God had promised the
Israelites that He would go before them and drive out the inhabitants
of the land (Ex.33:1-2). The Israelites needed but to trust in
Him and fight with His help. Yet, they were warned against failure. God
told them, “But if ye will not drive out the inhabitants of the land
from before you; then it shall come to pass, that those which ye let
remain of them shall be pricks in your eyes, and thorns in your sides,
and shall vex you in the land wherein ye dwell” (Num.33:55).
In the passage before
us, the conquest under the leadership of Joshua is over. He is
dead.
However, there are still pockets of the Canaanites and others throughout
the land. The Israelites still must drive them out. God had
told them, “I will not drive them out from before thee in one year; lest
the land become desolate, and the beast of the field multiply against
thee. By little and little I will drive them out from before thee, until
thou be increased, and inherit the land” (Ex.23:29-30). They were
to finish the job over a period of time.
But something happened. The
tribe of Judah conquered several cities, “but could not drive out the
inhabitants of the valley, because they had chariots of iron”
(v.19). They tried but failed. Then, instead of seeking God’s
face until the victory was won, they gave up. Pretty soon the remainder
of the tribes just stopped trying. Judah “could not” but the others “did
not.” We read this about Benjamin (v.21), Manasseh (v.27), Ephraim
(v.29), Zebulon (v.30), Asher (v.31) and Naphtali (v.33). Even
when Israel became strong, they simply collected tribute instead of driving
the people out as they had been told (v.28). And, as the remainder
of the book of Judges proves, these people did become pricks in their
eyes and thorns in their sides.
In a picture, God
saves us and brings us into the promised land. Yet, there remain
pockets of resistance in our lives. We still have besetting sins,
weaknesses of character, bad habits that give way to the world, flesh
and devil. God expects us to fight against these enemies and
to ever strive to grow in grace. Yet, many believers decide the
battle is too difficult. They choose the easy way of compromise. They
decide that the pockets of resistance are small and not worth the trouble.
Yet, these areas of
our lives continually trouble us. They keep us from a victorious
life. God would help us if we would just continue in the fight. But
we quit on God.
Have you made peace with a besetting sin in your life? Have you
given up on the battle? Have you given your flesh a win by default—because
you did not even show up? Then repent of your sin of not fighting
and return to the battlefront. Give yourself to God afresh. He
is still there. He will still give the victory!