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Joshua 1 — Bible Study Questions (Courage And Obedience)

Small-group guide for Joshua 1: passage snapshot, key themes, verse-by-verse highlights, discussion questions, and practical application.

You can watch the videos below as an added lesson on how we are Children of God and how to face challenges in the world, or you can just continue reading this study in "Joshua 1 — Bible Study Questions (Courage And Obedience)".

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Joshua 1 — Bible Study Questions (Courage And Obedience)

Why This Passage Matters

When you read this passage slowly, you start to notice God’s tone: firm, faithful, and patient.

In Joshua 1, God shows His heart and His way. We’ll read with context, then move into questions that lead to wise application.

Use this as a guide for personal study or group discussion—Scripture first, then honest conversation, then practical obedience.

  • Discussion questions that move from understanding to action.
  • Practical applications you can carry into the week.
  • A closing prayer and a community prompt.

Passage Context

Joshua 1 opens after Moses’ death. Israel faces leadership change and the challenge of entering the land.

God speaks directly to Joshua with commands and promises: arise, go, be strong, do not fear.

The chapter shows courage as more than confidence; it is obedience anchored in God’s presence.

This passage invites groups to discuss fear, calling, Scripture habits, and how to move forward when you feel inadequate.

Why this matters today: Many believers know Bible stories but struggle to connect them to anxiety, relationships, habits, and purpose. This passage gives a faithful lens for the week ahead—showing what God is like and how trust becomes practical.

Helpful approach: Read the passage aloud slowly. Pause after each major paragraph and let the group name what they notice before moving into interpretation. Observation first often produces better application later.

Leader’s guide: Before you begin, ask the group to listen for one sentence that reveals God’s character and one sentence that exposes a human heart reaction. Near the end, ask: “What would change in our week if we truly believed what we just read?”

As you read, watch for repeated words or contrasts (fear/faith, darkness/light, death/life, pride/humility). Scripture often teaches through patterns. Noticing those patterns will make the discussion questions land with more clarity.

Key Themes

ThemeWhat It Means
God’s Presence In TransitionGod’s work continues even when leaders change.
Courage Rooted In PromiseStrength comes from trusting what God said, not from self-esteem.
Obedience To God’s WordMeditation and obedience are the pathway to wise action.
Community ResponsibilityJoshua leads, but the people also commit to obedience and unity.
Forward MovementFaith does not stay stuck in grief; it steps into the next assignment.

These themes are not meant to stay abstract. As you talk, keep asking: “What does this show about God?” and “What does this show about how faith responds?” When a group answers those two questions, application usually becomes clearer and more gentle.

Watch for patterns: Scripture often repeats key ideas with different angles—fear and faith, surrender and provision, sin and mercy, mission and presence. Repetition is a clue about what the Spirit wants us to notice.

Common Questions To Clarify

Some passages raise difficult questions, especially when people have pain in their story or misunderstandings from the past. Use these prompts to keep the conversation clear and anchored in God’s character.

  • Is God good here? Ask the group to identify what the passage reveals about God’s faithfulness, mercy, or justice.
  • What is God asking for? Distinguish between descriptive narrative (what happened) and God’s enduring call (what He commands).
  • What is the heart issue? Many struggles are not just behavior problems but trust problems—fear, pride, control, shame.
  • How does grace change the conversation? Application is not punishment; it is response to God’s love.

If someone gets stuck on a hard question, it is okay to say, “Let’s stay with what the text clearly shows,” and return to interpretation later with more study.

Verse Highlights

SectionVerse Highlights
Joshua 1:1–5God commissions Joshua and promises presence: “as I was with Moses.”
Joshua 1:6–7Be strong and courageous—connected to obeying God’s instruction.
Joshua 1:8Meditate on God’s Word day and night. This is practical formation, not mere inspiration.
Joshua 1:9Courage grounded in presence: God is with you wherever you go.
Joshua 1:10–18The people commit to unity and obedience. Leadership and followership both matter.

Reading notes: The goal of Verse Highlights is not to rush past hard parts. It is to slow down and hear the passage as it is. If a moment feels heavy, name it. If a line feels hopeful, linger. Both can be true at the same time.

What to notice as you read:

  • Where people react from fear, shame, pride, or control—and how God addresses it.
  • What God says about Himself—His character, promises, and purposes.
  • What changes from the beginning to the end—tone, posture, or outcome.
  • How faith is described—words spoken, steps taken, or trust expressed.

If your group is new to Bible study, you can treat the highlights as a simple outline: read the section, summarize in one sentence, then ask “What does this mean for us?”

