SNAPSHOTS OF THE KINGDOM:
JOSHUA
By
Dr. Stephen Jones: Date: 12/01/2019: Issue No. 377
Blog Post Date: 1-1-2020
When
Moses was about to die, he commissioned Joshua to lead the Israelites into the
Promised Land. In this, he was a type of Christ, who is called to lead us into
the Promised Land, or the Kingdom. The Hebrew name, Joshua, is spelled
and pronounced Yeshua, which was rendered as Iesus in the Greek
New Testament.
Iesus itself was a name
compounded from Ie and Sus. Ie is the Greek way of writing
Yah (short for Yahweh). Sus is the Hebrew word for
“horse,” which was a biblical symbol of salvation. It literally means Yah’s
Horse, i.e., Yahweh’s Salvation.
Iesus, then, is not a translation
but a transliteration from the Hebrew itself, though written in Greek
characters. It was used because its meaning was identical to the Hebrew name,
Joshua, or Yeshua, “salvation.”
“J”
was added to the English alphabet in the 1700’s, and that is when Iesus
was changed to Jesus in the English translations of the New Testament.
Joshua
the Ephraimite
Joshua’s
name is also spelled Hoshea in Numbers 13:8, where we see he is of
the tribe of Ephraim. Jesus (Yeshua) was named after Joshua, and this provides
us with the first and foremost clue linking the two men prophetically.
The
first apparent discrepancy, however, is that Joshua was of the tribe of
Ephraim, while Jesus was of Judah. This is resolved when we understand the two
comings of Christ. He came the first time of the tribe of Judah to die on the
cross. He will come the second time as an Ephraimite (son of Joseph) in order
to lead us into the Kingdom.
For
this reason, Rev. 19:13 says,
13 And He is clothed with a robe dipped in blood; and His name is called
The Word of God.
Joseph’s
robe was dipped in blood (Gen. 37:31).
We
can also trace the Scepter back to Judah and the Birthright to Joseph/Ephraim (1 Chron. 5:1, 2). When Jacob
divided the Birthright among his sons, he removed the Scepter from the
Birthright and gave it to Judah. He also took the Priesthood from the
Birthright and gave it to Levi.
The
remaining portion of the Birthright was the authority of sonship, and this was
given to Joseph. Gen. 49:22 says
literally, “Joseph is a fruitful son.” The Birthright is the right of
sonship, something that concerned the apostle John when he wrote in John 1:12,
12 But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become
children of God, even to those who believe in His name.
The
New Testament tells us that the path to sonship is through Jesus Christ, the
Mediator of the New Covenant. Sonship is not possible to attain through the Old
Covenant.
Reunifying
the Scepter and the Birthright
As
long as the tribes of Israel were united, the Scepter and the Birthright were
united as well. However, when ten tribes (led by Jeroboam, the Ephraimite) revolted
from the rule of Judah, a great problem arose. The Scepter lost its kingdom,
and the kingdom lost its Scepter.
In
practice, this meant that Judah could produce the King-Messiah, but not the
Kingdom itself. As for the Israelites, they fell into idolatry and sin to the
point that God divorced the house of Israel (Jer. 3:8) and sent them out of His
house, according to the law in Deut. 24:1 KJV.
Hence,
the Israelites lost its marital status with God, making it impossible for them
to produce the sons of God. The provision for sonship came later, beginning
with the advent of Jesus Christ, whose death on the cross provided the path to
sonship. However, this path could not be completed until the Scepter and
Birthright could be reunited at the second coming of Christ.
Hosea 1:11 says,
11 And the sons of Judah and the sons of Israel will be gathered
together, and they will appoint for themselves one leader….
That
leader is the Messiah Himself. Reunification is possible only under His
leadership. He came first as Joshua the Judahite to claim the Scepter, and He
will come again as Joshua the Ephraimite to claim the Birthright of Joseph.
Therefore,
we see that Joshua is a type of Christ in both appearances, but primarily in
Christ’s second coming, when He comes through Joshua’s tribe, Ephraim/Joseph.
