Bible Reading Plan – 2021

Go Deep in God’s Word This Year

SYNOPSIS: I know of no greater practice for going deep with God than through the daily practice of Bible study—reading, meditating, journaling, memorizing and praying the Scriptures. That spiritual practice will contribute to your growth as a believer and your entrance into the deep things of God like nothing else. It’s as simple as that. Here’s what regularly reading and ruthlessly obeying God’s Word will do for you: mature in your faith, morph into greater Christlikeness, deepen your knowledge of God, insulate your life from sin, enlarge your Kingdom effectiveness, increase your spiritual power, develop life skills for the daily challenges you face, and live in the blessing zone of God’s favor. I hope you’ll join me in 2021 as we “go deep” in God through the daily reading of his Word.

Go Deep// 2 Timothy 3:14-17

But you must continue in the things which you have learned and been assured of, knowing from whom you have learned them, and that from childhood you have known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make you wise for salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly equipped for every good work.

Let’s go deep with God this year! When I was growing up in a small Southern Oregon town, the kids in my neighborhood would regularly gather in the street in front of my house. There we would play some of the best football games on the planet—even better than even the Super Bowl! Street football—skinned knees, bruised elbows, bragging rights (at least for that day) and tons of fun! Man, there was nothing like it!

The favorite play called in the huddle, was, of course, “go deep!” Forget about short yardage running plays or screen passes, we wanted the glory, paydirt, “tud!”, our name for a touchdown So just about every play was “go deep!” I’m telling you, that’s the way football at every level ought to be played.

I want to go deep this year in God, don’t you? I don’t want to splash around in the shallows or wade around in the wimpy water near the shore, I want to get into the depths of God like never before. Do you want to join me?

If you do, then I know of no greater practice for going deep with God than through the daily practice of Bible study—reading, meditating, journaling, memorizing and praying the Scriptures. That spiritual practice will contribute to your growth as a believer and your entrance into the deep things of God like nothing else. It’s as simple as that. Here’s what regularly reading and ruthlessly obeying God’s Word will do for you:

  • Mature in your faith
  • Morph into greater Christlikeness
  • Deepen your knowledge of God
  • Insulate your life from sin
  • Enlarge your Kingdom effectiveness
  • Increase your spiritual power
  • Develop life skills for the daily challenges you face
  • Live in the blessing zone of God’s favor

I hope you’ll join me in 2021 as we “go deep” in God through the daily reading of his Word. To help us along the way, I have provided a creative reading plan called the “One Year Bible. You can purchase a hard or electronic copy of your preferred Bible version on Amazon, or you can download a free app of the same for your smartphone on YouVersion (once you download it, go to the Bible Reading Plans and make sure to select The One Year Bible plan) or use an existing Bible to follow the reading schedule on the Portland Christian Center webpage, which is also a printable PDF.

Of course, you can choose your own Bible reading plan, but no matter what you do, choose to read God’s Word in 2021. By the way, there is no greater act of faith, obedience and yes, even worship, than to devote yourself to “rightly dividing the Word of truth.” (2 Timothy 2:15)

Finally, I am also inviting you to join me in memorizing scripture this year. I have selected fifty-two verses for us to commit to memory—one for each week of the year. And I will post a devotional blog for each verse on every Monday this year. Check it out at www.raynoah.com.

Let’s go deep in God’s Word this year!

God Has Been Good

Even Though You Don't See Him, He Is There

On a personal level, as I review each season in my life—and there have been both ups and there have been downs—I have to agree with God’s self-testimony: “I have given you success. I have had your back—day and night. I have given you everything you needed.” Yes, in looking back over my life, I can honestly say, “God has been good.”

The Journey // Focus: Deuteronomy 2.7

For the Lord your God has blessed you in everything you have done. He has watched your every step through this great wilderness. During these forty years, the Lord your God has been with you, and you have lacked nothing.

In Deuteronomy 2, Moses is recounting the wilderness journey of the Israelites over the forty years between exiting Egypt and possessing the Promised Land. Mostly in this chapter, he gives a blow by blow account of their battles with enemy nations who opposed their travel—nations who paid dearly for their opposition to God’s plan. And in the middle of his account, Moses makes this amazing statement of how God has tenderly cared for Israel at each step of the way. Actually, Moses is directly quoting the Lord himself. In the statement, we see God’s own assessment of how he has carried his people all these years:

I have given you success.
I have had your back—day and night.
I have given you everything you needed.

