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Speaker 1: Previously on the chosen people.
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Speaker 2: Now you and all the people will prepare to cross over the Jordan to the land I am giving you. Look up, Joshua, see the land before you across the river.
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Speaker 1: Joshua obeyed the Lord, tears still bringing as he blinked them away to see the land before him. The rising sun cascaded over the plains, revealing the lash vegetation and distant palm trees.
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Speaker 2: I have given you every place where the soul of your foot will tread, just as I promised Moses. No one will stand against you as long as you live. I will be with you, just as I was with Moses. I will not leave you nor abandon you.
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Speaker 1: This was the assurance Joshua had been seeking. The stark isolation that accompanied the burden of leadership, the mantle Moses bore for so long, was perhaps Joshua's greatest fear. As if sensing his thoughts, the Lord continued to.
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Speaker 2: Be strong and courageous, For you will distribute the land I swore to their ancestors and give to them us an inheritance.
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Speaker 3: My brothers, the Lord has given us the land he swore to our ancestors. Together we have taken possession of it, and of our enemies could stand against us if the Lord has handed them over to us.
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Speaker 4: Now we must settle for our inheritance.
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Speaker 3: You have sent out your representatives to serve in the land, and.
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Speaker 5: They have briefed you on what they found.
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Speaker 4: And now before our God, our.
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Speaker 3: High priest with the vine Woods tribe, gets what region the Lord, your guide has had the tribe that is chosen will choose to the allotments.
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Speaker 1: Before Joshua leaned forward heavily on his walking stick into the gentle spring breeze and squinted down the road. He had shewed the doting attendants and fretful priests away, declining their offers for seats or to wait inside with wine. No Joshua wanted to be the first to welcome his old friend when he entered their capital, the city of Shiloh. Twenty years had passed since Israel divided up the land, and the weight of those years had settled heavily on Joshua. Like his beloved mentor Moses, he now walked with the aid of a staff. His hands could still swing a hammer or an axe when the need arose, but he had not lifted his sword once since the last battle was won, he had spent the last two decades rebuilding his humble city of Timnath Sarah and traveling back and forth to the capital to oversee the growing pains of a fledgling government. The emerging nation was still recovering, slowly finding its footing after the many wars of conquest. But as the years passed and another generation began to fade age, gradually chipping away at the oldest of the Wilderness generation, Joshua felt an increasing urgency. He longed to commission the new generation to set them on the right path as stewards of God's legacy, his holy priesthood, and his chosen nation. The time had come for his final public address. Only when the mantle had been formerly passed would Joshua finally allow himself to rest. His duty was not complete, but soon.
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Speaker 4: It would be.
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Speaker 1: Joshua was rewarded with his persistence of war watching the road. As the proud banners of the tribe of Judah finally appeared on the horizon, he hobbled forward as the clan leaders of the tribe and their attendants rode by on their camels and donkeys. Joshua stood on his toes, but tried not to look overly eager. He was still the respected leader and general of the Israelite people after all. But finally, head poking above all the rest, atop his camel, at long last he saw him. Caleb's grin split his face practically in two as he met Joshua's eyes. He leaped from his mout, surprisingly agile for a man over one hundred years old, and swept Joshua into a tight embrace.
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Speaker 4: Joshua rather, Caleb, it's been years. Wa, I've been busy.
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Speaker 5: Yeah, you've been busy, fair, fair words, brother.
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Speaker 6: You've been battling politics and managing the squabbling of our people, And I've been battling Canaanites, parasites and the sons of giants and securing my inheritance.
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Speaker 1: The two old friends made their way into Joshua's quarters in the primary fortress of the city. Long gone were the days of Nomad's tents for the Israelites. They recounted tales of the last twenty years, until Caleb finally stopped Joshua and asked him the purpose of calling all the clan leaders from each of the tribes to Shiloh.
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Speaker 5: Now, now tell me you didn't call an old man here to listen to his exploits in battle, as impressive haha as they may be. Haha. Why do you wish to speak to the leaders of Israel?
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Speaker 4: I have heard concerning reports from the reaches of our kingdoms, even here closer to home. The men who took the promised land are grand and great grandfathers, now children we raised to starting to lead their own families, and those families are starting to entertain the customs and cultures of the land. The very people we subdued are tempting us with their gods, and I am hearing too many stories confirming that those invitations are being accepted. They are welcoming the gods of our neighbors with open arms. In short, God's people are yet again flirting with their own destruction. As long as I drop breath, I will not let the leaders of Israel go back to their hearts and halls uninformed. It's our responsibility to make sure the next generation remember the oaths our predecessors swore to the Lord.
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Speaker 5: You mean to renew the covenant?
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Speaker 3: I do would have us gather the people at Shechem and renew the Covenant, not just reciting, recommitting all men must choose the Lord or his own desires, life or destruction. I will not fade away from this life until I offer up this choice to all of Israel.
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Speaker 5: What will you do after we gather the people and when the covenant is renewed?
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Speaker 1: Joshua took a long swig of the wine from his cup as he considered how to answer his friend.
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Speaker 4: Do you know I asked a similar question of Moses once this was before we knew he would not enter the land?
