A Chosen Allegiance
The Bible in a Year
Joshua’s voice carries a weight that only comes from a life lived with God. As he nears the end of his days, he gathers the people and speaks with clarity: “Choose you this day whom ye will serve… but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord” (Joshua 24:15). This is not a casual encouragement; it is a defining moment. The Hebrew word for serve, ʿābad (עָבַד), implies more than occasional devotion—it speaks of labor, allegiance, and ongoing commitment. Joshua is not asking Israel to add God to their lives; he is calling them to center their lives around Him.
As I sit with this passage, I am struck by how Joshua begins—not with inspiration, but with confrontation. “If it seem evil unto you to serve the Lord…” That statement reveals something unsettling. There were those among God’s people who viewed serving Him as undesirable, even burdensome. Sin has a way of distorting what is good until it appears restrictive or unnecessary. What God calls life, the world often calls limitation. What God calls truth, the world dismisses as outdated. Isaiah captured this reversal when he wrote, “Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil” (Isaiah 5:20). The human heart, when untethered from God, does not merely drift—it inverts reality.
Yet Joshua does not linger on their excuses. He moves quickly to exhortation: “Choose you this day…” The urgency is unmistakable. Serving God is not something we stumble into; it is something we decide. The covenant language behind this moment echoes throughout Scripture, especially in passages like Jeremiah 31:33, where God says, “I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts.” To know God, as our weekly theme reminds us, is not merely intellectual—it is relational and volitional. It involves the will. The Greek equivalent in the New Testament often reflects this in words like thelō (θέλω), meaning to will or to choose with intention. Knowing God is inseparable from choosing Him.
I have found that many people want the benefits of God without the commitment to Him. They want peace without surrender, forgiveness without transformation, and blessing without obedience. But Joshua’s words leave no room for that kind of divided life. This is not about convenience; it is about allegiance. As Charles Spurgeon once said, “Every man must serve somebody—either the God who made him or the devil who would destroy him.” There is no neutral ground. Even the choice not to choose is, in itself, a decision.
What gives Joshua’s words their enduring power, however, is not merely his exhortation but his example. “As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” He does not stand at a distance, issuing commands. He steps forward, placing himself under the same call. Leadership, in the biblical sense, is always incarnational. It is lived before it is taught. Joshua’s declaration begins with “me” before it extends to “my house.” That order matters. One cannot lead others where one is unwilling to go.
In our homes, this truth becomes especially tangible. Spiritual direction is not established by occasional words but by consistent witness. Children and families are shaped not only by what is said, but by what is practiced. When a home sees prayer, hears Scripture, and observes a life oriented toward God, it forms a pattern that echoes across generations. This aligns with the covenant vision of Deuteronomy 6:6–7, where God commands His people to teach His words diligently to their children. The home becomes the first place where God is known.
And this brings us back to the heart of this week’s message: God desires to be known. “They shall all know me, from the least of them unto the greatest of them” (Hebrews 8:11). But knowing God is not passive. It is cultivated through relationship, sustained through obedience, and expressed through service. The choice Joshua presents is not merely about activity; it is about identity. Who am I aligned with? Whose voice shapes my decisions? Whose will governs my life?
As I walk through this day, I am reminded that I, too, am making that choice—not once, but repeatedly. In my priorities, in my responses, in my quiet moments and visible actions, I am declaring whom I serve. The call of Joshua still echoes because it speaks to the enduring reality of the human condition: we are always serving something. The only question is whether what we serve leads to life or away from it.
So today, I choose again. Not out of obligation, but out of recognition. God has made Himself known, not as a distant authority but as a covenant-keeping Lord who invites relationship. To serve Him is not loss; it is alignment with truth itself. And in that alignment, there is a clarity and purpose that no other path can provide.
For further reflection, consider this article:
https://www.ligonier.org/learn/devotionals/choose-this-day
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