It took faith for Moses to approach Pharaoh and demand the freedom of the children of Israel. It also took faith for him to believe that he would be able to defeat Pharaoh, his magicians and his armies. Just envision the victories that God gave them during the time of the plagues. God was strategic, giving Moses specific instructions every step of the way. It didn’t stop there; Hebrews eleven and twenty-nine tells us that it was faith that allowed them to cross the red sea on dry land. That miracle has strategy written all over it! God allowed their enemies to chase them into a place that he could show them his deliverance and drown their enemies too! It was faith that caused Joshua and Caleb to believe that they could have the victory in a land where their enemies looked like giants and they looked like grasshoppers (Numbers 13). Lastly, it was faith that allowed a young shepherd boy name David, with no fighting experience to kill a trained warrior who was also a giant (1 Samuel 17). There are many more stories of strategic victories in both the Old and New Testaments. However, the long and short of it all is, if you ever want to have any kind of victory, strategic or otherwise, you must start by having faith in the one that gives us the
It took faith for Moses to approach Pharaoh and demand the freedom of the children of Israel. It also took faith for him to believe that he would be able to defeat Pharaoh, his magicians and his armies. Just envision the victories that God gave them during the time of the plagues. God was strategic, giving Moses specific instructions every step of the way. It didn’t stop there; Hebrews eleven and twenty-nine tells us that it was faith that allowed them to cross the red sea on dry land. That miracle has strategy written all over it! God allowed their enemies to chase them into a place that he could show them his deliverance and drown their enemies too! It was faith that caused Joshua and Caleb to believe that they could have the victory in a land where their enemies looked like giants and they looked like grasshoppers (Numbers 13). Lastly, it was faith that allowed a young shepherd boy name David, with no fighting experience to kill a trained warrior who was also a giant (1 Samuel 17). There are many more stories of strategic victories in both the Old and New Testaments. However, the long and short of it all is, if you ever want to have any kind of victory, strategic or otherwise, you must start by having faith in the one that gives us the