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Book Storyline

Joshua Storyline

Joshua demonstrates that the Lord fulfills His covenantal promises to Abraham not through human merit or military prowess alone, but through the intertwined operation of divine power and covenant obedience, establishing His people in the land as a sign that promise-keeping is the character of God and the pattern of blessing.

Book Storylines

Open the book storylines index

Return to the storyline index when you want to compare the wider canonical movement of Scripture by book.

Major Movements
Opening

Joshua 1-4

Joshua 1 - Joshua 4

The Lord's mission continues beyond Moses through Joshua, and His people must enter the promised inheritance with courage grounded in His presence and obedience to His Word. By Joshua 4, god's saving acts must be remembered, taught, and handed down so His people fear Him and the nations know His mighty hand.

Sets the book's opening burden from the available chapter or passage coverage.

Rising Tension

Joshua 5-9

Joshua 5 - Joshua 9

Before God's people fight the battles ahead, they must be marked by covenant identity, nourished by remembered redemption, and humbled before the holy Commander of the Lord's army. By Joshua 9, god's people must not rely on appearances when making covenant decisions, but when they swear in the Lord's name, they must honor His holiness even when the oath becomes costly.

Develops the book's central pressure points and theological movement.

Pivot

Joshua 10-14

Joshua 10 - Joshua 14

The Lord fights for His covenant people, turning even a compromised situation into an occasion to display His sovereign power, faithfulness, and judgment over hostile kings. By Joshua 14, the Lord keeps His promises across decades, and wholehearted faith still asks for obedience's hardest hill because God's presence is enough.

Marks the book's major turn in the available coverage.

Climax

Joshua 15-19

Joshua 15 - Joshua 19

The Lord gives Judah a real and detailed inheritance, but that inheritance must be actively possessed, wisely stewarded, and not left compromised by unfinished obedience. By Joshua 19, the Lord assigns every tribe its portion, calling His people to receive, steward, and possess their inheritance under His presence and authority.

Carries the book toward its climactic emphasis.

Resolution

Joshua 20-24

Joshua 20 - Joshua 24

The Lord orders His people's inheritance with justice and mercy, protecting life from both bloodguilt and uncontrolled vengeance. By Joshua 24, because the Lord alone has redeemed, preserved, and given inheritance to His people, He alone must be feared, loved, served, and worshiped with undivided allegiance.

Closes the book's movement and final emphasis.

Storyline Themes

Covenant

Covenant is the binding relationship God establishes by His own authority through which He orders His relationship with humanity, governs His redemptive purposes, and carries His promises forward throughout the biblical storyline.

Holiness

Holiness in Scripture describes God's absolute moral purity, uniqueness, and separation from sin, as well as the calling of His people to reflect His character through lives set apart for Him.

Mission

Mission is God's purposeful movement to reveal His glory, redeem sinners, gather a people from every nation, and restore creation, carried out through His covenant people and fulfilled through the saving work and authority of Jesus Christ.

Redemption

Redemption is God's act of delivering people from bondage, guilt, and judgment by paying the necessary cost to restore them to Himself and to His purposes, ultimately accomplished through the saving work of Jesus Christ.

Presence of God

The presence of God is the biblical theme describing God's nearness to His creation and His people, expressed through His dwelling among them, guiding them, revealing Himself, and ultimately restoring full fellowship with humanity through Jesus Christ.

Faith and Obedience

Faith and obedience describe the covenant response God calls for from His people: trusting His promises and acting in faithful submission to His revealed will, a response ultimately made possible through His saving grace.

Judgment and Mercy

Judgment and mercy describe the twin realities of God's righteous response to sin and His compassionate provision of forgiveness and restoration, revealing both His justice and His grace throughout the biblical storyline.

People of God

The people of God are the community God forms, preserves, and claims as His own throughout the biblical storyline, beginning in His purpose for humanity, developed through Israel, fulfilled in Christ, and expanded through the church as a redeemed people gathered from every nation.

How To Read This Book
  1. Read Joshua as the fulfillment of the promise made to Abraham , the land given, not earned, as an act of covenantal faithfulness.
  2. Notice how obedience and conquest go together: the battles are not purely military. Jericho, Achan, Ai, and Gibeon all show that Israel's success is bound to covenant fidelity.
  3. Follow the structural rhythm: chapters 1-12 (conquest) and chapters 13-24 (distribution), both anchored by covenant renewal ceremonies.
  4. Read the conquest narratives with canonical honesty: the language of total destruction is often hyperbolic, as later passages and the book of Judges make clear.
  5. Let the book's final covenant renewal at Shechem (chapter 24) close your reading , Israel must choose whom they will serve, and that question echoes through every generation.