RAISE THE NEED, SIGNPOSTS, STATE THE DESTINATION
As we turn to the Old Testament book of Joshua, we’ll be covering a lot of ground today, but the main theme we’ll engage is the theme of rest. Chapters 13-22 could easily turn into three or four sermons, so we won’t be able to mention everything in those chapters. Here’s the headline summary of these chapters: There is a tension between God’s gift of the land to Israel and the reality that much of the land still remains in Canaanite hands. In other words: God promised to give them all the land of Canaan, which would give them rest, yet some of the land still isn’t theirs. They can’t rest yet. They’re still waiting on the promised rest of God. And I propose to you today that this theme of rest, this promise even of rest is something we are deeply in need of today, it’s something we too are waiting on, and as we consider these chapters, they will teach us about:
1. The Importance of Rest – Why do we need it?
SUMMARY OF THE TEXT
As I said, we cannot read all these chapters. You would be greatly benefited if you did so this week. But in order to set the stage, we’ll read three passages. One from the end of our section, another from the beginning, and then finally, a short verse from the New Testament book of Hebrews. We’ll flip around a lot today, so you’ll be helped to have a Bible out in front of you. We’ll begin in…
Joshua 21:43-45
43 Thus the Lord gave to Israel all the land that he swore to give to their fathers. And they took possession of it, and they settled there. 44 And the Lord gave them rest on every side just as he had sworn to their fathers. Not one of all their enemies had withstood them, for the Lord had given all their enemies into their hands. 45 Not one word of all the good promises that the Lord had made to the house of Israel had failed; all came to pass.
Notice what the passage says: the Lord gave them rest. All the promises came to pass. Not one word failed. But the author of Joshua creates tension on this point. Let’s turn back to…
Joshua 13:1
Now Joshua was old and advanced in years, and the Lord said to him, “You are old and advanced in years, and there remains yet very much land to possess.
Over the course of the next 7 chapters, the author highlights all of these cities and regions that the Canaanites still possess. Where there is no rest. So. On the one hand, they are promised rest, yet they don’t have it all—not completely. Not yet. That’s the tension of the book of Joshua. And that tension becomes a theme in the New Testament as well. So, turn over to…
Hebrews 4:8, 9
8 For if Joshua had given them rest, God would not have spoken of another day later on. 9 So then, there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God,
So, there it is. The Lord promised to give them rest, and yet, says Hebrews, the ministry of Joshua never provided the true, promised rest of God that they needed.
As we try to understand this tension, let’s begin by considering…
1. THE IMPORTANCE OF REST
Now, the theme of rest runs through the Bible. In the beginning. God made the world and rested on the 7th day. Later, when the world was broken and hurting by human sin, God raised up a man named Noah, whose name means, “Rest.” And before we can get to Joshua, we have to lay some groundwork.
As you trace God’s plans through the descendants of Abraham, you find them in Egypt. The children of Israel are enslaved for 400 years. If you read the stories in Exodus, you see their labor is hard and bitter. They are worked to death. They can never enjoy the products of their own labor. They aren’t allowed to rest or have a land of their own. God sends the deliverer, Moses to them and says, “In Egypt, you’re slaves. You work without rest. You can’t enjoy the fruit of your labor. I’m going to deliver you out of your slavery, I’ll bring you to myself and give you your own land. That’s what Joshua is all about: receiving, and taking possession of this promised land that God had given to them. God says “You will be my people. I will be your God. You’ll have your own houses, not slave quarters, your own vineyards, not Pharoah’s. You’ll be able to work and enjoy the fruit of your work.” And then God does something astounding.
On the mountain, God meets with Moses and gives him the 10 Commandments, written on stone. The commandments say things like Do Not Commit Adultery. Do not steal. Do Not Murder. And then, right in the center of the commandments is this command: Every seven days, cease working. Honor the Sabbath. Every seven days, I’m commanding you to rest. Has it ever struck you that in the 10 Laws God set at the center of human society, one of those 1o is a command to rest? Do you realize what this means? God says a society that idolizes overwork is as brutalizing as a society that encourages stealing, adultery, and murder.
Let’s think, for a moment, about…
THE COMPETITION FOR REST
As I read earlier, from Hebrews 4, the author of Hebrews tells us that the children of Israel failed to enter the rest that God promised.
