Victory Requires Purity: A Study of Joshua 7
The salient point of our discussion this evening centers on the critical examination of sin within the camp of Israel, specifically as illustrated in Joshua chapter seven. We delve into the narrative of Achan, whose transgressions not only brought about personal ruin but also led to the collective suffering of the Israelite community. This episode serves as a profound reminder that harboring sin can have far-reaching consequences, impacting not solely the individual, but also the broader community. As we reflect on the significance of obedience to God's commandments, we are compelled to consider how our own actions and choices reverberate beyond our individual lives. Ultimately, through this examination of scripture, we seek to cultivate a deeper understanding of the necessity of ridding ourselves of sin in order to experience the fullness of God's blessings and guidance in our lives.
Takeaways:
- The defeat at AI illustrates the grave consequences of harboring sin within the community of believers.
- Joshua's initial victory at Jericho was contingent upon strict adherence to God's commands regarding the accursed things.
- Achan's disobedience serves as a stark reminder that individual sin can have profound impacts on the collective well-being of the community.
- The narrative emphasizes the importance of seeking divine guidance before engaging in any endeavors, acknowledging that human strength alone is insufficient for success.
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00:00 - Untitled
00:23 - Exploring the Book of Joshua
04:50 - The Consequences of Complacency
16:18 - Dealing with Sin in the Camp
28:43 - Dealing with Sin in the Camp
35:13 - Lessons from Joshua: The Importance of Integrity
Hello and welcome to the Middletown Baptist Church podcast, where we are proclaiming the truth to the world.
Speaker AMy name is Pastor Josh, and I want to thank you for listening to this podcast.
Speaker AI hope that this podcast can be a blessing to you and strengthen you in the word of God.
Speaker ANow, come along, let's look into the Bible and see what God has for us here today.
Speaker AAll right, we're going to be in the book of Joshua this evening.
Speaker AIf you have your Bibles, that's right there with me.
Speaker AJoshua, chapter seven.
Speaker ATonight, we're going to be talking about AI, Artificial intelligence.
Speaker ANo, I'm just kidding.
Speaker AWe're not talking about artificial intelligence.
Speaker AWe're talking about AI, but not artificial intelligence.
Speaker AThat's another sermon for another day.
Speaker ABut here in Joshua, chapter seven, we're going to be talking about the sin that is in the camp in Israel and really the loss, the defeat at AI or depends on who's pronouncing it.
Speaker AI've heard some people pronounce it I or AI, but you guys know what I'm talking about.
Speaker AWhen you get to this passage, you're going to see a word there.
Speaker AIt's the letters AI.
Speaker AAnd obviously, AI is a buzzword in our culture today.
Speaker ABut this is a place, and we're going to study this tonight.
Speaker AWe're going to be looking at the issue at hand.
Speaker AAnd the issue at hand is sin in the camp.
Speaker AAnd we're going to look at, yes, the literal story here in Joshua, chapter seven, which obviously has a huge impact in the life of the Israelites in their conquest of the land of Canaan.
Speaker ABut also, we take by way of application what this means for us in our own walk.
Speaker AWhen it comes to God pushing forward with his plans in our life.
Speaker AAs many of you know, as we've been studying the book of Joshua, that God had a plan and a purpose for his people.
Speaker AAnd the plan and the purpose was for them to be taken out of the land of Egypt, obviously, for many years, travel in the wilderness.
Speaker ANow, it wasn't God's ultimate plan for them to be in the wilderness.
Speaker AMany of the wanderings that happened there were because of the people's disobedience.
Speaker ABut ultimately, the end of that plan was that God would usher in his people into the land that he promised.
Speaker ANow, because of rebellion, because of sin, certain individuals were not able to make it in.
Speaker ABut God brings them over the Jordan river.
Speaker AAnd that was a miracle in itself, that God would bring his people across the river and lead them into the promised land.
Speaker AAnd then they had Their first victory there at Jericho.
Speaker AAnd Jericho was a fortified city.
Speaker AJericho was a city that had a high population, a lot of warriors, and from the looks of it, it looked like it would be a difficult battle.
Speaker ABut God's promise to his people is that he would be there with them through it all.
Speaker AAnd so when they get to Jericho, you remember what happens.
Speaker AGod gives the plan to Joshua, and Joshua tells the plans of the people.
Speaker AAnd the plan was essentially this, to march around the city for those seven days, and then the last days march around those seven times to blow.
Speaker AThe trumpets shout and the walls came down.
Speaker AAnd we know that God gave them the victory.
Speaker ABut if you remember back in Joshua chapter six, we're going to need to know a few verses in Joshua chapter 6 to understand what's happening in Joshua chapter 7.
Speaker ALook back with me to Joshua 6, 18 and 19.
Speaker ABecause in the midst of their battle and in the midst of their victory, God gives them some orders.
Speaker AHe gives them some direction.
Speaker AHe gives them an opportunity for obedience.
Speaker AAnd as they're winning the battle, God tells them in verse 18, and ye in any wise, keep yourselves from the accursed thing.
Speaker ANow in this case, he says, stay away from the things that the people there in Jericho were worshiping.
Speaker AThe idolatry, the evil pagan worship.
Speaker AHe says, stay away from the accursed thing, lest ye make yourselves accursed when you take of the accursed thing and make the camp of Israel a curse and trouble it.
Speaker ASo anytime God holds us accountable to something, he gives us the warning, he gives us the teaching, he gives us the admonition.
Speaker AAnd the admonition for the people of Israel was, when you're conquering the land of Jericho, don't partake in the accursed thing.
Speaker ADon't.
Speaker ADon't join in with them.
Speaker ADon't take anything of theirs and personalize it.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause you will take that sin and put it into the camp of Israel and it'll be troubled.
Speaker AVerse 19.
Speaker ABut all the silver and gold and vessels of brass and iron are consecrated unto the Lord.
Speaker AMeaning this.
Speaker AIn that victory, everything was to be given over to God.
Speaker AIt was not to be taken for themselves.
