A New Dawn, A New Day
God already gave you the land. The catch? You still have to walk on it. Joshua 1 on comfort, courage, and the cost of staying put.
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A New Dawn, A New Day
Joshua 1:1–9
Heavenly Father, Jesus, we come before you this Sunday morning, and we lift up your holy name. Jesus, we invite your presence, your Holy Spirit power, into this moment and into this place and into our lives and our hearts and our minds. Jesus, we pray prayers of gratitude for our children who came back from camp this week. We pray prayers of protection and grace over our youth who are headed off this week. We pray a prayer of clarity for Yates Baptist Church. Jesus, we ask in your holy name that you would give us clarity over confusion, that you would cast vision for the future of your church, and that that vision would lead us where division stirs. And finally, Jesus, we declare boldly this morning that whatever you may have in store for the future of Yates Baptist Church, we know that the very best days of the kingdom of Jesus Christ are still to come. The best is yet to come. And so, Jesus, we come before you this morning, and we give you the honor and the glory and the praise that is rightly due to your name. Jesus, we pray. Amen.
Well, it is such a treat to be with you today, Yates Baptist Church. I want you to know the last time I was in this building was a few years ago, when I had the opportunity, as the head of the communications team for the Tri-West Baptist Network, to come in here. You hosted our annual meeting, and I got to give a report. So it is a very different experience being here preaching rather than giving a business meeting report. This is far more enjoyable, and I’m so glad to be with you today. Knowing that I’m going to be with you for the next three weeks helps me, because it allows me to preach a sermon series rather than try to squeeze everything together into one message. So we’re going to get you to that meeting and that lunch earlier than you had hoped. That’s the plan.
So we’re starting a series today called Onward. Onward. This series is going to be all about — and you can go ahead and throw that up on the screen, there we go — moving toward the uncharted. Moving toward the uncharted. We’re going to be looking at the book of Joshua, and Joshua felt like an important book for where you are right now in the life of Yates Baptist Church.
So before we jump into the first chapter of Joshua today, I wanted to start by looking back at the end of the Mosaic books. Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy — those are the five books we call the Law, or the Pentateuch. These are the first five books of the Bible, and they are written by Moses. When we get to the end of Deuteronomy, Moses, after forty years leading the people through the wilderness, has died — before he was ever able to cross the Jordan River into the promised land. There’s something powerful about that, because Moses was a good and faithful leader for the people of Israel, but Moses was not able to experience where the people of Israel were headed. Moses died before the people had stepped into all that God had for them.
One of the things that is true in the life of every church is that there are changes, there are shifts that happen in churches. Any church older than seven years has probably had more than one pastor — it’s just the nature of how that works. A church has a vision that is bigger than any one person. The church has a vision that is bigger than any one generation, because the church of Jesus Christ is multigenerational. It continues, and you and I are standing on the shoulders of the giants who have come before us, generations and generations and generations, and we get the opportunity to be the people the next generation stands on the shoulders of, to go even further. I’m so grateful for that. I’m so grateful that the kingdom of God never stops with a person or with a generation.
For the people of Israel, they had been in the wilderness for forty years, and Moses had been leading them faithfully. When Moses dies, there is a moment of utter chaos and confusion for the people of Israel. Suddenly they find themselves in a spot where they don’t know what to do, they don’t know what’s next, they don’t know who to listen to, they don’t know who to follow. And that’s where we find ourselves at the beginning of Joshua chapter one.
Today we’re going to read Joshua chapter one, verses one through nine. If you have your Bibles with you, I want to encourage you to pull them out. If someone wants to give one to Keith, I know he didn’t have his up here, but I want to make sure everyone has their Bible. I do want to say what a treat it is to be here with Keith. When I first moved to Durham, I moved here to pastor Durham Memorial Baptist Church on the east side of town, and for the three years I was there, I had the wonderful privilege of spending every Sunday with Keith’s lovely wife, Kathy. That was an incredible joy to me, and I love, Keith, that you’re still here — it’s so, so meaningful to me. So let’s go ahead and open up your Bibles. Joshua chapter one, verses one through nine — I’m going to be reading out of the Holman Christian Standard Bible, but whatever translation you’re reading out of is just fine.