Now of course, as Christians, you and I know that to be theologically true of God. He cares for us; he carries us. We sing about it every time we gather for worship. We remind one another that very truth to encourage us through the rough spots of life. Intellectually, we affirm in our minds that the Lord will provide—he is Jehovah Jireh, after all, the God who supplies all of our needs according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.

Yet, if we are to be honest about it, there are seasons where we question God’s care. There are spells where we don’t feel too successful, and we wonder if God even notices. We go through a deep disappointment or a painful failure or a tremendous loss, and we can’t see any evidence whatsoever that the Lord had our back. We pray for an answer—a provision, a healing, a breakthrough—and get a big fat nothing burger instead of everything we needed.

Most of us would never say that out loud—a few brave, unfiltered souls would, but you and I are too “holy” to say anything like that—but we are thinking that very thing to ourselves. Maybe in our prayers we let it slip, “God, where were you?” While disappointment with God is not something we like to dwell on and certainly don’t broadcast, it is a part of the journey for most, if not all believers. Yet God still says the same thing to us as he did to the Israelites: I have given you success, I have protected you, I have provided everything you needed.

Think about those statements from the view of the Israelites on their journey. They spent forty years meandering through a desert, with no end in sight, instead of making their beds in the land God had promised them. They were thirsty to the point of death on several occasions. They were sick and tired of eating the same thing day after day for forty years. They had to fight for their lives against enemy nations bent on destroying them—with bigger and better equipped armies than Israel’s. My guess is there were plenty of people on plenty of occasions who felt deeply disappointed with God’s care and provision.

Yet those emotions are based on just a relatively short slice of history—both the Israelites and ours. We see things in brief moments of time and make assessments about God. If we are in a season of success and wellbeing, we overflow with joy and thanks to God. But if the season is filled with disappointment and loss, we wonder where God is. The point is, they are just that: seasons. Seasons have a beginning and an ending. And while we only see what is right in front of us, God is over it all, watching out for us, allowing according to his impeccable wisdom what will develop our character and our faithfulness through experiences of joy as well as sorrow, and always leading us to where he desires to take us.

On a personal level, as I review the ups and downs of my seasons, I have to admit to the self-testimony the Lord gives:

I have given you success.
I have had your back—day and night.
I have given you everything you needed.

In looking back over all the seasons of my life, I can honestly say, “God has been good.” That indisputable fact leads me to declare trust in his goodness in any current season, whether pleasant or rough.

Yes, God has been good. I bet you can say that too!

Going Deeper: Review your life—both the good and the bad. Now offer up a declaration of trust by telling the Lord, “God, you are good!”

The God of Contingencies

He Really Thinks of Everything!

God really does think of everything, doesn’t he? Down to the smallest detail of individual and communal life, for every hypothetical question we could ask, for every unexpected or unwanted circumstance that may arise, God has already thought through how we as his people can pursue life, liberty and happiness within the confines of a kingdom society. In the case of sanctuary cities in Numbers 25, God even made it possible for people who accidentally take another life not to be forced to live as a fugitive. Yes, he has made contingencies for everything that might concern us, and that means everything that may be concerning you at this very moment!

The Journey // Focus: Numbers 35:6, 12, 15
The LORD said to Moses, “Six of the towns you give the Levites will be cities of refuge, where a person who has accidentally killed someone can flee for safety… These cities will be places of protection from a dead person’s relatives who want to avenge the death…. They are for the protection of Israelites, foreigners living among you, and traveling merchants. Anyone who accidentally kills someone may flee there for safety.”

God really does think of everything, doesn’t he? Down to the smallest detail of individual and communal life, for every hypothetical question we could ask, God has already thought through how we as his people can pursue life, liberty and happiness within the confines of a kingdom society. He has made contingencies for everything that might concern us.

In the case of Numbers 25, God even made it possible for people who accidentally take another life not to be forced to as a fugitive. By fleeing to one of the designated sanctuary cities, they could live without always looking over their shoulders, not having to worry about the victim’s family exacting revenge on them, knowing that they could move forward in spite of the tragedy they caused.

Of course, some in our current cultural context might attempt to squeeze from this chapter a justification for sanctuary cities that can overrule federal law regarding illegal immigration. That is a worthwhile discussion, but this is not about justifying willful disregard of a law. This was about accidental events. Accidents happen! Sometimes they are simply the result of a set of circumstances for which no one was at fault, at other times they are the result of someone’s negligence. But never were they intentional. And when that was the case, God set up protections to limit the outrage of the victim’s kin; the punishment was not to exceed the crime, so to speak.

