R is for Rahab

We hear the cat calls and whis­tles as she sashays by the group of men on the corner. Rahab is a stun­ning woman…living in Jericho…running an “inn”…and has a ques­tion­able resume. The rep­utable people of Jericho don’t asso­ciate with her. The upstanding women in town cross the street when they see her and whisper behind her back. She’s not invited to the high-class social soirees. She’s popular…but for all the wrong reasons.

Joshua and his army are camped out­side the city and need spies inside Jericho. His Chief of Staff is strate­gizing how to seize the city…and they need recon­nais­sance. Why Joshua’s spies go to the house of a pros­ti­tute is not clear. Outside of obvious rea­sons, there may be people there who don’t care who hears them talk about the town’s affairs. In any case, the spies are at Rahab’s when who should come looking for them? Why the King’s sol­diers of course.

Now, in addi­tion to being beau­tiful, Rahab is a quick-thinking woman. In her most dis­tracting way, she bats her eye­lashes and lies that the men were indeed hanging out with her but have since left. And then tells them to pursue quickly because she’s con­fi­dent they’ll over­take those bad men before they get out of town. There’s nothing like a little schmoozing to get the King’s sol­diers out of your face. Little do they know the two spies are hiding upstairs on the roof.

So, not only is she a woman of ques­tion­able means, she’s evi­dently a liar and willing to betray her own people. She approaches the men and con­fesses she knows they are Joshua’s spies. Since Joshua is a well-known war­rior, his con­quests are in all the head­lines. Believing they’re the good guys, Rahab strikes a deal.

Now then, since I have dealt kindly with you, swear to me by the Lord that you in turn will deal kindly with my family. Give me a sign of good faith that you will spare my father and mother, my brothers and sis­ters, and all who belong to them, and deliver our lives from death. ~Joshua 2:12–13

Joshua is good for his word when the recon mis­sion is com­plete. When the sol­diers take the city, they look for a red rope hanging from a window of a house at the edge of town. Rahab and her family are safely tucked inside, pro­tected from the chaos hap­pening out­side her door.

Rahab is a sur­vivor, and someone we can cer­tainly learn from, once we get past her “history.”

* She risks every­thing and takes a mon­u­mental leap of faith to secure her future. After all, if she’s wrong, she’ll be put to death for treason.
* As an out­cast, she puts her trust in strangers who follow a God that is unknown to her.
* She trusts this God of the Hebrews will not reject and abandon her based on her past.
* She was not solely con­sid­ering her own selfish needs in the sit­u­a­tion. Her family prob­ably had aban­doned her, but she still chooses to save them in her house when the city is taken by Joshua’s army. She chose not to cut a deal that was only in her best interests.

Rahab is willing to turn her back on her past, and walk by faith into the future. And God blesses her new life because of her faith and her actions.

In bib­lical genealogy cir­cles, women are not typ­i­cally men­tioned. But as Matthew is doc­u­menting the lin­eage of Jesus, he includes 4 women; Tamar, Rahab, Ruth and Bathsheeba (by ref­er­ence). Bathsheeba is Jewish, the other three are not. All four share the shame of sexual scandal in their lives. Not exactly the royal, upper crust lin­eage we’d expect for the Son of God. Perhaps that’s why Jesus had such a soft spot for women of ques­tion­able pasts that walk by faith and for­give­ness into the future.

Do you believe your past is a deal-breaker for God’s grace?
Can you take a leap of faith, blindly trusting God will catch you?
Can you now walk with faith­ful­ness and change your life for the better?

Sub­mitted for ABC Wednesday

 

 

Be the first to like.

you may also like…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>