Shownotes
Section 1
This teaching from Joshua 24:15 centers on one of the most defining realities of the Christian life: choice. Joshua does not assume that everyone around him will automatically follow the Lord, even after all that Israel had experienced. Instead, he puts the responsibility directly on the people—“choose for yourselves this day whom you will serve.” That statement removes excuses. Every decision, whether small or significant, is ultimately owned by the individual. No one else is responsible for how a person responds, reacts, or lives before God. Even within a household, while leadership can establish direction, each person must personally decide. This reinforces a powerful truth: faith is not inherited, forced, or transferred. It is chosen. Every day presents a new opportunity to align with God or move away from Him, and that responsibility cannot be shifted to anyone else.
Section 2
The teaching deepens by emphasizing that this choice is both personal and ongoing. Joshua declares, “as for me and my household, we will serve the Lord,” showing leadership and conviction, yet still acknowledging that each individual must ultimately decide. This extends into family life, where even the most committed parents cannot choose faith for their children. They can pray, guide, and model, but they cannot decide on behalf of another soul. This reality can be both sobering and motivating. It calls believers to live authentically and consistently, while also recognizing the limits of their control. The responsibility to choose God is renewed daily, and it applies to every believer regardless of background, upbringing, or environment. Even if others walk away, the call remains the same: stand firm and choose the Lord personally.
Section 3
The connection to Judges 2 reveals the consequences of neglecting this responsibility across generations. After one generation passed, the next arose not knowing the Lord or what He had done. This was not due to a lack of God’s activity, but a failure to communicate it. The absence of both relationship and testimony led to spiritual decline. This underscores the importance of sharing what God has done—clearly, consistently, and without hesitation. Believers are not only called to choose God for themselves but to testify of His work so others have the opportunity to know Him. While no one can make the decision for another, there is a responsibility to make the truth known. Silence creates gaps, and those gaps can lead to entire generations drifting away. The call, therefore, is twofold: choose the Lord personally and faithfully declare His works so those who follow are not left without witness.