Speaker AIt was not to be taken for personal gain.
Speaker AAnd it says ultimately that they shall come into the treasury of the Lord.
Speaker ASo God gives them very clear instructions in this battle, in this victory.
Speaker AAnd on the front side of the battle, they obey.
Speaker AOn the front side of the battle, they do everything that they're supposed to do by marching around the city, as silly that might be.
Speaker AAnd they do that, and ultimately God works through them to show them that it's not their strength that's going to give them the victory, it's God's strength.
Speaker ABut we're going to see here in Joshua, chapter seven that one individual and his family essentially don't listen to this and allow themselves to hinder the people of Israel in their next battle.
Speaker AAnd what we're going to see in Joshua, chapter seven is that this is a picture of harbored sin in our lives.
Speaker AThat, that a.
Speaker AThat a personal harbored sin in our life can affect our life because we're in disobedience to God, but ultimately it can affect others as well, when we are living in open rebellion to God or even secret rebellion to God.
Speaker AAnd so we're going to see here that God sees everything.
Speaker AAnd that even though this fellow named Achan thought he could hide from God, thought that he could take these things and have them for himself, that God ultimately reveals his sin.
Speaker AAnd we know a New Testament principle is be sure your sin will find you out.
Speaker AAnd that Achan certainly realized that here in this passage.
Speaker ASo let's look at Joshua, chapter seven.
Speaker AIt says, but the children of Israel committed a trespass in the accursed thing.
Speaker AAnd so right off the bat, we see that as God commanded it, as ultimately Joshua told the people of Israel that they were not supposed to be touching the cursed thing, that they should not take any of the accursed things for themselves, that those things were associated with evil, sinful worship, and that ultimately that is the sin here, is that they don't obey God.
Speaker AAnd then it goes to say, for Aan, the son of Carmi, the son of Zabdi, the son of Zerah, and the tribe of Judah took of the accursed thing, and the anger of the Lord was kindled against the children of Israel.
Speaker AAnd so they fight this battle.
Speaker AThere's this victory, but through this victory they were told not to take of the accursed thing.
Speaker ASo what happens?
Speaker AAchan does.
Speaker AAchan takes it, and he now is going to cause God's wrath to be kindled against all the people.
Speaker ANow what we're going to see here is that, yes, the Israelite people had this great victory against the people of Jericho.
Speaker AIt seems like there's a lot of power on their side, but Israel could not be defeated by the enemy, but they could be defeated by their own sin.
Speaker AAnd ultimately God is going to judge them for that until they come to a place of repentance.
Speaker AVerse 2.
Speaker ALet's see what happens here.
Speaker AThey're scouting for the next battle.
Speaker AAnd Joshua sent men from Jericho to AI, which is beside Beth Haven on the east side of Bethel, and spake unto them, saying, go up and view the country.
Speaker AAnd the men went up and viewed AI.
Speaker ASo these individuals, these spies, are going to basically survey the land and they're going to say, okay, this is what we need for the victory, verse three.
Speaker AAnd they returned to Joshua and said unto him, let not all the people go up.
Speaker ABasically this.
Speaker AWe don't need everybody like we needed with Jericho.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABut let about 2 or 3,000 men go up and smite AI and make not all the people to labor thither, for they are but few.
Speaker ASo the idea that they're sharing with Joshua is this.
Speaker AWe don't need that many people.
Speaker AWe've got it under control.
Speaker AWe just defeated Jericho, which had a lot more people, which is a lot more fortified.
Speaker AWe can handle this with just 2 or 3,000.
Speaker AAnd we're going to see that Joshua does listen to that, but he goes on the higher side.
Speaker AHe doesn't go to 2000.
Speaker AWe see that he's going to send 3000 people up to AI.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd so what we're going to see here in this passage of scripture is that Israel's success is not depending on the amount of people that they have or the amount of swords that they have, or their plan or their tactics, but ultimately through their submission to God.
Speaker AAnd so we're going to see that they try to go ahead of God and do their own plan here without seeking God's wisdom, without seeking God in prayer, without coming to him and ultimately following his path for their life.
Speaker AAnd so Israel is going to be defeated.
Speaker ASo verse 4.
Speaker ASo there went up thither of the people, about three thousand men, and they fled before the men of AI.
Speaker AAnd the men of AI smote of them about thirty and.
Speaker AAnd six men.
Speaker AFor they chased them from before the gate, even unto cherubim, and smote them in the going down.
Speaker AWherefore the hearts of the people melted and became as water.
Speaker ASo Joshua hears from his spies, and they say, you need only about 2 or 3,000.
Speaker AThat should be plenty.
Speaker AInstead of seeking the Lord's wisdom on this, instead of seeking the Lord's guidance like before with Jericho going around the city, Joshua, even though he is a wise military leader, allowed for these men to go up to AI.
Speaker AAnd what we see here is that it doesn't matter how many people were sent.
Speaker AThey were walking in rebellion to God.
Speaker ATherefore they would not have the victory and so there is, we would say, only 36 men.
Speaker ABut 36 men killed is a lot more than what was killed at Jericho, which was zero.
Speaker AAnd, and we know here that this victory for the people against Israel wasn't a victory in their wisdom or their strength.
Speaker AIt was a victory and a lack of seeking after the Lord's guidance in their life.
Speaker AAnd so the defeated AI showed what mattered wasn't the strength of the opponent or the wisdom of the people, but really ultimately the power and the presence and the provisions of God.
Speaker AAnd so without God's help, they're lost, Israel's lost.
Speaker AWithout God's help, we're lost.
Speaker ANow let's stop there and let's think about that in our own personal lives when we come to what we would consider a battle in our life.
Speaker AAnd we know that the New Testament tells us that we're fighting spiritual battles.
Speaker AAnd some battles that we might face might feel like a physical battle and we might go through physical battles, but all of the battles that we face in our life ultimately stem back to where we stand in our spiritual life with God.
