“Leadership is not about titles, positions or flowcharts. It is about one life influencing another.”
JOSHUA 1-3
JOURNAL
Joshua steps into leadership at a moment of transition, taking the place of Moses and carrying the responsibility of leading Israel into the promise. What stands out in these opening chapters is the constant tension between fear and courage. God repeatedly commands Joshua and the people to be strong and courageous, while at the same time their enemies are described as melting in fear. One response leads to movement and fulfillment, the other to collapse. That contrast feels central, not just to their story, but to mine as well.
Courage is not the absence of fear, but the decision to move forward in spite of it. God does not hand Joshua a clear plan or detailed instructions for every step. Instead, He gives him something deeper and more sustaining. He tells him to stay rooted in His word, to not drift to the right or the left, and to trust that His presence will go with him wherever he leads. That promise becomes the anchor. It is not clarity of outcome that produces strength, but confidence in who is with him.
At the same time, the birth of John shows that God is always working ahead of what we can see. John is given a purpose before he ever speaks a word, to prepare the way for Jesus. No one around him could have understood how it would all unfold, yet God’s plan was already in motion. The promise spoken over him carries a depth that resonates deeply with me, that God’s mercy breaks into darkness, that light reaches those who feel lost, and that He guides our feet into a path of peace even when the way is unclear.
This is where I find courage. Not in having everything figured out, but in trusting that God has always been faithful to His promises and will continue to be. The real challenge is internal. It is choosing to persist through doubt, through emotion, and through the moments where fear tries to take over. It is easy to drift or hesitate when things feel uncertain, but when I continue forward in what I know to be true, something changes. Strength returns, clarity increases, and I am able to take the next step.
The reminder that God gave Joshua is the same one that speaks to me now, that He will never leave or forsake me. That truth becomes the foundation for everything. Leadership is not about position or recognition, but about living in that trust and allowing it to shape how I move, how I respond, and how I influence others. It is a steady, quiet confidence that comes from knowing I am not walking alone, and that each step forward, even when it feels small, is part of something far greater than I can see.
Joshua steps into leadership at a moment of transition, taking the place of Moses and carrying the responsibility of leading Israel into the promise. What stands out in these opening chapters is the constant tension between fear and courage. God repeatedly commands Joshua and the people to be strong and courageous, while at the same time their enemies are described as melting in fear. One response leads to movement and fulfillment, the other to collapse. That contrast feels central, not just to their story, but to mine as well.
Courage is not the absence of fear, but the decision to move forward in spite of it. God does not hand Joshua a clear plan or detailed instructions for every step. Instead, He gives him something deeper and more sustaining. He tells him to stay rooted in His word, to not drift to the right or the left, and to trust that His presence will go with him wherever he leads. That promise becomes the anchor. It is not clarity of outcome that produces strength, but confidence in who is with him.
At the same time, the birth of John shows that God is always working ahead of what we can see. John is given a purpose before he ever speaks a word, to prepare the way for Jesus. No one around him could have understood how it would all unfold, yet God’s plan was already in motion. The promise spoken over him carries a depth that resonates deeply with me, that God’s mercy breaks into darkness, that light reaches those who feel lost, and that He guides our feet into a path of peace even when the way is unclear.
This is where I find courage. Not in having everything figured out, but in trusting that God has always been faithful to His promises and will continue to be. The real challenge is internal. It is choosing to persist through doubt, through emotion, and through the moments where fear tries to take over. It is easy to drift or hesitate when things feel uncertain, but when I continue forward in what I know to be true, something changes. Strength returns, clarity increases, and I am able to take the next step.
The reminder that God gave Joshua is the same one that speaks to me now, that He will never leave or forsake me. That truth becomes the foundation for everything. Leadership is not about position or recognition, but about living in that trust and allowing it to shape how I move, how I respond, and how I influence others. It is a steady, quiet confidence that comes from knowing I am not walking alone, and that each step forward, even when it feels small, is part of something far greater than I can see.