Lesson
73: Joshua 3–5
Introduction
Joshua’s
calling as a prophet was confirmed to the Israelites when God parted the Jordan
River and allowed them to cross into the promised land. The Lord told Joshua to
commemorate this miracle by having one man from each of the 12 tribes of Israel
pick up a stone from the riverbed and construct a memorial with the stones.
Once they had entered the promised land, the Lord stopped sending manna, and
the Israelites ate from the fruit of the land.
---If
possible, bring 12 stones or rocks to class and stack them in a place where
students will see them as they enter. If students comment on or ask questions
about the stones, do not respond.
---To
begin the lesson, invite students to read Joshua
4:21
silently, looking for the question it contains.
---Write
the following question on the board: What mean these stones?
---Ask
students to raise their hands if they had a similar question as they entered
the room.
---Invite
students to look for the meaning of the stones stacked in the classroom as they
continue their study of the book of Joshua today.
---Explain
that Joshua and the Israelites moved their camp so they were near the Jordan
River (see Joshua
3:1).
They knew they were supposed to cross the river and settle other portions of
the promised land, but the river was flooding, which made it difficult to cross
(see Joshua
3:15).
---What would you have done in
these circumstances?
---Invite
a student to read Joshua
3:1–6
aloud. Before the student reads, divide the class into three groups. Assign each group one of the following questions
and ask them to look for the answer as these verses are read:
---What did the officers tell
the people to do?
---What did Joshua tell the
people to do?
---What did Joshua tell the
priests to do?
---After
the passage has been read, repeat the three questions and ask students to
report what they found. Then ask:
---Why do you think the people
were instructed to sanctify themselves before they crossed the Jordan River?
What difference would their preparation make in their response to the Lord’s miracles?
---Read
Joshua
3:7
aloud, and ask students to follow along, looking for what the Lord told Joshua
after the priests started to carry the ark toward the river.
---On
the floor of the classroom, place two parallel tape lines about six feet (two
meters) apart. (You may want to do this before class.)
---Explain
that the space between the two lines represents the Jordan River that the
Israelites needed to cross to enter the promised land. Invite a student to come
to the edge of one tape line. You may want to give this student a heavy
backpack or a large pile of books to hold. Explain that the student will be
acting out the part of one of the Levite priests who was carrying the ark of
the covenant.
---Ask
a student to read Joshua
3:8–11, 13
aloud. Ask students to follow along, looking for what the Lord said He would do
to help the Israelites cross the river. Explain that the phrase “stand upon an
heap” in verse 13 means the water
would stop flowing downstream.
After
Joshua
3:13
is read, ask the following questions to the student representing the priests
who carried the ark:
---What would those who were
carrying the ark have to do before the river stopped?
---Would you be willing to step
into the water? (Invite the student to step into the space between the two
lines.)
---What quality did the priests
demonstrate by stepping into the water before the water stopped flowing
downstream?
---Invite
two students to take turns reading aloud from Joshua
3:14–17.
Ask the class to follow along, looking for what happened when the priests
stepped into the water.
---What principle can we learn
from the priests’ actions that can help us when we are faced with obstacles and
challenges?
(Students
may identify a variety of principles, including the following: Moving
forward in faith invites God to perform miracles on our behalf. Write this
principle on the board.)
To
help students understand this principle, invite a student to read aloud the
following statement by Elder David A. Bednar of the Quorum of the Twelve
Apostles.
“Recall
how the Israelites came to the river Jordan and were promised the waters would
part, and they would be able to cross over on dry ground. Interestingly, the
waters did not part as the children of Israel stood on the banks of the river
waiting for something to happen; rather, the soles of their feet were wet
before the water parted. The faith of the Israelites was manifested in the fact
that they walked into the water before it parted. They walked into the river
Jordan with a future-facing assurance of things hoped for” (“Seek Learning by Faith,” Ensign, Sept. 2007, 63).
---What do you think it means to
move forward in faith?
---Point
out that although we may not have flooded rivers to cross in our lives, we will
have obstacles and challenges that we may not know how to overcome.
---Read
the following scenario aloud and ask students to respond with ways they could
move forward with the faith that God will help them:
---You
feel that you should share the gospel with a friend but are nervous that you
may do it incorrectly and that it will negatively affect your friendship.
---What are some other
challenges or life events that may require us to move forward before we can
understand how things will turn out?
---When have you or someone you
know experienced miracles or blessings after moving forward in faith?
---Consider
sharing your testimony of this principle or inviting students to share their
testimonies of moving forward in faith.
---Ask
students to name any memorials, such as monuments or statues, within their community
or country. You might consider showing a picture of one, if possible.
---What is the purpose of a
memorial?
---What is the memorial you
named intended to remind you of? How can you benefit from remembering these
things?
---Draw
students’ attention to the pile of stones in the classroom, and explain that as
the Israelites crossed through the Jordan River, they were commanded to gather
stones.
---Invite
students to scan Joshua
4:1–5
looking for how many stones they needed to gather and where they needed to get
them.
---Ask students to report what they find.
---Point
out the question on the board (“What mean these stones?”), and invite a few
students to take turns reading aloud from Joshua
4:6–7, 20–24.
Ask students to follow along, looking for answers to this question.
---What answers did you find to
the question “What mean these stones?”
---According to verse 24, what effect
should remembering this miraculous event have had on the Israelites?
