Be Bold and Walk Tall
Be Bold and Walk Tall
Be Bold and Walk Tall
WALK TALL
by
Dr. Lester Sumrall
LeSEA PUBLISHING
South Bend, Indiana
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Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are taken from the King James Version of the
Holy Bible.
Printed in the United States of America. All rights reserved under International Copyright Law. Contents
and/or cover may not be reproduced in whole or in part in any form without the express written consent of
the Publisher.
LeSEA Publishing
530 E. Ireland Road
South Bend, Indiana 46614
www.leseapublishing.com
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Contents
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A Slave Who Was Bold and Walked Tall
Write on your doors the saying wise and old,
“Be bold! Be bold!” and everywhere, “Be bold!;
Be not too bold!” Yet better the excess than
the defect; better the more than less.
—Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
If you want to be bold and walk tall in God, it will require complete obedience. If you want
to walk tall in God, be like Caleb of the Israelites. Caleb could say with confidence, “I entirely
followed the Lord my God when no one but Joshua was with me. The others refused to take the
land God promised us, but I followed God.”
And Moses sware on that day, saying, Surely the land whereon thy feet have trodden shall be
thine inheritance, and thy children’s for ever, because thou hast wholly followed the Lord my
God (Joshua 14:9).
Look at the results of Caleb’s obedience: Everywhere his feet trod was given to him, not just
for his own inheritance, but to go to his children’s children in perpetuity (Deuteronomy 1:36).
What are your children going to receive in this life? If you wholly follow the Lord your God,
then your seed can possess everything that God has for you and them.
I have always felt sorry for Christians who do not pass on their heritage of godliness to their
children. Many do not bother to send, much less take, their children to church activities. When
those children are older, they will not want church at all. Then the parents will scream, “Oh,
God! Save my children!” And they will blame the church for what is happening.
We have lost so many children from our churches, because their parents—who were
Christians—did not see that they attended Sunday school and youth activities. God promised to
bless our children, but we have to do our part by keeping them in church where they can hear His
Word and learn to fellowship with the saints.
Notice something else about Caleb: He knew God had kept him alive for a purpose. He was
determined to fulfill his destiny in God, although he was eighty-five years old before he could
begin to possess his promised inheritance.
And now, behold, the Lord hath kept me alive, as he said, these forty and five years, even
since the Lord spake this word unto Moses, while the children of Israel wandered in the
wilderness: and now, lo, I am this day fourscore and five years old (Joshua 14:10).
Look at Caleb’s boldness even in his old age. When the Israelites finally were ready to go
into the Promised Land, Caleb reminded them that God had kept him alive since the first time he
spied out the land.
He was bold to excess, but that was better than being cowardly and not having the courage to
go into the land at all. Also, being bold sometimes means having to wait on other people to get
ready to move.
It would have been nice if God had simply built Caleb and Joshua a little camp on the edge
of the Promised Land and let them stay there until the next generation of Israelites got ready to
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move. But, then, who would have been an example for them? Who would have led them when
Moses and Aaron passed on?
The Israelites were able to see a contrast in Joshua and Caleb between boldness and its
reward and the devastation brought by the devil because of fear running in God’s people.
Sometimes we have to witness the destruction that doubt, unbelief, fear, and sin bring before we
develop the boldness to be obedient.
But God is faithful, and He kept Caleb alive in order for him to enter the land as He had
promised. God is always faithful to His promises. The Lord will keep you alive and provide
special blessings, as long as you walk in faith, obedience, and boldness.
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Supernatural Strength
If you want supernatural strength and wisdom, you must stop watching those carnal, dead
programs on television. Even knowing how to “build muscle” in the natural will not help you in
the spiritual realm.
Better get your nose in the Book of books and begin reading about a man named Caleb, who
was bold and walked tall even at what is generally considered a ripe old age.
Obedience and wholly following the Lord will give you supernatural strength and bring
blessings raining down on you.
I can just hear Caleb saying, “I have as much strength and vitality now as I had when I was
forty. In fact, my strength is still so great that I could go out to war, fight, and come back
shouting with the victory!”
He was talking about fighting hand-to-hand with swords and spears, not riding inside tanks
and firing machine guns.
Also, look at the handicaps he had to overcome in the beginning. He had many
disadvantages, including these:
1. He had been a slave to Egyptian bondage for forty years, working at hard labor on the equivalent of
a chain gang making bricks out of straw.