Keep in mind also that the offender was not offered a day at the beach in these cities. These sanctuary cities belonged to the Levites, the clerics and religious workers of that culture. So the person who took up refuse in one of these cities would have to live under the watchful eye of Israel’s spiritual leaders. Furthermore, fleeing to a sanctuary city didn’t negate the judicial process. A murderer couldn’t leverage a gracious system to his own advantage. If there were more than one witness who could corroborate murderous intent, the murderer would face the death penalty. But if the community found that the killing was accidental, the accused could find refuge in the city. Even then, “though he was innocent of murder, he was still guilty of manslaughter. An accidental killing still destroyed a human life made in God’s image, polluting the land God had given (Numbers 35:33). A person guilty of manslaughter still had to pay for his actions.” (Quest Study Bible) In this kind of a tragic case, while no one was happy, everything would be fair.

Yes, God had thought of everything. Again and again in the Books of Moses, we see God involved in the affairs, large and small, of his people. He is a God who cares. He is a God who provides, not just materially, but through laws and processes that kept his kingdom society civil.

Which brings us to the point extracted time after time in Leviticus and Numbers: God cares about you, too. He watches over the affairs of your life, large and small, and he has made contingencies for every possible circumstance that you might face. When it comes to you, God has thought of everything.

Going Deeper: What has you flummoxed today? God has an answer. Go to him. Listen. Wait for discernment. He has already thought your situation through.

The Beauty of Boundaries

He Is The God Who Protects!

Our Heavenly Father knows that we need the safety, warmth and nurture of a protective environment, and wherever he has established a boundary, it is for that very purpose. And while we might find his boundaries restrictive, we would do well to remember that one hundred percent of the time, they are for our good. Thank God for boundaries!

The Journey // Focus: Numbers 34:1-2

Then the Lord said to Moses, “Give these instructions to the Israelites: When you come into the land of Canaan, which I am giving you as your special possession, these will be the boundaries.

Human beings have a love-hate relationship with boundaries. Intrinsically we know we need them, but throughout our lives we resist and resent them. Such is the rebellious nature of our fallen condition. So distorted is our view that we treasure the security that boundaries provide but crave the freedom of breaking loose from what we wrongly think holds us back. Somehow, we just can’t blend the two; we see boundaries and freedom as an oxymoron.

Yet boundaries are the Creator’s special gift to us—a gift that opens the way to another of the Creator’s special gifts: freedom. When we learn to accept the gifts and understand that both are two sides of the same coin, we can then come into a dimension of living that allows us to thrive in the abundance of a very wise and purposeful God.

Do you realize that God is a being of boundaries? From the very beginning, God established that Adam and Eve would have freedoms unimaginable to humans today, but there were limits. They couldn’t eat the fruit of just one particular tree. The limitation was both a test of their trust in the wisdom and love of God as well as a protection from the forces that would destroy them if they didn’t trust and obey him.

And now, in Numbers 34, as the Israelites are about to make their way into another land of abundance, a land flowing with milk and honey, God clearly defines the boundaries that will keep them safe, orderly and blessed within the freedoms of the inheritance he is giving them. The boundaries are a gift from their Creator. Embracing them will allow them the freedom to thrive. Living within them will demonstrate their trust in a loving, all-wise God. Honoring them will keep their nation safe. For Israel, these geographical boundaries were a special gift from their loving Father.

At the birth of our first child, the nurses at the hospital sat my wife and me down and gave us the Cliffs Notes version of Parenting 101. It was sort of a “Parenting for Dummies”—and while my wife didn’t really need it, I definitely did. And I distinctly remember the instructions on how to tightly wrap our little jewel in a baby blanket. When we laid our little girl down for her nap, they showed us how to tuck the blanket around her and into the sides of the crib so that she could barely move; she would be almost mummy-like. Why? Because they reminded us that she had spent the past nine months within the confines of a warm, safe and nurturing womb, and would not immediately know how to handle the freedoms of this new world.

We are no different before the watchful eye and tender care of our loving Heavenly Father. He knows that we need the safety, warmth and nurture of a protective environment. So wherever he has established a boundary, it is for that very purpose. And while we might find his boundaries restrictive, we would do well to remember that one hundred percent of the time, they are for our good.

