Thursday, September 18, 2025

Know before you attack

There are moments in our walk with God when obedience does not mean charging forward blindly, but rather waiting, watching, discerning. I have often mistaken faith for haste, assuming that once God has spoken, the only next step is immediate action. But then I read again the story in Numbers 13, where God tells Moses, “Send some men to explore the land of Canaan, which I am giving to the Israelites” (Numbers 13:1–2). It strikes me that God, who had already promised them the land, still instructed them to first know what lay ahead.

Why would God, who could see the end from the beginning, command a reconnaissance mission? He already knew what was in the land. He knew the people, the cities, the obstacles, the fruit. He knew the giants and the walls. But perhaps the exercise was not for His information, but for theirs. Perhaps God wanted the people to see what they were really up against—not to frighten them, but to prepare them. Because knowing the enemy, knowing the terrain, and knowing the cost is part of walking in wisdom.

Sometimes I have rushed into battles I wasn’t ready for, simply because I knew God was on my side. And yes, He is faithful, but He also calls us to wisdom. Jesus echoed this principle in Luke 14:31: “Or suppose a king is about to go to war against another king. Won’t he first sit down and consider whether he is able with ten thousand men to oppose the one coming against him with twenty thousand?” Even in spiritual warfare, strategy matters. Counting the cost matters. Knowing what we are facing matters.

When I reflect on how the twelve spies returned—ten full of fear, two full of faith—I see a reflection of myself in both groups. There are days when I look at the promises of God and say, “Yes, we can take it.” But there are other days when I see the giants and think, “This is too much. We are like grasshoppers.” The same evidence brought two completely different conclusions. What made the difference?

I think the answer lies not just in what they saw, but in how they saw it. All twelve saw the same land. They saw the fruit, the people, the fortified cities. But Joshua and Caleb viewed the land through the lens of God’s faithfulness. The others viewed it through the lens of their fear. It reminds me that knowing before you attack is not just about gathering facts; it is about framing them with faith.

When God calls us into something new—a ministry, a mission, a reconciliation, a confrontation—we must not enter with blind zeal. Zeal without knowledge is dangerous. Paul himself once persecuted Christians with the fire of religious zeal, thinking he was doing God’s will. It wasn’t until his eyes were literally opened that he saw things as they truly were. And so I am learning to pray not just for courage, but for clarity. Not just for strength, but for sight.

There have been seasons in my life when I felt ready to attack—to move forward, to claim what was promised. But God held me back. Not because the promise was withdrawn, but because I wasn’t ready. I needed to see more. Learn more. Understand more. Sometimes I needed to go into the “land” quietly, like the spies, to discern the reality of what lay ahead. I needed to hear the whispering voices of fear so I could learn how to silence them. I needed to face the question: Will I believe what I see, or will I believe what God has said?

There is also a deep lesson in how the majority influenced the community. Ten voices full of fear made an entire nation turn away from the promise. Words have power. The way we interpret what we see can impact others. This reflection humbles me. I must be careful not to discourage others simply because I am afraid. I must not speak defeat over a situation that God has already declared victorious. Joshua and Caleb tore their clothes and pleaded with the people, saying, “The land we passed through and explored is exceedingly good. If the Lord is pleased with us, he will lead us into that land… Do not be afraid of the people of the land” (Numbers 14:7–9). But the people had already internalized fear.

To “know before you attack” is not only a call to prepare; it is also a warning to interpret well. We must guard our hearts against jumping to conclusions born of fear. We must learn to report honestly, but also trust deeply. Faith does not mean denying the presence of giants—it means believing they will fall.

I believe God sends us to explore the land before we possess it because He wants to grow our discernment. He wants us to ask the right questions: What kind of battle is this? Is it physical, spiritual, emotional? What resources do I need? Who should I walk with into this land? What lessons must I carry with me? We do not honor God by rushing in unprepared. We honor Him by trusting His process—even when it includes scouting trips and waiting seasons.

As I grow older in faith, I am learning that delay is not always denial. The Israelites delayed their entrance because they doubted, but God had originally allowed time to explore. That time was meant to equip them, not derail them. So now, when God tells me to pause and look, I no longer resist. I pray, “Lord, help me see what You see. Help me know what I must before I move. And when the time comes, give me the faith of Caleb to say, ‘We should go up and take possession of the land, for we can certainly do it’” (Numbers 13:30).

In knowing before I attack, I learn not only the size of the enemy but the size of my God. I learn the value of obedience over impulse. I learn that wisdom walks hand in hand with faith. And above all, I learn that God's promises are not always easy, but they are always worth it.


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