You are standing at the edge of a new year, and the path ahead is unclear. The familiar is behind you. The future feels uncertain. In this exact moment, God has something to say to you, and it is not what you might expect. He does not offer you comfort. He offers you a command. Be strong and very courageous. But here is what makes this different from every other motivational message you will hear this week: He is not asking you to find courage within yourself. He is calling you to receive it from Him.
I’ve written a pastoral reflection on Joshua 1:7 the closing day of 2025. The reflection integratestogether:
– The context of Joshua’s moment of transition, mirroring readers’ own threshold into a new year
– Deep spiritual insights about courage rooted in obedience rather than self-confidence
– Practical wisdom about staying true to God’s Word amid life’s pressures
– Pastoral warmth and encouragement for facing the unknown future
– A hopeful, grace-filled welcome to the new year
Daily Biblical Reflection – Verse for Today (31 December 2025)
Forwarded by Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan | Reflection by Johnbritto Kurusumuthu.
“Only be strong and very courageous, being careful to act in accordance with all the law that my servant Moses commanded you; do not turn from it to the right hand or to the left, so that you may be successful wherever you go.”
Joshua 1:7
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
As we stand on the threshold between years, at this sacred moment when one chapter closes and another awaits to be written, God speaks to us through the words He once spoke to Joshua. How fitting that on this final day of 2025, we receive not a gentle whisper but a clarion call to courage.
Joshua stood where you stand now, facing an unknown future. Moses, his mentor and guide, had died. The familiar was behind him; the unfamiliar stretched ahead. The Promised Land lay before him, not as a gift wrapped and ready, but as a journey requiring every ounce of faith he could muster. In that moment of transition, God did not say, “Take it easy, Joshua” or “Don’t worry, it will all work out.” Instead, He said, “Be strong and very courageous.”
Notice the emphasis: not just strong, but very courageous. God knew that what lay ahead would demand more than Joshua thought he had. And beloved, as you prepare to step into 2026, God knows what lies ahead for you too. He knows the challenges that will test your resolve, the decisions that will require wisdom beyond your own, the moments when you will want to turn aside, to compromise, to take the easier path.
But here is the beautiful truth woven into this command: God never calls us to courage without providing the strength to sustain it. The courage God asks of us is not a reckless bravado or a denial of our fears. It is a settled confidence that He who calls us will also equip us. It is the courage to obey when obedience is costly, to remain faithful when faithfulness feels foolish, to keep walking the narrow path when wider roads beckon.
“Being careful to act in accordance with all the law that my servant Moses commanded you” – this is not legalism but love. God was reminding Joshua that true success, lasting success, comes not from clever strategies or impressive strength, but from staying aligned with His Word. In a world that constantly offers us shortcuts and alternative paths, God’s instruction remains the same: do not turn from it to the right hand or to the left.
How easily we are tempted to veer off course. Sometimes it is a dramatic departure, but more often it is a subtle drift, a small compromise here, a little accommodation there. We tell ourselves we are being practical, realistic, and compassionate. But God knows that every degree we turn away from His truth eventually takes us to a destination we never intended to reach.
As this year draws to a close, take a moment to examine your path. Have you stayed true to God’s Word, or have you drifted? Have you allowed the pressures of the world, the opinions of others, or the desires of your own heart to pull you away from the course God set before you? There is no condemnation in this honest assessment, only the opportunity for course correction. The new year offers us a fresh start, but not a blank slate. We carry forward the lessons learned, the character forged, and the grace received.
The promise attached to this command is profound: “so that you may be successful wherever you go.” God defines success differently than the world does. His success is measured not in achievements that impress others, but in a life that honours Him. It is faithfulness in small things, integrity when no one is watching, love when it costs us something, joy despite circumstances, and peace that passes understanding. This is the success that lasts, the only success that matters when we stand before Him.
As you prepare to welcome 2026, let me offer you this pastoral encouragement: You do not step into this new year alone. The same God who commanded Joshua to be strong and courageous is with you. He has not brought you this far to abandon you now. Every fear you carry, every uncertainty that weighs on your heart, every challenge you anticipate – He knows them all, and He is sufficient for them all.
Make this your resolution: to stay close to His Word, to walk in obedience regardless of the cost, to be strong and very courageous even when you feel weak and afraid. The strength you need is not something you manufacture; it is something you receive as you remain in Him.
