Pulpit & Podium
There are moments when faith is no longer theoretical—it becomes a decision. In Numbers 13–14, Israel stands on the edge of the promised land, holding in tension everything God has said and everything they can see. The land is good, just as God promised, but it is also filled with real opposition. Faced with that tension, the people choose fear over faith. What began as deliverance from Egypt now stalls at the border of promise, not because God has failed, but because his people refuse to trust him. This sermon exposes how easily we do the same. Trusting God in the abstract is one thing; trusting him when obedience is costly is another. Israel’s refusal is not simply about fear—it is about redefining reality based on what feels most secure in the moment. Yet even in their rebellion, God remains faithful to his purposes, preserving a future for his people and pointing forward to a greater Joshua who will lead his people into true rest. The question is not whether God is trustworthy, but whether we will trust him when it matters most. I unpack: * Why fear often feels more “real” than God’s promises, and how that shapes our decisions * How unbelief is not just doubt, but a refusal to trust God’s character and word * How this story points forward to Jesus, who succeeds where Israel failed and leads us into true rest 📖 Key Passage: Numbers 13–14 🎧 Listen and reflect: Where in your life are you standing at the edge of obedience—and what would it look like to trust God rather than retreat?
45 episodios
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