Speaker ASo what I would say is this, when we're going into the battle, instead of looking at something like, well, that's nothing, I've accomplished that before, I've overcome this temptation before, I've fought this battle before and I've won many times.
Speaker AI don't need to be as stringent on my prayer life, or maybe I don't need to go to the Lord in prayer.
Speaker AMaybe I don't need to even study the word of God.
Speaker AMaybe I can just do this on my own without seeking his wisdom.
Speaker AMany times we set ourselves up for failure in our pride, in our ego, in our self righteousness.
Speaker AAnd so what we can see here in this is a lesson that I think all of us need to learn is no matter what victories we've had in our past, we need to remember that all those victories in the past came because of God's presence in our life, came because of us seeking God's will and obedience to God's will.
Speaker AAnd we can never get complacent in that spiritual fight that we're facing.
Speaker AAnd so they get complacent here and what happens?
Speaker AThey lose, they are driven back and there's going to be grieving in this.
Speaker AObviously Joshua is going to be confused because he just sees this major victory in Jericho and now they're defeated by such a lesser people.
Speaker AAnd how could this be?
Speaker AAnd Joshua, as it says here in verse six, rent his clothes and this is a picture of.
Speaker AOf being brokenhearted, maybe even in a sense, confused, maybe.
Speaker AMaybe to tear our clothes meant to be in a place of mourning for many people at that time frame.
Speaker AHe's mourning the loss of these individuals, and he's going to go before the Lord and ask him why.
Speaker ANow, if you go back just at the end of verse five, I think it's a very picturesque way to describe the outcome of this.
Speaker AIt says that after they lose this battle, that says that their hearts of the people were melted, the people of Israel.
Speaker AAnd when anytime you see that phrase hearts melted, usually that means fear.
Speaker AThat means to be petrified in fear, to be overcome with fear.
Speaker AAnd I think all of us maybe could identify at some point in our life, fear taking us over, where we almost feel like we're melting.
Speaker AWe almost feel as if we can't do anything in our lives.
Speaker AAnd that's exactly the way the people feel.
Speaker AAnd that's sometimes how we feel in a spiritual battle and in a spiritual.
Speaker AWhat we would consider loss, a defeat because we are broken and because we can't look to anything else in our life to give us hope.
Speaker AAnd so their panic was in.
Speaker AIn many ways understandable.
Speaker ABut it's because they weren't letting God fight for them.
Speaker AThey were trying to fight their own battles on their own, their own wisdom, their own strength, their own flesh.
Speaker AAnd so it says there that they became as water.
Speaker AAnd so Joshua grieves, Joshua mourns, and it says here and fell to the earth upon his face before the Ark.
Speaker AAnd the Lord until the evening tide.
Speaker ASo he goes, lord, I think this is a proper response to a difficulty in our life.
Speaker AThis is a proper response to sin in our life.
Speaker AThis is a humbled response.
Speaker AIt's a prayerful response.
Speaker AAnd I think this is sometimes where we need to be when we come to places in our life where we feel overcome, overwhelmed, and even in some cases, defeated.
Speaker AWe come to him and we go before the Lord.
Speaker AAnd that's really the picture there is that he comes to the Ark, and that's the presence of God at that time.
Speaker AAnd he falls before the Lord, and he asked the Lord to give him wisdom.
Speaker AWhy did this happen?
Speaker AAnd we see that he spends time with him and he grieves there before the Ark.
Speaker AAnd it says that he put dust.
Speaker AHe and the.
Speaker AAnd the elders of Israel put dust upon their heads.
Speaker AAnd that's a picture of mourning.
Speaker AAnd that's their way of basically telling the Lord that they are broken before him and that they don't know where to go.
Speaker ASo verse seven.
Speaker AAnd Joshua said, alas, O Lord God, wherefore hast thou at all brought this people over Jordan to deliver us into the hands of the Amorites, to destroy us.
Speaker AAnd so Joshua's question is this, or you brought us all this way for us to lose.
Speaker AYou brought us all this way.
Speaker AYou've brought us through the.
Speaker AThe bondage in Egypt.
Speaker AYou brought us all the way through the wilderness.
Speaker AYou brought us across the Jordan river to just get to this place.
Speaker AAnd now you're going to leave us.
Speaker ANow you're going to take your hand off of us.
Speaker AHe says, would to God we had been content and dwelt on the other side of Jordan.
Speaker AAnd so Joshua knew that God had a plan for them, and he knew that God had been blessing them and had been guiding them.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd he says, would it.
Speaker AWould it be better if we hadn't even come here at all?
Speaker AAnd we should have just not come, because now we need you.
Speaker AWe need you more and more.
Speaker AAnd so this shows that Joshua does have concern for his people, but he also has concern for the glory of God.
Speaker AIn verse 8, O Lord, what shall I say when Israel turneth their backs before their enemies?
Speaker AThe way that I see this is that he's a leader concerned and confused about where to turn.
Speaker AHe says, what if our people turn our backs against you?
Speaker AWe don't want that.
Speaker AWe want to be for you.
Speaker AI want to be for you.
Speaker AAnd so he's concerned about the testimony of the Lord.
Speaker AHe's concerned about the people and their reliance to the Lord.
Speaker AAnd we know that sometimes we're going to stumble, sometimes we're going to get to a place in our life where we do turn away from the Lord and his Word.
Speaker AAnd the prayer for all of us, as Christians should be that we get back on that path, that we realign ourselves with God's plan in our life.
Speaker AAnd obviously at this point in time, Joshua does not understand why this victory or this defeat happened.
Speaker ABut we're going to see that he finds out here soon.
Speaker ASo verse nine, he says, for the Canaanites and all the inhabitants of the land shall hear of it and shall environ us around and cut off our name from the earth.
Speaker AAnd what will thou do unto thy great name?
Speaker AHe says, if this gets out that we lost, people are going to not praise you.
Speaker APeople are going to actually, on the other side around, come around us and defeat us, and you're not going to be glorified.
Speaker AVerse 10.
Speaker AAnd the Lord said unto Joshua And I think that this is so indicative of the relationship that Joshua had with God.
