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CHAPTER 1 This is God: May I have Your Attention?
Оглавление“Moses My servant is dead; now therefore arise, cross this Jordan, you and all this people, to the land which I am giving to them, to the sons of Israel.”
Joshua 1:2
Joshua and all the children of Israel were in deep mourning over the death of their beloved leader, Moses. For thirty days they were weeping and lamenting in the plains of Moab (Deuteronomy 34:8), as they remembered and rehearsed all their marvelous experiences associated with Moses’ leadership since they left Egypt. Although they knew that their aged prophet and leader was quickly approaching his death, when it did finally occur, they were completely devastated. When the stark reality of his absence did set in, and the silence of the wilderness was no longer punctuated by his commanding, spirit-filled voice, a strange and foreboding emptiness pierced the souls of the wailing multitude.
The distraught people suddenly became acutely aware of how much they really did love Moses, despite the numerous occasions they wanted to get rid of him. What a fickle multitude of ex-slaves they were! Even while Joshua understood and accepted God’s commission to be the new leader to replace Moses (Deuteronomy 31:23), he could not detach himself from the gripping sadness of that very tear-jerking occasion. Although Joshua had received the official endorsement of Moses in the presence of the people, through the laying on of the prophet’s hands, he probably felt stuck in the lingering waves of emotions that had overcome the people.
God remembers the past, but does not live in it.
It was during this period of emotional numbness that the God of Israel and of Moses suddenly appeared to Joshua. He was possibly at a loss with regard to where to begin in executing his new role as Israel’s leader, and with how to motivate them to move forward to possess their inheritance. While he was thus engaged, waiting patiently to get Israel’s full attention, God was ready to direct his. He too had been waiting to perform wonders through Joshua.
The Bible says that God spoke to him, saying: “Moses My servant is dead . . .” This was not only a statement of confirmation about the death of Moses; it was also a declaration of finality. There was no going back to Moses, although he was God’s faithful servant and had done many wonderful works on His behalf before the people and against foreign nations. God remembers the past, but does not live in it. He is the great I AM, the ever-present One.
Consequently, God first had to lift the dark cloud of sadness that had engulfed Israel, and that had momentarily stymied the enthusiasm of His servant, Joshua. However, once God had gotten his attention, He immediately gave Joshua his marching orders. God’s first command called for swift action; He expected a prompt response: “Now therefore arise. . .” The “therefore” links the present to the past, and has the reference to the dead prophet, Moses.
In other words, “he who is dead, is dead, Joshua!” “Now therefore arise!” God had been grooming His servant, Joshua for this very moment from the time Israel begun it journey through the wilderness (Exodus 33:7-11). He is the One who promotes men and women to positions of greatness for His own purpose. Joshua’s unshakeable confidence in the words of Jehovah, amidst the faithless, oppositional cry of an angry multitude which was, at any moment, ready to stone him and Caleb, had singled him out as a man great faith and courage.
6Joshua the son of Nun and Caleb the son of Jephunneh, of those who had spied out the land, tore their clothes; 7and they spoke to all the congregation of the sons of Israel, saying, “ The land which we passed through to spy out is an exceedingly good land. 8If the LORD is pleased with us, then He will bring us into this land and give it to us— a land which flows with milk and honey. 9Only do not rebel against the LORD; and do not fear the people of the land, for they will be our prey. Their protection has been removed from them, and the LORD is with us; do not fear them.” 10But all the congregation said to stone them with stones. Then the glory of the LORD appeared in the tent of meeting to all the sons of Israel.
Numbers 14:6-10
Joshua had distinguished himself before Moses and the congregation of Israel as a man who could be trusted to carry out all of God’s commands. He was also a very faithful servant and follower of Moses over the forty years of Israel’s journey through the wilderness. That’s a very long time to walk humbly, but faithfully, in the shadow of one’s predecessor.
It was Joshua who accompanied Moses up the mount to receive the Ten Commandments (Exodus 24:13), and never once turned away from his leader’s side. Joshua had learnt quite a lot from just being in the presence of the only prophet (beside Jesus) that ever walked the face of the earth who knew God face to face (Deuteronomy 34:10). He was such a loyal understudy of his master, that by the time of Moses’ death he was a very seasoned, God-fearing leader, characterized in the Word as one who was filled with the spirit of wisdom (Deuteronomy 34:9).
