OCTOBER 8, 2025 “BUT GOD, DO I REALLY HAVE TO OBEY YOU? WHY? #2 DEUTERONOMY 1 HOW TO LOSE THE PROMISED LAND BY LISTENING TO FEAR!

1 1-2 These are the sermons Moses preached to all Israel when they were east of the Jordan River in the Arabah Wilderness, opposite Suph, in the vicinity of Paran, Tophel, Laban, Hazeroth, and Dizahab. It takes eleven days to travel from Horeb to Kadesh Barnea following the Mount Seir route.

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3-4 It was on the first day of the eleventh month of the fortieth year when Moses addressed the People of Israel, telling them everything God had commanded him concerning them. This came after he had defeated Sihon king of the Amorites, who ruled from Heshbon, and Og king of Bashan, who ruled from Ashtaroth in Edrei. It was east of the Jordan in the land of Moab that Moses set out to explain this Revelation.

Moses Preaches to Israel on the Plains of Moab

5 He said: 6-8 Back at Horeb, God, our God, spoke to us: “You’ve stayed long enough at this mountain. On your way now. Get moving. Head for the Amorite hills, wherever people are living in the Arabah, the mountains, the foothills, the Negev, the seashore—the Canaanite country and the Lebanon all the way to the big river, the Euphrates. Look, I’ve given you this land. Now go in and take it. It’s the land God promised to give your ancestors Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob and their children after them.”

The Israelites had been moving slowly through the wilderness while God gave them the Law and trained them, trying to get them to worship Him and to abandon their slave mentality.

Now God is shaking things up, telling the Israelites that they have stayed long enough at Mount Hor and that it’s time to get on with their calling. Why does God have to say these things? The Israelites have gotten used to their current situation and are reluctant to try anything new, even though they are currently migrants. Many times, God has to tell us, “You’ve stayed at this mountain long enough,” so that we will proceed with His calling on our lives.

9-13 At the time I told you, “I can’t do this, can’t carry you all by myself. God, your God, has multiplied your numbers. Why, look at you—you rival the stars in the sky! And may God, the God-of-Your-Fathers, keep it up and multiply you another thousand times, bless you just as he promised. But how can I carry, all by myself, your troubles and burdens and quarrels? So select some wise, understanding, and seasoned men from your tribes, and I will commission them as your leaders.”

14 You answered me, “Good! A good solution.”

15 So I went ahead and took the top men of your tribes, wise and seasoned, and made them your leaders—leaders of thousands, of hundreds, of fifties, and of tens, officials adequate for each of your tribes.

16-17 At the same time I gave orders to your judges: “Listen carefully to complaints and accusations between your fellow Israelites. Judge fairly between each person and his fellow or foreigner. Don’t play favorites; treat the little and the big alike; listen carefully to each. Don’t be impressed by big names. This is God’s judgment you’re dealing with. Hard cases you can bring to me; I’ll deal with them.”

18 I issued orders to you at that time regarding everything you would have to deal with.

In the beginning, Moses was trying to settle all the disputes by himself, wearing himself out in the process. Then Jethro, Moses’ father-in-law, made the sensible suggestion that Moses should establish officials with varying levels of responsibility who could handle everything but the most major problems. This decision not only empowered those men, giving them experience as leaders, but it also allowed Moses to focus on his main calling as a prophet and head of the group.

Delegating authority to unit heads is generally a good thing, as long as you are very careful about your choices. But you must ensure that those whom you select will handle power wisely and not merely degenerate into bullying people and mishandling resources.

19-21 Then we set out from Horeb and headed for the Amorite hill country, going through that huge and frightening wilderness that you’ve had more than an eyeful of by now—all under the command of God, our God—and finally arrived at Kadesh Barnea. There I told you, “You’ve made it to the Amorite hill country that God, our God, is giving us. Look, God, your God, has placed this land as a gift before you. Go ahead and take it now. God, the God-of-Your-Fathers, promised it to you. Don’t be afraid. Don’t lose heart.”

22 But then you all came to me and said, “Let’s send some men on ahead to scout out the land for us and bring back a report on the best route to take and the kinds of towns we can expect to find.”

23-25 That seemed like a good idea to me, so I picked twelve men, one from each tribe. They set out, climbing through the hills. They came to the Eshcol Valley and looked it over. They took samples of the produce of the land and brought them back to us, saying, “It’s a good land that God, our God, is giving us!”

