Week 15 — Table of Contents
- April 9, 2026
- April 10, 2026
- April 11, 2026
- April 12, 2026
- April 13, 2026
- April 14, 2026
- April 15, 2026
April 9, 2026
Joshua 1:1–2:24; Luke 12:35–59; Psalm 43:1–5
Joshua 1:1–2:24
The death of Moses creates a silence that God fills immediately. He speaks to Joshua before Joshua has a chance to grieve his way into paralysis: Moses my servant is dead. Now therefore arise, go over this Jordan, you and all this people, into the land that I am giving to them. The transition is abrupt in the text and deliberately so: God’s purposes do not pause for mourning, and the same God who was with Moses will be with Joshua. The promise is stated four times in four verses, each repetition reinforcing the same foundation: I will be with you. Not the same strategies, not the same style, not the same gifts. The same God.
The command to be strong and courageous appears three times in the commission, and each occurrence is tied to a specific reason. Be strong because you will cause this people to inherit the land I swore to their fathers. Be strong because I am with you wherever you go. Be strong, for the book of the law shall not depart from your mouth; you shall meditate on it day and night, so that you may be careful to do according to all that is written in it. Courage is not a character trait to be cultivated in isolation but the fruit of specific knowledge: the promise is real, the presence is real, and the Word is sufficient. Meditation on the law is not a devotional practice separated from the courage required; it is its source.
Rahab is one of the most theologically significant figures in the entire book, and her significance begins before any of her actions. She is a Canaanite, a prostitute, and a woman, three categories that would have placed her at the periphery of any Israelite expectation about who the God of Israel might save. When she hides the spies and makes her case for her family’s preservation, she does it by declaring what she knows about the LORD: she has heard what He did at the Red Sea and to the two kings of the Amorites, and her heart melted and there was no spirit left in any man because of you. Her theology is more accurate and more urgent than that of many Israelites, and she acts on it before the spies can do anything to earn her help. Faith that comes from hearing, expressed in action at personal risk, is what the text holds up as the model of genuine response to God’s works.
Luke 12:35–59
The parables of watchfulness in this section of Luke are strung together with the urgency of someone who knows that the moment of decision is closer than it looks. Dress for action, keep your lamps burning, be like men who are waiting for their master to return from the wedding feast, so that when he comes and knocks you may immediately open to him. The image is domestic and specific: servants who have stayed awake and ready rather than sleeping their way through the hours of waiting. The master who returns and finds them awake will dress himself for service and have them recline at table and come and serve them, which is one of the most strikingly reversed images of the kingdom in the Gospels.
Peter asks whether the parable is for them or for everyone, and Jesus does not directly answer but expands into the parable of the faithful and wise manager. The one who is put in charge and is found doing his duty when the master returns will be given greater responsibility; the one who says the master is delayed and begins beating the servants and eating and drinking will be cut in pieces. The question of for whom the parable is meant is answered by the question of what the hearer is actually doing with it: the person who finds themselves thinking about when the master might return rather than about what the master would want them to be doing has already answered Peter’s question about themselves.
I came to cast fire on the earth, and would that it were already kindled. Jesus speaks of His coming not as a peaceable arrival but as the throwing of fire, the creating of division, even within households: father against son, mother against daughter. Then He turns to the crowd and rebukes them for their ability to read a cloud from the west as rain and a south wind as heat but their inability to read the present moment. You know how to interpret the appearance of earth and sky, but why do you not know how to interpret the present time? The meteorological intelligence and the spiritual blindness coexist in the same people, and the combination is not a minor failing but a crisis.
Psalm 43:1–5
The psalmist asks God to vindicate him against an ungodly nation and against deceitful and unjust men, which places the prayer in the context of a specific injustice rather than a general spiritual malaise. He has been displaced from where he belongs, and the displacement is the occasion for the deepest longing in the psalm: send out your light and your truth; let them lead me; let them bring me to your holy hill and to your dwelling. The request is not for safety or revenge but for guidance back to the place of God’s presence. The pain of the displacement has clarified what he actually wants.
Then I will go to the altar of God, to God my exceeding joy, and I will praise you with the lyre, O God, my God. The promised praise is not a payment owed for answered prayer but the natural expression of arriving at the destination the prayer is reaching toward. The altar of God is where he belongs, and arriving there will produce praise the way arriving home after a long journey produces relief. The joy is not separate from the place; the place is where the joy lives.
Why are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you in turmoil within me? Hope in God; for I shall again praise him, my salvation and my God. The refrain returns from Psalm 42 with the same diagnostic question and the same prescription, but now it is not in the middle of the lament but at its close, and it functions as both a summary and a landing: the soul that has been tumbling through distress and displacement and longing is commanded to find its ground in the God who is both salvation and personal possession. The hope does not depend on the vindication having arrived; it depends on who will eventually provide it.
Together
God’s commission to Joshua and Jesus’ parables of watchfulness are both addressed to people standing at a threshold: Joshua on the east bank of the Jordan with the land before him, the disciples waiting in the uncertain hours between the promise and its fulfillment. Both commissions are organized around the same instruction: do not be afraid, stay ready, do what you know to do, because the one who sent you is also the one who is coming. Joshua’s courage is grounded in the presence and the Word; the servants’ readiness is grounded in knowledge of who their master is and what his return will mean.