2. He was of a persecuted minority, one which the people of the nation where he lived were
prejudiced against.
3. He was also of a persecuted minority of two—Joshua and himself—when the other ten spies
wanted to run from the Canaanites. The people were ready to stone Caleb and Joshua, as well as
Moses (Numbers 14:10).
4. He wanted to go forward, while millions of his companions wanted to go backward; so he had to
suffer for their sakes and mark time in the wilderness until he was an old man.
Perhaps you have had disadvantages in your life. Perhaps you have had some hard times in
different areas of your life. Perhaps you have had to “mark time” and wait because of other
people’s mistakes or disobedience. But know this: If you will be bold and walk tall in God, you
can overcome every disadvantage. You can be like Caleb, the man who was bold enough to ask
for a mountain.
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The Man Who Asked for a Mountain
“Now therefore give me this mountain, whereof the Lord spake in that day” (Joshua 14:12).
Caleb also had courage and determination. He did not ask for something that was easy. He
had the boldness to ask for something big in God.
Caleb asked for a mountain!
He did not say, “Please, I know I’m getting old, so just give me this little plain down by the
riverside. It won’t take a lot of work, and I won’t have to climb uphill. After all, I’ve already
‘paid my dues’ and done my part to help others. We have already taken this little piece of land
from the Canaanites.”
That is probably what an ordinary person would have asked for, but not Caleb. No! He said,
“Give me something with a little challenge to it. Give me this mountain!”
Can you imagine an eighty-five-year-old man asking to be allowed to take in battle and
possess an entire mountain? And this was not just any mountain. This mountain was full of
giants. It was fenced and had “great” cities.
Now therefore give me this mountain, whereof the Lord spake in that day; for thou heardest
in that day how the Anakims were there, and that the cities were great and fenced: if so be the
Lord will be with me, then I shall be able to drive them out, as the Lord said.
And Joshua blessed him, and gave unto Caleb the son of Jephunneh Hebron for an
inheritance (Joshua 14:12, 13).
The Anakims were giants, some reportedly as much as ten feet tall. But Joshua granted his
request. Hebron became the inheritance of Caleb, because he wholly followed the Lord God of
Israel. I like that! Personally, from my many visits to the Holy Land, I have found that I like
Hebron almost better than any other part of the Holy Land. It is a beautiful area.
Caleb received his inheritance—the land of Hebron—because he determined to walk tall and
boldly follow the Lord God of Hosts.
You would not believe how many times the phrase, “because he wholly followed the Lord
his God,” is in the Bible. So many people have obtained their desires from the Lord because of
this one thing.
Caleb followed God in complete obedience, which is why he received so much from Him.
He drove out the giants, because he was empowered with supernatural strength from walking so
close to God: “And Caleb drove thence the three sons of Anak, Shesai and Ahiman, and Talmai,
the children of Anak” (Joshua 15:14).
What did Caleb think and say was the secret of his success? He never took the glory and
credit to himself. He said, “If so be the Lord will be with me, then I shall be able to drive them
out, as the Lord said” (Joshua 14:12).
Caleb knew that if God was on his side, if God said he could do it, he knew no one could
stand against him and succeed. Because of knowing that, Caleb, at eighty-five years of age, had
the supernatural strength, energy, and boldness to ask for a mountain—not a plain and not a
valley.
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I can just hear him saying to Joshua, “I’ll climb that mountain! And, up on that mountaintop,
I will fight men twice my size, and I’ll ‘lick’ every one of them. I know I can drive out that
bunch, because I’m bold in God!”
Caleb probably took one look at the giants and, like David, said, “I’m coming after you,
boys! This is the end of your ‘messing around’ with the children of Israel.”
He won as tremendous a victory as David did years later over Goliath. Caleb drove the giants
down to the Mediterranean Sea. That is where they were living, among the Philistines, when
David came on the scene (1 Samuel 17).
Caleb took their houses away from the giants. Those houses must have had mighty big doors
to let in ten-foot giants. Caleb stripped from them everything they had, and Hebron became a
holy place. That was where the patriarchs—Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob—were buried with their
wives.
Notice that the children of Anak were not buried in Hebron, the same area as the patriarchs.
The Anakims were not allowed to join that godly crowd, even in death. They did not receive
great honor; they did not deserve it.
But Joshua was granted great honor in God. There is even an entire book of the Bible named
after him. Caleb also was granted great honor by God. However, there was no honor for the sons
of Anak, because those giants came against God’s people.
