Outnumbered, Outgunned… but Not Outdone

“One man of you puts to flight a thousand, since it is the Lord your God who fights for you, just as he promised you.” (Joshua 23:10)


There’s a strange kind of math in the kingdom of God. One man puts a thousand to flight? I’ve seen some men run a thousand yards after finding a wasp in their car, but I’ve yet to witness a solo warrior send an entire enemy brigade packing. And yet here it is in Joshua 23:10—a promise, not a proverb. A God-given reality, not just a motivational poster for the local men’s ministry.

But the point isn’t that one believer is just that impressive. The point is: the Lord is.

Joshua is giving his farewell address here. He’s no longer the sword-swinging, river-parting, Jericho-flattening commander of old. He’s gray, probably tired, and speaking like a man who knows the hourglass is nearly empty. He reminds the people of what they’ve seen: impossible victories, unlikely conquests, the sheer absurdity of walking around a city seven times and watching the walls do a spontaneous trust fall.

Why did these things happen? “Because the Lord your God fought for you.” That’s the math. That’s the power. That’s the only way one faithful follower sends a thousand foes packing.

But the verse doesn’t stand alone in a vacuum of divine comfort. It comes wrapped in covenantal cloth. In verse 6, Joshua says, “Be very strong to keep and to do all that is written in the Book of the Law of Moses.” In other words: God will fight for you—so obey Him.

Here’s the mystery and majesty of life in Christ: we are called to act with strength and courage, to “act like men” as Paul says in 1 Corinthians 16:13—not because we are the source of strength, but because we know the One who is. It’s not a call to swagger. It’s a call to stand.

We stand because He stands with us.

We act boldly, not because we have it all together (spoiler: we don’t), but because God has bound Himself to us by promise. The same God who told Joshua, “I will never leave you nor forsake you,” is the One who tells us, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.”

Yes, weakness. That’s not exactly what you put on the résumé under “Core Strengths.” But in God’s kingdom, weakness is the invitation for divine strength to show up and flex.

So what does this mean for us?

It means when you’re outnumbered—when the odds are bad, the culture is loud, and you feel like the only one still standing for truth—don’t panic. One plus God is still a majority.

It means when obedience feels costly, when faithfulness looks like foolishness to the world, when you’re asked to do hard things (say no to sin, love your enemies, forgive the unforgivable), don’t flinch. God doesn’t command without also equipping.

And it means that though the battle is the Lord’s, He’s still called you to the field. Not the couch. Not the bunker. The field.

The promise is clear: “The Lord your God fights for you.” The duty is just as clear: “Be very careful… to love the Lord your God” (v. 11). That’s covenantal logic—grace fuels gratitude, and gratitude expresses itself in obedience.

It’s not that you fight so that God will love you. It’s that God fights because He loves you—and your response is to love Him back with your life, your loyalty, and yes, your strength.

So act like men. Stand strong. Obey with courage. But do so with a joyful dependence on the One who puts the thousand to flight.

And maybe keep your car windows closed when driving past a wasp nest—just to be safe.

SDG

His Presence/My Strength

Matthew 28:20 [widescreen]

Have you ever had that experience when you keep seeing the same thing over again, and wonder if maybe someone is trying to tell you something?

For some reason, everything I’ve been reading lately has been coming back around to the fact of God’s presence with His people.

Last weekend I led a Bible study on the life of Gideon. If you’ll remember when the Lord called Gideon to service, God said, “Go in the strength that you have.”  Gideon quickly replies that he is not a mighty man, nor does he come from a strong family; how could he possibly deliver Israel? Then the Lord said to him, “But I will be with you, and you shall strike the Midianites as one man” (Judges 6:16). It was the presence of the Lord that was Gideon’s strength in service.

Again, tonight I led a study on the story of Joshua at the battle of Jericho. Not much of a battle. All Israel was called to do was march around the city for 6 days, and on the 7 day, march around the city 7 times; blowing their trumpets as they marched.  I’m not sure that this tactic has been repeated in battle since.

What then was the source of victory of Israel. It was the presence of the Lord.  As they marched around the city, the ark of the covenant was carried in the midst of the people, reminding them that the Lord was with them with every step. Joshua 6:27 reminds us, “So the LORD was with Joshua, and his fame was in all the land” (Joshua 6:27).

Then I was reading with a church member the passage from Ephesians 6 on the armor of God.  Having already been thinking about the importance of God’s presence, this verse at the beginning of the reading jumped out at me: “Finally, be strong in the Lord and in the strength of his might” (Ephesians 6:10).

It is in the presence of God in our lives that our strength lies. This is the wonder of Jesus’ promise, “And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:20).

Finally, I’ll leave you with this from A.W. Tozer that I came across today:

The spiritual giants of old were those who at some time became acutely conscious of the presence of God. They maintained that consciousness for the rest of their lives. How otherwise can the saints and prophets be explained? How otherwise can we account for the amazing power for good they have exercised over countless generations? Is it not that indeed they had become friends of God? Is it not that they walked in conscious communion with the real Presence and addressed their prayers to God with the artless conviction that they were truly addressing Someone actually there? Let me say it again, for certainly it is no secret: we do God more honor in believing what He has said about Himself and coming boldly to His throne of grace than by hiding in a self-conscious humility! Those unlikely men chosen by our Lord as His closest disciples might well have hesitated to claim friendship with Christ. But Jesus said to them, “You are my friends!”

He concluded with the verse: “Surely the righteous shall give thanks to your name; the upright shall dwell in your presence” (Psalm 140:13).

SDG