Ephraim
means “double fruitfulness,” because the -aim (ayim) ending is a
Hebrew dual. It means two, or double. In this case it indicates
the double portion of the inheritance that goes with the Birthright.
It
is also a promise of sonship, which is from a “fruitful” womb. The idea is
derived from the Fruitfulness Mandate given in Gen. 1:28, “Be fruitful and
multiply.” It commands us to bring forth the sons of God and was the responsibility
inherent in the Birthright. It is a major theme in Scripture.
The
Fruitfulness Mandate of Ephraim
Joseph,
then, is the key, because the Birthright was his inheritance. It was passed
down to Joshua, who utilized it to plant Israel in the Promised Land for the
purpose of bringing forth fruit fit for the Kingdom. Isaiah 5:1, 2 says of this,
1 Let me sing now for my well-beloved a song of my beloved concerning
His vineyard:
“My
well-beloved had a vineyard on a fertile hill. 2 And He dug it all
around, removed its stones, and planted it with the choicest vine. And He built
a tower in the middle of it and hewed out a wine vat in it; then He expected it
to produce good grapes, but it produced only worthless ones.”
The
prophet thus pictures Joshua planting the Kingdom (“vineyard”) in the land of
Canaan, expecting it to produce good fruit. But the fruit was “worthless,”
because the people turned to false gods who were unable to beget the sons of
God.
This
story continues into the New Testament era as well, for Jesus told a parable
about the same vineyard in Matt. 21:33-44, which begins this way:
33 Listen to another parable. There was a landowner who planted a
vineyard and put a wall around it and dug a wine press in it, and built a tower,
and rented it out to vine-growers, and went on a journey.
The
parable goes on to say that those whose job it was to produce good fruit
refused to give the fruit to the Owner of the vineyard—essentially usurping it
for their own use and pleasure. They beat and stoned the prophets who were sent
to secure the fruit. Finally, they killed the Son Himself.
The
verdict is found in Matt. 21:43,
43 Therefore I say to you, the kingdom of God will be taken away from you
and be given to a nation producing the fruit of it.
Jesus
applied this parable to Judah, which actually did not have the Birthright. Even
so, if they had accepted the true Messiah-King, they would have secured the
Scepter, and He would have then found Israel and reunited the two nations and
their callings. But they did not fulfill their own calling as per Gen. 49:10.
Instead, they disputed Christ’s claim in the divine court (Luke 19:12-14),
which tied up the case in court until the time of the end.
This
dispute has now been resolved in court and will be enforced shortly when their
allotted time to comply has run its course. The verdict is prophesied in Luke 19:27,
27 But these enemies of mine, who did not want me to reign over them,
bring them here [to Jerusalem or Judea] and slay them in my presence.
This
prophesies of the immigration of non-believing Jews to the old land in a
movement known as Zionism. God has brought them back to the scene of the crime
to be judged.
To
prevent such an outcome, the Israeli state would have to repent and bring forth
fruit fit for divine consumption, beginning with their public acceptance of
Jesus Christ as King. Then, by uniting with Israelite believers who hold the
Birthright, the two callings might be united in the Kingdom.
However,
prophecy is quite clear that this will not happen. The fig tree that Jesus
cursed for its lack of fruit (Matt. 21:19) was never again to bear
fruit. That fig tree represented Judah. Jesus said later in Matt. 24:32, 33,
32 Now learn the parable from the fig tree: when its branch has already
become tender
[i.e., green, coming back to life after winter] , and puts forth its
leaves, you know that summer is near; 33 even so you too, when
you see all these things, recognize that He is near, right at the door.
Jesus
was referring to the fig tree that He had cursed earlier, commanding, “No
longer shall there ever be any fruit from you” (Matt. 21:19). This is the tree that
would come back to life toward the end of the age, bearing more “leaves,” but
still no fruit.
