DID YOU KNOW
Did you know that following God’s will is not blind faith, but guided obedience shaped by both trust and wisdom?
Many believers have heard the phrase, “Just step out in faith,” as though God expects us to disengage our minds and simply leap into the unknown without thought. Yet when I look closely at Scripture, I see something far more balanced. In Joshua 7:2–5, Joshua sends spies into Ai before advancing. This is not hesitation—it is preparation. The Hebrew mindset never separated faith from wisdom. The word often used for wisdom, חָכְמָה (chokmah), carries the idea of skillful living. Joshua trusted God’s promise, but he also used the discernment and leadership ability God had given him. Faith, then, is not the absence of thought; it is the alignment of thought with divine direction.
When I bring this into my own walk, it reshapes how I approach decisions. God’s will is not an invitation to recklessness, but to partnership. The apostle Paul the Apostle echoes this in 2 Corinthians 10:5, where he speaks of “bringing every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ.” The Greek word αἰχμαλωτίζοντες (aichmalōtizontes) suggests intentional control—taking hold of our reasoning and submitting it to Christ. This means my logic is not discarded; it is refined. Faith leads, but wisdom walks alongside it. When I neglect either, I lose balance—either becoming overly cautious or dangerously impulsive.
Did you know that even faithful obedience can still encounter failure when hidden sin is present?
The story of Ai is not just about strategy—it is about spiritual condition. Joshua did everything right on the surface, yet Israel suffered defeat. Why? “But the children of Israel committed a trespass…” (Joshua 7:1). One man’s hidden disobedience affected the entire community. This is a sobering reminder that God’s will is not merely about external actions; it is deeply connected to internal integrity. The Hebrew word מַעַל (ma‘al), translated “trespass,” implies a breach of trust—a violation of covenant loyalty. This was not a minor mistake; it was a fracture in the relationship between God and His people.
In my own life, I must be careful not to assume that good intentions or proper planning guarantee success. There are times when I may be doing all the right things outwardly, yet something beneath the surface is misaligned. That is why Joshua’s response is so instructive. In Joshua 7:6–9, he falls before the Lord in grief and confusion. He does not blame strategy; he seeks God. This teaches me that failure, when it comes, is not the end—it is an invitation to deeper examination. God is not looking to condemn, but to reveal and restore. When I allow Him to expose what is hidden, He clears the path forward.
Did you know that God’s correction is not rejection, but redirection toward victory?
After Israel’s defeat, God speaks clearly to Joshua: “Get up! Why do you lie thus on your face?” (Joshua 7:10). This is not harshness; it is urgency. God identifies the root problem and calls for action. The process that follows—exposing Achan’s sin and removing it—may seem severe, but it underscores a critical truth: God will not allow what corrupts His purposes to remain unchecked. His correction is always aimed at restoration. The Greek concept of discipline in the New Testament, παιδεία (paideia), reflects this same idea—training that shapes character, not punishment that destroys it.
What encourages me is what happens next. In Joshua 8:1, God tells Joshua, “Do not be afraid, nor be dismayed; take all the people of war with you, and arise, go up to Ai.” The very place of defeat becomes the place of victory. That is the nature of God’s redemptive work. He does not discard His people because of failure; He restores them through it. As one insight from Bible.org explains, “God’s discipline is evidence of His commitment to our growth, not His abandonment.” That perspective changes how I interpret correction. It is not a sign that I have lost my place—it is proof that God is still actively shaping my path.
Did you know that success in God’s will is always followed by renewed devotion, not self-congratulation?
After the victory at Ai, Joshua does something remarkable. Instead of celebrating military success, he leads the people in worship and recommitment. Joshua 8:30–35 records the building of an altar and the reading of the Law. This moment is crucial. It reminds me that success is not the final goal—relationship with God is. The Hebrew word for altar, מִזְבֵּחַ (mizbeach), is rooted in sacrifice. It represents surrender, not achievement. Joshua understood that victories can easily lead to pride if they are not anchored in worship.
This principle speaks directly into my daily walk. When God brings breakthrough or blessing, my natural tendency is to move forward quickly, focusing on the next challenge. But Scripture invites me to pause, to remember, and to give honor where it belongs. Psalm 49:13 warns of those who trust in themselves, calling it folly. True success in God’s will is not measured by outcomes alone, but by the condition of the heart. When I return to God in gratitude and humility, I protect myself from the subtle drift into self-reliance.
In all of this, I begin to see a pattern emerge. God’s will is not a straight line of uninterrupted success; it is a journey shaped by calling, preparation, correction, and renewal. It requires both faith and thought, both courage and humility. It invites me to trust deeply while walking wisely.
There is an invitation here for each of us. Where might you be leaning too heavily on your own understanding, or perhaps expecting God to act while neglecting the wisdom He has already given you? Where might there be something hidden that needs to be brought into the light? And where has God already given you victory that calls for renewed devotion rather than quiet pride? These are not questions to answer once, but to carry with you as you move forward.
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