Joshua 1 — Be Strong and of Good Courage
Moses is dead. Joshua takes the mantle of leadership over a nation about to enter the land. God speaks the words that have steadied every weary leader since: be strong, be of good courage, do not be afraid — for I am with thee.
“Have not I commanded thee? Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest.”
— Joshua 1:9
- v.1-4 The commission — Moses is dead; arise and cross
- v.5-9 The promise — I will be with you; be strong
- v.10-11 Joshua prepares the people
- v.12-18 The eastern tribes pledge their support
The same promise to Joshua is later applied to every believer in Hebrews 13:5 — "I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee."
God's presence is the only sufficient resource for leadership. Without Him, no method works; with Him, no opposition prevails.
Courage is commanded — not merely encouraged. Faith calls for it. Fear can be felt and overcome; it cannot be allowed to govern.
The path to prosperity in God's economy is obedience that does not deviate. "To the right hand or to the left" — even small turnings end in distant destinations.
Meditation in the Hebrew sense is to mutter — to speak the Word over to yourself again and again until it sinks beneath the surface of the mind into the heart.
The promise of prosperity here is not material wealth as the world counts it. It is the flourishing that comes from a life shaped by God's Word.
The order matters: meditate first, then observe to do, then prosperity follows. Reverse it and you have superstition; keep it and you have wisdom.
The fourth time in this chapter God tells Joshua to be strong. Repetition signals importance — and signals that Joshua needed to hear it more than once.
"Whithersoever thou goest" — there is no geography outside His company. Wherever obedience takes you, He has already gone before.
Whatever Jordan stands before you, the same God who told Joshua to be strong tells you. Take His Word into your mouth. Meditate on it day and night. Do not let it depart. The mark of a courageous believer is not the absence of fear but the presence of a meditated Word.
The name Joshua in Hebrew is the same as Jesus in Greek — both meaning "the Lord saves." Joshua led the people into the earthly promised land; Jesus leads us into the eternal one. As God was with Joshua, so the greater Joshua is with us forever.
God names the loss bluntly — Moses is dead. He does not gloss over it. But He does not let Joshua linger in it either. The next word is "arise."
Every generation must cross its own Jordan. The faith of the previous generation does not carry the new one across automatically. Each generation receives the promise afresh.