Joshua 3:1-4:24 · Crossing the Jordan
Filling Moses’ Shoes
Joshua 3:7-17
Sermon
by Charles L. Aaron
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What will they do now? Moses has died, and nobody even knows where he has been buried. Moses is the one who led the people of Israel out of Egypt, and all along the way in the wilderness. Now he is dead, and what will happen next? Maybe Moses' burial place was kept a secret so that the people wouldn't hang around his grave wringing their hands over the loss of their leader. The people have no time for self-pity. They are still on the wrong side of the Jordan. The journey is not yet complete. They are on their way to the land God promised them, but they aren't there yet. They need to move on, but how? Who will lead them? Who could possibly fill Moses' shoes? Some people are impossible to replace. A leader like Moses doesn't come along every day.

Moses had been larger than life. He was the great lawgiver who had brought the commandments themselves down from Mount Sinai. With God's help, he had taken on Pharaoh, the powerful ruler of Egypt, and won. Moses had made the waters of the Sea of Reeds stand up in a heap so that the people could cross on dry land. Moses had intervened with God to save the people. Moses had actually seen God with his own eyes. How could anyone fill those shoes?

Joshua has shown promise. He led the fight with Amalek at Rephidim (Exodus 17:8-13). Even there, he needed Moses' help. Through some way the narrator doesn't explain, by holding up his arms (or having someone hold them up), Moses is able to influence the battle at Rephidim. So, even in his great victory, Joshua needed Moses' help. Still, he has shown potential. Joshua has distinguished himself as a spy, helping to scope out Canaan before the rest of the people get there. When the people are about to chicken out of going into Canaan, Joshua implores them to have faith in God (Numbers 14:6-10). Joshua has a lot going for him.

The question is: Can Joshua take over for Moses? Moses has been the leader all along. When the people ran out of food, water, and patience, Moses has taken care of things. He has dealt with snakes, uncooperative kings, and the people's own unfaithfulness. Moses has carried them through. Can Joshua take over from here? Won't they face just as many hardships once they actually get into Canaan? Don't major battles lie ahead? Won't the people be even more anxious, and so more prone to idolatry now that Moses has died? They still have to make it across the Jordan River. Can Joshua gain their confidence, see them through, and get the job done?

According to the narrator, Joshua didn't get much choice. The Lord announced the obvious, that Moses was dead, and then told Joshua to get going. He was to be the new leader. For his part, Joshua is a man of few words. He doesn't protest and try to pass the job on to someone else as the great Moses did. We don't ever get to know Joshua as well as we did Moses, but he seems to accept responsibility without all of the whining that the Lord had to put up with from Moses. Joshua doesn't wear his feelings on his sleeve. When the Lord tells him what to do in chapter 1, he just does it. The Lord does make Joshua a promise: "As I was with Moses, so I will be with you; I will not fail you or forsake you" (Joshua 1:5). That's a great promise, but the Lord's presence hasn't kept them out of trouble so far. They've made it through everything, but it hasn't been easy.

So, Joshua, the one trying to fill Moses' enormous sandals, stands before the Jordan River. Here is the first real test of his leadership. Everyone is watching to see what will happen. If everyone gets drenched or half the food gets too soggy to eat, everyone will remember. The Lord has promised to be with Joshua, just as the Lord was with Moses, so that's a start anyway. Joshua gives the directions to the priests and the people. With the priests in front, Israel prepares to cross the Jordan. The way it was supposed to work was that when the feet of the priests hit the river, the water would recede, just like at the Sea of Reeds. What went through everyone's mind? Were they wondering if it would work again? Were they all, especially the priests in front, wishing that Moses were still there? Perhaps with some mixture of faith and doubt the priests dipped their feet into the water. Then it happened. Just as it had in the good old days of Moses, the water drew back and stood up in a heap. The people could cross over on dry ground, just as their mothers and fathers had at the Sea of Reeds. Maybe this Joshua has the right stuff after all.