After the death of Moses the Lord’s servant, the Lord spoke to Joshua son of Nun, who had served Moses: “Moses My servant is dead. Now you and all the people prepare to cross over the Jordan to the land I am giving the Israelites. I have given you every place where the sole of your foot treads, just as I promised Moses. Your territory will be from the wilderness and Lebanon to the great Euphrates River — all the land of the Hittites — and west to the Mediterranean Sea. No one will be able to stand against you as long as you live. I will be with you, just as I was with Moses. I will not leave you or forsake you.
“Be strong and courageous, for you will distribute the land I swore to their fathers to give them as an inheritance. Above all, be strong and very courageous to carefully observe the whole instruction My servant Moses commanded you. Do not turn from it to the right or the left, so that you will have success wherever you go. This book of instruction must not depart from your mouth; you are to recite it day and night so that you may carefully observe everything written in it. For then you will prosper and succeed in whatever you do. Haven’t I commanded you: be strong and courageous? Do not be afraid or discouraged, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go.” (Josh 1:1–9, HCSB)
That’s nine verses to start off the book of Joshua, and three times in nine verses we get the instruction from the Lord to be strong and courageous. [Addressing the person running the slides.] We’re not ready for that yet, but you can come on back — thank you. Be strong and courageous. Hey, I do want to take a second — can we give it up for the AV volunteers in the back, for how they’ve had to handle everything today? Thank you so much. Yeah, we’re not ready for that slide yet, but I appreciate it.
So, Joshua chapter one, we get this important message: be strong, be courageous. Be strong, be courageous. Be strong, be courageous. And I’m wondering why it is that God would have to tell Joshua, this leader who’s about to take over for Moses — why he would have to be told to be strong and courageous, be strong and courageous, be strong and courageous. And I want to just say, I think it is because to lead is hard. To lead into uncharted territory is impossible without God. And I wonder today — I wonder today, as you are preparing for an important meeting today and an important business meeting next week, as you prepare for today — are we a people who are afraid? Are we fearful? Are we full of doubt about what could be, about what might happen? Or are we a people who are strong and courageous? Are we a people who are ready to say there is more to do, there is more to come? The battle is not over yet, and it is time to be strong and courageous, because as long as the Lord has given breath in your lungs, you and I have work to do. The story’s not over, and it’s going to require that we are strong and courageous.
Now, that is what I have always taken out of Joshua 1:1–9. If you’ve ever been involved in a church youth group, or you’ve ever been to a Bible study, or — strangely enough — if you’ve ever been a member of a sports team, Joshua 1:1–9 is not an unfamiliar passage of Scripture. And one of the things that can happen as we spend time with Scripture we’re familiar with is that our familiarity can sometimes lead us to miss something that’s right there on the page. Maybe this has been your experience — you’ve read over a passage of Scripture time and time again in your life, and something happens, whether you were at the right moment or it spoke into the right instance in your life, but something happens. You go back to that Scripture you maybe even know by heart, and suddenly something jumps out at you that never has before. And so, in this sermon that I have titled “A New Dawn, A New Day,” I want to talk about what we see by looking at a principle and a promise. What we see by looking at a principle and a promise.
Now see, there is a promise from God in Joshua chapter 1. In fact, there are a few promises. God is reasserting the promises he made to Moses, and he is letting Joshua know: the promises I made to Moses, those promises are true for you too, Joshua. These promises are not just for Moses. These promises are for you.
But they’re not just a promise — there’s also a principle at play, and a principle is a foundational truth. A principle is a foundational truth. Maybe to put it a different way: a principle is a promise that is dependent on the user. A principle is a promise that is dependent on the user, meaning a principle is a truth that requires your obedience. And because of that, a principle can be a blessing or a curse. If you receive the promise, and the promise leads you to step out in obedience, then that promise has been a blessing. But if you receive the promise and do nothing with it, then the principle there is — man, that’s kind of become a curse to you.
So here’s what I want to do this morning. I need three volunteers, and I’m going to go ahead and say this now, please take it in the loving way it’s meant: I need three spry volunteers. I need three spry people. Come on up — who’s ready? I need three people. If you make me start pointing at people, it’s not going to go well. So, my friend right here in gray and black, I’m going to have you come on up. My friend over here in the blue shirt with the white stripe, come on up — I’ve got to have you come on up. And then, hey, my friend Matt Griffin is here — I’m going to have Matt come up. Come on, y’all. Oh, sir, I apologize, I’m sorry — all right, I’m going to have you stay there. I need one more volunteer who’s ready to raise a hand. There we go, thank you, my friend, you can come on. Actually, you guys come on up on stage.
