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A Study of Joshua 1:6–9 for Christian Men

Every man eventually faces a moment where comfort ends and calling begins.

The book of Joshua opens at one of those defining moments in history. Moses is dead. The wilderness season is over. And an entire nation—2 to 3 million people—stands at the edge of a promise they’ve heard about for generations but never stepped into.

This is not just Israel’s turning point.
It is a picture of every man’s turning point.

And what does God say to Joshua?

Not once.
Not twice.
But repeatedly:

“Be strong and courageous.” (Joshua 1:6–9)

Because stepping into what God has for you will always require courage.


The Setting: Transition, Loss, and Responsibility (Joshua 1:1–5)

Joshua steps into leadership after the death of Moses. This is a moment filled with grief, uncertainty, and pressure. He is likely 80–85 years old (Deuteronomy 34:9–12). The wilderness wandering is over. The promise is ahead. The responsibility is his.

God doesn’t give Joshua a battle strategy first.
He gives him identity and assurance.

“No one will be able to stand against you… As I was with Moses, so I will be with you.” (Joshua 1:5)

Strength and courage begin with presence.
Joshua will not fight alone.

There are 600,000 fighting men behind him—but more importantly, God Himself goes before him.


The Problem: Misunderstanding Strength and Courage

Today, many men misunderstand what biblical strength and courage actually are.

How the World Defines Strength

  • Dominance

  • Aggression

  • Independence

  • Emotional suppression

  • Ego-driven confidence

How the World Defines Courage

  • Loudness

  • Risk-taking for attention

  • Pride

  • Arrogance

  • “Liquid courage” borrowed from alcohol or hype

But biblical strength and courage are entirely different.


What Is Biblical Strength?

Biblical strength is Spirit-formed endurance.
It is the ability to remain faithful, obedient, humble, and anchored in God regardless of circumstances.

“Be strong in the Lord and in His mighty power.” (Ephesians 6:10)

Strength is not self-generated.
It is sourced in God.

It kneels before it stands.


What Is Biblical Courage?

Biblical courage is not bravado or pride.
It is strength rooted in obedience and trust in God.

Courage always has a source. Be careful where you get yours.

You can borrow courage from ego.
You can borrow courage from the applause of others.
You can borrow courage from anger.

But those sources fade.

When ego collapses and applause stops, fear returns.

True courage flows from calling, not personality.
From obedience, not self-sufficiency.
From promise, not pride.


You Are Leading Someone Somewhere (Joshua 1:6)

God tells Joshua:

“You will lead these people…”

Here is the truth for every man reading this:

You are leading someone somewhere.

Your wife.
Your children.
Your friends.
Your coworkers.

Even if you think you’re passive—you are still leading.

The only question is:
Where are you leading them?


How to Remain Strong and Courageous (Joshua 1:7–9)

God gives Joshua a clear pathway to sustained strength and courage:

1. Carefully Obey

Strength is not emotional intensity—it is consistent obedience.

2. Do Not Waver

“Do not turn from it to the right or to the left.”
Compromise always begins subtly.

3. Keep the Word on Your Lips and in Your Heart

“Keep this Book of the Law always on your lips; meditate on it day and night…” (Joshua 1:8)

Every man meditates on something:

  • Work

  • Money

  • Social media

  • Pornography

  • Success

  • Fear

The question is not whether you meditate.
The question is what is shaping your thinking.

4. Access the Presence of God

“The Lord your God will be with you wherever you go.” (Joshua 1:9)

Courage grows in the awareness of God’s presence.


Most Men Aren’t Failing — They’re Drifting

At Pain 2 Purpose, we see this often in Christian counseling with men:

Most men are not lacking ability.
They are lacking courage.

Joshua stood before an impossible assignment. Enemies ahead. Pressure behind. And God did not say:

“Be impressive.”
“Be dominant.”
“Be aggressive.”

He said:

“Be strong and courageous.”

Because strength and courage are choices before they are feelings.


The Real Question

Joshua was over 80 years old when God called him forward.

This isn’t about age.
It isn’t about personality.
It isn’t about background.

It is about obedience.

So let me ask you:

What would you be willing to do if you truly believed God was with you?

Would you:

  • Lead differently at home?

  • Confront hidden compromise and sin?

  • Step into spiritual leadership instead of outsourcing it?

  • Stop surviving and start living on purpose?

Because the promise hasn’t changed:

“The Lord your God will be with you wherever you go.”

Not just on Sundays.
Not just when you feel confident.
Wherever you go.


The Call to Biblical Manhood

Brothers, this is the moment.

We cross the line.
We leave passivity behind.
We leave shallow faith behind.
We leave fear and compromise behind.

And we become men who are:

  • Strong in the Lord

  • Courageous in obedience

  • Grounded in the Word

  • Confident in His presence

Not loud men.
Not arrogant men.
Anchored men.

And if a handful of men will stand firm in that, God will do more through them than through a crowd of comfortable ones.

So men of P2P—

Be strong.
Be courageous.
And step forward.

Get your FREE copy of the eBook Standing Tall: Building Biblical Confidence in a World Meant to Tear You Down 

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Coach Matt

Coach Matt

Matt has over 25 years of experience as a pastor, organizational leader, and coach. Matt is a survivor of pain, trauma, depression, anxiety, panic attacks, suicidal thoughts, and codependency. He has learned to not only survive trauma and pain but also live a passionate and fulfilling life and loves helping others do the same.