Fighting Temptation – Wanting only what you want
Joshua 7:16-26 16Joshua got up early in the morning, and he had Israel come
forward tribe by tribe. The tribe of Judah was identified. 17Then he
had the tribe of Judah come forward, and he identified the clan of the
Zerahites. Next, he had the clan of the Zerahites come forward by individual
familes, and Zabdi’s family was identified. 18Then he had Zabdi’s
household come forward one man at a time, and Achan the son of Carmi, the son
of Zabdi, the son of Zerah, from the tribe of Judah, was identified.
19Joshua
said to Achan, “My son, give glory now to the Lord,
the God of Israel, and give him praise. Now tell me what you
did. Do not conceal it from me.”
20Achan
answered Joshua, “It is true. I am the one who has sinned against the Lord, the God of Israel, and this is
what I did: 21Among the plunder I saw an expensive Mesopotamian robe, a fine one, and two hundred
shekels of silver and one wedge of gold—it weighed fifty shekels. I coveted
them and I took them. Now they are hidden in the ground inside my tent, and the
silver is underneath it.”
22So
Joshua sent agents. They ran to the tent, and there it was! The robe was hidden
in his tent, and the silver was underneath it! 23They took them from
the middle of the tent and brought them to Joshua and to all the people of
Israel, where they poured them out before the Lord.
24Then
Joshua took Achan son of Zerah and the silver, the garment, and the wedge of
gold, as well as Achan’s sons and his daughters, his ox, his donkey and his
flock, and his tent and everything that belonged to him—so all Israel, led by
Joshua, brought them up to the Valley of Achor.
25Joshua
said, “Why have you brought disaster on us? The Lord
will bring disaster on you this day!”
Then
all Israel stoned Achan to death. They also burned him and them with fire, and
they pelted them with stones. 26They erected a large heap of stones
over Achan, which remains to this day. Then the Lord
turned from the heat of his anger. For that reason the name of that place is
called the Valley of Achor to this day.
God
deals violently with sin.
That
is shocking to us. It seems so foreign to our way of thinking. We imagine sins
as being those little irritations with our children, or the constant
difficulties with our neighbors and co-workers, or the persistent aggravations by
our spouse.
We
cannot conceive how improper behaviors can give birth to total destruction of a
person’s life.
So
we delete the search history on our computer – just to avoid embarrassment -
believing what we’ve been viewing won’t hurt anyone.
We
copy from a classmate’s paper, presuming that it will help our grades in the
long-run.
We
fudge on our taxes, view social media while at work or get a little tipsy on
the weekend, certain that everyone else is doing it.
We
want to know everyone’s business and share everyone’s business, all under the guise
of being good stewards of information.
Call
these seemingly “minor” missteps or “insignificant” indiscretions what they
really are – transgressions against a holy and just God.
Sin
- even if we consider it small or accidental - is a powerful force. It has the potential
to bring self-destruction with it.
Termination
from a job. Loss of a scholarship. Audit by the IRS. Jail time. Loss of
reputation.
These
are possible violent and destructive restults of our sins. It doesn’t matter
whether we consider our sins accidental or purposeful, single or habitual. Transgressions
against God have disastrous results.
Even
though this destruction was brought on by your actions, the devastation can
still be felt by your family, your workplace, your church or elsewhere. They
are the unwitting and unwilling recipients of your self-destructive behavior.
Just
look at the account of Achan.
God
had commanded the Israelites to transgress the Jordan River. They were to march
around the fortified city of Jericho. God caused Jericho’s walls to collapse
(Joshua 6:20). The Israelite army charged in with God’s command to destroy every
living thing in the city with the sword. As Israel’s new leader, Joshua gave
the people God’s direction: “Keep
away from the devoted things, so that you will not bring about your own
destruction by taking any of them. Otherwise you will make the camp of Israel
liable to destruction and bring trouble on it. All
the silver and gold and the articles of bronze and iron are sacred to the Lord and must go into his treasury”
(Joshua 6:18-19).
Israel’s
next military target was the small city of Ai. Joshua sent only a small force
of three thousand soldiers. This should have been plenty of military manpower.
But the Israelites were routed and 36 soldiers were killed. The rest of the
army ran for their lives from puny Ai (Joshua 7:4-5). The Israelites were devastated
by this defeat. “The hearts of the people melted in fear and became like water”
(Joshua 7:5).
With
his clothes torn in grief and his face in the dirt in sorrow, Joshua poured out
his discouragement and disappointment to the Lord (Joshua 7:6-9). The Lord
answered Joshua’s prayer plainly: “Israel has sinned; they have violated my covenant, which
I commanded them to keep. They have taken some of the devoted things; they have
stolen, they have lied, they have put them with their own possessions. That
is why the Israelites cannot stand against their enemies; they turn their
backs and run because they have been made liable to destruction. I
will not be with you anymore unless you destroy whatever among you is
devoted to destruction” (Joshua 7:11-12).
God says that the Israelites “transgressed” his
covenant. The Lord uses the same Hebrew word that the Holy Spirit uses to refer
to the Israelites “transgressing” or “crossing” the Jordan River. The nation
that the Lord caused to cross over the Jordan into the Promised Land had now
crossed over and transgressed God’s covenant. They abused God’s grace. They had
become “devoted for destruction” until they destroyed the “devoted things.”