Rahab’s faith and the crowd’s inability to read the present time in Luke are mirror images of each other. Rahab has heard what God has done from a distance, across enemy lines, in a city that is about to be judged, and she believes it thoroughly enough to act on it at risk to her life. The crowd in Luke has seen what God is doing in Jesus with their own eyes, in their own territory, among their own people, and they cannot interpret it, not because they lack the information but because they have not been willing to follow where the information leads. Hearing and responding are two different acts, and Rahab’s distance from Israel made her response more costly and more deliberate than the crowd’s proximity to Jesus made theirs.
Psalm 43’s longing for the altar, for the holy hill, for the place where God’s light and truth can lead: this is what the servants’ readiness in Luke is really about, and what Joshua’s courage is really for. The destination of the whole narrative is not military victory or even the promised land but the place where God dwells and His people worship. The lamp kept burning through the night, the Jordan crossed in the morning, the praise offered at the altar: all are movements toward the same center, the presence of the one who is both salvation and exceeding joy.
April 10, 2026
Joshua 3:1–5:12; Luke 13:1–30; Proverbs 9:1–12
Joshua 3:1–5:12
The crossing of the Jordan is staged liturgically rather than militarily, which is itself the point. The ark of the covenant leads the way, carried by the priests, and the people are to follow at a distance of about two thousand cubits so that they can see it and know the way to go, for they have not passed this way before. The distance from the ark is not reverential detachment but the practical requirement for visibility: the people need to be able to see where the presence of God is going in order to follow it. The theology of the crossing is established before the miracle happens: this is a passage led by God’s presence, not by military intelligence.
When the priests’ feet touch the water of the Jordan, the waters rising from above stand and rise up in a heap far away, at Adam, the city that is beside Zarethan, and those flowing down toward the Sea of the Arabah, the Salt Sea, are completely cut off. The people pass over on dry ground while the priests stand firm on dry ground in the midst of the Jordan until all the nation has finished passing over. The echo of the Red Sea crossing is deliberate: the same God who opened the sea for Moses has opened the river for Joshua, and the theological continuity is as important as the geographical arrival. The new generation is experiencing its own exodus.
The twelve stones from the riverbed are installed at Gilgal as a permanent question-generator: when your children ask in times to come, “What do these stones mean to you?” the stones are designed to produce the question that requires the telling of the story. Memory is not preserved by stones but by the stories the stones provoke, and the stones are placed so that the story will be required for as long as the community inhabits the land. The circumcision at Gilgal removes the reproach of Egypt, and the Passover eaten in the plains of Jericho marks the end of the manna: they eat of the fruit of the land, and the manna ceases. The wilderness provision ends precisely when the land’s provision begins; God does not overlap His gifts unnecessarily.
Luke 13:1–30
The report of Galileans whose blood Pilate mixed with sacrifices and the eighteen killed by the falling tower at Siloam give Jesus the occasion for a sharp theological correction. The questioners assume that these deaths indicate special sinfulness in the victims; Jesus denies this twice and then adds the same warning twice: unless you repent, you will all likewise perish. The assumption He is refusing is the assumption that suffering is evidence of divine judgment on the one who suffers, and the warning He is giving is that this comfortable reassignment of responsibility keeps people from attending to their own repentance. The deaths of others are not diagnostic of their spiritual state; they are a summons to examine your own.
The parable of the barren fig tree is one of Jesus’ most compassionate parables. The vineyard owner wants to cut down the tree that has produced no fruit in three years; the vinedresser asks for one more year: let me dig around it and put on manure, and then if it should bear fruit next year, well and good; but if not, you can cut it down. The vinedresser’s intervention is not a denial of the owner’s authority but an extension of the patience, a willingness to do the hard work of remediation before the final decision. The manure and the digging are not pleasant, and they are offered as the last gift before the end. God’s patience is not passive; it is active, costly, and temporary.
The healing of the crippled woman on the Sabbath and the parables of the mustard seed and the leaven are three quick movements that together describe the kingdom’s logic. The woman has been bent double for eighteen years and is straightened by a word; the ruler of the synagogue is indignant because it is the Sabbath; Jesus exposes the hypocrisy with a question: do you not on the Sabbath untie your ox or donkey and lead it to water? This woman is a daughter of Abraham whom Satan bound for eighteen years. She belongs to the covenant community; she has been imprisoned within it while its leaders were protecting the rule. The kingdom heals what religion has failed to free. And that kingdom, though it begins as a mustard seed and a pinch of leaven, is heading somewhere that the narrow door of genuine repentance is the only entrance to.
Proverbs 9:1–12
Wisdom has built her house of seven pillars, slaughtered her beasts, mixed her wine, set her table, and sent her young women to call from the heights of the city. She is the most prepared host in ancient literature, and her invitation is addressed to the simple: whoever is simple, let him turn in here. To him who lacks sense she says, “Come, eat of my bread and drink of the wine I have mixed. Leave your simple ways, and live, and walk in the way of insight.” The invitation is not to those who have already achieved wisdom but to those who know they lack it, and the condition of entry is the willingness to leave what they have been doing and turn toward something better.
Do not reprove a scoffer, or he will hate you; reprove a wise man, and he will love you. Give instruction to a wise man, and he will be still wiser; teach a righteous man, and he will increase in learning. The test of whether someone is wise is not their intelligence but their response to correction. The scoffer and the wicked turn correction into an occasion for hatred and personal harm; the wise person turns it into an occasion for growth. The capacity to receive reproof without retaliation is not a personality type but a measure of the formation that wisdom has accomplished; it requires a self that is secure enough not to be threatened by the news that it was wrong.