This
was fulfilled in 1948 with the establishment of the State of Israel. The
church, which apparently does not know the difference between fig leaves and
fruit, has supported that state, thinking the people will soon repent,
recognize Jesus as the Messiah, and bear fruit. But if it were ever to bear
fruit, it would prove Jesus to be a false prophet.
Judah
can bear fruit only when it is associated with Joseph/Ephraim, because Ephraim
holds the Birthright and has the authority to bring forth the sons of God.
These tribes have not been united since the death of Solomon.
Meanwhile,
a New Covenant has been instituted, after the failure of the Old Covenant made
it obsolete (Heb. 8:13). Hence, the manner in which
the divine plan will be successful has been altered—or rather, clarified,
since this was God’s original intent from the beginning.
The
New Covenant
When
God came down as fire upon Mount Horeb in Exodus 19:18, the people were unable
to hear the law. Since faith comes by hearing (Rom. 10:17), and because it is by
faith that the law is written on one’s heart, the people were unable to have
the law written on their hearts at that time.
That
is why God gave it to them later on tablets of stone. They were given a written
record of what God said, but only those who could overcome fear and allow the
Holy Spirit to speak to them would be able to transfer the law from external
tablets to the tablets on their hearts.
Few
did this over the centuries, but some did. In so doing, they came under the New
Covenant, even during the general dominance of the Old Covenant. God also said
to entwine blue threads in their tassels (Num. 15:38, 39) to remember the commandments. Most
did so but remained under the Old Covenant, unless the Holy Spirit worked to
transfer the law from blue thread on the outside to their hearts on the inside.
The
Old Covenant, given at Mount Horeb, was based on the will of man, requiring Israel
to take an oath of obedience in order to obtain the blessings of God. In other
words, they were required to conform to the nature of God, as expressed in His
law, by disciplining their flesh.
The
problem was that the law was “holy and righteous and good” (Rom. 7:12), but
the death factor in man made him too weak to succeed in attaining perfection
through his own will. All sinned, making it impossible for the law to reward
them with life. So Paul says in Rom. 7:10,
10 and this commandment, which was to result in life, proved to result in
death for me.
Under
this covenant Israel failed to enter the Promised Land and to inherit the
promises. Thus, another path to life had to be created, one that would succeed,
a plan that was based on the will of God, rather than the will of man.
After
40 years, when the time of Israel’s sentence came to an end, God made a second
covenant with them that would succeed. Deut. 29:1 says,
1 These are the words of the covenant which the Lord commanded
Moses to make with the sons of Israel in the land of Moab, besides the
covenant which He had made with them at Horeb.
This
second covenant ran concurrent with the first covenant until Christ ratified
the New Covenant at the cross by His blood. It was inherently different from
the covenant at Horeb, because it was based on God’s oath and His will, rather
than man’s oath and man’s will. Deut. 29:10-13 says,
10 You stand today, all of you, before the Lord your God… 12
that you may enter into the covenant with the Lord your God and into His
oath which the Lord your God is making with you today, 13 in
order that He may establish you today as His people and that He may be your
God…
On
this occasion, no one was required to swear an oath like what happened in the
earlier covenant (Exodus 19:8). Thus, it was based
purely upon the will and promise of God. Whoever makes an oath is the one
required to fulfill it. In this case, God took the burden upon Himself to
accomplish the stated goal: “that He may establish you today as His people
and that He may be your God.”
With
this oath came three precedents supporting it:
13 … just as He spoke to you and as He swore to your fathers, to Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob.
It
is well known that Abraham was given what we now call the New Covenant, based
upon the promise of God. Some call it an unconditional covenant, which it is,
but more specifically, it is the oath of God alone. Hence, if it were to fail,
and if God proved incapable of establishing them as “His people” and to be
their God, He would not be able to claim that they were too disobedient or that
their will was too strong for Him to succeed in His good intentions.
God
does not make promises that He cannot keep. He does not make promises unless He
knows that His will is strong enough to succeed in spite of all opposition.