Achan is identified as the culprit. He gives his
confession. He bares all before Joshua, Israel and the Lord. But it comes too
late. He admits his sin was not a momentary weakness. It was calculated. He
admits: “I saw … coveted … took” (Joshua 7:21). The hiding made it a continuing
act of evil, not a one-time action. Achan details what he stole from the Lord –
a beautiful, expensive, imported Babylonian robe; 200 shekels or about 5 pounds
of silver (worth $1000 today); a wedge of gold weighing 50 shekels or about 1 ¼
pounds (worth $25,000 today).
The very dirt of God’s Promised Land was used for
the dirty work of covenant violation and cover-up. It was a tragic twisting of
God’s blessings for Achan to use these gifts for evil instead of for God’s
glory.
Achan, the troubler, is taken into the valley
that would then be known as the Valley of Achor – the Valley of Trouble. God
deals violently with the sins. The nation that had been brought trouble and
death by Achan hurls stones upon him. Then, he is burned. A large heap of
stones is erected over Achan’s corpse. When Israel first entered the Promised
Land, two stone memorials were created near the Jordan River as a memorial for
God keeping his covenant (Joshua 4:9, 20). The stone memorial in the valley served
as a warning about disobeying God’s covenant.
We can so easily see ourselves in Achan.
God
has told us what is holy. We desire what is off-limits. God tells us “no.” We
say, “yes.” He commands us to stay away from something. We transgress his
commands to go directly toward that something. We want only what we want and
ignore what God wants. We are supposed to be battling temptation, but we don’t
even put up a fight!
We
believe the delusion that we can cover up our pet behaviors, our accidental
indiscretions, and our willful disobedience. Rather than praying that we don’t
commit the sins, how often don’t we pray that our sins remain covered?!
And
when they are uncovered and everything is laid bare, how do we react? We cry
out to God that it is unfair that our lives have self-destructed!
Before
we find ourselves in the valley of trouble, let us turn to Jesus. He was no
stranger to temptation. He battled, yet was without sin. Christ is with us
fighting temptation so we want what he wants.
We
are guilty of transgressing God’s commandments. For our transgressions, Jesus
transgressed the line between divinity and humaity. He transgressed the line of
covering his holiness with our sinfulness. He transgressed the line that should
not be crossed – the God of the living died!
Then
the God who died returned to life again! He transgressed that line when he victoriously
rose from the tomb. He gives that resurrection life to us as we fight the devil’s
temptation to keep leading us into the valley of death. The open tomb remains a
stone memorial of Christ keeping God’s covenant promise to humanity.
God
held the entire nation of Israel accountable for Achan’s sin. “The Israelites
were unfaithful in regard to the devastated things” (Joshua 7:1). The sin of one
man, Achan, resulted in defeat and death for the Israelites at Ai. The sin of
one man, Adam, resulted in death spreading to all people and defeat overcoming
all creation (Romans 5:12). But one Man, Jesus Christ, has brought eternal life
and glorious victory to all people through his death and resurrection.
Achan’s sin was so
offensive to the Lord because of one Hebrew word – cherem. It means “something totally devoted to the Lord and no one else.”
It’s bad enough when you take what belongs to someone else. Achan sinned by taking
what belonged to the Lord.
No wonder God was so violently angry!
When we do not
raise our children in God’s Word and church, but devote our time to other pursuits,
we have stolen their time from God.
When we spend our
money on our pleasures, instead of devoting our offerings to the Lord for his
ministry, then we have stolen money from God.
When we indulge
our eyes or bodies in unclean sex, instead of devoting our bodies as temples to
the Lord, then we have stolen our bodies from God.
No wonder God is
so violently angry!
This is why Jesus’
whole life was cherem. Jesus knew
every fiber of his existence was totally devoted to God. He knew that if he
fell for even the slightest of Satan’s temptations, he would be stealing from
his heavenly Father.
In the desert,
throughout his ministry, during his trials, beating and crucifixion, Jesus
remained totally devoted to God. He achieved complete victory over sin, death
and Satan through his complete cherem.
Jesus was devoted
to taking our sins and giving us his righteousness in return.
Jesus took the rich
robes of our pompous pride. He gave us the white robes of his holiness in
return.
Jesus took our
silver-tongued alibis. He gave us tongues to praise our God in return.
Jesus took the fool’s
gold of our phony holiness. He gave us our names written in the Book of Life in
return.
Jesus took all our sinful treasures and buried them
deep in his body and soul. Then he stood before God’s law as a guilty sinner. God’s
law buried Jesus, not under a pile of stones, but under the mountain of divine
wrath.
God
deals violently with sin.
God
could not overlook and ignore Achan’s sin. So, Achan was stoned in the valley.
His was a violent death.
God
could not and does not overlook or ignore our sins. Though we may consider our
sins inconsequential or insignificant, puny or pet – God considers them as
breaking his covenant with us. So Jesus was crucified on the hill. His was a
violent death.
Achan’s
sin had robbed the entire nation of purity and holiness. God removed the curse
on the Israelites after Achan’s death in the Valley of Achor. Adam’s sin in the
Garden robbed all humanity of purity and holiness. God removed the curse after his
Son’s death on Calvary’s hill. More than that, God has given his Son’s purity and
holiness to the entirety of humanity.
Jesus’
violent, bloody death gives his obedience to those he came to save. He allows
us to be the undeserving and privileged recipients of his sacrifice.
God
deals violently with sin. Being the recipients of the Son of God’s obedient
life and violent death is striking. It strengthens our resolve because the Son
of God is helping us fight temptations. The Son of God gives his strength to us
to traverse in the other direction rather than transgress God’s commands. He
empowers us to say “No,” even when no one else is looking. He enables us to
want what God wants. Amen.
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