The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom, and knowledge of the Holy One is understanding. He will be multiplied by wisdom’s years are added to him. The fear of the LORD is not the whole of wisdom but its beginning, which means everything wisdom offers is available to the person who starts there and unavailable to the person who does not. The reverential recognition of who God is, before any other knowledge is acquired, is the epistemic posture that makes everything else learnable. The person who scoffs has decided that their own perspective is the measure of things, which is the decision that closes the door to wisdom before it has been opened.
Together
The twelve memorial stones at Gilgal and wisdom’s seven-pillared house are both structures built to welcome and to teach. The stones answer the children’s question with the story of the crossing; wisdom’s house answers the simple person’s need with bread and wine and instruction. Both are invitations to enter a story larger than the one the uninformed person is currently inhabiting, and both require a willingness to come in: to cross the Jordan and inhabit the land, to leave simple ways and walk in the way of insight. The entrance in each case is not passive; it requires the turning toward something better than what one has been doing.
Jesus’ teaching about repentance in Luke 13, the barren fig tree given one more year, and the narrow door all express the same urgency that wisdom’s invitation carries. The invitation to leave simple ways and live has a time limit, just as the fig tree’s reprieve has a time limit and the narrow door closes when the master of the house rises and shuts it. The kingdom that begins as a mustard seed is heading toward a full-grown tree; the leaven is working through the whole lump; and when the process is complete, those who stood outside saying “We ate and drank in your presence” will find the door shut. The invitation is now, while the vinedresser is still digging and the door is still open.
Proverbs’ observation that the wise person loves correction while the scoffer hates the one who reproves them is the key to all three passages. The Galileans’ deaths and the tower’s fall are occasions for correction that the questioners are trying to redirect toward the victims. The barren fig tree and the narrow door are both images of the cost of failing to respond to correction in time. Wisdom’s feast is set and the invitation is sent, and the response that gains entry is the response that can hear “leave your simple ways” as good news rather than insult. The kingdom’s entrance and wisdom’s entrance require the same thing: the humility to be corrected, and the courage to turn.
April 11, 2026
Joshua 5:13–7:26; Luke 13:31–14:14; Psalm 44:1–12
Joshua 5:13–7:26
The commander of the LORD’s army who meets Joshua outside Jericho does not come as a subordinate of Israel’s military campaign but as a reminder of whose campaign this actually is. When Joshua asks whether this figure is for Israel or for their adversaries, the answer refuses the frame: neither, I am the commander of the LORD’s army. The battle of Jericho is not Israel’s battle with divine assistance; it is the LORD’s battle in which Israel participates. Joshua’s first response is to fall on his face and ask what his lord says to his servant, which is the correct posture: the commander has arrived, and Joshua’s role is to receive orders.
The strategy God gives for Jericho is deliberately military nonsense. March around the city once a day for six days, with seven priests bearing trumpets before the ark; on the seventh day, march around seven times and then blow the trumpets and shout. There is no siege, no assault, no battering rams. The walls will fall when the people shout, which means the walls cannot be attributed to any human military competence. The battle plan is designed to make the victory inexplicable except by reference to God. Israel’s obedience is the instrument of the miracle, but the obedience itself is not the miracle: the walls fall because God throws them down.
Achan’s sin transforms the narrative without warning. After the spectacular victory at Jericho, the small city of Ai defeats an Israelite contingent and sends them fleeing, and Joshua tears his clothes and falls before the ark until evening. God’s explanation is precise: Israel has sinned; they have transgressed my covenant; they have taken some of the devoted things. The defeat at Ai is not a military setback but a theological rupture: the holiness that made the campaign possible has been compromised from within. When Achan is identified by lot and his sin exposed, he confesses fully and immediately, but the confession comes after the damage is done, and his whole household is destroyed in the valley of Achor. The hidden thing has become the most public thing, and what was taken from the ruins of Jericho has ruined what should have followed.
Luke 13:31–14:14
The Pharisees warn Jesus that Herod wants to kill Him, and His response is one of the most magnificent in the Gospels: Go and tell that fox, behold, I cast out demons and perform cures today and tomorrow, and the third day I finish my course. Jesus has a schedule, and Herod is not in charge of it. He must go to Jerusalem not because Herod has forced Him there but because it cannot be that a prophet should perish away from Jerusalem. The irony is devastating: the city that kills the prophets is the city He must go to, and He goes not in flight but in deliberate fulfilment.
His lament over Jerusalem is one of the most emotionally charged passages in the Gospels: O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it. How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you were not willing. The image of the hen is intimate and maternal and achingly specific: wings spread, brood nearby, protection offered. And the city has refused it, not once but repeatedly, as the “how often” implies a history of offered gathering that precedes even this moment. Behold, your house is left to you desolate.
The healing of the man with dropsy on the Sabbath and the teaching on seats at the feast are both studies in the inversion of the kingdom’s logic. Jesus heals on the Sabbath and is answered by silence when He asks whether it is lawful, because the objectors know what the honest answer is and will not say it. He then watches guests choose the best seats and tells a parable about how the person who assumes the best seat will be told to move down, while the person who takes the lowest place will be invited up. When you give a feast, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind: those who cannot repay you. The feast that cannot be repaid will be repaid at the resurrection of the just. The kingdom’s economy runs on gifts that have no human rate of return.
Psalm 44:1–12
The psalm opens with an extended meditation on what the ancestors told them: God drove out the nations with His hand, planted Israel, saved them not by their sword, for their arm did not save them, but by your right hand and your arm and the light of your face, for you delighted in them. The tradition of received memory is being honored before it is held in tension with present experience: the fathers told us, and what they told us is true, which is exactly why what is happening now is so disorienting. The problem is not that the tradition is false; it is that the present experience does not match what the tradition would lead them to expect.
