Obedience: A Study In DeuteronomySample
What does it say?
The Lord promised victory over the seven nations living in the Promised Land. Any involvement with the current inhabitants would turn their hearts away from God.
What does it mean?
When the Israelites entered the Promised Land, they needed to rid the land of all enemies. Even though other nations were more numerous and powerful, the Lord promised to fight for His people, just as He had done in Egypt. God’s command to completely destroy the land’s inhabitants and everything they possessed is shocking but just. By doing so, Israel would carry out the Lord’s judgment on those who had aligned themselves against the one true God. Anything that the Israelites allowed to remain would be a snare for future generations. They needed to preserve their holiness by decisively removing everything that would tempt them into idolatry.
How should I respond?
How seriously do you take personal holiness? Are you ruthless when it comes to ridding your life of anything that displeases God? It’s dangerous to hang on to any type of sinful attitude or behavior, no matter how seemingly insignificant. Eventually, it will become bigger than you can handle. What sinful habit or indulgence has entangled you? How could that same habit ensnare your children? Anything that is contrary to Scripture should be treated as the enemy and removed completely. You are not alone. Obey what God tells you in Scripture and trust Him for the victory. He is all-powerful!
Scripture
About this Plan
Deuteronomy represents the precipice between Israel's wilderness journey and their conquest to come. As God draws his people into the promised land, Moses explains and amplifies the covenantal relationship between Yahweh and his people. By calling them to obedience, Moses looks forward to the day that Israel will be a blessing to all the nations of the earth.
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