What lessons can we learn from the defeat of the kings in Joshua 12? Setting the Scene Joshua 12 is not filler between dramatic battles. It is inspired history, a divinely preserved victory roll showing that every promise God made about the land (Genesis 15:18-21; Joshua 1:3-5) was literally fulfilled. Verse 18 simply reads, “the king of Aphek, one; the king of Lasharon, one”. Two names, two defeated kings—yet each line shouts that the Lord left no enemy standing. Why Two Unknown Cities Matter • Aphek and Lasharon were not major powers like Jericho or Hazor. Their obscurity reminds us that God values every line of His Word (Matthew 4:4) and records every victory, large or small. • If the text is precise in minor details, we can trust it completely in matters of salvation and eternity (John 3:16; 1 Peter 1:25). • Small places, small battles, small people—none are overlooked by the Lord who numbers our hairs (Luke 12:7). Lesson 1: God’s Total Sovereignty Over Every Enemy • “The LORD your God is the One who fights for you, just as He promised” (Joshua 23:10). • Whether a fortified Jericho or a lesser-known Lasharon, every stronghold falls under His command. • Romans 8:37 echoes the truth: “In all these things we are more than conquerors through Him who loved us.” Lesson 2: Promises Kept in Full, Not in Part • Deuteronomy 7:24 foretold that no king would stand against Israel; Joshua 12 lists the literal fulfillment—31 kings in all. • God’s faithfulness toward Israel guarantees His faithfulness to us: “He who calls you is faithful, and He will do it” (1 Thessalonians 5:24). • Because He fulfilled land promises precisely, we can rest in the precise fulfillment of every future promise—resurrection (1 Corinthians 15:52), return of Christ (Acts 1:11), and eternal dwelling (John 14:2-3). Lesson 3: Victory Recorded for Future Faith • Generations later, Israelites could read Joshua 12 and remember, “The LORD fought for us then; He will fight for us now” (see Psalm 44:1-3). • Writing down victories helps us recall God’s track record. Revelation 12:11 shows overcoming believers “because of the word of their testimony.” • Keep your own record of answered prayers and deliverances; yesterday’s victories fuel today’s courage. Lesson 4: No Enemy Too Obscure for God to Face • Aphek and Lasharon may symbolize sins or struggles we think are “minor.” God calls us to surrender those as well (Hebrews 12:1). • Colossians 3:5 urges us to put to death every earthly inclination—none are too small to ignore. • As Israel cleared the land completely, believers are to walk in wholehearted obedience, leaving no corner for compromise. Lesson 5: Anticipating the Greater Joshua • Joshua’s name means “Yahweh is salvation,” pointing to Jesus (Yeshua), the ultimate Captain of our salvation (Hebrews 2:10). • Just as Joshua subdued earthly kings, Jesus “disarmed the rulers and authorities” at the cross (Colossians 2:15). • The catalog of defeated kings foreshadows the day when “The last enemy to be destroyed is death” (1 Corinthians 15:26). Taking It Home • Trust the Lord’s meticulous faithfulness—if He toppled Aphek and Lasharon, He will topple the obstacles you face. • Celebrate every answered prayer, however small; record it and rehearse it. • Leave no “little” sin unchallenged; small strongholds fall by the same mighty hand that leveled Jericho. • Fix your eyes on Jesus, the true and greater Joshua, who leads us in triumph until every enemy—sin, Satan, and death itself—is finally and forever defeated. |