Yet you have rejected and disgraced us and have not gone out with our armies. You made us turn back from the foe, and those who hate us have gotten spoil. You have sold your people for a trifle. The accusation is theological and direct, and it is addressed to God in the second person: you, not fate, not the enemy’s superior strategy. The psalmist is not losing faith in God’s existence or power; he is demanding an account of God’s actions, which is a far more intimate and dangerous kind of prayer than the polite distance that passes for faith when things are going well.
You have made us like sheep for slaughter and have scattered us among the nations. You have sold your people for a trifle and have not increased your wealth by their price. All this has come upon us, though we have not forgotten you, and we have not been false to your covenant. The protest is that the suffering cannot be explained by apostasy, because they have not been apostate. The psalm is sitting in the most difficult theological territory in Scripture: suffering that is not the result of sin, endured by people who have remained faithful. God has allowed it. The psalmist says so directly.
Together
The commander of the LORD’s army at Jericho and Jesus setting His face toward Jerusalem are both figures who refuse to have their mission framed by anyone else’s agenda. The commander is neither for Israel nor for their adversaries; he is for the LORD’s purposes. Jesus is not deterred by Herod’s threat; he must go because that is where the course ends. Both are oriented toward a destination that the people around them cannot fully see and are moving toward it with a clarity that looks from the outside like either recklessness or sovereignty, and is in fact both.
Achan’s hidden thing that ruins everything and the psalm’s protest of faithfulness amid suffering are opposite cases of the same theological question: what is the relationship between human behavior and divine action? Achan’s hidden sin disrupts the campaign because God has said it will; the psalmist’s faithful behavior does not prevent the disaster because God has allowed it anyway. Together they form a picture of a God who is neither mechanically predictable nor arbitrarily capricious: He responds to covenant faithfulness and covenant violation, but in ways and at times that are not available for human calculation. The person who thinks they have God’s responses mapped has not been reading carefully enough.
Jesus’ teaching on the lowest seat and the guests who cannot repay the feast is wisdom’s kingdom economics applied to social life, and it stands in illuminating contrast to the Pharisees’ table politics and Achan’s calculation that the gold and silver of Jericho were worth concealing. The Pharisees are maximizing social position; Achan was maximizing material gain; both calculations ignore the economy that actually governs the kingdom. The feast to which the poor and crippled are invited, the seat given to the one who took the lowest place, the victory that cannot be credited to military competence: all are expressions of a kingdom that runs on different mathematics than the surrounding world and cannot be navigated by the maximizing strategies the surrounding world teaches.
April 12, 2026
Joshua 8:1–9:15; Luke 14:15–35; Psalm 44:13–26
Joshua 8:1–9:15
The battle of Ai is won by the strategy God provides: set an ambush behind the city, draw the defenders out by feigning flight, then have the ambush rise and take the city while the main force turns back. The strategy is straightforwardly military, in contrast to Jericho’s shout and trumpet, and the juxtaposition is instructive. God is not committed to making every victory miraculous in the same way; He uses different means at different times, and the consistent element is not the method but the command to engage under His direction and with His assurance. Military intelligence applied under God’s commission is as much His work as the walls that fell without a weapon being swung.
After the victory, Joshua builds an altar to the LORD on Mount Ebal and reads the whole law to the assembled community: men, women, little ones, and the sojourners who lived among them. The ceremony is precisely as Moses commanded, blessings from Gerizim and curses from Ebal, with the ark in the valley between them. The military victory is consecrated by covenant renewal before the next campaign begins, which is the pattern the whole book is trying to establish: the campaign is not separate from the covenant but flows from it and returns to it.
The Gibeonite deception is one of the most psychologically acute passages in Joshua. The Gibeonites hear what Israel has done to Jericho and Ai and act with cunning: they put on worn-out sacks and patched wineskins, took old sacks and old worn-out sandals on their feet, old cloaks on themselves, and all their provisions were dry and crumbled. They come to Joshua at Gilgal claiming to be from a far country, and the critical note is precise: the men of Israel did not ask counsel from the LORD. Joshua and the leaders taste the dry bread and examine the worn-out wineskins and are satisfied by the physical evidence. They make a covenant without praying. The evidence was manipulated specifically to prevent the kind of careful inquiry that would have exposed the deception, and the Israelite leaders obliged by not inquiring past the physical evidence. What we fail to bring to God we are left to evaluate with only our own perception.
Luke 14:15–35
The parable of the great banquet is addressed to someone who says, at the table, “Blessed is everyone who will eat bread in the kingdom of God,” which sounds pious but may be functioning as a way to avoid the more demanding question of whether they themselves will be among those who eat there. Jesus tells the story of the man who gives a great banquet and sends his servant to tell the guests that everything is ready. The guests begin to make excuses: I bought a field, I must go see it; I bought five yoke of oxen, I must examine them; I have married a wife, I cannot come. The excuses are all reasonable and all reveal the same underlying reality: the banquet is not the priority.
The master’s response is anger and an expanded guest list: go out quickly to the streets and lanes of the city and bring in the poor and crippled and blind and lame. When there is still room, he sends to the highways and hedges, compelling people to come in, so that my house may be filled. For I tell you, none of those men who were invited shall taste my banquet. The parable is not primarily about social justice, though it includes it; it is primarily about the danger of the prior claim. The people who had the first invitation are the people who had the most reason to be ready, and their readiness was entirely undermined by what they had acquired in the meantime. The field and the oxen were not wrong in themselves; they became wrong when they functioned as reasons not to come.
