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Joshua 1 — A transfer of command, a charge to be courageous, and a people ready to move
5 min read
is dead. Just let that sit for a moment. The man who faced down , parted the , climbed , and led an entire nation through forty years of wilderness — gone. And standing in his shadow is , his former assistant, looking across the at the land God promised generations ago.
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This chapter is a transfer of command. But it's also something deeper — it's God making clear that the mission was never dependent on one man. The didn't die with Moses. And what God says to Joshua here has echoed through every season of uncertainty since.
There's no long mourning period in the text. No extended eulogy. God came to and opened with a statement that was both honest and urgent. The Lord said to Joshua:
"Moses my servant is dead. Now get up. Cross this Jordan — you and all this people — into the land that I am giving to Israel. Every place your foot touches, I have given to you, just as I promised Moses. From the wilderness and Lebanon all the way to the great Euphrates River, and all the land of the Hittites to the Mediterranean Sea to the west — that's your territory.
No one will be able to stand against you for the rest of your life. Just as I was with Moses, I will be with you. I will not leave you. I will not abandon you."
Read that first line again. " my servant is dead. Now get up." God didn't minimize the loss, but he also didn't let Joshua sit in it. There's a time to grieve, and there's a time to move. And sometimes the most compassionate thing God does is tell you the next step when you're not sure you're ready for it.
But notice what God didn't say. He didn't say "you're as gifted as Moses" or "you've got everything it takes." He said "I will be with you." The confidence wasn't supposed to come from Joshua's résumé. It was supposed to come from whose voice was speaking.
Then God said something so important he repeated it three times. Not as a suggestion. As a command:
"Be strong and courageous, because you are going to lead this people into the land I swore to give their ancestors.
Only be strong and very courageous. Be careful to follow all the instructions Moses gave you. Don't drift from them to the right or the left, and you will succeed wherever you go. Keep this Book of the Law on your lips constantly. Think about it day and night so you can be careful to live by everything written in it. Then you will prosper. Then you will succeed.
Haven't I commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Don't be afraid. Don't be discouraged. The Lord your God is with you wherever you go."
Three times. Be strong and courageous. Be strong and very courageous. Be strong and courageous. When God repeats himself, it's not because he forgot he already said it. It's because he knows what's coming and he knows what you're feeling.
And here's what's easy to miss — courage wasn't the only instruction. Right in the middle, God told to stay anchored in his word. Meditate on it day and night. Don't drift. The strength wasn't supposed to come from sheer willpower. It was supposed to come from staying close to what God had already said. Think about that next time you're facing something that terrifies you. The instruction isn't just "be brave." It's "stay connected to me, and the courage will come."
first act as leader was immediate. No committee meeting. No long strategic planning session. He went straight to his officers and gave the order. Joshua told them:
"Go through the camp and tell the people: get your supplies ready. In three days, we cross this Jordan to go in and take the land the Lord your God is giving you."
Three days. That's it. After forty years of waiting, wandering, and wondering — three days. There's something electric about that. Joshua didn't ease into leadership. He didn't ask for a transition period. God said move, and Joshua moved. Sometimes the thing you've been preparing for your whole life shows up, and you don't get a warm-up lap. You just start.
Now here's a moment that shows us what kind of leader was going to be. Back when was still alive, two and a half tribes — , , and the half-tribe of — had asked to settle on the east side of the Jordan. They'd already found good land. Moses agreed, on one condition: their fighting men still had to the river and help everyone else take the western territory first. Only after the job was done could they go home.
Joshua held them to it:
"Remember what Moses the servant of the Lord told you — the Lord your God is giving you rest and giving you this land. Your wives, your children, and your livestock can stay in the territory Moses gave you east of the Jordan. But every warrior among you must cross over armed, ahead of your brothers, and help them — until the Lord gives them rest just as he's given you rest, and they've taken possession of their land too. Then — and only then — you can go back to your own territory east of the Jordan."
This is what commitment looks like when it's not convenient. These tribes already had what they wanted. Their families were settled. Their land was secured. Going to war across the river was someone else's problem now — except it wasn't. Because they'd made a . And Joshua wasn't going to let that slide. Your blessing doesn't excuse you from helping someone else get theirs.
And then something remarkable happened. The people didn't argue. Didn't negotiate. Didn't drag their feet. They answered directly:
"Everything you've commanded us, we will do. Wherever you send us, we will go. Just as we obeyed Moses in everything, we will obey you. Only may the Lord your God be with you, the way he was with Moses.
Anyone who rebels against your command and refuses to obey your orders will be put to death. Just — be strong and courageous."
Catch that last line? The people echoed God's own words back to Joshua. "Be strong and courageous." The same phrase God used three times, the people now used to send their new leader forward. It's almost like the words had already started to do their work — traveling from God's mouth, into Joshua's heart, and now out through the people he was called to lead.
And notice the weight of their commitment. This wasn't polite applause. They pledged their with their lives on the line. They were saying: we're all in. It's a stunning contrast to how had responded to leadership in the past — the grumbling, the rebellion, the constant second-guessing. Something had shifted. A generation that grew up watching their parents wander was finally ready to walk forward.