Hey, I’m Rob. What’s your name? Jeff — so good to have you come on up. And you are? Watson. Love that. And Matt, it’s so good to see you — as I knock over this microphone stand. I’m going to have all three of you guys come over here. So — Matt, Jeff, Watson — Matt, Jeff, and Watson.
Now, I want to take you back to the Scripture — in reading this passage recently, this is what jumped off the page to me. This is verse three: “I have given you every place where the sole of your foot treads, just as I promised Moses” (Josh 1:3, HCSB). I have given you every place where the sole of your foot treads, just as I promised Moses.
So, Watson, you get to go first. I’ve given you — I’ve given you every place where the sole of your foot treads. What’s your first response? I’ve given you every place where the sole of your foot treads. Okay, wonderful — are you staying right there? Okay, well, let’s see it, come on. You’ve been given — Jeff, what about you? I’ve given you every place where the sole of your foot treads. You’re going to get moving. Matt, I’ve given you every place where the sole of your foot treads. Where are you going? Come on. Now, thank you, thank you. By the way, give these guys a round of applause. [Congregation applauds.] Thank you so much.
Okay, let’s be honest here for a minute — can we be honest? How many of us have received this promise from the Lord, and we are the blessed, frozen, chosen? I’ve given you every place where the sole of your foot treads. “God, thank you for this, that’s so awesome. I’m so grateful, God, thank you that you’ve given me every —” but, man, I’m comfortable right here. Oh, man, I’m comfortable. I mean, there’s air — come on, y’all, there’s air conditioning. There’s air conditioning, and it is too hot. Oh, man, and you know, I’ve got this thing in my back. Oh, all right. I’ve given you every place where the sole of your foot treads, and we are good right here.
So let me tell you the principle. Let me tell you the principle here: “I’ve given you every place where the sole of your foot treads, just as I promised Moses” (Josh 1:3, HCSB). It’s a promise, but it’s not just a promise — it’s a principle. Because if we are the frozen chosen, that’s it. This is what we get. God’s made a promise. God said, come on, I’ve given it to you, let’s go. Thanks, God, doing great right here. And we get to the end of our lives, and despite the faithful promise of our God, we look around at what we’ve done for the kingdom, and we go, yep, I had it — God gave me all of this right here. It was a promise, but the promise turned into a curse, because we didn’t do anything with it.
Watson, I loved your reaction: “I’ve given you every place where the sole of your foot treads” — well, let’s dance in time then, come on, let’s go. “I’ve given you every place where the sole of your foot treads” — well, then there is no way you are stopping me from taking ground. “I’ve given you every place where the sole of your foot treads” — so get moving.
Because I don’t want us to come to the end of our lives and go, I could have gone so much further, I could have gone so much further, but the more comfortable I got, the easier it was to go, man, I’m going to take those steps tomorrow. I’m going to take that ground tomorrow. I’m going to have that conversation tomorrow. I’m going to invite that friend to church tomorrow. And tomorrow turns into tomorrow turns into tomorrow. I know I’m not the only procrastinator in the room, right? Come on, someone else there with me — you know what it’s like to see your days turn into tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow. And you get to the end of a week, or a month, or a year, or a life, and this is all we’ve got.
And the truth is: if God has promised Joshua to give him every place where the sole of his foot treads, just as he promised Moses (cf. Josh 1:3, HCSB), and Joshua were to stay still on the east side of the river, it’s not just Joshua missing the opportunity. It’s Joshua looking back at Moses’s faithfulness and saying it didn’t matter — because for all the steps you took, I’m not taking any. And that’s the reality of the church. And by the way, this isn’t unique to us. This has been the reality of every single generation of the church. Every single generation in the history of the church is constantly fighting against our human nature for safety and security and comfort. But God hasn’t called you to that. He hasn’t called us to that. God has called us out into the great wide open. God has called you to go further and do more and reach more people.
Generation after generation of faithful believers who have gone before us have taken steps so that we could be right here in church. I say to you today, let’s not come all this way just to stop. Let’s not have come all this way just to make it this far. God has more for us. God has more for you. God has a bright future ahead — but the bright future ahead will not be easy, and it will not be safe, and it will not be comfortable. It will involve taking steps.
