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About Abraham Piper

Abraham Piper is the Web Content Editor for Desiring God Ministries and a regular contributor to the Desiring God Blog. Piper also blogs at 22 Words

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Abraham Piper

Desiring God Ministries

Monday, January 05, 2009

When the Bible is Boring

It would be hard to have a slow, careful, exegetical Bible study about the second half of the book of Joshua. Chapters 13 to 21 are mostly lists: what parcels of land are going to which tribe of Israel.

Much of the Old Testament is like this—genealogies, lists, rules, procedures. As lovers of the Bible, what should we make of these mundane details? Is it even appropriate to call parts of God's word mundane? It sounds sacrilegious.

What does it matter, though, that Issachar received the territories around Jezreel, Chesulloth, Shunem, and 13 other cities? Or that Manasseh's land reached from Asher to Michmethah, just east of Shechem?

Joshua tells us why these obscure details are important: So that the Israelites would have specific and extensive evidence that God does what he says he will do.

Not one word of all the good promises that the Lord had made to the house of Israel had failed; all came to pass. (Joshua 21:45)

The more detailed the report of God's faithfulness, the more proof that indeed not one word of his had been false. He promised their forefathers this land, and now, because of this account in the book of Joshua, they can remember specifically how God was faithful. Faithful in concrete detail. Faithful down to the most boring of trivia.

As Joshua died, he said to the Israelites,

You know in your hearts and souls, all of you, that not one word has failed of all the good things that the Lord your God promised concerning you. All have come to pass for you; not one of them has failed. (23:14)

It's true that knowing Michmethah is east of Shechem ranks very low in the list of facts that are important to know from the Bible. But it matters, because the sum of all the dull details that God has accomplished proves that whatever he promises, he will do.

We have a God who keeps a tally of sparrows, who counts the hairs on our head (Luke 12:6-7), and who watches over the grass as it grows (Matthew 6:30). If that's not boring, what is? But it is his power over the mundane and trivial details that proves his power over the universe. And because of this power, we know he can keep his promises.

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Most Recent User Comments
tacotamale
1/10/2009 7:38 AM
I have had the same problem - will determine to read through the Bible and have done better in the past year - (mainly because the Lord really dealt with me to read it for knowledge, and to love His word, not because it just had to be done) but I would get to those boring lists and knew they were there for a reason, but couldn't figure it out. What you said makes sense. Thank you. Now it will mean more to me when I get to these parts.
Przlyana1
1/8/2009 12:37 PM
It is amazing to me how God works in mysterious ways. My goal is to read the Bible through again in one year and as I was reading the Old Testament, I wondered why it was so important to know who was given what land, etc. This morning as I was reading, it came to me that God made a lot of promises and has kept them, even though Jacob was deceitful, God still kept his promise. Then I receive this in my email and I could not believe it was a subject on the same thing I was wondering about this morning. God is awesome. It may not be important to some, but this was surely important to me.