8 For if Joshua had given them rest, God would not have spoken of another day later on.
What does it mean that Joshua didn’t give them rest? Well, what you see in Joshua 13-22 is that even though the Lord was gracious to give his people land, they did not take it all. They did not devote all of the land to the Lord. So, we see in:
In fact, Joshua says in Joshua 23:13 that if Israel embraces their Gods that the Canaanites will be like: a whip on your sides and thorns in your eyes, until you perish from off this good ground that the Lord your God has given you. Do you see what he’s saying? Worse than losing land, you’ll become slaves again. If you go after the Canaanite gods, you’ll never rest.
Sadly, as you read Joshua 13-22 you realize that all of these places that Israel failed to devote fully to the Lord—every last one competed with their devotion to the Lord, and turned the rest of Israel against the heart of the Lord.
Every place that they did not devote to the Lord, became a competition to their love of the Lord. You say, “How does this apply to me? I’m not Israel.” No, but the principle is still the same for us. Remember what I said… Within every human being, there is a spiritual restlessness, an impulse to prove ourselves. Listen! A competition to measure and justify ourselves by our work; to find our worth in our work.
Remember Chariots of Fire? The two Olympic runners, Eric Liddell and Harold Abrams. Abrams says, “I am forever in pursuit and I don’t even know what I’m chasing. In one hour’s time, I will be out there again. I will raise my eyes and look down that corridor; 4 feet wide with 10 lonely seconds to justify my existence. But will I?”
Or, listen to the words of Joanna Gaines, from her Magnolia Magazine. By the way, I don’t read the magazine, but I had to once waiting in a sonogram office with Chelsea and oddly enough, they didn’t have Guns & Ammo. Here’s Joanna:
We see the importance of rest, the competition of rest… finally…
3. THE ONE WHO GIVES US REST
Remember what I said at the beginning. There’s a tension in Joshua. There are all these places they haven’t taken from the Canaanites—and yet… God has promised to give them rest. And as you continue reading you realize that tension is never resolved in Joshua. It’s not resolved in Judges. And it’s not resolved in the rest of Israel’s history.
The people never devote the land entirely to God. They are ensnared by the idols of the nations. They’re carried off and made slaves in Babylon, and the rest of the Old Testament asks, “When will the people of God finally rest?” Joshua was unable to deliver the rest they needed. That’s because only foreshadowed the one who could truly bring rest. There was another Joshua to come – Jesus Christ. And when we read the life of Christ in the gospels we see that he’s the only human being in history who devoted himself fully to God. He’s the only human being who perfectly obeyed the laws and the commands and the purposes of God.
He’s constantly saying, “I’m not living for my own approval. I’m not living for my own glory.
John 6:38, Jesus says, 38 For I have come down from heaven, not to do my own will but the will of him who sent me. John 5:30 “I can do nothing on my own. I seek not my own will, but the will of him who sent me.” In other words, Jesus did, what Joshua couldn’t do. He devoted himself entirely to the Lord. There were no competing loves, no competing trusts in his life. Listen – he didn’t live for the approval of man. The religious leaders mocked him, and he never caved to pressure. His family didn’t believe in him, and it never moved him off his mission. He didn’t live for his own vainglory. He said, “The Son of Man didn’t come to be served, but to serve.” When you read the life of Jesus, you see that he devoted himself, he set himself completely apart to his Father in heaven.
This means, that if anyone in history deserved to rest, it was Jesus. If anyone earned the right to rest, it was Christ. And yet, in his life, he’s constantly saying, “The foxes have dens, the birds have nests, but I’ve got no place to rest my head.” And at the end of his life, devotion to the Lord does not lead him to rest. At the end of Jesus’ life, what happened? He’s chained. He’s bound. He’s made a slave, and the curse of Joshua 23 comes down on him. He’s whipped on his sides. And thorns are pressed into his eyes, and he perishes from off the earth.
But in his last breath, he cries out “It is finished.” What’s he saying? You can stop working for your worth. I have made an end to your striving. I am your worth. I am your treasure. If you have the approval of my faith in me, you have the rest that your soul needs. Come to me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. You can’t find rest by coming into a promised land. You can only find it by coming into a promised person—Jesus Christ.
Lay your deadly doing down.

