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Joshua 5:13 – 6:21
The Israelite invasion party was camped at a safe distance outside Jericho. Joshua was pensive, as he stood alone looking towards the city, and probably wondering how they could possibly overcome its impregnable fortification. Nothing the Israelites’ possessed in terms of strategic weaponry could make a dent in those walls, and any attempts at throwing themselves in a frontal assault would be suicidal. As the leader of a ragtag army, he was undeniably confounded. Suddenly, he saw facing him, a distance away, a lone combatant with his sword drawn. His immediate instinct informed him to be on the alert to this ambiguously dressed warrior, before his allegiance is established. Joshua drew nearer and proffered a normal challenge to a potential adversary, “Are you for us or for our adversaries?” (Joshua 5:13) The reply he got was not what he expected. The stranger’s non-aligned reply was loaded, “Neither; but as Prince of the Lord’s host am I now come.” How long did it take for this significant response to sink into Joshua’s soul? It was not neutrality this stranger was referring to, but he threw Joshua’s question back at him, whether Joshua was with him or against him, as he leads the Lord’s hosts. When God judges, He does not need to take sides, neither does He need to justify to us His actions. What was it in the alien's countenance or demeanor that prompted Joshua suddenly to conclude that this mysterious person is someone greater than anyone he had ever met and therefore commanded immediate respect and reverence? Or did he caught sight of His unusual sword? Perhaps it was an abrupt holy awe he sensed? Joshua immediately hit the ground and bowed in worship (Joshua 5:14). If it were holiness, how does one behave as one comes face to face with it? I think, like Joshua, we would be out of our depth and quite unsettled, for holiness is beyond the human capacity to appreciate! Like Moses and Isaiah, being flat on their faces was insufficient, to be on consecrated ground is to be in God’s pure presence, and their sandals had to come off. Some commentators speculate that there is strong inference that this mysterious person is the pre-incarnate Christ, as angels are not worshipped by the Israelites. The turning point was “What has my lord to say to his servant?” Joshua, no doubt, was expecting God to do Israel a favour in the Jericho campaign, but in any human involvement in God’s sovereignty and holiness, He demands that Joshua relinquish his own expectations, and submit to His will unconditionally. All the battles initiated by God included an element of leaders being critically set apart to carry out unequivocally His will His way; thereby removing the possible contamination of human pride. If Jericho was to be won, Joshua had to die to self – he had to understand that holiness pervades this battle from start to finish, and God was the only one who had a claim on his undivided heart. Now, with hindsight, we know the Divine strategy for capturing Jericho, but did the Israelites find God’s plan hard to swallow? How did Joshua win them over in submission to this awkward stratagem? Was success achieved purely by their faith? The Ark was to be the army’s centerpiece, leading the way! So “be holy, because I am holy” says God (1 Peter 1:16). This makes absolute sense in any relationship with our God! Unless we are willing to love God for who He is and what He represents through His death for us, His holiness remains another abstract religious concept, devoid of any desirability and beauty expressed in Christ Jesus our Lord.
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AuthorGerald Cai Archives
April 2026
Preamble
Our eyes are holden that we cannot see things that stare us in the face, until the hour arrives when the mind is ripened; then we behold them, and the time when we saw them not is like a dream. Ralph Waldo Emerson My introduction to the spiritual realm took place in my late teens in London, U.K. The realisation that God existed was never in doubt, as I searched for answers on the mode of communicating with Him. One day, after challenging God on His silence and relevance in this tumultuous age, I was immediately immersed in a peace that was out of this world; it was nothing that I could have produced from within myself. That extraordinary peace led me to earnestly seek its Giver. Journeying with Him continues to this day as the reality of God's presence and fellowship remains, at times, palpable. After all, we are spiritual beings too! Hence, this Blog is entitled Living Coram Deo - living in the presence of God. |