What are the boundaries that God has given you? Just open your Bible and you will immediately see them. They are throughout his Word, both in the form of “thou shalls” and “thou shall nots”. They are found in the Ten Commandments and in the Sermon on the Mount. They are tucked into the epistles and scattered throughout the psalms. And each one, whether it makes sense or not, whether it challenges today’s conventional wisdom or not, is simply a reminder of how much your Heavenly Father treasures you and desires to bring you into the freedom of abundance.

Believe in the blessings of the boundaries! They will be what takes you into a land of incredible freedom.

Going Deeper: Anywhere your flesh is offended by a boundary, stop and think about it. Remind yourself that the boundary is a love note from your Father. Thank him for it. Trust that honoring it will lead to unimaginable freedom. And forever settle with your flesh that God’s boundary is non-negotiable.

Jesus Led Me All The Way

He Is Sovereign ... Thank God!

Do you cast all your cares on God, knowing that he cares for you—and not only cares, but is competent to carry you all along the way? Do you know that God is sovereign over you—even the smallest details of your life are within his control? Whether you do or don’t does not diminish the fact that God is leading you all along the way. There is no question: God has taken charge of you.

The Journey// Focus: Numbers 33:38-39

While the Israelites were at the foot of Mount Hor, Aaron the priest was directed by the Lord to go up the mountain, and there he died. This happened in midsummer, on the first day of the fifth month of the fortieth year after Israel’s departure from Egypt. Aaron was 123 years old when he died there on Mount Hor.

Do you trust God to watch over every day of your life? Do you believe that he is involved even in the minute details of all your moments? Can you relax about tomorrow, knowing that it is securely in God’s hands? Do you cast all your cares on him, knowing that he cares for you—and not only cares, but is competent to carry you all along the way?

Whether you do or not doesn’t diminish the fact that God is leading you all along the way. There is no question: God is in control of you. Even the day of your death is foreknown by God, which means that you will not live a day longer, nor die a day sooner than what your Creator will permit. We see that in Numbers 33 when God invited the High Priest of Israel, Aaron, up to the mountain to take back the breath of life that the Creator loaned him on the day Aaron was born. And in a very real sense, in the realm invisible to the human eye, when it comes time for you to die, God will invite you to give back what he loaned you—the breath of life—and he will exchange it for eternal air that will never be reclaimed from your lungs.

Yes, when you wing your flight to realms of day, this your song through endless ages: Jesus led me all the way. Praise his holy name!

King David offered this amazing insight about the Creator’s sovereign care over his life in Psalm 139:2-3, 7-12, 16,

You know my sitting down and my rising up;
You understand my thought afar off.
You comprehend my path and my lying down,
And are acquainted with all my ways…
You have hedged me behind and before,
And laid Your hand upon me…
Where can I go from Your Spirit?
Or where can I flee from Your presence?
If I ascend into heaven, You are there;
If I make my bed in hell, behold, You are there.
If I take the wings of the morning,
And dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea,
Even there Your hand shall lead me,
And Your right hand shall hold me.
If I say, “Surely the darkness shall fall on me,”
Even the night shall be light about me;
Indeed, the darkness shall not hide from You…
And in Your book the days fashioned for me,
They all were written,
When as yet there were none of them.

As David prayerfully, worshipfully exclaimed, “such knowledge is too lofty for me!” (Psalm 139:6)

God is in charge of you, whether you are conscious of it or not. So why not practice awareness of the presence of God in your moment-by-moment life? It is better than carrying the weight of the world around on your shoulders!

Going Deeper: Reprint the above verses taken from Psalm 139, and read them morning, noon and night every day this week. Practice awareness of God’s presence and declare his sovereign control over you. It is the best way to live.

You Have A Choice, But Don’t Settle

What God Permits, He Doesn't Always Bless

When God allows you to determine how you will walk out your faith, just remember that what he permits is not always what he will bless. Never make a choice that sacrifices long-term blessing for short-term comfort. Stay alert if the choice is between better and best—and go for the best!

The Journey // Focus: Numbers 32:5-8, 13

The men of Gad and Reuben asked Moses, “If we have found favor with you, please let us have this land as our property instead of giving us land across the Jordan River.” But Moses responded, “Do you intend to stay here while your brothers go across and do all the fighting? Why do you want to discourage the rest of the people of Israel from going across to the land the Lord has given them? Your ancestors did the same thing when I sent them from Kadesh-barnea to explore the land….The Lord was angry with Israel and made them wander in the wilderness for forty years until the entire generation that sinned in the Lord’s sight had died.”