Caleb deserved honor, because he was a generation builder. He established Hebron as his
inheritance, and it remains a place many people visit even today. It is a mountain, and it is
surrounded by other mountains.
A man, old by our terms, possessed that mountain because he was bold. He walked tall in
God, and he cast a long shadow. His influence was far-reaching. A little mistreated boy, born and
reared in poverty, hatred, and slavery, became a mighty man of God. No doubt, however,
Caleb’s greatest celebration of victory was not when he won Hebron, but when he went to
heaven.
Young Christians should learn lessons from men such as Caleb:
1. What your parents are or have been does not need to determine what you are going to be in God.
2. Where you live today does not have to determine where you are going to live.
3. What you do today does not have to be what you are going to accomplish for God some day.
4. What your parents’ life was like does not have to be the pattern for your life. You can be what God
says you can be!
You do not have to be afraid. If your parents are now poor, that does not mean you always
have to be poor. God will help you personally, if you just ask Him.
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This was the same Peter who denied Jesus three times in a matter of hours when Jesus was in
the hardest trial of His life, a literal trial for His life. This was the same Peter who had “backslid”
and gone back to fishing for a living instead of going into the ministry after the crucifixion.
From the time Peter was filled with the Holy Spirit, he became bold. He walked tall in God,
and he cast a healing shadow for the world.
God is talking to some Christians today to be bold for Him. He wants us to walk tall in Him.
Some Christians hear the Word, and it just goes in one ear and right back out the other. Some
Christians believe the Word, but the world changers are those who live the Word. What are you
going to do about being bold in God?
There is a price to pay for greatness, boldness, walking tall in God, and casting a long
shadow. I want God to change hearts and change lives, so that the Church as a whole can walk
bold in Him and change this world! Those who walk close to God are changed.
Being bold, walking tall, and casting a long shadow has nothing to do with what we call
arrogance or pride. For example, when Moses was bold and walked tall in God, the Lord said he
was the humblest man on the face of the earth! (Numbers 12:3).
So, if you associate boldness with arrogance, you are missing the point. I am not talking
about human arrogance or human boasting. I am talking about being so submerged in God that
your life is changed.
God wants to change the world using people like you. However, you will have to move
deeper into God for Him to be able to do that. Ask Him for holy boldness. Yes, there is such a
thing as holy boldness unto the Lord so that you have something others do not have. You must
have the wisdom of God in you, in order for you to be a “life-changer” and a “life-builder” like
Caleb.
The entire Church of Jesus Christ needs to become bold in God. They need to walk tall and
learn how to cast a long shadow of godly influence on this earth for Jesus.
Do you have a heart like Caleb?
Come up out of “Egypt’s” (the world’s) sin, degradation, and bondage, and begin to walk
with the greatest Man of all time, named Jesus. He will give you boldness. He will give you the
ability to walk tall and bold in Him so that you can change the world for His glory.
If you will walk with Jesus wherever He leads you, He will take you into your Promised
Land and then on up to heaven. God wants you. He will give you supernatural strength, just as
He did Caleb. He will make you into one of those who walk bold in the earth to accomplish His
purposes.
God does not want us to be “put down” as we live for Him on this earth. God does not want
us to be pushed around as the servants of men. We are to be the mighty servants of the Lord God
Almighty, because we are His champions.
Some Christians believe in the Holy Spirit, yet they do not have Him functioning every day
in their lives. They need to move in the Spirit, think in the Spirit, walk in the Spirit, and talk in
the Spirit.
Some Christians think, “But if I get into the operations of the Holy Spirit, there will be
problems and disadvantages to me. Even some other Christians will shun me or make fun of
me.”
Do not let the devil tell you lies like that.
When I was a little boy, other children made fun of me almost every day at school, because
my mother belonged to a “full gospel” church. Their parents belonged to mainline denominations
and were highly respected. My mother’s little church “made too much noise” out there praising
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God and “carrying on.” So do not talk to me about being embarrassed over the operations of the
Spirit! I have been there.
Once, I even asked my mother, “Why don’t you join another church, so I can have peace at
school?”
She said, “Because God wouldn’t be happy with us.”
I said, “Well, then, let’s keep God happy if we can!”
What other people say and do is their business. What Christians say and do is God’s
business.
We should make up our minds to walk with God, talk with God, live for God, and be one of
His bold ones.