Furthermore,
God extended this New Covenant beyond the borders of Israel, saying in Deut. 29:14, 15,
14 Now not with you alone am I making this covenant and this oath, 15
but both with who stand with us today in the presence of the Lord our God and
with those who are not with us here today.
The
plain reading of these verses makes it a universal covenant that was not
restricted to time or space. It covers the entire earth for all generations.
God took an oath to include everyone as “His people” and assured us that He
would be every man’s God in the end.
Such
is the provision and scope of the New Covenant, and if this were too hard for
God, He should never have taken such an oath.
Joshua’s
Commission
After
the New Covenant was promised by God’s oath in Deut. 29, God foretells that the Israelites
will go into captivity (under the Old Covenant) and subsequently be delivered
under the New Covenant. In other words, the captivity will be temporary because
it will ultimately be overruled by the promise/oath of God.
They
were to “return to the Lord your God and obey Him” (Deut. 30:2), and
this will provide the lawful basis of their “restore you from captivity”
(Deut. 30:3). This is a New Covenant
promise, according to Deut. 30:6,
6 Moreover the Lord your God will circumcise your heart and the heart of
your descendants, to love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all
your soul, in order that you may live.
Then
God (through His agent, Moses) commissioned Joshua to implement this New
Covenant by bringing Israel into the Promised Land. Deut. 31:23 says,
23 Then He commissioned Joshua the son of Nun, and said, “Be
strong and courageous, for you will bring the sons of Israel into the land
which I swore to them, and I will be with you.”
Moses
then taught Israel a prophetic song in Deut. 32, followed by a final prophecy
about the tribes in Deut. 33. Chapter 34, then, gives the
account of Moses’ death. So we see how the commissioning of Joshua was really
the climax to the book of Deuteronomy.
Joshua,
the Type of Christ
Both
Moses and Joshua were types of Christ in different ways. Moses was a type of Christ
in that he led Israel out of the house of bondage in Egypt, while Jesus Christ
led us out of a greater form of bondage imposed upon us for the sin of Adam.
For this reason, God promised Moses that One who was like him would arise in
the future (Deut. 18:18).
Joshua,
on the other hand, was a type of Christ in His second coming (as Joseph). In
His second coming, Christ will lead us into the Promised Land on a greater
level. No longer will this inheritance merely be land on which to live. Our
bodies are made of the dust of the ground, and this is the true inheritance.
Israel
had moved away from Canaan when Joseph invited them to move to Egypt. Joseph’s
descendant, Joshua, caused them to return to that land inheritance. But this
entire process was but a type and shadow, designed to teach us about a greater
inheritance that was lost in Adam.
So
Joshua himself served as a type of Yeshua-Jesus. As a mere type, Joshua was
only partially successful in his commission. Though he completed his mission,
we find that there was yet more land to conquer, more enemies to subdue, and
more Israelite idolatry to eradicate.
The
tribe of Dan, for instance, only possessed the mountainous portion of its land,
leaving the plain in the possession of the Philistines (Judges 18:1).
God Himself claimed responsibility for leaving ungodly nations in the land,
saying in Judges 3:1-5,
1 Now these are the nations which the Lord left, to test Israel by them…
4 And they were for testing Israel, to find out if they would obey
the commandments of the Lord… 5 And the sons of Israel lived among
the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Amorites, the Perizzitets, the Hivites, and
the Jebusites.
Before
Joshua died, he told Israel, “And now the Lord your God has given rest to
your brothers” (Josh. 22:4). But the type of rest
given was an imperfect rest, something less than what God really intended. This
is evident from the fact that Israel was later uprooted and exiled to Assyria.
If they had truly entered God’s rest, their condition would have been
permanent.
8 For if Joshua had given them rest, He would have spoken of another day
after that. 9 There remains therefore a Sabbath rest for the people
of God.
Nonetheless,
Joshua did all that he was commissioned to do. He did his work under the
limitations of the type and shadow that were imposed upon him. It had to be so,
in order to make room for a greater Joshua—Yeshua, the Christ, who would
complete the work and bring us into the true Sabbath rest, unencumbered by sin
and death.
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