Jesus turns from the parable to direct teaching about the cost of discipleship, and the escalation is deliberate. If anyone comes to me and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be my disciple. The word “hate” is not a counsel of emotional hostility but of comparative priority: in the ancient idiom of comparison, to love X and hate Y means to choose X over Y when the choice must be made. Every other claim, family, possession, life itself, must rank below the claim of Jesus when the two come into conflict. Then the images of the builder who counts the cost and the king who calculates before going to battle: discipleship is not entered into casually, and the person who does not count the cost before committing will not sustain the commitment when the cost arrives.
Psalm 44:13–26
The lament intensifies as the psalmist describes the nations’ mockery: you have made us a byword among the nations, a laughingstock among the peoples; all day long my disgrace is before me and shame has covered my face at the sound of the taunter and reviler, at the sight of the enemy and the avenger. The shame is public and relentless, and it is being experienced by people who have maintained their covenant faithfulness. They have not forgotten the name of God or spread out their hands to a foreign god, and God knows this, because He knows the secrets of the heart.
Yet for your sake we are killed all the day long; we are regarded as sheep to be slaughtered. The phrase “for your sake” is the most important in the psalm. The suffering is not random and not the result of their own unfaithfulness; it is connected to their belonging to God. Being known as God’s people has made them targets rather than protecting them, and the lament is addressed to the God whose name has become the occasion for their suffering. This is the most honest possible prayer: God, being yours is what has put us here.
Awake! Why are you sleeping, O Lord? Rouse yourself! Do not reject us forever! Why do you hide your face? Why do you forget our affliction and oppression? For our soul is bowed down to the dust; our belly clings to the ground. Rise up; come to our help! Redeem us for the sake of your steadfast love! The language of God sleeping and hiding is not theology properly considered but prayer honestly felt, and the psalmist is not rebuked for it in the text. The appeal at the end is to God’s steadfast love rather than to Israel’s merit, which is always the right ground for the final appeal. Redeem us not because we deserve it but because you are the one who does that.
Together
The Gibeonites’ deception of Joshua through physical evidence he did not inquire past, and the parable of the banquet guests whose field and oxen and new wife were good enough reasons not to come: both are portraits of how legitimate things become obstacles when they are allowed to substitute for inquiry, attention, and the willingness to be where one is supposed to be. Joshua had physical evidence; he needed prayer. The guests had real possessions and real commitments; they needed to come to the feast. In both cases, what is present and visible crowds out what is required and unseen.
The psalm’s protest that the suffering is happening for God’s sake, and Jesus’ teaching that following Him requires being willing to lose everything including life, are both naming the same uncomfortable reality from different angles. The psalmist is discovering it from the inside of unexplained suffering; Jesus is announcing it in advance to those who might not have counted the cost. Both are resisting the assumption that belonging to God is a protection from loss. Belonging to God is itself the reason for the vulnerability, and the response the psalm models and Jesus commands is not the renegotiation of the terms but the continued trust in the one who set them.
Psalm 44’s final appeal, redeem us for the sake of your steadfast love, is the prayer the banquet parable is teaching people to learn to need. The guests who declined the invitation never got to the place of needing redemption because they never ran out of their own resources: the field and the oxen and the marriage were still sufficient. The sheep counted for slaughter in the psalm have run out of everything except the appeal to God’s steadfast love, which turns out to be the only appeal that has ever worked. The cost Jesus commends counting is the cost of arriving at exactly this place: nothing left but the steadfast love, which is the only thing that was ever enough.
April 13, 2026
Joshua 9:16–10:43; Luke 15:1–32; Psalm 45:1–9
Joshua 9:16–10:43
When Israel discovers the Gibeonite deception three days later, the congregation murmurs against the leaders, which is a recurring pattern in the wilderness now reappearing in the land. The leaders hold to the oath they swore in the LORD’s name and do not kill the Gibeonites but make them woodcutters and water-carriers for the congregation and for the altar of the LORD. The oath sworn without inquiring of the LORD is still a binding oath once it has been sworn, because oaths invoke the LORD’s name and the LORD’s name is not a legal technicality that can be voided when it becomes inconvenient. The consequences of the uninquired oath are permanent, but the oath must be kept.
The battle of Gibeon is one of the most spectacular in the entire Old Testament. The five Amorite kings attack Gibeon because they have made peace with Israel, and the Gibeonites call on Joshua for help. God tells Joshua: do not fear them, for I have given them into your hands. Not one of them shall stand before you. Israel marches through the night, arrives suddenly, and the LORD throws the Amorite army into a panic; He also throws great stones of hail on them as they flee, and the stones kill more than the swords do. Then Joshua prays for the sun and moon to stand still, and they do, until the nation took vengeance on their enemies. There has been no day like it before or since, when the LORD heeded the voice of a man.
The summary of the southern campaign in the chapter’s second half is stated with deliberate theological compression: Joshua struck the whole land, the hill country and the Negeb and the lowland and the slopes, and all their kings. He left none remaining, but devoted to destruction all that breathed, just as the LORD God of Israel commanded. The moral difficulty of these passages is real and must not be evaded, but the narrative’s own logic is consistent: what is devoted to destruction is not destroyed arbitrarily but as the judicial judgment of a God who has waited four hundred years since the iniquity of the Amorites was declared not yet complete. The execution of judgment on a civilization whose wickedness has reached its full measure is not the same moral category as conquest for empire.