And here’s the truth — I did not do this for the sake of today’s message. I went with a men’s group Friday and Saturday up to Galax, Virginia, for a little two-day camping trip with some guys I know from another church. And yesterday morning, we decided, hey, let’s go for a hike. I don’t know if you can tell by looking at me, but I don’t go on a lot of hikes. It’s five and a half miles, and there’s a significant amount of elevation change, but we’re not running, right? It’s not a race. So I’m like, yeah, we’ll just take the whole morning and we’ll do it. But every step was harder, and then it got to the point where all the muscles in the backs of my legs started clenching up. And the muscles are like, no, we’re done. And you’re like, well, we’re not back to the car yet — so you’re kind of grabbing your legs along the way, you’re like, come on, we’ve got to go. And I wonder today how many of us, in our faith, need to just grab our legs — even though it’s hard, even though it’s not comfortable, even though it’s pushing us further than we thought we could go — and just say, nope, God has given me every step, so I’m not stopping.
Because here’s the principle for Joshua: Joshua will only inherit what he inhabits. Joshua will only inherit what he inhabits. Let me put it to you another way — Joshua will only receive what he steps into.
Right now, Durham, North Carolina, and the greater Triangle remains one of the fastest-growing areas in the country — second in the Southeast in growth behind the suburbs of Atlanta.1 But what makes this place unique, among all the other places you could be living, is a set of universities — regardless of which color blue you may wear — a collection of research and tech companies based here that is pulling in people from all around the world. Right now, there are more people coming from places in the world where Christianity is illegal, and those young adults are coming here to attend school or to work jobs. You are right now living in one of the few places on earth where, without leaving your zip code, you can impact the whole world. There’s a student right now at Duke University who doesn’t know Jesus, comes from a family that doesn’t know Jesus, and comes from a country where people don’t talk about Jesus — and God brought them to your doorstep. He brought them to you.
Right now, there are teenagers in the vicinity of this church who are part of not just the least Christian, but the least faith-based generation in American history. In the history of the United States, “no religious affiliation” — the “nones,” as we call them — has never been the predominant group within a generation, until my kids’ generation. The largest and most rapidly growing religious affiliation in the United States among my children’s generation is “none.”2 And they’re right here. They’re right here. They live next door and across the street, and some of them are children in the developmental center. And they’re part of families that don’t know Jesus, that haven’t heard the engaging and compelling story of what Christ has come to do for you and for me.
You are right now in one of the most unique positions that any group of Christians has ever been in, in human history. The question is: are we going to stand right here and be comfortable, and watch the opportunity pass by? Are we going to find ourselves at the end of our lives with the Savior saying, “I brought them to you,” and we say, “Yeah, but we were really comfortable”? God has given you a promise. I have already given it to you. I’ve already given you the land. I’ve already given you every step that you will take.
Over the next two weeks, we’re going to be hearing more about Joshua leading the people of Israel across the Jordan River and into the promised land. But for right now, at the end of Joshua chapter one, the people have not yet made that step. They have not yet stepped across the river. They have not yet crossed their lines of comfort and safety in order to follow God’s vision and mission for their lives.
What better place to end today’s message than to leave us with this question? Just like Joshua and the people of Israel, we are standing on the shore of a river. We are standing on the border of where we have been and where we are going.
Church — has God brought you this far just to come this far? Or is there a step to take? Is there a step to take that is worthy of the sacrifice of the generations behind us? Is there a step for us to take that says, it’s not going to end here, but we are moving forward — even when it’s not comfortable, even when there’s no safety and security in it? Are we willing to be the kind of people who have enough faith to say, just like Joshua, we will only inherit what we inhabit? We will only receive what we live into. Church, how is God calling you to be obedient today? And are we taking those steps of obedience? Are we taking those steps like our lives depend on it? Are we taking those steps like our legacies depend on it? Are we taking those steps like the kingdom of heaven is in the balance?
Because everything that we’re about to read in the rest of the book of Joshua is incredible — beautiful stories of God’s faithfulness. But here’s what was true for Joshua, and here’s what’s true for you today: if Joshua didn’t cross the river, he never would have seen any of it. We woke up this morning with breath in our lungs, which means God has purpose and mission for us. And I don’t want you to miss it. I don’t want you to miss it, because the best is yet to come.