Part-time followers of God will never make it. You must be wholly attached and committed
to God. Greatness does not go along with double-mindedness. Greatness goes along with a single
mind—a mind sold on Jesus.
Be a Caleb—bold and walking tall in God. Walk tall among men. We do not need just one
Caleb in this earth today. We need a houseful of “Calebs.” We need a multitude of men and
women who will say, “I’m bold, and I’m walking tall in God! Therefore, I will never be
defeated. The devil does not have any power over me. I am not going to believe the devil’s dirty
little lies that he tries to speak to me through my mind. I am walking bold in the Word.”
We should learn the lessons of the Old Testament in order to profit from the mistakes of
those who are examples for us: “Now all these things happened unto them for examples: and
they are written for our admonition” (1 Corinthians 10:11a).
The entire Old Testament was not forgotten when the New Testament was written. It was
preserved to teach us how to live in a time like this. It was preserved for those “upon whom the
ends of the world [age] are come” (1 Corinthians 10:11b).
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On the other hand, all of the other adult male Israelites had the same example, and they did
not become bold. What made the difference? Let’s look at the life of Moses and see the things
that made him a man of boldness.
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The Sheepherder Who Became Bold
God can make anyone great. He can change a sheepherder into a mighty leader. He can make an
automobile mechanic great and mighty in Him. He can make you great if He can get you to turn aside to
see what He is doing.
Moses had a divine encounter with God. That is when he became bold and began to walk
very tall in God. The great Pharaoh of Egypt shrank to the size of a peanut in this man’s
presence.
In his generation, this sheepherder named Moses cast a long shadow across the entire nation
of Egypt, as well as his own nation of Israel.
Moses was already eighty years old when God cornered him in the Sinai Peninsula of the
Arabian Desert at the base of Mount Horeb. Meeting God was the beginning of Moses’
greatness, and when Caleb met God through Moses, he began to become great.
Moses’ first meeting with God was out in the desert. While looking after his father-in-law’s
sheep, Moses came across a sight that would startle anyone—a bush on fire that would not burn
up. Possibly the light that radiated out from this burning bush was the same kind of light that
guided the wise men from Persia (now Iran) to the Christ-child In Bethlehem. It was the
Shekinah glory of God.
The fire that shown from that bush must have been brilliant, because it attracted Moses’
attention to God. When he turned aside to look at it, he had an encounter with God (Exodus 3:2-
10). Moses took time to turn aside and notice, and he saw what God was doing in the earth.
When God saw that Moses had turned aside, He called him by name, and Moses answered,
“Here am I.”
At that time in his life, Moses must have given up any expectation of becoming great. His
days in the palace of Pharaoh as the adopted, favored son of Pharaoh’s daughter were long gone.
He did not expect to be remembered for millenniums of time. He did not expect to be
remembered down through the ages by millions of people. He probably thought that his only
destiny was a final trip to the grave, a trip to be buried deep in the sands of the wilderness. But,
suddenly, in an instant of time he “turned aside” and had an encounter with the living God; it
was then that everything changed for him.
From that one confrontation, we find a man totally changed by the power of God! Moses
became bold. He talked boldly, walked boldly, and stood tall in the knowledge of God. He was
not afraid of anyone any longer. That is how he came to cast a long shadow over two nations—
Egypt and Israel—in his own lifetime, and many nations since.
One time while traveling through the Sinai Desert, I was shown an interesting little tree that
looks something like an umbrella. It is called a “Moses tree.” Natives say that this kind of tree
has always been in the desert. They say that this might have been the kind of bush which
attracted Moses’ attention as it burned brightly with the fire of God.
God performs wonders for many people who do not even bother to turn aside to notice what
is going on. They pay no attention to what God is doing in the earth. Many people are so busy
with this world’s affairs that, when they hit eternity and go to hell, they will not even know what
happened until it is too late!
Someone told me recently about the owner of a company for which he had worked. The
owner owns mansions in about eight different nations and spends his time flying from one place
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to another in his own private plane. A multimillionaire, he does business from exotic places.
However, he has one big problem: He is afraid to die.
It is foolish to be afraid to die. It is inevitable, and if something is inevitable, there is no use
being afraid of it. You had better just get acquainted with it.
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When Moses arrived in Egypt, it looked as if he had failed almost before he got started.
However, by the time he led the Israelites out of Egypt, things had changed. Moses was bold and
walked tall. His people left Egypt heavily laden with treasure.