God is the One who promotes men and women
to positions of greatness for His own purpose.
In spite of the very sad circumstances that surrounded him, Joshua was fully ready to assume the leadership of Israel when God called on him. Thus, God could forthrightly and confidently say to His servant: “Arise!” “It’s time to move out,” (my paraphrase). “Cross over this Jordan, you and all this people.” This was Joshua’s moment to shine in a totally different capacity. He was no longer the servant who waited on the directions of his leader, Moses. He was now the leader who waited on directions directly from the God of all the earth. It was now his responsibility not only to represent God before the people of Israel, but also to represent the people before God; and to cooperate with Him in leading the nation to its promised destiny.
As one carefully reads the account of God’s call on Joshua to replace His faithful servant Moses, it is not very difficult to notice the distinguishing adjective “this” that qualifies both the Jordan and the people of Israel. These identical qualifiers beckon our inquiry and understanding. THIS Jordan is a very clear indication that there was something quite unusual about the Jordan at the time of Israel’s impending crossing. At this place, and at this time, the Jordan overflowed its banks, on account of the melted snow from the mountains of Lebanon.
The springtime phenomenon forced excess water to pour into the Jordan in torrents, making it gravely unsafe for anyone to cross, let alone a teeming multitude of undisciplined ex-slaves—infants, children, the aged—with all their animals and belongings. THIS Jordan presented an evacuation nightmare, more serious and life-threatening than that precipitated by the infamous hurricanes “Katrina” and “Ike,” which devastated many gulf cities in southern United States in 2005 and 2008 respectively.
“THIS Jordan” was not the only major challenge facing the newly appointed leader of Israel. Shepherding THIS weary, impatient and rebellious people was an equally very daunting task. However, God commanded Joshua to take the responsibility of handling both. “THIS people” carries the connotation of quite an inglorious history that began in the clay pits of Egypt and that haunted the children throughout their forty years of wandering in the desert. It was “THIS people” who murmured against God from the gates of Pharaoh’s Egypt to the borders of the Promised Land.
THIS was the people who quarreled with Moses for water; railed on him for the flesh pots of Egypt; forced Aaron to make them a golden calf for a god; incited a mutiny against Moses and was ready at any moment to rebel against any new instruction he’d receive from God. THIS was such a cantankerous multitude of ex-slaves that God associated their volatile, unpredictable disposition with the waters of the raging Jordan that was overflowing its banks. Joshua was commissioned to take “THIS people” across “THIS Jordan.”
God of Hope
“For I know the plans that I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans for welfare and not for calamity to give you a future and a hope.”
Jeremiah 29:11
Despite Israel’s selfish, rebellious, and reckless ingratitude, God, through His servant Joshua, offered THIS people the promise of a much brighter future. He instructed His servant to cross the Jordan and to take the ungrateful people along with him to the land that He was going to give to them. Because of His unconditional promise to His friend, Abraham, God was going to bring the patriarch’s downtrodden, desert-worn descendants to their undeserving inheritance. Through His covenanted promise, God had already established His plan to give the sons of Abraham a glorious future, filled with bright hope. Consequently, His command to Joshua was to escort them to the place He had made ready for their possession.
You and Your Jordan
Crisis Intervention
Gaining a person’s undivided attention is often a very difficult and challenging task when life appears to be good, and everything seems to be going according to plan. This is especially true when that individual is in a phase of life that is fulfilling a particular pleasure quest. During that phase, a person can become so absorbed in his activities and preoccupations that he is oblivious of other major events that may be occurring in his little world. Moreover, pleasure quest activities can lead a person to more addictive behaviors, from which the individual often feels quite powerless to break free.
How do we get the attention of someone caught in such a cycle, to focus on making a decision to change the course of events in his life? Social psychologists characteristically use an approach called “crisis intervention,” in which they create a life-threatening crisis for the victim caught in the cycle of abusive behavior. Such a crisis has the effect of awaking and grabbing the victim’s attention long enough for him to accept therapeutic treatment designed to rescue him from his unhealthy, destructive conduct.
Moses’ death, prior to Israel’s entrance into Canaan,
was a God-appointed “crisis intervention” strategy.
At the time of Joshua’s appointment as the new leader of Israel, the people had been through cycles of abusive behavior toward God and His servant Moses for a period of forty years. The entire journey through the wilderness was a checkered history of whining, complaining and disaffection.