Let me pray for us. Heavenly Father, Jesus, we are so grateful for the power of your gospel. We are compelled by your Holy Spirit to take faithful steps of obedience, even when it’s hard, even when it makes us uncomfortable, God. We are willing to take steps of obedience. So, God, when everything in us wants to pursue comfort, safety, security, God, will you give us the boldness to believe that the best is yet to come? Would we not make choices from a scarcity mindset, God? Would you give us an abundance mindset? Would we be a people who believe that you have placed us here and now to make a difference in the whole world? God, what could be more deserving of the name Yates than that we would go — that we would cross borders and lines of comfort and safety and security, that we might see those who are far from Christ become sons and daughters of the King? Jesus, we pray this in your name. Amen.
Endnotes
1 The greater Research Triangle region (Raleigh–Durham–Chapel Hill) is widely recognized as one of the nation’s fastest-growing metropolitan economies. The UNC Kenan Institute’s “American Growth Project” ranks the Triangle’s economy third-fastest-growing among the fifty largest U.S. metros and fourth-fastest among 150 extended metropolitan areas, while also noting that the Triangle is North Carolina’s second-largest regional economy by GDP, behind Charlotte. Census-based analyses of metro population growth similarly place Raleigh–Cary in the national top tier — roughly tenth-fastest in recent rankings — and highlight that many of the country’s fastest-growing metros are in the Southeast. These data support the general description of the Triangle as a leading growth center in the Southeast, though the sermon’s specific claim that it is “second in the Southeast behind the suburbs of Atlanta” generalizes across the precision of the available rankings.
2 Recent survey data show that today’s youngest adult cohort is the most religiously unaffiliated in recorded U.S. polling. The 2024 PRRI Census of American Religion reports that about 38–39 percent of Americans ages 18–29 identify as religiously unaffiliated (“nones”), a substantially higher share than among older generations. PRRI’s breakdowns by age and gender likewise show that young adults — especially young women — have become significantly more likely to claim no religious affiliation over the past decade, rising from 32 percent in 2013 to 38 percent in 2024. The Pew Research Center’s Religious Landscape Study finds that roughly 44 percent of 18- to 29-year-olds now identify as religiously unaffiliated, making the “nones” the single largest religious category in that age group and larger than any individual Christian tradition — a pattern not seen in older cohorts in prior survey waves.
Works Cited
Baptist News Global. “PRRI: Growth of the Religiously Unaffiliated Is Slowing.” May 15, 2025. Accessed July 12, 2026. https://baptistnews.com/article/prri-growth-of-the-religiously-unaffiliated-is-slowing/.
The Holy Bible, Holman Christian Standard Bible. 2004. Nashville: Holman Bible Publishers.
“Markets with the Most Population Growth in 2025.” RealPage Analytics, April 1, 2026. Accessed July 12, 2026. https://www.realpage.com/analytics/population-growth-markets-2025/.
Pew Research Center. “Religious ‘Nones’ in America: Who They Are and What They Believe.” January 23, 2024. Accessed July 12, 2026. https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2024/01/24/religious-nones-in-america-who-they-are-and-what-they-believe/.
Public Religion Research Institute. “2024 PRRI Census of American Religion.” PRRI, April 14, 2026. Accessed July 12, 2026. https://www.prri.org/spotlight/2024-prri-census-of-american-religion/.
Public Religion Research Institute. “Gen Z, Gender, and Religion.” PRRI, March 4, 2025. Accessed July 12, 2026. https://www.prri.org/spotlight/gen-z-gender-and-religion/.
“Southeast Metros Lead US Population Growth as National Gains Slow.” Becker’s Hospital Review, March 26, 2026. Accessed July 12, 2026. https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/strategy/southeast-metros-lead-us-population-growth-as-national-gains-slow/.
UNC Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise. “From Tobacco to High Tech: Manufacturing in the Piedmont Triad and the Research Triangle.” March 18, 2025. Accessed July 12, 2026. https://kenaninstitute.unc.edu/commentary/from-tobacco-to-high-tech-manufacturing-in-the-piedmont-triad-and-the-research-triangle/.
© 2026 Rob Stone. All rights reserved.