There is something about walking tall in God and casting a long shadow that will change
people and nations for God’s glory. Your boldness influences others. Other people will be drawn
to you, and you can help them change their destinies and walk tall in God also.
Caleb was born into the earth at a very sad and dangerous time for him. He and his forebears,
descendants of Jacob, grandson of Abraham, had been in Egypt more than four hundred years. At
first, they had favor with Pharaoh, because Joseph, son of Jacob, was prime minister. However,
as the years passed and rulers gained the throne who did not remember Joseph, the fortunes of
the Israelites declined.
America is only a little more than two hundred years old as a nation, which gives us little
perspective on how a Pharaoh could arise in four hundred years who did not know Joseph. Time
obscures even the greatest of rulers.
Caleb had an advantage over some of the other slave children. He had a godly mother. Godly
mothers are sweet and full of character. She must have been an interesting woman, because
Caleb’s greatness began with her. She had the courage to name her son—born a slave and the
son of slaves—a challenging name. Some mothers do great things for God.
She named her son “Bold.” That is what Caleb actually means. Whenever people spoke to
him using his name, by definition they were calling him, “Bold.” Everytime he was called for a
meal, he was reminded that he was “Bold.” From birth, whenever people addressed him, they
really were saying, “Bold, what are you doing? Bold, where are you going? Bold, what are you
going to do next?” The Israelites began to know him as “the bold one.”
In the natural, Caleb had no advantages to go along with his name. Then what made him
different from other men? As a slave, he was not any different from other slaves. In fact, we do
not really see any difference in Caleb until he was forty years old.
Then a certain man came into his life. God sends men to us who change and influence our
lives. Moses influenced many people for God. Your life could be changed some day because of
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someone else’s godly influence. And you could change someone else’s life, if you walk tall and
act bold in the Lord.
For the first time in his life, Caleb saw a man of his own race who walked bold in God. When
Moses came walking into sophisticated Egypt from the “backside” of the desert, he declared,
“I’ve heard from God!”
That statement will get your attention in a hurry!
He told the Israelites that God had sent him to set them free. He told the Israelites that they
must be bold and walk tall in the Lord their God.
Because of Moses’ influence, Caleb also became bold. Personally, I do not believe Moses
was ever out of Caleb’s sight for any length of time. At first, Moses may not have noticed him
very much, but it could not have been long before Caleb caught the attention of the leader of
Israel.
Study Caleb’s life and you will see that he was on the right side every time a decision was
made, whether it was in the desert or anywhere else. He was always on the right side, which was
God’s side. He never opposed Moses, so he never opposed God.
In all the transgressions of Israel during that forty-year journey, Caleb is never mentioned.
He stood against every rebellion ever attempted against Moses. He stuck with Moses all the way.
He was a true friend and a true follower.
Caleb was probably right there when the death angel walked through Egypt. Caleb was
probably right there when Moses raised his rod and told the Red Sea to back off and stand in a
heap (Exodus 14-15); more than likely, he was one of the first to race across the dry river bed to
safety on the other shore. Caleb saw Moses work the works of God. I am sure he got bigger on
the inside every time he saw Moses pronounce the judgments of God and the laws of God.
When Moses asked Caleb to be one of the twelve representatives of the tribes of Israel to
search the land of Canaan, it may have been the greatest thing he ever asked him to do. The
Bible says that each of these men was a ruler in his own tribe (Numbers 13:2, 3).
During that walk from Egypt, apparently Caleb had gained some prestige among the people.
He was a leader among his people already. Out of the twelve, only two saw victory. The other
ten saw giants.
If you are bold and walking tall in God, you also are only going to see victory. If you are
bold, you are taller than any giant. You can cast down giants in the name of Jesus, no matter
what kinds of giants they are. You never have to go down in defeat.
Those who are bold in God do not know defeat. They only know victory. The war is not over
until it is over, and we are going to win the war.
Caleb and Joshua saw the same giants as the other ten. They saw the same walled cities and
the same huge gates. However, they saw something that the other spies did not. They saw God.
When they returned, Caleb gave a great report, a report of faith, filled with boldness and
courage. Big walls and big men could not stop Caleb from walking tall in God. I am not talking
about his physical stature. The kind of walking tall that I mean occurs in faith and on the inside.
Caleb not only gave a good report, but he said, “Let’s go up at once, and possess it”
(Numbers 13:30). At once means “right now.” No hesitating, wavering, or doubting. He even
said, “They are bread for us!”