This section begins the Israelites’ decades-long conquest of Canaan as they settle the Promised Land. God was giving them a land that geologically would provide a great deal of security because of its natural borders: the Jordan River on the east, the Mediterranean Sea on the West, the desert on to the south and the Lebanon Mountains to the north. Israel’s enemies would not have the easiest time physically invading the land.

Moreover, God himself had promised this land to their ancestor Abraham. Now it was time for the fulfillment of that promise; the land was theirs by divine decree. It was not their land by United Nations declaration or bilateral negotiation or some grand land for peace swap. God said it belonged to Israel—now and forever—end of story.

It had taken several hundred years for God to fulfill that decree. God had declared that the current occupants, the various tribes of the Canaanites, would have to leave, but interestingly, that time would not come until, as he had declared to Abraham, the sin of the Canaanites had reached its limit (cf. my devotional blog on Numbers 31 regarding the sin of Canaan). The inhabitants of the land had grown intolerably wicked, and divine justice demanded their expulsion, by any means necessary.

Canaan was now ready for conquest, and the Israelites were about to possess their promise, a land flowing with milk and honey. Some of the twelve tribes of Israel, however, didn’t want to go in. They didn’t want to take ownership of the land. They prefered to stay on the east side of the Jordan where there were lush plains of grazing land. From their pastoral perspective, this was the perfect place to feed their flocks, raise their kids and make a life.

Moses, however, didn’t take it kindly when the tribes of Gad and Reuben informed him of their hope to stay on the edge of the Promised Land. He charged them with being negligent in their duties to help expel the Canaanite nations on the other side of the Jordan River. He claimed their settling for the east would discourage the rest of the tribes forging ahead to lay claim to the west. He argued that they were simply repeating the same sin that kept their fathers out of the Promised Land. But after a good tongue lashing, he accepted their explanation for staying put as reasonable—not ideal, but reasonable. Yet even then, you get the feeling that Moses wasn’t totally comfortable with the idea, and his acceptance of their plan was couched in a severe warning about being unengaged in God’s mission for Israel in the years to come.

That’s the story. So what is the application for us today? Obviously there is a reason God included it in the Bible, so what are the take-away’s for us?

Perhaps there are many, but I will suggest this one: At times, God gives us a choice. Sometimes the choice is either this or that, and one is no better than the other. Then at other times, God says, “sure, you can choose, but what you want is less than my best.” So simply be aware that when God allows you to determine how you will walk out your faith, what he permits is not always what he will bless. At times God brings us to a place where the choice he allows us to make is not between good and bad, it is between better and best.

God’s deepest desire is to lead you to the best place a believer could ever hope for—but he gives you a choice. In that choice, don’t’ settle! Don’t surrender for second place. Don’t forfeit the potential for divine abundance because of a short-sighted desire for comfort and convenience. Don’t give up just shy of the thrill that awaits at the finish.

Too many Christians surrender to far less than what God has in mind for them just prior to the final push of obedience and sacrifice faith required to bring them into a land flowing with milk and honey. I am not sure what that means for you today, but I know that the choice you and I will face today and every day as we walk out our faith is settling for the good when God wants to give us the best.

Don’t settle, God has a land of promise for you!

Going Deeper: Is there an area of your life where you are tempted to settle for less than God’s best? Perhaps it is in waiting for a Christian spouse, or maybe the right job, or the resolution of a challenging problem or for the green light on a business opportunity. Sometimes it is perfectly clear that God has not given you a choice in walking out his will for you. In that case, offer him 100% obedience and trust. But if he has given you options—a choice between this or that—be very careful: Don’t forfeit a future of blessing for comfort and convenience in the moment!

God Doesn’t Need You To Defend Him

He Wants You To Trust His Loving But Just Character

With the things we don’t understand about God, and with the things the world shudders at about God, keep in mind that we don’t always need to defend him. God is perfectly suited to defend himself. We ought to arm ourselves with as much knowledge as we can through study, but at the end of the day, God is infinite—in being, in wisdom and in power. And we are not. So let God be God, and lean into his loving but just character!

The Journey // Focus: Numbers 31:1-2,7,13-18

The Lord said to Moses, “Take vengeance on the Midianites for the Israelites.” …Israel fought against Midian, as the Lord commanded Moses, and killed every man. …Moses, Eleazar the priest and all the leaders of the community went to meet them outside the camp. Moses was angry with the officers of the army—the commanders of thousands and commanders of hundreds—who returned from the battle. “Have you allowed all the women to live?” he asked them. “They were the ones who followed Balaam’s advice and enticed the Israelites to be unfaithful to the Lord in the Peor incident, so that a plague struck the Lord’s people. Now kill all the boys. And kill every woman who has slept with a man, but save for yourselves every girl who has never slept with a man.