Speaker ABut ultimately, the way that God sometimes needs to be stern with his people, he says, get thee up.
Speaker AWherefore lies thou thus upon thy face?
Speaker AAnd so he says, get up.
Speaker AWhat are you doing?
Speaker AThere's something to be dealt with right now.
Speaker AInstead of asking why you need to be dealing with sin inside of the camp, he says in verse number 11, Israel hath sinned.
Speaker ASo it would be like this.
Speaker AIt would be like our churches is broken, our church is struggling, and I go before the Lord saying, lord, why have you turned your backs on us?
Speaker AWhat's going on?
Speaker AAnd the Lord says, it's not me that has turned my back against you.
Speaker AIt's you that have turned your back against me.
Speaker AHe says, you need to deal with the sin in the camp.
Speaker AYou need to deal with this issue at hand.
Speaker AYou need to address this face on and allow the people to turn back to me.
Speaker AAnd so he says, Verse 11, Israel hath sinned.
Speaker AAnd they also have also transgressed my covenant which I commanded them for.
Speaker AThey have even taken of the accursed thing and have also stolen and dissembled also.
Speaker AAnd they have put it even among their own stuff.
Speaker AAnd so he says, get up.
Speaker AHe says, you need to move.
Speaker AGod says his teaching for Joshua is this.
Speaker AYou need to fix your efforts, not just on prayer here in this case, but dealing with this sin in the camp.
Speaker AAnd so the idea is, is that God had not forgotten, forgotten about the people.
Speaker ASo, you know, this morning I said, you know, there's good news and bad news.
Speaker AThe good news is, is that God did not turn his back against the people.
Speaker AThe bad news is, is that they're living in sin.
Speaker AAnd that needs to be addressed.
Speaker AAnd so Joshua doesn't need to fear that God has turned his back.
Speaker AJoshua can look to the fact that God is still there with him.
Speaker AAnd that's what we see in, in first John chapter time.
Speaker AFor if we confess our sins, he's faithful and just to forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
Speaker AYou know, as a Christian, sometimes we think that because we're going through a hard time in our life and because we've made bad decisions, maybe God has turned his back on us.
Speaker ABut really what has happened is that we have turned our backs against him and we have broken that fellowship.
Speaker ANow, we haven't lost the relationship.
Speaker AAnd I've used this analogy before with my children, but my children can be living in open sin against their Father, that doesn't mean that they're no longer my children.
Speaker AI can't deny that.
Speaker AAnd God does not deny his own children.
Speaker ABut there can be things that my children do because of sin that could cause a break in the fellowship.
Speaker AYou know, my.
Speaker AMy children could say, you know what?
Speaker AI'm not talking to my dad because I'm living in a way that he doesn't agree with.
Speaker AI'm living in rebellion to him.
Speaker AI don't want him to tell me anything.
Speaker AAnd so I'm going to break fellowship with him.
Speaker AAnd so there is that aspect of our Christian life that we as people that are walking in sin, can break that fellowship with God.
Speaker AAnd we need to come back to him in humility and in brokenness and honesty and coming to him and.
Speaker AAnd as the Bible says, to confess, to say the same thing together with him about our sin.
Speaker AAnd so he tells Joshua to get up.
Speaker AHe says, you need to deal with this.
Speaker AYou need to have not just an intellectual change, but a heart change.
Speaker AAnd so God says that Israel had sinned.
Speaker AAnd he doesn't just say one man, even though we know that initially it's Achan.
Speaker ABut he says it's not just one man.
Speaker AHe says it's Israel.
Speaker AAnd so it's amazing to think that the whole nation is guilty by.
Speaker ABy way of association, and 36 people died, all because of the sin of one man and his family.
Speaker ABut what we see is, is we're going to get to a New Testament principle that a little sin that's un.
Speaker AIt's not dealt with.
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AIt's relinquished.
Speaker AMaybe, uh, maybe.
Speaker AMaybe for.
Speaker AI don't know, maybe sometimes we overlook sin or we wink at sin, or we just overlook it or don't think about it too much.
Speaker ABut what we see is that unrepentant sin in the camp can cause major issues, not just for that family, but for everybody around.
Speaker AAnd so Paul speaks of that in First Corinthians, chapter 5, verse 6, when he teaches of the.
Speaker AOf the principle of know ye not that a little leaven.
Speaker ALeaven if the whole lump.
Speaker AAnd in the New Testament, we see that leaven.
Speaker AAnd speaking of sin, it's a picture of sin.
Speaker AAnd he says that little leaven is going to eventually affect the whole group.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ASo, for example, if we have someone in our church who is walking in unrepentant sin and they're walking and rebelling to God, even though I might not know particularly what that person is dealing with, whether we know it or not.
Speaker AUnrepentant sin in our camp can affect the overall goals of the church, whether.
Speaker AWhether we know it or not.
Speaker AThe Bible says in the New Testament that our marriages can be hindered and our prayer lives can be hindered because of unrepentant sin that's in First Peter.
Speaker AAnd so I want you to see that just because you might think, or I might think, or anyone might think that I've got this private sin that nobody knows about is certainly, even though it might be private for a time, with the eyes of the people around me, the Bible says, be sure your sin will find you out.
Speaker AAnd also God already knows your sin, and therefore it is affecting people around us.
Speaker AThere's a lot of people that I've heard that have said this basically, well, my sin's not hurting anybody, so why does it matter?
Speaker ABecause to them, it might not be that their sin is hurting somebody, but we know that that sin is not just poison for the individual who's committing it, but we know that that could be a poison for people all around.
Speaker AAnd so that's exactly what he's explaining here in this passage that Joshua needs to deal with it.
Speaker AVerse 11, he says, Israel has sinned.
Speaker AAnd he says that they even have this accursed thing with their own selves.
Speaker AIt's in their camp.
Speaker AAnd verse 12, Therefore the children of Israel could not stand back before their enemies.
Speaker AHe tells them why they lose, but turn their backs before their enemies because they were accursed.