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Speaker 1: Joshua paused again as the memory of his mentor flickered before his mind, A lifetime ago, packed to the brim with strife and triumphs, grief and joy, and staggering defeats and soaring victories. Caleb leaned forward and breathlessly interrupted Joshua's reveries.
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Speaker 5: What did he say? He said he wished to go, wasn't wasn't he a shepherd before he came to us. I would have thought he would want to return to the simplicity of what he knew when all the work was done. But a farmer, how strange, I said as much when he told me. He told me that he was many things and lived many lives, he said, the only life he wanted, what it was all said and done, was life close to the Creator, not as an advisor or intercessor, not as a prophet or orator, but just as one who comes to worship alone. Nothing more, nothing less. I've been thinking of our histories. Before all the pain, betrayal, failures, and evil, there was just peace. And in that peace unity, a closeness with the Creator that is not attainable anywhere else outside that initially life giving garden anyway, So I suppose Moses's answer has become my own. I have served as an attendant, led armies into battle, that a nation rebuilt, a city, founded, a government. But now, Ah, I suppose I'll spend my whole life trying to understand God. Better, I'll spend it seeking to get a glimpse of paradise lost, the holy connection between Creator and creature that was broken. When all of this is over, I think I would like to cultivate my own little Leeden, and you will have it, my friend.
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Speaker 1: After Joshua gathered the leaders of Israel at Shiloh and reminded them of the faithfulness of their God and the importance of clinging to his instructions. He then commanded them to return to their homes and prepare their people to journey to Shechem. Nestled between Mount Obal and Mount Garrison, the historic site was home to the first altar to the God of Abraham, constructed by the man himself in response to God's promise that a nation born of his seed would inhabit this land. It was also where Abraham's great grandson Joseph's bones were finally laid to rest, carried all the way from Egypt and through the wilderness years, Joshua had seen that they were buried at Shechem, in the parcel of land Jacob had purchased from the sons of Hamoor, a place of rich and significant history in the heart of the Promised Land, the land that was now finally in their possession. Joshua leaned against the twisted oak tree, perhaps the very same one from Abraham's day, and watched as the people filed into the clearing to hear his instructions to them. Caleb and his family, along with Salmon, Raehab and their young son Boaz, stood among the tribe of Judah. Near By, moses sons Gersham and Elieza stood with their families now extending four generations. Joshua offered them a warm smile. Moses would have loved to see how his family had grown. Beside Joshua stood Aaron's descendants. Eliezer, the High Priest, stood as tall and proud as his years allowed, supported by his brother Ishamar and his faithful son and heir Finnas, Joshua took a moment to take them all in, the men who had been his loyal and trusted friends all these years. They helped him carry the mantle Moses had passed to him, and together they claimed the promise from their lord over six hundred years in the making. Heartened by the sight of his friends, Joshua turned to the nation of Israel, took up his staff, and trudged forward to begin his final address.
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Speaker 3: Children of Israel, I called your leaders together and implored them to prepare you for what I would call you to today.
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Speaker 4: I will tell you now what I told them, and.
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Speaker 3: I pray the Lord has heard my prayers, prayers that you would be ready, be very strong, and continue obeying all that is written in the book of the Law, so that you do not turn from it to the right or left. And so that you do not associate with these nations, these nations remaining among you. Do not call on the names of their gods or make an oath to them, do not serve, a worship a bow down to them. Instead, be loyal to the Lord your God, as you have been to this day.
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Speaker 4: I am now going the way of the whole earth.
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Speaker 3: And you know with all your heart and all your soul that none of the good promises the Lord your God made to you have failed. If you break the covenant to the Lord your God which he commanded you go to serve these other gods and bow and worship to them, the Lord's anger will burn against you, and you will quickly disappear from this good land he has given you.
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Speaker 1: Joshua's words rang out in warning over the crowd.
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Speaker 4: He did not back down or shy.
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Speaker 1: Away, even though he was tired, even though his legs were sore from standing, even though he longed to rest. This was far too important.
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Speaker 3: And so here we are the moment you've been waiting for. Your leaders have brought you here to renew the covenant, to say yes to the God who first said yes to you. Before we go any further, let me remind you how we got here, long ago, before you ever called on the name of your way, before you ever lifted your hands in worship, or laid your sacrifices on the altar. Your ancestors live beyond the Euphrate. They worshiped other gods, bowed before idols of stone and wood, gods who could.
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Speaker 4: Not see or hear or save.
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Speaker 7: But the Lord, our Lord, took Abraham, your father and led him away from that land. He brought him here to Canaan and gave him a promise, promise of children of land, a blessing that would ripple outward, not just to us, but to every nation on earth. And the Lord kept his word.
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Speaker 3: He gave Abraham a son, Isaac, and to Isaac he gave Jacob. And Jacob had twelve sons, a family that grew into a nation. But then came Egypt. Then came the chains. Four hundred years of slavery, four.
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Speaker 8: Hundred years of back, brave making, labor, of crying, out of wondering if.