He was going to eat “gianties” for breakfast, not “Wheaties®.” You know that you are bold
and walking tall in God when you can make your boast in Him. Boldness in God casts a long
shadow of faith and godly influence over people.
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Boldness is Following Jesus
What is boldness? It simply is following Jesus. It is being obedient. When you are bold in
Jesus, you can just knock your enemies out of your way. You do not follow man. You do not get
discouraged.
Caleb tried to tell other Israelites how to walk tall in God, but they would not listen to him.
They even hated him for being so bold. He may have had to wait forty years, but he won and
they lost. Their bodies were buried beneath the sand, as God had said, and he went on to possess
a mountain and judge Israel (Joshua 14:12-14; 15:13-14).
I feel sorry for Caleb, having to watch his friends and relatives—all the Israelites over twenty
years of age—die of doubt and unbelief in the desert and be buried in the sand. Perhaps he had to
assist with many of their burials. He may have seen as many as two million people die because
of disobedience.
However, he could claim that, of the times Israel rebelled during the forty-two times they
moved from place to place during that forty years, he was never one who grumbled. He was
never bitten by a snake. He was always one of those standing by Moses and supporting Him.
The result is that one day Caleb walked in Moses’ shoes as one of the leaders of Israel. Caleb
was not only the first man to go into the Promised Land, but he was the last man to lead the
Israelites before the judges and prophets began to rule.
Disobedience cost the Israelites their promised inheritance and, eventually, their lives. It even
cost Moses, Aaron, and their sister, Miriam.
Moses lived until the very last day before the Israelites were permitted to enter the land of
Canaan. Then God cut him off, saying, “You can’t go in to possess the land, because when I
asked you to speak to the rock, you hit it with a stick instead, saying, Must we fetch you water
out of this rock?” (Numbers 20:10).
No matter how bold you get or how tall you walk in God, He does not need you to take the
credit with Him. A lot of people make Moses’ mistake when they say, “God and I are going to
do thus and so in the earth.” No, it is God who is going to do something mighty in the earth. We
are just to pronounce what He does. We are just to say, “In the name of Jehovah, let it be done!”
Presumption, or tempting God, is one of the five sins that will hinder you from success in the
Lord. Christians should be very aware of the five sins that brought disaster on an entire adult
generation of Israel.
The Church of Jesus Christ will never be able to walk tall and cast a long shadow of
influence in this world, if we allow these sins in our lives.
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Five Sins That Will Hinder Boldness
But with many of them God was not well pleased: for they were overthrown in the wilderness (1
Corinthians 10:5).
The five sins which Israel committed in the wilderness are listed in 1 Corinthians 10:6-10.
These are sins that will destroy any civilization. However, there is no record in the Bible that
Caleb or Joshua were involved in any of these sins.
Paul wrote that all of the “fathers” traveled under the cloud of God, and all passed through
the Red Sea. He said:
1. All were baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea.
2. All ate the same spiritual meat and drank the same spiritual drink.
3. All drank of Christ, the Rock who followed them.
But, Paul wrote, God was not pleased with many of them. Why was that? God was
displeased because of these five sins that Paul went on to describe.
Now these things were our examples, to the intent that we should not lust after evil things, as
they also lusted.
Neither be ye idolators, as were some of them; as it is written, The people sat down to eat and
drink, and rose up to play.
Neither let us commit fornication, as some of them committed, and fell in one day three and
twenty thousand.
Neither let us tempt Christ, as some of them also tempted, and were destroyed of serpents.
Neither murmur ye, as some of them also murmured, and were destroyed of the destroyer (1
Corinthians 10:6-10).
The number-one sin committed by the Israelites was lust. They were always clamoring,
“Give us meat! Give us this! Give us that!” They were never satisfied with God. They could not
seem to remember that He was the one who brought them out of bondage where their hands were
blistered from rough work and their backs bent from hard labor. They lusted after food, sex, and
even over being endued with the same power Moses had. They were full of lust.
Just a few days after leaving Egypt and seeing the great love and protection of God for them,
they fell back into idolatry. When Moses was on the mountain receiving the Ten Commandments
longer than they thought he ought to be, they pressured Aaron to make them a golden calf to
worship.
They offered sacrifices to this calf, one of the gods of Egypt, had a great feast, and then
began to participate in an orgy. They not only were lustful and idolatrous, but they also
committed adultery and fornication as part of the worship of the calf.