Speaker ANeither will I be with you anymore except you destroy that accursed thing from among you.
Speaker AAnd these are some strong words, but essentially what the Lord tells Joshua is like, if you don't get this right, you're not going to have victory, you're not going to have spiritual growth, you're not going to have the promises of God fulfilled in your life.
Speaker AAnd so it's.
Speaker AIt's really sobering to think about this principle that if we just keep living in sin and then expecting God to just keep blessing us, we're missing the point.
Speaker AAnd so God's power can come into our lives and that fellowship can be restored.
Speaker ABut if we're walking in that rebellion to God again, we don't lose our salvation, but what we can lose is the joy of our salvation.
Speaker AWe can lose the fruitfulness of our salvation.
Speaker AWe can lose the effectiveness in our service for the Lord because of unrepentant sin.
Speaker AWe can have human relationships broken.
Speaker AWe can have major pain and loss in our lives because we're walking in unrepentant sin.
Speaker AAnd I would warn all of us to the place of saying this.
Speaker AIf you know of something in your life that you're harboring against the word of God, then in that case, make sure you handle it now.
Speaker ABecause sometimes we don't think it's a problem until it's too, too far gone, and we need to get it right right now.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd when God deals with a particular area of sin in our lives, he's calling us to change, he's calling us to repent.
Speaker AAnd that comes through conviction, that comes through discomfort.
Speaker AI would.
Speaker AI would say that there's times in our life where God does make us come to a place of discomfort because we should not be comfortable with our sin as a Christian.
Speaker AWe should not be comfortable feeling comfortable with the sin in our life.
Speaker AIt should be so foreign to us.
Speaker AI. I was talking to a pastor one time, and he put it really in a good, clear way for me, especially because I like the fish.
Speaker AHe was like, when you catch a fish and you pull it out of the water, does it die right away?
Speaker AI said, no, you know, the fish is still alive and flopping around and let you throw the fish in the water again.
Speaker AHe's not going to live for very long, but he's going to live for a little bit.
Speaker AHe says, okay, that's the way it's supposed to be for a Christian.
Speaker ALike, we might be able to survive in sin for a while, but it should not be something that we're comfortable with.
Speaker AIt should not be the character and the lifestyle of a Christian.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd so that's what we're seeing here in this case.
Speaker AGod says, get this right before you go anywhere else.
Speaker AGet this right before you expect to have any more battles in your life.
Speaker AAnd get this right before you expect the Lord to be working and giving fruit.
Speaker AAnd so he says, verse 13, up, sanctify the people and say, sanctify yourselves against tomorrow.
Speaker AFor thus saith the Lord God of Israel.
Speaker AThere is an accursed thing in the midst of thee, O Israel.
Speaker AThou canst not stand before thine enemies until ye may, until you take away the accursed thing from among you.
Speaker AWhat is he saying here?
Speaker AWell, verse 13, he's saying, this says, if you expect to have the victory of the Lord in your life, if you're expecting to have fruit, if you're expecting to win the battle with using spiritual tools, you have to make sure that you deal with the sin in the camp.
Speaker AAnd so if I'm a Christian and I'M expecting all these wonderful things to happen.
Speaker AGod's word being, speaking to me and, and the conviction of the Spirit moving me and the guidance and the, and the will of God and all these different things.
Speaker AAnd then I have sin in the camp.
Speaker AThe Bible says that, hey, we, we need to stand up for our.
Speaker ATo our enemies, but we're not going to be able to stand against our enemies if we are allowing the accursed thing to be in our midst.
Speaker AAnd so we need to be careful about that.
Speaker AVerse 14.
Speaker AHe gives clear instructions to how to deal with sin.
Speaker AHe gives clear instructions of how to deal with this sin in the camp.
Speaker AVerse 14.
Speaker AIn the morning, therefore you shall be brought according to your tribes.
Speaker AAnd it shall be that the tribe which the Lord taketh shall come according to the families thereof.
Speaker AAnd the family which the Lord shall take shall come by households, and the household of the Lord shall take, shall take, shall come man by man.
Speaker AAnd it shall be that he that is taken with the accursed things shall be burnt fire.
Speaker AAnd he and all that he hath, because he hath transgressed the covenant of the Lord and because he hath wrought folly in Israel.
Speaker ASo essentially this God is going to reveal who the person is that has the sin.
Speaker AAnd this speaks to the power of God.
Speaker AThis speaks to God exposing sin, private sin.
Speaker AAnd this is conviction, but also more than that, it's judgment.
Speaker AObviously, the Bible teaches the law of sowing and reaping, the principle of sowing and reaping in the book of Galatians and and so this is Achan and his family reaping what they have sown.
Speaker AVerse 16.
Speaker ASo Joshua rose up early in the morning and brought Israel by their tribes.
Speaker AAnd the tribe of Judah was taken.
Speaker AAnd he brought the family of Judah.
Speaker AAnd he took the family of the Zerites.
Speaker AAnd he brought the family of the Zerites man by man.
Speaker AAnd Zabdi was taken.
Speaker AAnd he brought his household man by man.
Speaker AAnd Achan the son of Carmi, and and the son of Zabdi, and the son of Zerah.
Speaker AAnd the tribe of Judah was taken.
Speaker AAnd Joshua said unto Aan, my son, give, I pray thee, glory to the Lord God of Israel and make confession unto him.
Speaker AAnd tell me now what thou hast done.
Speaker AHide it not from me.
Speaker AAnd Aan answered Joshua and said, indeed, I have sinned against the Lord God of Israel.
Speaker AAnd thus, and thus have I done so.
Speaker AHe essentially here confesses his sin.
Speaker AHe gets to a place in his life after, after this confirmation where he confesses what he has Done.
Speaker AHe's tried to cover it up.
Speaker AWe're going to see that here in a few moments.
Speaker ABut he is challenged to come forward and come clean, if you will.
Speaker AAnd so what we're seeing here is that this hidden sin that he has has power over him.