On the very borders of the Promise Land, when the spies returned with their reports, the stiff-necked people kicked off their final rebellion against Moses. They were quite ready to stone Caleb and Joshua to death for bringing back what they thought was a contrary description of their intelligence-seeking expedition. Had not this same Moses interceded for Israel, God would have wiped out the entire nation at the border; but He chose, instead, to destroy all those who were twenty years old and above (Numbers 13, 14).
However, Israel had been down that road before when they witnessed the rebellion and destruction of Nadab and Abihu (Leviticus 10), and of Korah, Dathan and Abiram (Numbers 16). Nevertheless, these very compelling incidents did not stop all their bitter complaining and revolting against God’s appointed servant. Consequently, Moses’ death, prior to Israel’s entrance into Canaan, was a God-appointed “crisis intervention” strategy, not only to inject fresh leadership into this unbroken nation of intolerant ex-slaves, but also to provide new direction for Israel’s grand and exciting future.
God was now using the very one (Joshua), whose faith embraced the divine vision of Israel’s future, to lead a nation in crisis, out of its rebellious, complaining debacle, into an era of conquest and final settlement. It took the crisis of Moses’ death to be the launching pad for this new experience. The death of this faithful servant of God, along with the prior wasting of the people twenty years of age and older, were symbolic of the death of the old cycle of the wilderness life of the nation. Something new was about to occur and the crisis in the plains of Moab (Moses’ death) was the precursor to this impending event.
Sometimes God, in His mercy, has to break through our “this-worldly” preoccupations in order to fulfill His design and purpose for our lives. We can become so engrossed in the things of this age that we completely lose our focus on God, or we place Him on the back-burner because of all that is “cooking” in our self-absorbed lives. Jesus’ warning to the people of our age is:
“And take heed to yourselves, lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting, and drunkenness, and cares of this life, and so that day come upon you unawares”
Luke 21:34
John also cautioned:
15“Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. 16For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world. 17And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever.”
1 John 2:15-17
A worldly heart is one that is so crowded with the demands of this life that there is very little room (or none at all) or time for God and His will in the daily experience of a person categorized by such a disposition. In such a heart, the love of the things of the world has supplanted the love of the Father, and the person possessing that overcharged spirit belongs to the self-centered, “last-day” crowd who loves pleasure more than God (2 Timothy 3:5).
Sometimes God has to break through our “this-worldly”
preoccupations with a crisis in order to fulfill
His purpose for our lives.
Therefore, quite often, God has to penetrate the thick crust of our blind, ambitious souls by precipitating crisis situations in our lives, in order to bring us to our divinely-appointed destinies. These crises help to jolt us into the reality of our human frailty, and to focus our attention on our desperate need of a power much higher than ourselves and our earthly assets. That power, we soon realize, is God Almighty. Invariably, in the center of our crisis, amidst our pain, suffering, sorrow and tears, the God of our fathers suddenly appears and gently whispers through the inner man of our spirit: This is God: May I have your attention?
Who or What is dead, is dead
The crisis God chooses to get our attention could be short and decisive, if we understand, receive and follow through on His instruction or revelation. It can also be long and protracted, which is a mere reflection of the time it takes us to learn the lesson God is trying to teach us. Moreover, crises often persist because we have a very difficult time letting go of the past, especially if it holds cherished memories and accomplishments, or unresolved brokenness and pain. However, in either case, crises are designed to put to death our cherished attitudes, behaviors, relationships, lifestyles and dreams, so that new life and thoughts of God’s ordering can emerge.
When God intervenes, He does so to change our perception of reality concerning our life and situation, and to give us brighter, clearer vision of things pertaining to our appointed future. Through the Spirit’s enlightenment, we are able to identify and separate our old mental framework from the new revelation of God’s will for our lives; but there still remains the challenge of making the choice to pursue the path that God has chosen for us.
Crises are designed to put to death our cherished attitudes,
behaviors, relationships, life-styles and dreams.
In this regard, the experience of Israel, prior to the nation’s crossing of the Jordan, is very instructive for us. We cannot live our present and future lives by repeating what we did in the past. Moses, the great leader, was dead and there was absolutely nothing that Israel could do about it. After thirty days of weeping and wailing, of reminiscing and lamenting over their leader and their past, God had to bring the people to the realization that what was dead, regardless of its stature, had to be buried and left behind. A glorious future was ahead of them, but in order for them to inherit it, they had to let go of the past—so should we.