To all our dear readers of Rise and Inspire, we extend our warmest greetings for the new year. May 2026 be a year of deeper faith, greater courage, and unwavering commitment to following Christ wherever He leads. May you not turn to the right or to the left, but walk steadily in the path He has set before you. And may you discover that in His presence, you have everything you need to face whatever lies ahead.
The future is unknown to us, but it is not unknown to God. Step forward with confidence, not in yourself, but in the One who goes before you, who walks beside you, and who will never leave you nor forsake you.
Be strong and very courageous, beloved. Your God is with you wherever you go.
In Christ’s love and service,
Johnbritto Kurusumuthu
Rise and Inspire
December 31, 2025
Stepping Forward with God: A Catholic Devotional Reflection on Joshua 1
“Be strong and courageous… for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go.” (Joshua 1:9)
Transitions are holy ground.
The Book of Joshua opens at a moment of profound loss and uncertainty. Moses—the great lawgiver, intercessor, and shepherd of Israel—is gone. A generation shaped by wandering, testing, and waiting now stands at the edge of promise. Joshua 1 invites us into this sacred threshold, where grief meets hope, and where fear is gently but firmly met by God’s promise: “I will be with you.”
For Israel, the crossing of the Jordan is not merely geographical; it is spiritual. It marks the passage from promise remembered to promise fulfilled, from wandering to inheritance. In our own lives, we too stand at such Jordans—after loss, during change, or at moments when God asks us to step forward without full certainty.
God’s Faithfulness Does Not End with a Chapter
The death of Moses does not signal the end of God’s plan. Instead, it reveals a deeper truth: God’s covenant faithfulness transcends individual leaders. The same Lord who spoke from the burning bush now speaks to Joshua with reassurance and clarity.
In Catholic life, this continuity echoes through Sacred Tradition. God’s saving work unfolds across generations—through patriarchs and prophets, apostles and saints—yet always with the same fidelity. What God promises, He fulfils, though often through new servants and new seasons.
Joshua’s commissioning reminds us that God does not abandon His people between chapters. When one voice falls silent, another is raised—not by human ambition, but by divine calling.

Joshua succeeded Moses as leader:
Courage Rooted in Obedience, Not Self-Confidence
Four times in this chapter Joshua is told: “Be strong and courageous.” This repetition reveals that courage is not assumed; it is commanded and cultivated.
Notably, God does not ground Joshua’s courage in military skill or personal resolve. Instead, courage flows from obedience to the Law—from meditating on God’s Word “day and night.” Strength, in the biblical sense, is born from fidelity.
For Catholics, these points us toward a life anchored in Scripture, prayer, and the sacraments. True courage arises not when we trust ourselves more, but when we conform our lives to God’s Word, allowing it to shape our decisions, desires, and direction.
“I Will Be With You”: The Promise of Divine Presence
At the heart of Joshua 1 is a promise that reverberates throughout salvation history:
“As I was with Moses, so I will be with you.”
This assurance anticipates the fullness of Emmanuel—God with us—revealed in Christ and sacramentally present in the Eucharist. The same God who walked with Israel now walks with His Church, especially when the path ahead feels uncertain.
In moments of fear or discouragement, Joshua 1 teaches us to listen again to this promise. God does not merely send us forward; He goes with us.
Inheritance, Rest, and the Journey of Faith
The promised land represents rest after long wandering, yet Scripture reminds us that this rest is not final. As the Letter to the Hebrews later reflects, the true and lasting rest is found in God Himself.
Joshua’s journey becomes a signpost for our own pilgrimage. Each step of obedience draws us closer to the fullness of life God desires for us—a rest not defined by ease, but by communion with Him.
A Prayerful Invitation
Joshua 1 is not only a historical account; it is a living word addressed to every believer standing at the edge of change.
When we face transitions, may we hear God’s voice anew.
When we feel unworthy or afraid, may we remember that courage is a gift, not a requirement.
When the way forward feels unclear, may we trust the promise that never fails:
“Be strong and courageous… for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go.”
FAQs on Joshua Chapter 1 (Catholic Perspective)
1. Why is Joshua 1 important in salvation history?
Joshua 1 marks the transition from Moses to Joshua and from wilderness wandering to the fulfilment of God’s promise. It shows that God’s plan continues even when human leaders change, emphasising divine fidelity rather than human achievement.