Speaker AAnd what I will tell us is that hidden sin in our life will control our lives whether we know it or not.
Speaker AAnd so he addresses this, and he does confess.
Speaker AHe says, this is what I have done, verse 20.
Speaker AAnd Achan answered.
Speaker AAnd he says, this is.
Speaker AThis is what I've done.
Speaker AI've sinned against the Lord God of Israel, verse 21.
Speaker AWhen I saw among the spoils a goodly Babylonish garment.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ASo he saw something.
Speaker AIt tempted him.
Speaker AHis.
Speaker AHis flesh was kindled.
Speaker AAnd he saw what he wanted and he took it.
Speaker AA Babylonish garment, 200 shekels of silver and a wedge of gold of 50 shekels weights.
Speaker AAnd then he says, right here, then I coveted them.
Speaker ASo we see the sin.
Speaker ASin isn't necessarily that he took it, even though that is the outcome of that sin.
Speaker AThe sin of the heart was covetousness.
Speaker AThe sin of his heart was that he wanted.
Speaker AHe wanted what someone else had.
Speaker AWe know that that is a sin that can cause us to fall into many different avenues of despair.
Speaker AAnd so he says, I coveted them and took them.
Speaker AAnd behold, they are hid in the earth in the midst of my tent and the silver under it.
Speaker AAnd so he.
Speaker AHe admits that he wanted these things.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd we know that you could go to a lot of passages of Scripture, but one that I would point to is in First Timothy, chapter 6, verse 10.
Speaker AFor the love of money is the root of all evil, which while some coveted after they have erred from the faith and pierced themselves through with many sorrows.
Speaker AThe Bible says that that covetousness, that love of money, can cause many people to fall into pain and suffering.
Speaker AAnd that's where Achan finds himself.
Speaker AAchan finds himself in a place where his covetousness overcame him.
Speaker AHe desired it, he took it.
Speaker AAnd now he is really dealing with the judgment of God.
Speaker AAnd so Starting in verse 22, we see that the confession is confirmed and we see that Achan is judged.
Speaker ASo Joshua sent messengers and they ran unto the tent.
Speaker AAnd behold, it was hid in his tent and the silver under it.
Speaker ASo what he said came to pass.
Speaker AIt was true.
Speaker AAnd they took them out of the midst of the tent and brought them unto Joshua and to all the children of Israel, and laid them out before the Lord and Joshua and all of Israel.
Speaker AWith him took Achan and the son of Zara, and the silver and the garments and the wedge of gold, and his sons and his daughters, and his oxen and his asses and his sheep and his tent and all that he had, and they brought them unto the valley of Acre.
Speaker AAnd so we see that Joshua and the people of Israel are taking very seriously this sin.
Speaker AAchan and his sons and his daughters.
Speaker AThe reason why I believe that his sons and daughters are lumped into this is because they knew they had knowledge of the sin.
Speaker AThey weren't necessarily maybe the ones that directly committed it, but they did know the sin and they were harboring the sin.
Speaker AAnd what we're going to see here in this case is that God is going to extremely judge them.
Speaker AAnd this is a difficult passage for us to understand, but I think that we'll be able to tie it all together here in a few moments.
Speaker AAnd so they take him out to the Valley.
Speaker AVerse 25.
Speaker AAnd Joshua said, why hast thou troubled us?
Speaker AAnd the Lord shall trouble thee this day.
Speaker AAnd all Israel stone him with stones and burned them with fire after they had stoned them with stones.
Speaker ANow, obviously, we live in a different system in a different society.
Speaker AI don't encourage all of us to find someone in our church who is in open sin and do this very thing, okay?
Speaker AWe're.
Speaker AWe're living under a new covenant.
Speaker AAnd New Testament says, vengeance is mine.
Speaker AI overpay, saith the Lord.
Speaker AWe know that God is the ultimate judge, but in this case we do see God is very serious about the sin in the camp.
Speaker AVerse 26.
Speaker AAnd they raised over him a great heap of stones unto this day.
Speaker ASo the Lord turned from the fierceness of his anger wherefore the name of the place was called the Valley of Acor unto this day.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd so the Israelites here know that God definitely is enacting a justice and judgment.
Speaker AAnd then this type of sin when.
Speaker AWhen it's dealt with can bring us back to a place of victory.
Speaker AAnd now Israel was in a position in which God could now lead them.
Speaker AAnd so, yes, this does seem like a very serious judgment, but we see how serious God is in that case, and God's leading and guidance in how to deal with that sin, and that is to get rid of it, to not just accept it, to.
Speaker ATo not just get to a place where we say, okay, but next time we're really going to make sure that we need to deal with this sin.
Speaker ABecause what happens is that when we put off sin, it could be like a disease, it can be like a sickness, and it can spread.
Speaker AAnd even if we cut it back just a little bit, it'll come back.
Speaker AThe Bible very clearly teaches us to get that sin out of our life, to completely deal with this.
Speaker AAnd so this kind of victory only comes through a.
Speaker AA death.
Speaker AAnd we know that in the Old Testament, in this case, it was the death of Achan.
Speaker ABut we know also that in the New Testament, it was someone's else's death that was able to pay the price for our sin, and that was the death of Jesus Christ.
Speaker ASo now we get to have forgiveness.
Speaker AWe.
Speaker AWe might have dealt with covetousness in our life, we might have dealt with certain elements of sin in our life.
Speaker ABut the beautiful thing about being a Christian and walking in the grace of Jesus Christ is that even though we do have sin, Jesus paid the price for us.
Speaker AAnd that God has dealt with that sin and that the price has been paid, and we can walk in that.
Speaker ABut that doesn't give us an excuse to continue to walk in sin and to live in that rebellion.
Speaker AWe need to deal with that in our own lives.
Speaker AAnd so it is the power of the victory of Jesus that gives us the opportunity and hope that, you know, what the truth is, is that we, many of us are Achan.
Speaker AMany of us have fallen into the trap of covetousness.
Speaker AAnd so what do we all deserve?
