Joshua 24:1-3a, 14-25
Forsaking All Others
James Sledge November
9, 2014
Choose this day whom you will serve… but as for me
and my household, we will serve the Lord,
(Yahweh). So
says Joshua in one of those signature lines from the Bible. Of course there are
other options. Joshua even mentions a few: the gods their ancestors served back
in Egypt or in the wilderness, or perhaps the gods of the people in the land where
they now live.
Bob
Dylan once put is slightly differently in song called “Gotta Serve Somebody.
You’re
gonna have to serve somebody, yes indeed
You’re
gonna have to serve somebody
Well,
it may be the devil or it may be the Lord
But
you’re gonna have to serve somebody
Choose this day whom you will serve is part of
something called a covenant renewal ceremony. God had made a covenant with the
people of Israel, and Joshua takes them through its history and what that
means. Then, in something akin to the renewal of marriage vows, the people once
more state their loyalty and fidelity to the God known as Yahweh, to God and
God alone. In fact, they could well have used a line from the old, traditional
wedding liturgy, “And forsaking all others, be faithful only to you…"
We
have a covenant renewal ceremony in our worship today. We have one any time
someone joins the church or is baptized, and it has its versions of Choose
this day whom you will serve, put away the foreign gods that are among you,
and “forsaking all others.”
Trusting in the
gracious mercy of God, do you turn from the ways of sin and renounce evil and
its power in the world?
Do you turn to
Jesus Christ and accept him as your Lord and Savior, trusting in his grace and
love?
Will you be
Christ’s faithful disciple, obeying his Word and showing his love?
Choose this day whom you will serve. Forsaking all
others, be faithful only to Christ. Put away the foreign gods that are among you.
Of course that last one doesn’t really connect with us. Foreign gods,
the god our ancestors served beyond the river or back in Egypt. What does any
of that have to do with us and our lives?