2. Why does God repeatedly tell Joshua to “be strong and courageous”?
The command acknowledges Joshua’s fear and responsibility. In Scripture, courage is not self-confidence but trustful obedience rooted in God’s Word. God commands courage because He supplies the grace needed to live it.
3. What does “meditate on the Book of the Law day and night” mean for Catholics today?
It points to a life formed by Scripture, prayer, and obedience. For Catholics, this includes:
✔️ Reading Scripture regularly
✔️ Listening to the Word proclaimed in the liturgy
✔️ Allowing God’s Word to shape conscience and action
Meditation here is not passive reading but living attentiveness to God’s will.
4. How does Joshua 1 relate to Christ and the New Testament?
Joshua leads Israel into the Promised Land; Jesus leads humanity into eternal life. The Letter to the Hebrews teaches that the rest Joshua provided was partial, pointing toward the true rest found in Christ (Hebrews 4:8–9).
5. What does “the Promised Land” symbolise for Christians?
Beyond geography, it represents:
• God’s faithfulness
• Spiritual inheritance
• Growth in holiness
• The journey toward eternal communion with God
It reminds believers that faith involves movement, trust, and obedience.
6. Why are the tribes east of the Jordan mentioned?
Their obligation to help the other tribes highlights communal responsibility and fidelity to promises. In Catholic life, this reflects the Church’s teaching that faith is never lived in isolation—we journey together as one Body.
7. Is Joshua 1 about military conquest?
While historically involving conquest, the chapter’s theological focus is on God’s presence and obedience, not human violence. The Church reads this text spiritually, seeing it as a call to interior courage and faithfulness, not physical warfare.
8. How does Joshua 1 speak to moments of change or loss today?
Joshua 1 reassures believers that God remains present during transitions—after loss, leadership change, illness, or uncertainty. God’s promise, “I will be with you,” is stronger than fear.
9. What does this chapter teach about leadership?
Biblical leadership is grounded in:
• Obedience to God
• Humility
• Responsibility toward the community
Joshua is successful not because he replaces Moses, but because he walks faithfully with God.
10. What is the central spiritual message of Joshua 1?
God calls His people to move forward in faith, anchored in His Word, sustained by His presence, and strengthened by courage that comes from obedience—not fearlessness.

Discussion Questions for Groups or Personal Reflection
1. What “Jordan River” am I standing before right now in my life?
2. Where do I struggle most with fear when God invites me to move forward?
3. How do I currently “meditate” on God’s Word? What could deepen this practice?
4. In what ways do I rely more on my own strength than on God’s presence?
5. How does Joshua’s leadership challenge modern ideas of success and power?
6. What promises of God do I find hardest to trust during times of transition?
7. How does this chapter shape my understanding of obedience as a path to freedom?
8. Where is God asking me to be courageous—not aggressively, but faithfully?
9. How can my faith community support one another in “crossing the Jordan” together?
10. What would it mean for me to truly believe: “The Lord my God is with me wherever I go”?
Theological and Interpretive Soundness: This reflection faithfully captures the context of Joshua 1: God’s charge to Joshua after Moses’ death, emphasising courage rooted in obedience to God’s law rather than self-reliance. It draws appropriate parallels to transitioning into a new year, stresses faithfulness over worldly success, warns against subtle compromise, and ends with encouragement grounded in God’s presence. This faithfully reflects orthodox Christian interpretations of the passage.
Authorship and Source: Johnbritto Kurusumuthu is the author behind the “Rise & Inspire” devotional series (hosted at riseandinspire.co.in). His writings consistently feature daily biblical reflections inspired by verses shared (“forwarded”) by Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan, Bishop of Punalur, Kerala.
© 2025 Johnbritto Kurusumuthu | Rise & Inspire Devotional Series
Word count:2503
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Happy 2026 🥂
Happy 2026! 🥂✨ Wishing you a year full of good health, happiness, and exciting new beginnings.
This is truly inspiring.
I love how it shows that real courage comes from trusting God and following His Word, not relying on ourselves.
A perfect reminder to end the year grounded in faith and step into the new one with confidence and peace.
👏🤝🌷🎉
Amen 🙏 Courage comes from God, not just ourselves. Such a powerful way to start the new year…
🙌🙇🎉🙏