Wake up and smell the coffee
Many people fail to achieve meaningful success in their lives because they remain anchored to their past, instead of using old experiences as reference points to chart new directions to a rewarding future. It was while all Israel remained emotionally paralyzed by the death of their “larger-than-life” leader, that God blindsided Joshua with the command: “Arise!” In other words, “wake up and smell the coffee, Joshua!” “There is no more life in the past; you are no longer a servant of what is dead in your life. It is time for you to take the reins of leadership and move forward.”
In a very similar manner, we cannot dwell in the past by reliving it every day, no matter how glorious or how dismal it may have been. Although it may feel great reviewing and rehearsing past achievements, and altogether dreadful, remembering past woes, they are gone! We must wake up, arise, and “smell the coffee.” We must ask God for spiritual discernment and understanding to be able to identify and confirm what He has pronounced dead in his life, and resign it to the past.
You are no longer a servant to what is dead in your life.
Not only must we know what is dead; but we must also possess the wisdom and courage to bury what is dead— that is, we must come to terms with, and add finality, to it. Sometimes we try desperately to put new life in old fires— situations, friendships, failures, mistakes, love affairs, broken dreams—and end up with major conflagrations and disasters. Spiritual and natural wisdom dictate that we should “allow sleeping dogs to lie,” and dead dogs to remain buried. We should not go about unearthing what is dead; the stench may be more than we may be prepared to handle.
God is the great I AM, the ever-present One. While the Almighty remembers the past, He always operates in the present. The psalmist David says that our God is a very present help in the time of trouble (Psalm 46:1). Through our afflictions and trials, the ever-present God is positioning us, His children, for divine intervention. By His circumstantial ordering we must put to death that which needs to die in our lives, and to bring about an altogether “new thing” of His own choosing. He says, through the prophet Isaiah, “Do not call to mind the former things, or ponder things of the past. Behold, I will do something new, now it will spring forth; will you not be aware of it? I will even make a roadway in the wilderness, rivers in the desert. (Isaiah 43:19, NASB).
However, in order to bring about a “new thing” into our lives, God often has to put to death that which is old. Quite frequently we resist such a change because we have grown so accustomed to the cycle of expectations from that which is old and ready to die, or from that which is already dead. In conjunction with this, the enemy of our souls influences us to magnify our fears—fears of our situation and our future—above and beyond our faith in the Almighty, who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we could ever ask or think (Ephesians 3:20).
It really does not matter what your current situation may appear to be, or what you may be experiencing physically or emotionally. God already has a solution and a plan for your state of affairs. He can most certainly give you new directions in the midst of your chaos and confusion, and He is able generate new life in whatever appears to be dried up, decaying or dead in you. He is willing and able to make a way where there is no way—a roadway in the wilderness and rivers in the desert. Trust Him!
Crossing Jordan
As was cited earlier, the Jordan that confronted the children of Israel was not the typical, quiet stream that watered the valleys at the foot of Mount Lebanon. It was a raging torrent of melted snow and ice that rumbled relentlessly down the mountain gorges, overflowing the river’s banks and strategic crossing-points. This made crossing extremely dangerous because Jordan’s normal flow was violently disrupted. However, to cross over was a must, not only because Israel’s future destiny lay on the other side, but because God Almighty, who is the security of the nation’s future, had ordained the prompt crossing of the river.
Just like the experience of the children of Israel, a raging, formidable Jordan may be churning over before you, separating you from your life’s dream or future destiny. Jordan does not only represent a great obstacle in your path to progress or to your destiny. It also symbolizes your meeting place for a miraculous encounter with God.
Your Jordan could be anything—a lingering illness or disability; a great loss—possibly of a loved one, your job or your home; a series of mishaps; severe economic hardship; a stalled job promotion; a disgruntled, vindictive co-worker, boss, neighbor or relative; a rebellious, wayward child; a cheating spouse or some other major challenge. Whatever you may be battling with right now, this thing has disquieted your spirit, has stolen your peace and joy, and has made you run the gauntlet many times over, with feelings of anger, fear, frustration, and fatigue.
