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Joshua 24:15
Good morning Hope Hill!
I say this every Sunday but I mean it every time when I say I am truly excited to be with you this morning!
Now, before we get to the subject of our preaching this morning I have to catch you up to where we are In the scripture.
If you don't know who Joshua is, you kidof have to go back to Moses and the time he spent with God liberating the hebrew people from Pharoah and his tyranny (Go watch Prince of Egypt if you need a crashcoarse with a fire soundtrack) anyway, Joshua is the one who took over for Moses in leading the Israelites after all of that to the promise land.
Joshua was a strong leader... he was a courageous leader...
In Chapters 1-4, he succeeds in leading God's people where Moses could not.
It was Joshua who ultimately led the lost generation of former slaves to the promise land.
However, when they got there, they were surprised to find that there was still some work to be done.
Chapters 5-12 describes how, with God as his guide, Joshua led his armies to conquer the grand fortress of Jericho... the town of Ai... and eventually the control of all of central, southern and northern Canaan just as the Lord had promised them.
Finally, in chapters 13-24, the newly conquered land is divided up and distributed amongst the twelve tribes of Israel.
And just before he dies, Joshua issues one of the greatest challenges to his people.
in Chapter 24 verse 15 where he says,
So with the brief time that I have, we are going to talk about some...
House Rules
Growing up in my house as far back as I can remember, we, as a family were passionate about... spades...
You heard me right, Spades.
The card game...
We didn’t just wait for when the family came over for a holiday or event.
we would bust out the spade table just because it was Tuesday.
and don't you dare act like you don't know what the spade table is because you couldn't play on a regular table.
When I play my big joker, I need you to feel all of it!
I need to be able to slam that thing on the table and not have to worry about breaking something 'Cus I need all of your little feelings hurt.
Anyways we would bust out the spades table on any given night and commence in a game...
It was one of my favorite things to do growing up.
and eventually I got comfortable enough and confident enough that I went out into the world with the skills I had developed at the house... but I learned very quickly that there are different ways of playing depending on where you go.
There were different house rules.
You know what I'm talking about.
No matter where you ended up, you are not gonna walk into someone else's house and change their house rules.
I am preaching already and y'all don't even realize it
Now there are certainly some universal rules.
Like, I don't care what you do or where you came from... you are not gonna sit here and talk across the board.
But depending on where you go, you may accidentally play a spade and all of a sudden you hear “spades stick!”
At Some houses we play deuces wild, but at my houses a two is a two so play that mess thinking it’s a spade if you want to but it'll get ate up around here!
My point is that there are different strokes for different folks and no matter what your house rules are, you were passionate about them.
but don’t miss the ministry in the message because our house rules are so engrained in us that its often difficult to comprehend doing things any other way.
Like walking up to a foreign monopoly board and the savages don't put money under the free parking!
(That's us by the way.
We play the actual rules.
Look it up!)
But, when you walked into that home you had to respect the law of the land.
You had to respect the rules that were established in that place.
Joshua told the Israelites “if it seem evil unto you to serve the Lord, choose you this day whom ye will serve;”
Joshua 24:15 (NIV)
But if serving the Lord seems undesirable to you, then choose for yourselves this day whom you will serve, whether the gods your ancestors served beyond the Euphrates, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you are living.
But as for me and my household, we will serve the Lord.”
In other words, if you think my rules are unfair then my friend you need to make a choice.
Make a Choice
We don't have to go deep on this one.
· We have to choose exactly who we are going to serve
· Choose who we are going to submit to
· Choose who and what we are going to prioritize in this world.
I'll be the first to admit that choice is hard.
Making a definitive decision is sometimes challenging.
My point is, making a decision is difficult, and I get that.
But there are some things we cannot straddle the fence on.
Chose you this day...
It was an easy choice when momma was dragging us to church whether we liked it or not.
But now that we're grown and out the house, it's time to choose.
You can't serve the Lord on Sunday and serve the State of Florida Monday through Saturday.
You can't serve the Lord on first and third Sunday and serve the Cowboys on second and fourth.
You can't serve the Lord just when it's convenient for you, or when He fits into your schedule.
No, chose you this day who you will serve.
Matthew 6:24 says that, "No man can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and despise the other..."
It's time to choose!
And when we are making that choice, it's important that we, as the old folks used to say, don’t forget where we came from.
Don’t Forget Where You Came From
Joshua 24:15 (NIV)
But if serving the Lord seems undesirable to you, then choose for yourselves this day whom you will serve, whether the gods your ancestors served beyond the Euphrates, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you are living.
But as for me and my household, we will serve the Lord.”
"And if it seem evil unto you to serve the Lord, choose you this day whom ye will serve;" But watch what Joshua says next, He says, "… the gods which your fathers served that were on the other side of the flood, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell..."
That choice seems easy enough, but the problem was that the Israelites had grown complacent...
1 : self-satisfaction especially when accompanied by unawareness of actual dangers or deficiencies
2 : an instance of usually unaware or uninformed self-satisfaction
In other words, the Israelites had just gotten too comfortable.
They had settled into their new home in the promise land and messed around and forgot all that their forefathers had gone through to get them there.
They had forgotten the generation before them that suffered under Pharaoh's wrath.
They had forgotten the generation that wandered with Moses in the wilderness, relying only on the mana that was sent from on high.
And that’s just like us... Sometimes we feel like we have "arrived"
· when we have gone through a storm or two and made it to the other side,
· when we've crossed our red sea,
· when Pharaoh and our enemies are far behind us,
· We tend to forget what it was like before we got to where we are... somehow some way we forgot where we came from.
I wear a suit to work every day... and I don’t have to.
I work in a casual office environment.
And they talk about me sometimes.
But I just laugh because you just don’t know where I came from.
· I remember being unemployed
· I remember having to choose between buying diapers and buying formula for my son.
· I remember not having enough gas to make it to Church on Sunday
· I remember sitting in the dark when the lights were shut off
· So I will not apologize for giving honor to God for blessing me with a good job
· I will not apologize for showing my gratitude by giving my absolute best every single day
· You just don’t know... My suit is my testimony
· I’m walking around praising God every day and they just don’t realize it
That’s why it's so important that we don’t forget where we came from!
Joshua in chapter 21:45 says, "Not one word of all the good promises that the LORD had made to the house of Israel had failed; all came to pass"
To Joshua, it was unfathomable that some of the Israelites would choose to worship any other God other than the one who brought them so far from so much.
How on earth could one possibly go backwards and worship the gods of the other side of the flood when our God brought us through the flood... on dry land?
How could they worship the gods of this new Land when its only because of our God's promise that we made it at all?
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