Speaker AWe all deserve what Achan face.
Speaker AWe all deserve punishment and death.
Speaker ABut again, the grace that God extends to us is that we know that even in sin, God will allow us to find forgiveness when we come and trust in him.
Speaker AAnd so we know that the victory is found in Jesus, not in our own strength.
Speaker ABut here at the end of Joshua chapter 7, sin is dealt with.
Speaker AAnd we're going to see that because of them getting that sin right in the camp, that chapter 8 AI will be conquered, there will be victory, and they will follow the plan of God, and hopefully a lesson will be learned.
Speaker AAnd I think all of us can learn lessons through our failures.
Speaker AWe can learn lessons through the other people's failures.
Speaker ABut the best lesson to learn is just simply following the word of God, following his will for our life.
Speaker AI've used this analogy before, and I'll probably keep using it because it's one that I can understand and hopefully you understand when.
Speaker AWhen we grew up in Florida, there were certain, you know, beasts that would hurt us, right?
Speaker ASo you have, like, snakes, rattlesnakes were there, we had copperheads you guys have copperheads up here.
Speaker AWe had different types of rattlesnakes.
Speaker AWe had coral snakes.
Speaker AWe have water moccasins.
Speaker AAnd so, you know, I didn't have to go get bitten by one of these venomous snakes to know the dangers of it.
Speaker ALike, I could take someone else's word for it.
Speaker AI should learn from someone that knows better than me that, stay away from those animals.
Speaker AThey'll hurt you.
Speaker AIt being an inquisitive child, I just.
Speaker ASome people say, well, just don't grab any snakes, okay?
Speaker AI. I just wanted to find animals.
Speaker AI would pull, you know, turn over a rock.
Speaker AI would turn over stones and try to find snakes and different things and grab them.
Speaker AAnd so I had to learn a lesson.
Speaker ABut.
Speaker ABut I didn't have to learn the lesson from being bitten by the snake.
Speaker AI could learn the lesson by saying, okay, I know that there's higher wisdom than me that I can apply to my life, that I can avoid pain and suffering.
Speaker AAnd that's the same thing with us as Christians.
Speaker AThere's a lot of people that come from the school of thought that you have to just always keep messing up and finding your path.
Speaker AYou don't have to.
Speaker AYou can take the word of God, you can take the failures of others and use that as a cautionary tale against the sins of this world.
Speaker AAnd so we don't have to be like Achan.
Speaker AWe don't have to be like some of the other folks at face the pain and suffering of sin.
Speaker AWe can say, lord, give me wisdom and allow me to learn.
Speaker ABut the again, the grace of God is that even when we do sin, he gives us a pathway out.
Speaker AHe gives us forgiveness, he gives us hope.
Speaker ABut we cannot live in that open rebellion.
Speaker ASo really, the big lesson in Joshua, chapter seven is this.
Speaker ADon't condone sin, don't tolerate sin, don't harbor sin, don't celebrate sin.
Speaker AThere's all these different things that we can think about when it comes to sin, but really what we have to do is we have to reject it, we have to remove it, we have to kill it in our lives.
Speaker AThe New Testament says, mortify our members, die to that old way of doing things.
Speaker AAnd so in Joshua, chapter seven, it's a lesson on knowing that the victory will never come.
Speaker AIf we're harboring sin, if we're focused on the accursed thing, if we're living for ourselves, the victory can only come through submitting to the Lord and getting it right with God and walking in obedience to Him.
Speaker ABecause if you Remember, back in Joshua chapter one, we'll end with this Joshua chapter one.
Speaker AHe goes all the way back to verse eight.
Speaker AAnd he says, this book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth, but thou shalt meditate there in day and night, that thou mayest observe to do according to all that is written therein.
Speaker AFor then thou shalt make thy way prosperous, and then thou shalt have good success.
Speaker ASo the success and the prosperity is not a material prosperity.
Speaker AIt's not a material success.
Speaker AIt's a spiritual success only found when it says there what that we speak about the Word of God.
Speaker AWe meditate upon the Word of God, we observe to do all that is written therein.
Speaker AAnd so really, spiritual success comes from knowing the Word of God, speaking the Word of God, believing the Word of God, dwelling on the Word of God, and applying the Word of God.
Speaker AAnd so we can't expect to ever be successful in ministry, in the personal realm, in our business life.
Speaker AAnd when it comes, spiritually speaking, to doing things our own way, we must do it the way that God has ordained for us to live out in our lives.
Speaker AAnd so Joshua chapter seven is a cautionary tale of sin in the camp and a warning against harboring those things that cause us to have covetousness and ultimately disobedience to God.
Speaker ASo we should just follow God when he says to do things, get rid of that.
Speaker ADon't associate with that.
Speaker AThe Bible speaks of not having friendship with the world.
Speaker AWe're in the world.
Speaker AThe reality is that all of us have to live in this world.
Speaker AWe can't live in a bubble and refuse to be affected by the things around us.
Speaker ABut what we do have to understand is that there's a phrase that many of you heard, we're in the world, but we're not of the world.
Speaker AAnd being of the world means trying to follow all the things that the world brings our way.
Speaker ABut what we can say at the end of the day is this, Yes, I have to go to work.
Speaker AYes, I have to go to the grocery store.
Speaker AYes, I have to deal with all these different things coming my way.
Speaker ABut I don't have to be like that.
Speaker AThat doesn't have to characterize me.
Speaker AI want to be different.
Speaker AI want to be unique.
Speaker AYou know, one of the things that we're trying to teach our kids and I'm trying to learn in my own life is that biblical Christian character is not just what we do in public when everyone's watching.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ABecause that's, you know, it's A shame that some Christians even publicly live open rebellion to God.
Speaker ABut what we're going to say here is this, Most of us know how to act and behave and make other people think that we're pretty good people, okay?
Speaker ABut that's not true.
Speaker AComplete Christian character, true integrity, true Christian character is that I'm going to obey God even when no one else on this world knows what I'm doing.