---Write
the following on the board: As we remember what the Lord has
done for us …
---Ask
students how they would complete this statement. The following is one possible
response: As we remember what the Lord has done for us,
our reverence for Him increases and our testimonies are strengthened. (Write this
principle on the board.)
---How can remembering previous
miracles and spiritual experiences increase our reverence for God and
strengthen our testimonies?
---Ask
a student to read aloud the following statement by Elder Marlin K. Jensen
of the Seventy:
“Remembering
enables us to see God’s hand in our past, just as prophecy and faith assure us
of God’s hand in our future” (“Remember and Perish Not,” Ensign or
Liahona, May 2007, 38).
---Invite
students to consider how the two principles they have identified relate to each
other. Help them see that the first principle they identified focuses on moving
forward in faith, while the second one teaches us to look back and remember
what God has done for us.
---How can these principles help
you as you face challenges in your life?
---Encourage
students to look for God’s hand in their lives.
---
Invite students to draw a picture of a 12-stone memorial in their scripture
study journals. Encourage them to create their own memorials in writing by
recording an experience they have had when the Lord helped them or when they
felt God’s hand in their lives (see Henry B. Eyring, “O Remember, Remember,” Ensign or
Liahona, Nov. 2007, 66–69).
---Summary
of Joshua
4:8–19:
These verses describe some of the details of the Israelites crossing the Jordan
River.
---Invite
students to read Joshua
4:14
silently, looking for how this experience affected the Israelites’ view of
their new prophet, Joshua. (You may want to explain that in this verse, the
word fear refers to feelings of reverence or awe; see Bible Dictionary, “Fear.”)
---Ask students to report what they find.
III.
Joshua
5
The Israelites cease to eat manna and
begin to partake of the good of the promised land
---Summary
of Joshua
5:1–11:
Once the Israelites were in the promised land, the Lord instructed Joshua to
have all the men circumcised. Remind students that circumcision was a token of
the covenant that the Lord had made with Abraham and his seed. For some reason
this practice had ceased during their 40 years in the wilderness, and the Lord
wanted it reinstituted (see Joshua
5:4–5).
---Ask
students to recall how the Lord had provided food for the Israelites during
their 40 years in the wilderness. After students respond, invite them to read Joshua
5:12
silently, looking for what happened to the manna after they arrived in the
promised land.
---Why do you think the Lord
stopped providing manna to the Israelites once they arrived in the promised
land?
(If
needed, explain that once the Israelites were in the promised land—a fertile
land where they could grow and raise their own food—the Lord expected them to
provide for themselves.)
---Invite
a student to read Joshua
5:13–15
aloud. Ask students to follow along, looking for the sacred experience Joshua
had that was similar to Moses’s experience with
the burning bush.
---Ask students to report.
---Explain
that the messenger who announces himself as the “captain of the host of the
Lord” was the Savior.
(You
might point out that the messenger allowed Joshua’s worship. This suggests that
the messenger was Jesus Christ.)
---Conclude
by inviting a few students to summarize what they have learned in this lesson.
Encourage students to act on the truths they have learned.
Commentary and
Background Information
Joshua
3:13. Moving forward in faith invites God to perform miracles in our lives
President
Boyd K. Packer of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles shared an experience
that helped him learn the importance of moving forward in faith. He was faced
with a decision about where his family should live after he was called as an Apostle. He had
previously spoken with Elder Harold B. Lee, who had encouraged him to get
counsel from President David O. McKay. President Packer recalled that
after speaking with President McKay,
“I
returned to Elder Lee and told him that I saw no way to move in the direction I
was counseled to go. He said, ‘The trouble with you is you want to see the end
from the beginning.’ I replied that I would like to see at least a step or two
ahead. Then came the lesson of a lifetime: ‘You must learn to walk to the edge
of the light, and then a few steps into the darkness; then the light will
appear and show the way before you’” (“The Edge of the Light,” BYU Magazine,
Mar. 1991; magazine.byu.edu).
Joshua
5:13–15. Who was the captain of the Lord’s host that Joshua saw?
Elder
Bruce R. McConkie taught:
“Christ
himself is the chief soldier in his own army; as Commander, he carries the
title Captain of the Lord’s Host. By this name he appeared to Joshua, who
seeing ‘him with his sword drawn in his hand,’ and hearing him say, ‘As captain
of the host of the Lord am I now come, … Joshua fell on his face to the earth,
and did worship, and said unto him, What saith my lord unto his servant? And
the captain of the Lord’s host said unto Joshua, Loose thy shoe from off thy
foot; for the place whereon thou standest is holy.’ (Josh.
5:13–15.)
What further direction was then given has not been preserved for us.
“It
is profitable to compare this appearance of our Lord to Joshua with his appearance
to Moses in the burning
bush at which time the ground also was hallowed by the personal presence of
Deity (Ex. 3), and also to
compare it with the ministry of the angel whom John attempted to worship, but
was restrained with the command: ‘See thou do it not: … worship God.’ (Rev.
19:9–11.)
Among righteous messengers from the spirit realms, none but Deity will accept
worship from mortals, and none but the Lord himself hallows a spot so that
mortals are commanded to remove their shoes” (Mormon Doctrine, 2nd ed. [1966], 111–12).
Students
can build their basic understanding of the scriptures by identifying important
details within a scripture block. Because search questions encourage students
to look for information within the scriptures, it is helpful to ask such
questions before reading the verses where the answers are found. This helps
students focus their attention and allows them to discover answers within the
scriptural account.
No comments:
Post a Comment