Luke 15:1–32
The three parables of the lost in Luke 15 are Jesus’ response to the Pharisees’ murmuring that this man receives sinners and eats with them, which means they are the primary audience even though the parables are spoken to the crowd. The lost sheep, the lost coin, and the lost son all make the same point with escalating intimacy: there is more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who need no repentance. The Pharisees who murmur about Jesus eating with sinners have positioned themselves as the ninety-nine, and the parables are asking them to consider whether that position is as comfortable as it seems.
The father of the prodigal son runs to meet him when he is still a long way off, which is the detail that gives the parable its emotional weight. He does not wait for his son to complete the journey; he has been watching for him, and when he sees him he does not walk to meet him: he runs. He falls on his neck and kisses him before the son can finish his prepared speech, cuts him off at the part about making me like one of your hired servants, and calls for the robe and the ring and the sandals and the fattened calf. The celebration is immediate, extravagant, and entirely initiated by the father. The son’s repentance is real and necessary, but it is not the cause of the reception; it is the occasion for the father to do what he has been waiting to do.
The older son’s anger is the parable’s final and most pointed movement. He will not go in, and when the father comes out to him he rehearses his obedience: these many years I have served you and never disobeyed your command. The father’s response is one of the tenderest in Scripture: Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours. It was fitting to celebrate and be glad, for this your brother was dead and is alive; he was lost and is found. The older son’s problem is not his obedience but his failure to receive the father’s joy as his own. He has been in the house all along and has not been enjoying it. He has been working for a father he does not know, and the celebration of his brother’s return exposes it.
Psalm 45:1–9
The royal psalm opens with a declaration of the poet’s own overflow: my heart overflows with a pleasing theme; I address my verses to the king; my tongue is like the pen of a ready scribe. The poet cannot contain what he has to say and the saying itself is a pleasure: you are the most handsome of the sons of men; grace is poured upon your lips; therefore God has blessed you forever. The beauty and grace of this king are not merely aesthetic; they are signs of divine favor that express themselves in the king’s character and his speech.
Gird your sword on your thigh, O mighty one, in your splendor and majesty. In your majesty ride out victoriously for the cause of truth and meekness and righteousness; let your right hand teach you awesome deeds. Your arrows are sharp in the heart of the king’s enemies; the peoples fall under you. The martial imagery is placed explicitly in the service of truth and meekness and righteousness, which is what distinguishes this king’s warfare from ordinary conquest. He rides out not for glory or territory but for a cause, and the cause is the establishment of what is right in a world organized around what is not.
Your throne, O God, is forever and ever. The scepter of your kingdom is a scepter of uprightness; you have loved righteousness and hated wickedness. Therefore God, your God, has anointed you with the oil of gladness beyond your companions. The address to the king as “God” has been understood as messianic from the earliest Christian interpretation, and the uprightness of the scepter, the love of righteousness, and the hatred of wickedness describe a king whose character is the opposite of the surrounding monarchies. The anointing with gladness sets him apart not as powerful but as joyful, which is its own kind of authority.
Together
The father of the prodigal running to meet his returning son and the sun standing still at Joshua’s prayer are both images of the same extraordinary responsiveness: a God whose purposes bend toward the homecoming and the victory in ways that suspend the ordinary. Joshua’s voice is heeded and the sun holds its place; the father sees his son from far off and runs without waiting for the son to arrive. In both cases, the response exceeds what the situation seems to call for, and the excess is the point: the joy in heaven over one sinner who repents, the great battle won in a lengthened day, are both expressions of a God who overinvests in the things He cares about.
The five Amorite kings who attack the Gibeonites because they made peace with Israel and the older brother who will not go in because his father has welcomed a profligate are both people whose anger at another’s reception reveals the assumption they were operating under. The kings expected that making peace with Israel would cost the Gibeonites their protection; the older brother expected that his obedience earned him exclusive claim on his father’s celebration. Both are wrong about the economy they are in, and both discover it the hard way: the kings from the receiving end of hailstones and an extra-long day, the older brother from the outside of a party he refused to enter.
Psalm 45’s king who rides out for truth and meekness and righteousness is the king both the Joshua narrative and Luke 15 are circling toward. He is not the king who conquers for territory; he is the king who fights for what is right and whose gladness is the evidence of his character. The father in the parable rides out for nothing except the sake of his son, running without dignity because dignity is irrelevant when the dead are alive and the lost are found. That is the gladness beyond all companions that the psalm is describing, and it is the same gladness that makes heaven rejoice over one sinner who repents more than over ninety-nine who stayed in the field.
April 14, 2026
Joshua 11:1–12:24; Luke 16:1–18; Proverbs 9:13–18
Joshua 11:1–12:24
The northern coalition assembled against Israel is the largest military force the book of Joshua describes: as many as the sand that is on the seashore in multitude, with very many horses and chariots. God’s encouragement to Joshua is proportioned to the size of the threat: do not be afraid of them, for tomorrow at this time I will give over all of them, slain, to Israel. The promise is precise about timing and total about scope, and Joshua’s obedience is equally precise: just as the LORD had commanded Moses his servant, so Moses commanded Joshua, and so Joshua did. He left nothing undone of all that the LORD had commanded Moses.
The instruction about the Anakim, the giants who had been the source of Israel’s fearful report at Kadesh-barnea forty years earlier, is given particular emphasis. Joshua cut off the Anakim from the hill country, from Hebron, from Debir, from Anab. None of the Anakim were left in the land of the people of Israel; they remained only in Gaza, in Gath, and in Ashdod. The generation that refused to enter the land because of the Anakim has been replaced by a generation that destroys them, and the narrator notes the connection without comment. Fear that becomes refusal has a cost that extends across generations; the generation that trusted paid the price others refused to pay.
