The City of the Mighty – Part 2

Two Biblical examples of casting down confidence: [1] Joshua (Jos. 6:3-21; 8:4-8). Jericho was a fortified city, secure and confident behind its walls. By military standards, it seemed impenetrable. But Joshua did not rely on conventional warfare. By obeying God’s strategy, the people marched in silence. They followed divine instruction. The walls fell without siege engines or ladders. At Ai (Joshua 8), Joshua used a strategic ambush rather than a brute assault. In both cases, wisdom, rooted in obedience to God, defeated military confidence. [2] The wise woman of Abel (2Sam. 20:16-22). When Joab besieged the city of Abel to capture Sheba, destruction seemed certain. The city’s confidence in its walls could not guarantee survival. But a wise woman intervened: She negotiated and reasoned with Joab. She persuaded the people to remove the true cause of the threat. Her wisdom saved the city without prolonged warfare. Where force would have destroyed, wisdom preserved.

This proverb teaches more than military strategy. It reveals a spiritual truth: Pride trusts in visible strength. Wisdom trusts in understanding and divine guidance.

Strongholds, whether cities, institutions, or hearts, are not overcome by force alone. They are overcome by insight, patience, and godly direction.

Wisdom identifies weak points in strong systems, undermines false confidence, and achieves victory with minimal loss.

In life’s battles – whether relational, professional, or spiritual – wisdom is greater than aggression. Instead of reacting impulsively, trusting in personal power and relying solely on resources, the wise person seeks counsel, waits for the right moment, acts strategically, and trusts God’s direction.

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