What are we to do with the concept of holy war in the Bible? How are we to handle it when the Lord unleashes vengeance upon a nation? It is beyond our modern sensibilities that what we have come to understand as a New Testament God of love would order the annihilation of an entire people in the Old Testament. And annihilation is too clean of a word: men, women and children were put to death—by the sword—among other “unspeakable actions.”

Many have set forth scholarly and reasonable explanations for the concept of holy war, so I will allow you to explore those on your own should you desire to gain greater knowledge. I would simply say here, as I have often said in this journey through the Pentateuch, that context is everything. Keep in mind the progressive nature of what God is doing here: he is forming a people for himself. They have been called out from among the pagan nations, are being purged of the ungodly and brutal influences of those nations they have been among, and are now being fashioned into a nation themselves that is to be uniquely God’s and set apart in holiness for his sacred purposes. So God starts with where they are—a people without form and function—and be begins to give them both. Some of the laws and regulations that we read about are to be observed forever, some are for that time and place only, and some are for an indeterminate but definite period of time. Some of those Divine decrees won’t be needed once they are established in their Promised Land and a great many of them will go away entirely when the promised Messiah comes to establish the reign of God in the hearts of his people.

And that is precisely where the student of the Bible has to distinguish between the rigid letter of the law and the eternal principles of God.

Now what about this idea of holy war—which wouldn’t you agree after reading this account—war is hell? At this point, it will be helpful to consider the following article from the NIV Student Bible. While it doesn’t soften the tragedy of holy war, it does supply some of the contextual reasons for it:

The Old Testament makes clear that the Canaanites were not being uprooted on a sudden whim. God had promised the land to the Israelites over 400 years before Joshua. He had called one man, Abraham, to found a nation of chosen people. He repeated those promises often (see Genesis 12:1–3; 15:5–18; 17:2–8; 26:3,23–24; 28:13–14) and finally called the Israelites out of Egypt to take over the promised land. Almost from the beginning Canaan was a vital part of God’s plan. Israel’s inheritance, however, meant kicking out the Canaanites. How could innocent people simply be pushed aside, or killed? In answer to this question, the Bible makes clear that the Canaanites were not “innocent.” Through their long history of sin, they had forfeited their right to the land. Four hundred years before Joshua, God had told Abraham that his descendants would not occupy the land until the sin of its inhabitants had “reached its full measure” (Genesis 15:16). Later, just days before the onset of Joshua’s campaign, Moses stated, “It is not because of your righteousness or your integrity that you are going in to take possession of their land; but on account of the wickedness of these nations, the LORD your God will drive them out before you” (Deuteronomy 9:5). Historians have uncovered plenty of evidence of this wickedness. Canaanite temples featured prostitutes, orgies and human sacrifice. Relics and plaques of exaggerated sex organs hint at the immorality that characterized Canaan. Canaanite gods, such as Baal and his wife Anath, delighted in butchery and sadism. Archaeologists have found great numbers of jars containing the tiny bones of children sacrificed to Baal. Families seeking good luck in a new home practiced “foundation sacrifice.” They would kill one of their children and seal the body in the mortar of the wall. In many ways, Canaan had become like Sodom and Gomorrah. The Bible records that God has patience with decadent societies for a time, but judgment inevitably follows. For Sodom and Gomorrah it took the form of fire and brimstone. For Canaan it came through Joshua’s conquering armies. Later, God let his own chosen people be ravaged by invaders as punishment for their sins. The judgment pronounced on Canaan seems severe, but no more severe than what was later inflicted on Israel itself.

Keep in mind with the things we don’t understand about God, with the things the world shudders at, that we don’t always need to defend God. He is perfectly suited to defend himself. We ought to arm ourselves with as much knowledge as we can through study, but at the end of the day, God is infinite—in being, in wisdom and in power. And we are not.

Let God be God, and lean into his loving but just character. In the final analysis, God will be—and already is for that matter—justified in all his ways.

Going Deeper: If the reading today shakes you—and if you are ever shaken by the things you don’t fully comprehend about God—take a moment to prayerfully reflect on Hebrews 10:35, “Do not throw away your confidence; it will be richly rewarded.” Even when you don’t understand, you can trust in a God who is never evil, is always kind, but is too deep to always explain himself.