Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
[music]
>> Shalom friends, welcome to the Prophets
Visceral Daily. I'm Jeremy Gimpel here
with [music] Ari Abramowitz and this is
chapter 12 of the book of Joshua. This
series is brought to you by the Land of
Israel Network at the landofisrael.com.
At first glance, you look at chapter 12
and it looks like a little dry. It's
just a list of defeated kings. There's
no miracles, there's no walls falling,
no dramatic speeches, no stories. It's
literally just a list, but if you look
again, this chapter is doing something
very deliberate. It's documenting
carefully, methodically, that promises
made by God are kept.
That what was promised to the people of
Israel isn't just poetry. It's becoming
geography. It's reality. They're real
and they're in the world. They're
measurable and that's true today. You
see, every type of um replacement
theology, someone that wants to replace
Israel, they always have to turn God's
promises to Israel into analogies. They
spiritualize them. That's why they hate
Israel and Zionism so much. They have to
look at this modern country and the
Jewish return to the land of Israel and
come to grips with reality that God's
word is true. God is alive and he's
guiding the world toward its destiny and
that's why there's so much hatred
directed toward Israel. And on the other
hand,
that's why there's so much love. But
Ari, I'm going to do my very best to
make this list as exciting as I possibly
can. Well, I appreciate the confidence
there because when people hear, you
know, a chapter that basically is a list
of kings, those chapters appear in the
Bible and the Tanakh and different the
first instinct, at least mine, is often
like, "All right, I'm going to turn this
to two times speed, maybe 2.5."
But uh but here's the truth. This list
is actually really important because it
isn't just a list of names. It's proof,
right? Every king on this list
represents a real battle, a a real city,
real soldiers, real fear, a real
victory, right? This is where the Bible
basically paused the story and says,
"Let's document what actually happened
here." And and I think on a subconscious
level, this is important for all of us
because these are not ancient myths or
tall tales. This is as real as it gets
and if your heart is open in the right
way, I think encountering these details
really does drive that home. Exactly.
And I think that's one of the main
missions of this journey through Tanakh
because the more the real the stories
become in the book of Joshua, the more
relevant they are for our own journey
here in the land of Israel in our own
times. So, chapter 12 is essentially a
historical summary. First, it lists the
kings defeated by Moses at the Jordan,
on the other side of the Jordan, and
then it lists the kings defeated by
Joshua west of the Jordan. 31 kings in
total. And why does this matter? And I
think it's like exactly what Ari said,
the Torah and the prophets were very
careful with history. This chapter is
like an unofficial record, a divine
receipt, showing that the conquest of
the land is real, measurable, and it's
unfolding step by step. And on that
note, there has never been an
archaeological discovery in Israel that
contradicts the Bible. Every time
they've dug anywhere around the country,
they find that the Bible is true and
accurate 100%
all of the time. And uh let's get back
into the chapter. And so, it begins with
writing us the story and it didn't begin
with Joshua. It started with Moses and
we read about the defeat of Sihon, king
of the Amorites, and Og, king of Bashan.
And those were the first two cracks in
the seemingly impossible conquest of the
land of Israel. And then the chapter
shifts west of the Jordan and here we
get the famous list. One after another.
Jericho, Ai, Jerusalem, Hebron, Lachish,
Hazor, Eglon, Gezer. Each name is like a
milestone marker on the road toward
redemption. But think about what this
means. 31 independent city-states
defeated. Not by a superpower empire,
but by a nation that just left the
wilderness. I mean, each name on that
list was another battle, another entire
drama, the risk, the fears, the loss.
Israel had to risk it all to inherit the
land and Israel won every time.
And so,
even then,
Israel was the most revered military in
the region. And somehow, the children of
slaves, wanderers in the desert, who
were never trained, defeated every
single adversary. Wait, can we just
pause for a second and take that in
because it's just, you know, you read
the words of the Bible black and white
and so sometimes it just goes by you and
the reality of it, you just got to
really try to take it in. You know, 31
kings. Think about that. It really puts
today into perspective. You know, this
very moment we're surrounded by 22 Arab
states. You know, I guess after seeing
these chapters, I should say only 22
Arab states. I mean, the Israelites of
Joshua's time were facing 31 kingdoms,
31 armies armed with swords, shields,
chariots, soldiers. All of them were
like girded and ready for battle. I
mean, it's hard to wrap your mind around
the sheer magnitude of it. Exactly. And
that's part of the point. This wasn't
one lucky battle. This was sustained,
consistent, and almost unbelievable
progress, which is exactly why the
chapter lists every single king to make
it undeniable. But there's also a
spiritual layer here. I mean, notice
what's happening structurally. First,
Moses begins the process. Then Joshua
continues it. Slowly, the land is being
secured piece by piece. This teaches
something profound about how redemption
really works. It's rarely instantaneous.
It comes step by step, battle by battle,
generation by generation. The redemption
is like a sunrise and slowly rising over
the dark horizon, the light will shine
soon. And you know, people have this
fantasy about the redemption. It's going
to happen all at once. Messiah will just
show up one day and fix everything. 770
will fly across the sky all the way to
Israel. The Messiah will magically
appear and wrap things up by the
afternoon. But that's not the picture
that's painted by Joshua and for a
matter of fact, it's not the picture
painted by Ezra and Nehemiah, either, in
their return to the land of Israel. So,
the book of Joshua is the first of the
prophetic writings and it's teaching us
one of the most important principles of
growth in biblical destiny.
Big transformations are built
out of many small victories. I mean, the
book doesn't just celebrate the dramatic
moments. It records every king, every
city, every step forward and we look at
the modern state of Israel, the
parallels are striking, at least. I
mean, like in Joshua's time, the return
to the land didn't happen overnight.
They came wave by wave, challenge by
challenge, generation after generation.
We've been up against impossible odds,
surrounded by nations that just Joshua
reminds us, 31 kings didn't fall in one
day. And what looks slow in the moment
will be seen historic in the long run. I
want to add one more dimension to
understanding this chapter. Everything
in the Bible is a spiritual blueprint
for our lives and I feel like this
chapter is teaching us all a lesson.
Maybe today your progress feels small.
Maybe your journey feels unfinished. But
Joshua chapter 12 comes to tell you that
the redemption is built one faithful
step at a time.
So, keep going. Keep building. Keep
advancing. Keep track of every victory.
Even if they seem small because the
story that looks like a simple list
today
may one day be the road map to something
truly extraordinary.
All right, my friends, we will see you
tomorrow with chapter 13 and always I
want to invite you to take the next step
on the journey and join our global
community united by a love for Israel,
inspired by [music] the Torah and
biblical prophecy, the Land of Israel
fellowship. You can find out more at the
landofisrael.com. We'll see you
tomorrow.