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Speaker 3: God had forgotten. But he had not, the Lord, said Moses and Aaron, And with an outstretched arm, he struck Egypt with signs and wonders, tearing down the empire that had crushed you. At the Red Sea, your ancestors stood with their backs to the water, the greatest army in the world closing in behind them.
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Speaker 4: They thought they were done for.
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Speaker 3: But the Lord split the sea in two.
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Speaker 8: You walked on dry ground, and when Pharaoh's men followed, the waters crashed back over them, their bodies washing up on the shore.
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Speaker 4: You were free.
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Speaker 3: Then came the wilderness, years of wandering, of hunger and thirst, of manna in the morning, and water from the rock, years of doubt and faith and doubt again. But through it all the Lord was leading you until you stood on the edge of this land, the land he promised. There were enemies in the way, Amorites, Moabites, kings who sought to curse you, and armies who sought to destroy you.
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Speaker 4: There were no match for the Lord.
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Speaker 8: He turned Balamb's curses into blessings. He brought down the walls of Jericho. He handed over the Amorites, the Perizites, the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Gergoshites, the Hivites, and the Gemsites. Not by your sword or your bow, but by his power. Alone, and now here you stand in a land you did not labor for, in cities you did not build, eating from vineyards and olive groves you did not plant. This is the story of your people, This is the story of your God.
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Speaker 1: Emboldened by the memory of all the wonders he had seen firsthand, Joshua charged forward to the heart of their gathering, the covenant renewal.
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Speaker 3: Therefore, fear the Lord and worship him in sincerity and truth.
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Speaker 8: Rid yourselves of the gods of your ancestors, the gods they worship beyond the Euphrates River and in Egypt, and worship the Lord. But if it doesn't please you to worship the Lord, choose for yourselves today which for you worship the gods of your ancestors, who they worship beyond the Euphrates River, or the gods of the Amorites, in.
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Speaker 4: Whose land you now live.
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Speaker 3: As for me and my family, we will worship the Lord.
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Speaker 4: How do you answer, Israel.
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Speaker 7: We who have a rerd.
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Speaker 1: Joshua nodded. He had expected as much, but he pressed them further.
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Speaker 3: Remember, our God is a holy God, a jealous God. If you abandon the Lord and worship foreign gods, he will turn against you and utterly destroy you. Now we will worship Lord. You are witnesses against yourselves that you, yourselves, have chosen to worship the Lord.
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Speaker 5: We were we are when with earth.
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Speaker 3: Then listen, rid yourselves of those foreign gods that are among you, and turn your hearts to the Lord, God of Israel.
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Speaker 6: Alone.
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Speaker 7: We will worship the Lord, our God.
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Speaker 1: And away with those words, Joshua sealed the covenant for the people at Shechem, establishing a statute and ordinance that would bind them to the Lord. He recorded it all in the Book of the Law of God, every word etched as a witness to their commitment. When the writing was done, Joshua turned to the Gibeonite attendants of the tabernacle and motioned for them to come forward. Together, they wrestled with a massive stone. Their faces flushed and breaths labored as they heaved it inch by inch toward the ancient oak at the sanctuary of the Lord. The stone thudded heavily into place under its sprawling branches, its weight a symbol of the enduring covenant.
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Speaker 3: This stone will stand as a witness so that all who come after this day will remember the covenant Bernud.
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Speaker 5: Here beneath these.
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Speaker 3: Branches, you see the stone. It has heard all the words the Lord has spoken to us. It would be a witness against you.
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Speaker 4: Will not deny your God.
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Speaker 1: Joshua then blessed them and sent them on their way, and they went to their new homes. Israel's victory brought the land into their possession, fulfilling the promise made to their ancestors, and proving once more that the God of Israel was faithful to his word. Just as the Lord had commanded his servant, Moses, Moses commanded Joshua. That is what Joshua did, leaving nothing undone of all that the Lord had commanded Moses, the Lord's servant, Joshua, son of Nune, died at the age of one hundred and ten. They buried him in the beloved city he chose for his inheritance, and rebuilt Timnath Sarah in the hill country of Ephraim. To Joshua, there was no higher honor than to be known as a servant of the Lord. Not a king, not a prophet, not a general. He was just simply a servant who tilled the earth with his own hands in hopes of being worthy of the mighty inheritance promised to his people by his beloved God. Under his leadership, Israel worshiped the Lord throughout Joshua's lifetime because of his commitment to the next generation and to renewing the covenant. Israel worshiped the Lord during the lifetimes of the elders who outlived Joshua and all those who had experienced the works the Lord had done for Israel. This pray Door conproduction is only made possible by our dedicated team of creative talents. Steve Gattina, Max Bard, Zach Slabager, and Ben Gammon are the executive producers of The Chosen People. Narrated by Paul Coltefianu. Characters are voiced by Jonathan Cotton, Aaron Salvato, Sarah Seltz, Mike Reagan, Stephen Ringwold, Sylvia Zaradoc, Thomas Copeland Junior, Rosanna Pilcher, and Mitch Leshinsky. Music by Andrew Morgan Smith, written by Aaron Salvato, bre Rosalie and Chris bag You can hear more Prey dot Com productions on the Prey dot Com app, available on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store. If you enjoyed the Chosen People. Please rate and leave a review.