Speaker AYou know, there's opportunities for us to do something that no one will ever know, but we can maybe think that we can get away with it.
Speaker ABut what the Bible says that even Achan, maybe he thought he could get away with this, but God still sees it.
Speaker AWhat I would say is that growing in true Christian character means this.
Speaker AIt's not just doing good in front of people to make them think that I'm a good person.
Speaker AIt's not just avoiding the bad things so that I can be healthy.
Speaker AIt's about doing what God has asked us to do.
Speaker AYou know, it's about obeying him.
Speaker AIt's about glorifying him.
Speaker AIt's about loving him.
Speaker AAnd so I would encourage you to think about this.
Speaker AAnd one of the things that helped me in my life when it came to overcoming certain temptations that come.
Speaker AAnd I'm going to tell you, I don't think any of us will get to that place where we completely overcome every temptation in our life.
Speaker ABut what I will say is that one of the things that I was challenged with at a young age was think about this sin in the eyes of God.
Speaker AThat, you know, what does God think about what you're about to do?
Speaker AWhat does God think about this response?
Speaker AWhat does God think about this thought?
Speaker AWhat does God think about this action?
Speaker AAnd, and if I could do it before him and show him and have him be a part of it, then, hey, go forward with it.
Speaker ABecause that's, that's the, that's living in, in no conviction.
Speaker ABut what I will say is that many of the things that we do thinking that we can justify it, we would not be pleased if God was watching.
Speaker ABut I'm going to tell you a little secret here.
Speaker AGod is watching.
Speaker AHe can see everything we're doing.
Speaker AWe can't hide anything from him.
Speaker AAnd so what I would encourage you to do is to think about it from the perspective of this very sin that I get fleshly pleasure out of is what nailed my Savior to the cross.
Speaker AIt's what caused me to deserve death.
Speaker ABut ultimately my Savior, Jesus Christ loved me enough to go to the cross for me.
Speaker ATo pay that price for me.
Speaker AHow could I do that?
Speaker AAnd that's what Romans chapter six is about.
Speaker AThere are Christians who say, well, aren't I saved?
Speaker ALike, I'm saved and God's forgiven me.
Speaker AWhy can't I just do what I want to do?
Speaker AAnd Paul says, God forbid, how could you understand grace and continue on that way?
Speaker AIt's just a misrepresentation of grace.
Speaker AIt's an abuse of grace.
Speaker AAnd ultimately it is disrespectful to our Lord and Savior.
Speaker AAnd we don't want to be that way.
Speaker ASo I want you to pray about that.
Speaker AI want you to think about that.
Speaker AI've heard this message preached a lot at a Christian school.
Speaker AWe heard this message preached a lot when things went missing at the school.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AOkay, who's aching in the house?
Speaker AOkay, we're gonna bring everyone up.
Speaker AAnd there was a lot of that guilt.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd I understand, like, I'm not trying to guilt you in.
Speaker AI've been part of services that a preacher got up and said, we're not leaving the service till someone confesses their pub, their private sin.
Speaker ARight now.
Speaker AWe're gonna stay.
Speaker AAnd, you know, it was like trying to squeeze everyone dry.
Speaker AThat's not my goal.
Speaker AMy goal is not to come here and try to make you feel.
Speaker AFeel guilty and put a guilt trip on you.
Speaker AReally what my goal is is for us to all inspect our own lives.
Speaker AAs David says, search me, oh, God, know my heart, try me, and know my thoughts.
Speaker ASee if there be any wicked way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.
Speaker AThat should be all.
Speaker AThat should be our prayer.
Speaker AJust Lord, seek, seek in my life.
Speaker ALook into me.
Speaker AReveal to me where I need to change.
Speaker AReveal in me what is causing me to live that life of covetousness and sinfulness and brokenness.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd then when we do that, we're able to be refined.
Speaker AI love the principle of being refined.
Speaker AYou know, God takes us and he puts us to the fire of trials of life.
Speaker AAnd what it really is is, as many of you know, there's that process.
Speaker AAnd let's say, for example, we put gold in the fire, and as it gets to this place of being heated up, there's an ability to remove the dross, the.
Speaker AThe trash, the.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker AThe terrible stuff that makes it impure.
Speaker ABut that's what God's doing through our trials in our life.
Speaker AHe's refining us.
Speaker AHe's putting us to the trials of life, temptations of this world, the struggles that we might face so that we can have that dross removed so that we can be purified and sanctified and to be more like him.
Speaker AAnd so what I would encourage you to do is think about that process in your own life.
Speaker AWhat are some things in my life that God is working on me to remove?
Speaker AI'm not.
Speaker AThis should be our testimony.
Speaker AI'm not the same person that I was 10 years ago.
Speaker AI'm not the same person that I was even a year ago when it comes to my spiritual walk.
Speaker AIf we've learned all the lessons in our life and we think that we've reached the pinnacle of our spirituality, that we're never struggling anymore, then I think all of us have fallen into the sin of pride.
Speaker AWhat we have to do is we have to say, I'm learning every day.
Speaker AAnd God might speak to me somewhere that my convictions are changing, that I might need to be more strict in this area.
Speaker AOr maybe, I mean, maybe I need to have more grace in this area.
Speaker AMaybe I'm just not seeing this from the right perspective.
Speaker AAnd so I would encourage you to think about that process as Joshua did.
Speaker AHe comes before the Lord and the Lord says, get up and deal with that sin.
Speaker AAnd so I would encourage you to pray about that here this evening.
Speaker AThank you again for listening to the Middletown Baptist Church podcast.
Speaker AI hope that this sermon has been a blessing for you.
Speaker AYou would like to find out more information about our church or this sermon, you can find us at middletownbaptistchurch.org or find us on Facebook or YouTube.
Speaker AYou can also email me directly at Josh Massaro at middletownbaptistchurch.
Speaker ACom.
Speaker AIf you've enjoyed this podcast, please subscribe and follow along for future podcast and updates.
Speaker AThank you so much.
Speaker AGod bless.
Speaker AHave a wonderful day.