Joshua was a strong leader in battle, a man of faith, and quicker to obey God than Moses had been, but Joshua never got the recognition that Moses did. Deuteronomy says of Moses, "Never since has there arisen a prophet in Israel like Moses, whom the Lord knew face to face" (Deuteronomy 34:10). It's not just Deuteronomy. The psalmists and other Old Testament authors sing Moses' praises, but not so much about Joshua (see Psalm 103 and Nehemiah 9). Moses is mentioned in the New Testament almost eighty times, Joshua just three times. Moses is present at the Transfiguration; Joshua is not. Everyone from Cecil B. DeMille to Disney has done an interpretation of Moses at the Sea of Reeds, but Joshua crossing the Jordan has never made the big screen. Joshua is like the young cleric who has to follow a beloved pulpit giant at a high steeple church. No matter what he accomplishes, he's always going to be compared to his predecessor.

When you get down to it, though, isn't Joshua's accomplishment just as important as Moses' accomplishment? Moses had the triumphant experience of leading the people out of Egypt. That part of the mission was certainly uplifting. Getting out of a bad place is a great relief. Getting out of the hospital, even if we face a long rehab, is a great feeling. Getting started on a long journey or process is exciting. Some people go back to school in their twenties, thirties, forties, and even fifties or sixties. It's a great experience to start some daring new adventure. Some people decide to tackle a social issue or problem. They often begin with a burst of energy. When we start school or a new diet or music lessons or a project to register voters or to tackle some social issue, it's a great time. The finish line is really the exhilarating part, though, isn't it? Graduating from school, meeting our target weight, getting some new piece of legislation passed, exceeding a fund-raising goal -- those are the real thrill. Moses got the people started, but Joshua finished the job.

Israel would not have been Israel without Joshua and the crossing of the Jordan. Without this story, the rag-tag band of Hebrew slaves who left Egypt would have fizzled out in the wilderness. All of the forty years of wandering would have been for nothing. God's great journey may have begun with Moses, but Joshua brought it home. God worked through Joshua just as much as through Moses.

God works through us as well. In order to do its job, the church needs leaders. Sometimes we don't see ourselves in those leadership roles. Surely someone else could head the committees, teach Sunday school, lead worship, raise the church's budget, or even take care of the building and grounds better than we could. Some of the jobs in the church don't seem that glamorous or bring much recognition. Still, these jobs, small as they may seem, are part of God's work.

As an example, let's take Sunday school teachers. Sometimes we stand on the threshold of the Sunday school room just as Joshua stood at the Jordan River. What will happen when we take the next step? Will the class go well? Have I prepared enough? Sometimes, though, we wade into the class, and see how God is working through us. Sometimes we see ignorance or resistance to the message pushed aside, like the waters of the Jordan, so that the light comes through.

Every pastor has encountered parishioners who have been in the church all of their lives but still don't know the basic stories of the Bible. If we don't know the Bible, don't know the stories of faith, we can miss what it means to be the church. Teaching isn't easy work. It takes time to prepare. It can be intimidating. It gets old doing it week after week. Nevertheless, Sunday school teachers step up to the challenge. The church could not be the church without them. In spite of the difficulty, what they usually find is that God is with them. God works through them.

A United Methodist bishop from the North Texas Conference, William Oden, tells of his fifth grade boys' Sunday school class in Shawnee, Oklahoma. The group of rowdy boys had run off the last two Sunday school teachers. The next victim was to be a man named Lewis Cooper, a railroad engineer. He told the group of boys that he did not know much about the Bible, but that they would learn it together. Bishop Oden says that he can still see Cooper's rough hands lovingly turning the pages of the Bible as he taught. Cooper stayed with the boys for three years, fifth, sixth, and seventh grades. Out of that class of troublemakers came three clergy (one of whom was a bishop), a theology professor, and a conference lay leader. God worked through a railroad engineer, even if he didn't feel prepared for what God called him to do.

God may call us to a variety of ministries that are demanding or that don't bring much recognition. Responding to that call may fill us with uncertainty. If we answer God's call, we will find that God is with us. What God may accomplish through us may surprise us. Let us take the next step and see where God will lead us.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (Last Third): View from the Mountaintop, by Charles L. Aaron