The judgment of God killed twenty-three thousand of them when Moses came down from the
mountain and found out what they had been doing.
Later, they tempted God and many were bitten by snakes.
The desert was full of snakes, and God had protected them up to this point. All he had to do
was remove His strength and protective power from the Israelites for them to be bitten.
Suddenly, they were dying all over the place from snake bites.
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Moses made a brazen serpent on God’s instructions and held it up for the people to look upon
(a type of the cross of Christ), or they would have all died (Numbers 21:9).
There are many ways to tempt God. One of those is blaming Him. Some Christians actually
have the presumption to blame God. They say, “God, you didn’t do this! You didn’t do that!
Why did you let this happen? Why did that happen?”
We are too small to be blaming the God of the universe for anything. Many things happen for
which we do not have the answers. I know that God is a good God, and what He does is always
right. For anyone to stand up and accuse God of anything is foolishness.
Some people blame God for the things that happened to them as children. They say such
things as, “Something bad happened to me when I was eight years old. I’m not going to serve
God.”
My, how foolish that is.
I have lived my entire life on the premise that God knows best, that He is always right. I am
ready to be taken home, or I am ready to remain on earth. I am ready to do anything God wants
me to do, and I am not going to quarrel with Him about it. I will not find fault with Him, no
matter what happens.
The last sin Paul mentioned of the Israelites was that they “murmured,” and boy, did they
murmur!
It is so easy to murmur, to grumble and complain. It is so easy to find fault with the church.
However, no one is perfect. Let us keep our personal feelings washed by the blood of Jesus
Christ and keep the important things in mind.
The important thing is to get people saved. We are soldiers in the army of God. We are
supposed to go out and fight the devil. We are to take from him souls that he has stolen.
If you ever lose the vision for souls, you will not know what you are doing.
People who say, “What am I doing with my life? What am I supposed to be doing?” are not
winning a lot of souls to Jesus.
Perhaps you say, “But I don’t know how to win souls.”
I can tell you how in two minutes: Get your hands full of tracts, go from house to house, give
people a tract, and ask if they are born again. Then, pray with them. You would be amazed how
many each Christian could win to Jesus that way.
Perhaps you think you are too timid. But you are not timid out at the ball game cheering and
shouting for your team. Why should you get timid witnessing for Jesus? And why should you be
timid in church?
These five sins that Israel committed will keep anyone from walking bold and tall in God and
from casting a long shadow of influence in the world.
These five sins will keep you timid, sidetracked, and wondering what to do with your life.
If you want to win souls, avoid these five sins, and walk bold. Boldness attracts other people
to God.
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5
Boldness Influences People for God
Forty years old was I when Moses the servant of the Lord sent me from Kadesh Barnea to spy out the
land, and I brought him word again, as it was in mine heart (Joshua 14:7).
By the time Moses was ready to change his address from this world to the next, his influence
on Caleb had become obvious. Caleb was a winner, not a loser. In fact, from the time he was set
free from Egyptian bondage, Caleb only had a history of winning and winning and winning.
After forty years of wandering in the wilderness, and after more than a million people had
died from rebellion and disobedience, Joshua and Caleb finally walked into the Promised Land.
Caleb was remembering the time forty years before when he brought Moses word about the
land. He was remembering vividly, I am sure, when they first arrived, and he was sent with
Joshua and the other ten to spy on the Canaanites.
Notice that he says, “I brought Moses the news of Canaan as it was in my heart.”
When Caleb spied out the land, he came back and told the Israelites what was in his heart,
not what was in his head.
His head might have said what the other ten spies said: “This is impossible! The walls are
tall, and so are the giants. How are we going to do this?”
However, Caleb was of another spirit (Numbers 14:24), another attitude, and he walked tall
in his faith in God. He returned from the spy trip and gave Moses a report based on what was in
his heart.
You see, the wrong witness and the wrong testimony can discourage people. Sometimes you
hear Christians say, “I tell you, I’ve had a hard time in life! I don’t know anything but hard
times.”
Why don’t they pray it through? If I have a problem, I pray through on it. That way, I do not
know hard times when I meet them on the road. I have prayed it out.
For example, all over the world I have had to accomplish the impossible. I have had to
establish churches by faith. We built a church in Manila by faith. There were a few friends in
America who gave to that project, but, actually, our friends seemed to get fewer the whole time
we were building that church!