Know this, dear child of God: Your Jordan is not just another obstacle in your path, but your God-appointed opportunity to qualify you for the next level in your relationship with Him and with others. Every Jordan in your life is your opportunity for spiritual, mental and emotional development, to make you a more resilient and resourceful person. However, your trouble and confusion stem from focusing most, if not all, of your attention and energies on your Jordan. This pre-occupation tends to blind your vision of your omnipotent Father who is constantly watching your every step and misstep. He is always working for you, and never against you. The apostle Paul reminds us all of the true nature of our Jordans. He says:
17For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory; 18While we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal.
2 Corinthians 4:18, KJV
Every Jordan presents an opportunity for spiritual
growth and development.
Paul’s first observation may come off as shocking to those who are going through the awful grind of their Jordan situations. He summarizes these as momentary and light. “Are you kidding me, Paul?” I can hear some of you saying to yourselves. But Paul is not kidding at all. He calls your situations and mine short-lived and light when compared to what they produce in and for us, as those relate to our eternal future existence. The veteran soldier of the cross of Christ also speaks to the matter of our focus. He appears to be saying that focus is everything whenever the believer is confronted with a Jordan experience. He says that the things that we see or perceive are temporary or changeable; but the things that we do not see or perceive are eternal.
What are those things that we do not see? Those are the things that pertain to the realm of faith—not only in God, but also in the promises found in His infallible Word. It is woefully difficult to focus on the problems associated with your Jordan and on the promises of God at the same time. Moreover, your breakthroughs do not come from looking at the Jordan, but on focusing on, and listening to, the God who allowed you to come to that never-before crossing. It is very important to understand that nothing just happens to any child of God, even if you did not start it.
Every Jordan has a way through it before it begins to flow
your way. That’s heaven’s guarantee!
Be assured that your heavenly Father is in the midst of your seemingly insurmountable situation, working out EVERYTHING for your good (Romans 8:28). He says: ‘For I know the plans that I have for you,’ declares the LORD, ‘plans for welfare and not for calamity to give you a future and a hope.’ (Jeremiah 29:11). The Word of God also promises that:
No temptation has overtaken you but such as is common to man; and God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tempted beyond what you are able, but with the temptation will provide the way of escape also, so that you will be able to endure it.
1 Corinthian 10:13
There is absolutely no situation so trying that confronts you, of which God is not fully aware. The Bible makes it quite clear that Jordan-crossing experiences are not only the common lot of all humankind, but that God faithfully watches over all. He will not allow you to be tested beyond your ability to bear your trials, even though this appears inconceivable when you are going through your situations.
How often have you emerged on the other side of an ordeal you thought you would have never been able to handle, or even able to survive? Every Jordan has a way through it before it begins to flow your way. That’s heaven’s guarantee! With every temptation or trial, God has an ordained way of escape so that you would be able to bear and go through it. You have the unfailing assurance that if God has brought you to your Jordan, He is certainly able to take you through its raging waters triumphantly.
You have a secured destiny
“. . . cross this Jordan, you and all this people, to the land which I am giving to them, to the sons of Israel.”
Joshua 1:2
In His instructions to Joshua, God commissioned the newly-appointed leader to take His people across the Jordan to the land that He had given them. Two things are immediately clear from the above text—namely, (1) Joshua was not going to cross the Jordan alone, and (2) God had already prepared a place for him and the people. These two very important details in this remarkable experience are uniquely instructive for you as you position yourself for success against your personal Jordan.
First of all, you must know and believe that crossing your Jordan is never about you and you alone. God has predetermined that your future success is tied to the destiny of others. His blessings are never in isolation of those around you. He never blesses you for yourselves alone. Whenever you cross your Jordan, you will be a blessing to many others on both sides of the crossing experience—those that are on the side of Moab (trial) waiting to get over, and those on the side of Canaan (destiny), who have already made it over.
Second, as a potential Jordan-crosser, you must also know and believe that God has a future designed especially for you. He will most certainly bring you to it if you will only trust His wisdom and leadership instead of yours. You must have the abiding confidence that whatever is yours by divine design can never be taken away from you. No one, but yourself, can deter you from the future that God has established for you.
When you begin to believe and live by this truth, you will find your sense of peace and release from the harassment of your chaotic, wandering mind. It is only then you will begin to be aware of the divine presence, filling you with a feeling of hope and assurance. At that very moment of faith, you will be transported to a position of strength, where your mind will be more open to receive new insights and/or revelations from God. It is here that you will discover that there must be a clear path for you to negotiate your way right through your Jordan.