When the Israelites sent out twelve spies, they brought glowing reports of the land; however, ten of the spies were whiners who complained about the giants they saw. Only Caleb and Joshua were willing to trust God to help them wipe out the giants. The remainder of the group portrayed God as having ordered them to do something impossible. Caleb and Joshua were so frustrated they tore their clothes as they tried to argue, but the remaining ten men frightened the Israelites, causing them to refuse to enter Canaan. The God whom these people were refusing to trust was the same God who had delivered them from Egypt and from Pharaoh’s army and fed and watered them miraculously. This same God was leading the Israelites by manifesting as a pillar of cloud in the daytime and a pillar of fire at night. But those miracles weren’t enough for these unbelieving cowards.

26-28 But then you weren’t willing to go up. You rebelled against God, your God’s plain word. You complained in your tents: “God hates us. He hauled us out of Egypt in order to dump us among the Amorites—a death sentence for sure! How can we go up? We’re trapped in a dead end. Our brothers took all the wind out of our sails, telling us, ‘The people are bigger and stronger than we are; their cities are huge, their defenses massive—we even saw Anakite giants there!’”

29-33 I tried to relieve your fears: “Don’t be terrified of them. God, your God, is leading the way; he’s fighting for you. You saw with your own eyes what he did for you in Egypt; you saw what he did in the wilderness, how God, your God, carried you as a father carries his child, carried you the whole way until you arrived here. But now that you’re here, you won’t trust God, your God—this same God who goes ahead of you in your travels to scout out a place to pitch camp, a fire by night and a cloud by day to show you the way to go.”

34-36 When God heard what you said, he exploded in anger. He swore, “Not a single person of this evil generation is going to get so much as a look at the good land that I promised to give to your parents. Not one—except for Caleb son of Jephunneh. He’ll see it. I’ll give him and his descendants the land he walked on because he was all for following God, heart and soul.”

37-40 But I also got it. Because of you God’s anger spilled over onto me. He said, “You aren’t getting in either. Your assistant, Joshua son of Nun, will go in. Build up his courage. He’s the one who will claim the inheritance for Israel. And your babies of whom you said, ‘They’ll be grabbed for plunder,’ and all these little kids who right now don’t even know right from wrong—they’ll get in. I’ll give it to them. Yes, they’ll be the new owners. But not you. Turn around and head back into the wilderness following the route to the Red Sea.”

41 You spoke up, “We’ve sinned against God. We’ll go up and fight, following all the orders that God, our God, has commanded.” You took your weapons and dressed for battle—you thought it would be so easy going into those hills!

42 But God told me, “Tell them, ‘Don’t do it; don’t go up to fight—I’m not with you in this. Your enemies will waste you.’”

43-46 I told you but you wouldn’t listen. You rebelled at the plain word of God. You threw out your chests and strutted into the hills. And those Amorites, who had lived in those hills all their lives, swarmed all over you like a hive of bees, chasing you from Seir all the way to Hormah, a stinging defeat. You came back and wept in the presence of God, but he didn’t pay a bit of attention to you; God didn’t give you the time of day. You stayed there in Kadesh a long time, about as long as you had stayed there earlier.”

God was fully prepared to aid the Israelites so that they could eliminate those giants. Centuries later, a shepherd boy with a sling would take out a giant with a single stone. Certainly, the Israelites must have had soldiers capable of doing the same thing.

There are times when God calls us to do the impossible. If we falter, we lose the chance forever. The annals of missions are packed with stories of people who stepped out in faith. Lillian Trasher went to Egypt as a young woman with little backing but great faith. She founded the Assiout Orphanage in 1911, depending on God for everything. It was said of Trasher, “Lillian Trasher operated by faith, praying each hour to God to meet the needs of God’s children. Many times, she was desperate for support, and she often went door-to-door on her donkey soliciting for donations of food or money from wealthy Egyptian locals. By asking boldly, both to God and to others, Trasher was able to uphold her two requirements: first, the orphanage should never go into debt; and second, no orphan should be turned away.” https://www.cbeinternational.org/resource/story-lillian-trasher/

It’s tempting to criticize the Israelites, but would we have done any better? Familiar situations are comforting, even if they are unpleasant. May God help us to follow hard after Him, even when all ways appear to be barred and fearsome giants threaten us!

PRAYER: Father God, thank You for loving us and caring for us. Lord, help us to trust You, even when You seem to be leading us into hopeless situations. You are the Father of Light and in You there is no darkness. In the mighty and precious Name of King Jesus. Amen.

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