyone
    sins, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous. And He
    Himself is the propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only but also for
    the whole world.”

     

    We might also recall 1 John 4:4; “You are of God, little
    children, and have overcome them, because He who is in you is greater than he
    who is in the world.”

     

    Yes, my friend, the voice of Truth can become louder than
    the voice of failure if we will remember the great Name of our Jehovah and seek
    Him with our whole heart. There are so many verses that come to mind but let me
    share this passage from Romans 8:31-39; “What then shall we say to these
    things? If God is for us, who can be against us? He who did not spare His own
    Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely
    give us all things? Who shall bring a charge against God's elect? It is God who
    justifies. Who is he who condemns? It is Christ who died, and furthermore is
    also risen, who is even at the right hand of God, who also makes intercession
    for us. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or
    distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? As it is
    written: "For Your sake we are killed all day long; We are accounted as
    sheep for the slaughter." Yet in all these things we are more than
    conquerors through Him who loved us. For I am persuaded that neither death nor
    life, nor angels nor principalities nor powers, nor things present nor things
    to come, nor height nor depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to
    separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

     

    Today, what voice will you listen to?

     

    God bless!

    • 5 min

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