The list of thirty-one defeated kings in chapter twelve is not padding but theology. Each name and city represents a battle fought, a victory accomplished, a promise fulfilled. The comprehensive catalogue is the book of Joshua’s way of saying that what God said He would do, He did: every king, every city, every piece of the land that was given was given. The list is a testimony in the form of a ledger, and the ledger balances. God’s promises are not approximate; they are specific enough to be verified by a list.
Luke 16:1–18
The parable of the dishonest manager is one of the most difficult in the Gospels, and its difficulty is the point. A manager who has been wasting his master’s possessions is about to be fired; he calls his master’s debtors and reduces their bills, presumably writing off his own commission, to ensure they will receive him when he has no work. The master commends him for his shrewdness. Jesus is not commending dishonesty; He is commending the quality of being fully awake to one’s situation and using every resource available to address it. The sons of this world are more shrewd in dealing with their own generation than the sons of light.
The applications that follow are staccato and demanding. Make friends for yourselves by means of unrighteous wealth, so that when it fails they may receive you into the eternal dwellings: use your material resources to build eternal relationships rather than temporal comfort. One who is faithful in a very little is also faithful in much, and one who is dishonest in a very little is also dishonest in much: the scale of the resource does not change the character of the handler, which means how a person manages small things reveals how they would manage large ones. No servant can serve two masters: you cannot serve God and money. The either/or is absolute.
The Pharisees who are lovers of money hear all this and ridicule Him. Jesus tells them that they justify themselves before men, but God knows their hearts. Then the statement about the law and the prophets: the law and the prophets were until John; since then the good news of the kingdom of God is preached, and everyone forces his way into it. This is a compressed historical claim: the era of promise and preparation has ended and the era of arrival has begun, and the arrival changes the nature of everything, including the relationship to money, to law, and to the management of what one has been given. Not a dot of the law will pass away, but the era in which the law was the whole of the message is complete.
Proverbs 9:13–18
The woman Folly stands in deliberate contrast to Woman Wisdom: she is loud, seductive, and knows nothing. She sits at the door of her house on a seat on the highest places of the town, calling to those who pass by. Her invitation mimics wisdom’s exactly: whoever is simple, let him turn in here, and to him who lacks sense she says stolen water is sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant. The imitation is the danger: folly does not announce itself as folly. It presents itself in the same language, from the same elevated position, with the same accessibility. The person who has not learned to distinguish wisdom’s voice from folly’s cannot tell the difference from the outside.
The difference is only revealed by what is inside the house: the guests of Folly are in the depths of Sheol. Stolen water and secret bread are sweet for a moment and lead to death permanently, but the moment’s sweetness is enough to make the invitation compelling if one has not thought past the moment. The brevity of the pleasure and the permanence of the consequence are the folly’s defining feature, and the failure of the simple person is the failure to think further than the attraction. Wisdom requires the willingness to think past the immediate, to ask where this path leads as well as what it offers right now.
Together
Joshua’s comprehensiveness, leaving nothing undone of all that the LORD had commanded, and the dishonest manager’s shrewdness in using every resource available for his situation are both portraits of people who are fully awake to what is actually required of them. Joshua does not leave the Anakim for later or skip the small cities because the campaign is mostly done; he finishes the job. The manager does not hesitate or second-guess; he calculates his resources and acts immediately. Both are marked by a completeness of engagement with their situation that is itself a form of wisdom.
The list of thirty-one defeated kings and the parable of the dishonest manager make the same point about the use of what one has been given. The kings represent territory promised and received; each one is a fulfilled promise counted and recorded. The manager represents resources given and wasted; the commendation he receives is for finally using them wisely when his situation forced the clarity. In both cases, what matters is whether the full account of what was given can be shown to have been used for what it was given for. The ledger of Joshua 12 balances because Joshua left nothing undone; the manager of Luke 16 is finally using his resources for their proper purpose when the threat of accounting focuses him.
Proverbs’ folly and the Pharisees who love money and ridicule Jesus represent the same thing: the preference for the stolen sweetness of the present over the harder path of wisdom that thinks past the moment. Folly promises that the secret bread is pleasant, and it is, until you find yourself in the depths of Sheol and realize that no one told you where the door was headed. The Pharisees have justified themselves before men with sufficient success that they cannot hear the critique of a God who knows their hearts. Both are inside the wrong house, finding it pleasant enough not to ask about the exits.
April 15, 2026
Joshua 13:1–14:15; Luke 16:19–17:10; Psalm 45:10–17
Joshua 13:1–14:15
You are old and advanced in years, and there remains yet very much land to be taken. The LORD’s opening words to the aging Joshua are not a criticism but a commission: the work is not finished, but the framework for finishing it is Joshua’s to establish before he dies. God then details the territories that remain, east and west, north and south, more geography than one man or one campaign season could resolve. The distribution of what has been taken must proceed alongside the continuing effort to take what remains, because the promise is the whole land and not settling for a portion of it is part of what faithfulness requires.
Caleb’s request in chapter fourteen is one of the most moving moments in the entire narrative. He is eighty-five years old and he comes to Joshua and rehearses his own history: I was forty years old when Moses the servant of the LORD sent me from Kadesh-barnea to spy out the land, and I brought him word again as it was in my heart. My brothers who went up with me made the heart of the people melt; but I wholly followed the LORD my God. Moses promised me on that day: the land on which your foot has trodden shall be an inheritance for you and your children forever, because you have wholly followed the LORD my God.