You may not know the way ahead, and the truth is you do not have to know the way. God, who has brought you to your Jordan, is the Way. He will take you through. When Job, the indomitable patriarch, was going through his Jordan, he left us these encouraging words:
9When He acts on the left, I cannot behold Him; He turns on the right, I cannot see Him. 10But He knows the way I take; When He has tried me, I shall come forth as gold. 11My foot has held fast to His path; I have kept His way and not turned aside. 12I have not departed from the command of His lips; I have treasured the words of His mouth more than my necessary food. 13But He is unique and who can turn Him? And what His soul desires, that He does. 14For He performs what is appointed for me . . .
Job 23:9-14
What this Jordan-crossing stalwart is saying in verses 9 and 10 above is that although he cannot fathom the ways and moving (left and right) of the Almighty, he rests in the fact that God knows the way he (Job) is appointed to travel. He will bring him through on the other side of his Jordan like refined gold. Because of this abiding confidence, Job was steadfast in pursuing the following course of action: (1) He never strayed from the path of righteousness, nor did he turn aside from the ways of God. (2) He did not deviate from the commands of God’s Word, but treasured them more than his necessary food.
1. You will never cross your Jordan alone.
2. God has a future especially designed for you.
What a sterling example for all potential Jordan- crossers! In verses 13 and 14, Job gives us his experiential understanding of the Almighty, and these pointers we must never forget. (1) God is unique and we cannot bribe Him with our empty promises, or turn Him around from His purpose with our bitter crying. (2) Whatever God desires, He will do, regardless of how we feel about it, or of what we think about Him for doing or allowing it (Psalm 135:6). I know that this is a very hard one for many of us to deal with, but God’s thoughts are not like ours, and our ways are absolutely not like His (Isaiah 55:8). (3) God will perform to the letter whatever His wise judgment has appointed for you and me.
Job’s secret was that he surrendered himself completely to the will and the plan of God. He was determined to follow through on this commitment even if it meant losing his very life in the process. He declared with confidence, “though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him” (Job 13:15). This humble Jordan-crosser positioned himself for success and certainly reaped his reward on the other side of his harrowing experience. What does the Bible testify of him?
10The LORD restored the fortunes of Job when he prayed for his friends, and the LORD increased all that Job had twofold . . . 12The LORD blessed the latter days of Job more than his beginning; and he had 14,000 sheep and 6,000 camels and 1,000 yoke of oxen and 1,000 female donkeys. 13He had seven sons and three daughters . . . 16After this, Job lived 140 years, and saw his sons and his grandsons, four generations.
Job 42:10-16
My fellow Jordan-crosser, God is waiting to do new things in you and for you. He declares
“. . . I proclaim to you new things from this time, Even hidden things which you have not known. 7They are created now and not long ago; And before today you have not heard them, So that you will not say, ‘Behold, I knew them.’”
Isaiah 48:6, 7
These things that God is about to do are quite new, and have never been thought of by you, or have never occurred before in your life. These things are new because God is creating them for you now. They are not from long ago. Therefore, you will never be able to say when it is all over, “I knew this was going to happen.”
Through the experience of your Jordan, God is seeking to get your attention so that He can begin a new thing in your life. Are you even listening? Or are you, like Joshua and Israel, preoccupied with groaning and moaning over some perceived loss in your life? You are being positioned for success. Are you ready for the journey? Your manual is in your hand, so keep right on reading; and as you read, remember God’s promise through the prophet Isaiah:
2“When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; Andthroughtherivers,they will not overflow you.When you walk through thefire, you will not be scorched, Nor will theflame burn you.3“ForI am the LORD your God, The Holy One of Israel, your Savior...
Isaiah 43:2, 3
It is the common lot for all humanity to face major Jordan crossings along the journey of life. However, you need not be intimidated or overwhelmed by their threatening waves. The Holy One of Israel, your Savior, promises that those waters will not drown you, for He will be with you, to take you right on through. Therefore, you can confidently say to all your present situations: “Roll Jordan, roll; roll Jordan, roll. Your threatening waves are nothing new, my Lord and I will walk right through; so roll Jordan, roll” (the author).