Taking the Land!

Joshua 21:43-45  So the LORD gave to Israel all the land of which He had sworn to give to their fathers, and they took possession of it and dwelt in it.  44  The LORD gave them rest all around, according to all that He had sworn to their fathers. And not a man of all their enemies stood against them; the LORD delivered all their enemies into their hand. 45  Not a word failed of any good thing which the LORD had spoken to the house of Israel. All came to pass. 

The conquest of the land did not happen in a single moment — it unfolded over years of battles, endurance, and sustained faith. What began at the Jordan required perseverance through opposition, setbacks, and continued trust in God. City by city and territory by territory, Israel advanced, not by one decisive act alone, but through a journey of ongoing reliance on the Lord.

Yet when the story is brought into full view, Scripture summarizes it with a powerful declaration: “Not one word failed of any good thing which the Lord had spoken.” God finished what He promised. Every delay, every battle, and every season of waiting did not cancel His word — they confirmed the process by which it would be fulfilled. What God had spoken generations earlier came to pass in its entirety. Time did not weaken the promise; it revealed its certainty.

The wilderness had prepared them. It stripped away dependence on Egypt, exposed weakness, and formed a people who learned to rely on God. Faith sustained them, carrying them through the Jordan, through Jericho, and through every challenge that followed. And in the end, the promise was fulfilled—not partially, but entirely according to the word of the Lord.

This is the pattern of God. He does not speak casually, and He does not abandon what He begins. What He promises, He performs. Yet His fulfillment often unfolds through a process that requires endurance. The inheritance was given, but it had to be possessed. The land belonged to them by covenant, but it was walked out through perseverance.

Revival follows this same pattern. It is not sustained by a single moment of breakthrough, but by a people who continue — through resistance, through testing, and through time—holding fast to what God has said. The harvest is not gathered by those who start well, but by those who remain faithful until the work is complete. Promise becomes possession through perseverance.

Beloved, do not measure God’s faithfulness by your current moment — measure it by His word. He has not forgotten what He has spoken over your life, your calling, or this generation. This is not the hour to grow weary — it is the hour to continue. Revival and harvest belong to those who remain steady, who refuse to retreat, and who press forward until the promise is fully realized. If we endure in faith, we will see it — not one word will fail. Every promise will stand, and what God has spoken, He will surely bring to pass.

Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy Devotions. This devotional was originally published on Worthy Devotions and was reproduced with permission.

How to display the above article within the Worthy Suite WordPress Plugin.

[worthy_plugins_devotion_single_body]

Recently, I’ve been impressed by the Lord to address the anxieties many are feeling about the future– how to be strong in the face of the intense opposition we’ll be facing as believers. One of the founders of the modern state of Israel, David Ben-Gurion once said, “Courage is a special kind of knowledge, the knowledge of how to fear what ought to be feared and how not to fear what ought not to be feared. From this knowledge comes an inner strength that inspires us to push on in the face of great difficulty. What can seem impossible is often possible with courage.”

For a season, I worked in Washington, D.C., for one of America’s largest Christian political organizations. Sometimes I saw how politics could get ugly and, more often than not, how it changed people — not for the better…but usually for the worse!

Have you ever felt uneasy, unsettled or unstable? Or maybe a better question is — who hasn’t? How do we overcome these feelings?

Is that a trend or something? I don’t know what it is but I’ve heard that phrase said quite a bit. We were even walking down the Wal-Mart isle to pick up a few things and my wife showed me a T-shirt with “I have issues” written across the front! I guess the world is coming to the sad reality that we really do have some issues.

It never ceases to amaze me, the way the devil uses our offenses and our “offendedness” to divide and conquer marriages, relationships, churches — even entire nations!

There’s an old adage, “Have the heart of a lion!” Hearing it, we think, “courage”. This recalls a quote I once heard; “Courage is contagious. When a brave man takes a stand, the spines of others are often stiffened”. I doubt there’s a single hero story in which the fearless leader fails to inspire the righteous determination of his army or people. The voice of the captain resounds through the ranks evoking the fierce cry of every warrior ready to face death or worse, for the cause. Courage truly is contagious.

The Hebrew word for “face” is “panim”, (the Hebrew letters, peh-nun-yud-mem), literally “faces”, a plural word. Normally, when we think about God, we focus only upon one of His “faces” at a time. God is “love” – or He is “holy”– or He is “just”— or He’s a God of “wrath”. Yet, of course, ALL these “faces” are His at once; and so the word “panim” accurately reflects the truth of God’s multifaceted being. As we get to know Him better we begin to appreciate the complexity of His nature and the fact that our focus on one “face” is a very limited view, since there’s so much more going on in His amazing “Personality”.