What Caleb asks for is Hebron, the hill country that the other spies had found most terrifying because of the Anakim who lived there. He has been waiting forty-five years for this specific promise, and he has not redirected his expectation or settled for something safer. I am still as strong today as I was in the day that Moses sent me: as my strength was then, so my strength is now, for war and for going and coming. So now give me this hill country of which the LORD spoke on that day. The faith that chose the dangerous promise over the easier path and then waited forty-five years without releasing the expectation is the faith the book of Joshua holds up as the standard for inheriting what God has promised.
Luke 16:19–17:10
The parable of the rich man and Lazarus is unique in that it names the poor man, which no other parable of Jesus does. Lazarus is a specific person lying at a specific gate covered in specific sores that specific dogs lick; the rich man is anonymous, clothed in purple and linen and feasting sumptuously every day. The contrast is not subtle and its reversal in the afterlife is not a surprise to the reader, though it is apparently a complete surprise to the rich man, who calls on Abraham from Hades with the assumption that his social superiority still carries weight. Father Abraham, send Lazarus to dip the end of his finger in water and cool my tongue.
Abraham’s answer is structured around two unbridgeable chasms: the great chasm fixed between the place of torment and the place of comfort, and the chasm between the evidence the rich man’s brothers have and what he thinks they need. They have Moses and the Prophets; let them hear them. If they do not hear Moses and the Prophets, neither will they be convinced if someone rises from the dead. The parable is not primarily about the afterlife but about the quality of hearing required to live rightly in the present. What the rich man needed was not more evidence; it was the willingness to actually hear what the evidence he had was saying. Moses and the Prophets are sufficient; the problem is not the sufficiency of the witness but the condition of the listener.
Jesus’ teaching to His disciples on offenses, forgiveness, and faith is compressed and demanding. Offenses will come, but woe to the one through whom they come; it would be better for him to have a millstone around his neck and be thrown into the sea than to cause one of these little ones to stumble. Pay attention to yourselves. If your brother sins, rebuke him; and if he repents, forgive him. If he sins against you seven times in the day and seven times turns to you saying “I repent,” you must forgive him. The disciples’ response is “Increase our faith,” which is the honest response of people who have just been told to forgive seven times in a day. Jesus tells them faith like a grain of mustard seed could uproot a mulberry tree; and when you have done all you were commanded, say we are unworthy servants, we have only done what was our duty. The faith required for kingdom living is not the quantity of feeling but the quality of trust, and its exercise is not extraordinary achievement but ordinary faithfulness.
Psalm 45:10–17
The bride is addressed directly in the psalm’s second half: hear, O daughter, and consider, and incline your ear; forget your people and your father’s house, and the king will desire your beauty. Since he is your lord, bow to him. The address is bridal and demanding: the attachment to her former identity must be released for the new identity to be fully received. The king’s desire and the daughter’s beauty are not opposites of the bow of submission; they are its complement and its reward. The one who releases what she was for the sake of what she is becoming finds that what she is becoming exceeds what she left.
The people of Tyre will seek your favor with gifts; the richest of the people will entreat your favor. All glorious is the princess in her chamber, with robes interwoven with gold. In many-colored robes she is led to the king, with her virgin companions following behind her, with joy and gladness they are brought. The picture is festive and communal: the bride does not come to the king alone but accompanied, and the accompaniment is joyful. The marriage is not a private transaction but a public celebration that includes everyone who belongs to the bride.
Instead of your fathers shall be your sons; you will make them princes in all the earth. I will cause your name to be remembered in all generations; therefore nations will praise you forever and ever. The generativity of the marriage is eschatological: sons who become princes throughout the earth, a name remembered across generations, nations praising forever. The bridal psalm is not about a single royal wedding but about a union whose fruits are permanently world-shaping. The kingdom inaugurated by this king and celebrated by this bride will be the kingdom that outlasts every other kingdom.
Together
Caleb’s forty-five-year faithfulness to a specific promise about a specific piece of dangerous territory and the bride’s call to forget her father’s house for the sake of the king are both portraits of the costly single-mindedness that the kingdom requires. Caleb did not redirect his expectation toward something achievable when the Anakim were still in Hebron; he held the specific dangerous promise for forty-five years and then asked for exactly what had been promised. The bride is called to release her former identity completely, not partially, because partial release produces a divided heart, and a divided heart is not the heart the king desires.
The rich man in Luke 16 is the counterimage of both. He has all his life been feasting while Lazarus lay at his gate, and the gate is the detail that matters: the need was not remote but adjacent, visible from the door, impossible to have genuinely not noticed. He did not release what he had; he did not follow the Moses and the Prophets he possessed; he did not receive the evidence he had been given. And the chasm that opens after death is the permanent form of the distance he maintained in life. The distance between the feast and the gate was crossable; the chasm between Abraham’s bosom and Hades is not.
Psalm 45’s royal marriage, with its joy and gladness and its sons who become princes in all the earth, is the destination toward which Caleb’s faith and the bride’s surrender are both moving. The kingdom that begins with a dangerous hill country request and a bridal release of the past ends in a celebration that nations will praise forever. The inheritance Caleb claimed is part of what the sons of the bride will rule as princes. The gospel the disciples are being sent to preach is the announcement that this king has come and his kingdom is open to everyone willing to forget their father’s house and bow to him who is their lord.