Then God healed a little girl, and the whole country was set on fire. A six-week revival
began in the park. I took my station wagon every night with a big trunk in it, and every night,
people giving in the offering filled it up with money.
God built that building. When the revival was going on, we never told anyone how much it
would cost to build that church. We had not paid the contractor yet, but he trusted us. When that
revival broke out, he needed money to be able to continue with the construction. So we would
pay him with bags of money. He would walk out with two men helping him carry the bags. In
other words, that revival paid for the church building.
Did you know that it takes revival to pay for the things of God? Are you wondering why this
is? It is because “dead” people do not give. They have spiritual arthritis and cannot even get their
hands in their pockets to give.
When there is a revival, you can build a skyscraper. That is because when the joy of the Lord
is present, people want to give so much that they don’t know what to do. That church in the
Philippines is a miracle church. Today, it is valued at six to eight million American dollars.
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That is what God can do. If He has never done that for you, ask yourself if you have opened
your heart to give to Him? I give to God almost every day of my life. Even if I give to the wrong
people I would rather be a “sucker” occasionally than to give no one anything.
Being bold and walking tall does not mean you will not encounter problems in life. You will,
and you will sometimes have to do the impossible in God. But, when you “pray through,” you
will see God solve the problems.
So Caleb was able to give Moses and the people a good report, because he told them what
was in his heart, not his head. However, he said the “brethren” who went into the land with him
“made the heart of the people melt” (Joshua 14:8). Caleb meant their hearts melted with fear.
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If you have an excellent spirit in you, you will not run away from church as soon as the
service is over. Church is to be a place of fellowship. Christians are a family, a family in God,
and we need each member of the family to flow together.
If you want to gain your inheritance from God, then you must walk tall and act bold in His
service. To move in that boldness, you must be of a different spirit than many others. Boldness
will not be true boldness without faith.
You might say that boldness is the expression of faith and trust in God. Boldness is
confidence that God is good, that He is always right, and that He is in charge. Boldness never
doubts, never disobeys, and never is afraid.
Be a Caleb and begin to take your mountain for God!
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A Prayer of Salvation
If Jesus should come today, would you be ready? If you say the following prayer from the depths of
your heart and surrender to Him as the Lord of your life, He will forgive you for all the sins you have ever
committed. As you trust Him, you will be filled with the hope and peace that only Jesus can give. If you
are ready to make this commitment, please pray the following out loud:
Dear Lord Jesus, I am a sinner. I believe that you died and rose from the dead to save me
from my sins. Please forgive me for all the sins I have ever committed. I here and now open my
heart to you and ask that you come into my heart as Lord of my life. Please be my personal
Savior. Baptize me in your Spirit. Thank you for your grace and mercy. Amen.
Now that you have given your life to Christ, it is important to pray and read the Bible on a daily basis.
It also is important to attend a Bible-believing church regularly. Doing these things will help you to walk
in continual fellowship with the Lord.
LeSEA 24-hour Prayerline: 1-800-365-3732
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Other Books by
Dr. Lester Sumrall
101 Questions and Answers on Demon Power
Adventuring with Christ
Alien Entities
Angels to Help You
Demons: The Answer Book
Faith Can Change Your World
The Gifts and Ministries of the Holy Spirit
God’s Blueprint for a Happy Home
Jerusalem: Where Empires Die
Making of a Champion
Mercy: Man’s Greatest Hope
The Militant Church
Overcoming Compulsive Desires
Panorama of Prophecy
Pioneers of Faith
Supernatural Principalities & Powers
Victory and Dominion over Fear
You Can Destroy the Gates of Hell
www.leseapublishing.com
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Dr. Lester Sumrall
1913-1996
The voice of Dr. Lester Sumrall remains prominent in the Christian world today. More than 65
years of ministry in over 100 nations made Dr. Sumrall a respected source of wisdom and understanding.
He was an author, teacher, missionary, evangelist, and the pastor and founder of Christian Center Church
in South Bend, Indiana. Throughout his lifetime, Dr. Sumrall worked tirelessly to fulfill the Great
Commission by carrying the gospel to the ends of the earth. In 1957 he founded LeSEA, a multi-faceted
global outreach. Today, LeSEA’s outreaches blanket the world through LeSEA Publications, LeSEA
Global Feed the Hungry, television, satellite, and FM and shortwave radio.
www.lesea.com
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