The young mother sighed as she scraped together lunch for her 3-year-old daughter. Spying the empty fruit basket on the table in their tiny kitchen, she sighed and said aloud, If we just had a basket of fruit, I would feel rich! Her little girl overheard her.
Weeks passed. God sustained the small family. Still, the struggling mom worried. Then one day her little girl bounded into the kitchen. Look, Mommy, were rich! she exclaimed, pointing at the full fruit basket on the table. Nothing had changed except that the family had purchased a bag of apples.
When Joshua, the leader of the Israelites, was about to die, he shared a message from the Lord that recounted all God had done for them. And he noted, You lived in the wilderness for a long time (Josh. 24:7). Then he said, [God] gave you a land on which you did not toil and cities you did not build; and you live in them and eat from vineyards and olive groves that you did not plant (v. 13). Joshua set up a large stone to remind Israel of Gods provision (v. 26).
Like the Israelites, after a time of challenge and scarcity, that family now lives in a different place and enjoys fruit trees in a spacious yard, planted years earlier by a previous owner. If you visit them, youll find a bowl of fruit in their kitchen. It reminds them of Gods goodness and how a 3-year-old infused her family with faith, joy, and perspective.
In Genesis 15, God promised Abraham that He would give his descendants possession of a great stretch of land that was occupied by other people. Several hundred years later, under the leadership of Joshua, God fulfilled His promise, and the people of Israel took possession of the Promised Land. In todays passage, Joshua reminds the Israelites that it was not by their own military might that they did this, but it was God who gave them the land. As a result of Gods provision (defeating the armies of the other people), Joshua reminded them to fear and serve the Lord. J.R. Hudberg