Gently press deeper: Ask “Why?” more than once. For example: “Why did that response happen?” and “Why does God respond that way?” These questions move discussion from surface to heart.

Deeper Notes For Discussion

Courage Is Rooted In Presence: Joshua is told to be strong and courageous, but the reason is God’s presence. Courage is not personality; it is confidence that God is with you. When you feel inadequate, return to that promise.

Meditation That Leads To Obedience: Joshua is called to meditate on God’s word day and night. Meditation here means repeated attention that shapes decisions. The goal is not information, but obedience—living in alignment with God’s ways.

Leadership Under Pressure: Joshua inherits a massive task and a grieving people. God meets him with clear direction and reassurance. If you carry responsibility, this passage is a reminder: you can lead by leaning on God’s word and presence.

One Step At A Time: The conquest is not completed in a day. God often gives big promises and then invites steady steps. Ask for the next faithful action—then do it. God builds courage through repeated obedience.

Discussion Questions

Use these questions in a small group, a family discussion, or personal study. Move at a pace that allows honest answers and gentle encouragement.

Understand

  • What promises does God give Joshua, and what commands does He give?
  • How is courage connected to obedience in this chapter?
  • What does Joshua 1:8 teach about Scripture and daily life?
  • Why is God’s presence the anchor for courage?
  • How do the people respond to Joshua’s leadership?

Reflect

  • What transition are you facing right now—work, family, faith, health, relationships?
  • Where do you feel fear or inadequacy?
  • What does it look like for you to meditate on Scripture practically?
  • Do you tend to rush ahead without grounding, or freeze in fear?
  • Who has encouraged you spiritually the way God encourages Joshua?

Apply

  • What is one next step you can take this week that aligns with God’s Word?
  • How can you build a daily Scripture rhythm that is realistic?
  • Who can you invite to walk with you for accountability and courage?
  • What fear do you need to name and surrender to God today?
  • How can your group practice unity and mutual encouragement?

Facilitation tips:

  • Invite quieter voices by asking open questions like “What stood out to you?” rather than “What’s the right answer?”
  • When someone shares something heavy, respond with empathy first, then gently return to the passage.
  • If the conversation becomes argumentative, refocus: “What does the text actually say?”
  • End by choosing one specific application step and praying for one another.

Reading Notes To Help You Slow Down

  • Read the chapter once for the big idea, then re-read slowly and notice what repeats.
  • Ask what the passage reveals about God and what it exposes about the human heart.
  • Choose one sentence that stands out and turn it into a prayer.

Use these notes to guide your reading before you jump into the questions. Slow reading often produces deeper application.

Practical Application This Week

Pick one or two steps that fit your season and do them consistently. Growth usually comes through small acts of faith done repeatedly.

  • Write Joshua 1:9 (reference) on a note and place it where you’ll see it daily. Pray it in your own words.
  • Choose one Scripture passage to meditate on for seven days—read, reflect, apply one sentence each day.
  • Take one courageous obedience step you’ve delayed: a conversation, a habit change, a service decision.
  • Ask a believer to check in with you twice this week as you step forward.
  • Replace fear talk with promise talk: speak what God has said rather than what fear predicts.

It can help to choose one “micro-obedience” step—something small enough to do this week, but meaningful enough to stretch faith. Over time, small obedience steps become a steady discipleship lifestyle.

If you’re walking through hardship, aim for faithfulness rather than perfection. God often grows perseverance in slow, ordinary days.

10-minute version: Re-read one key paragraph, write one honest sentence about what you’re facing, and ask God for the next right step. Then do one practical thing that reflects trust—however small.


Bring someone with you: If you’re in a group, ask one person to check in with you mid-week. Faith grows faster with encouragement. A simple text—“How did your one step go?”—can keep the application from fading.

Gospel Connection

Ultimately, every passage is a doorway into the bigger story: God rescuing, renewing, and forming a people who live by faith. As you discuss Joshua 1, connect the passage to Jesus—His character, His teaching, His sacrifice, and His promise to be with His people. The goal is not information alone, but transformation that flows from worship and trust.

If someone in your group feels far from God, remind them that the gospel is not “try harder.” It is “come to Jesus.” Grace is the beginning of growth, and the Spirit supplies strength for obedience.

When a group applies Scripture without the gospel, it often turns into pressure. When a group applies Scripture with the gospel, it turns into hope: God changes hearts, forgives sin, and gives strength to walk in newness of life.

Deepening The Conversation

Sometimes a passage feels familiar, but the Spirit wants to move it from “I know that story” into “I’m living that truth.” If your group has time, return to the passage and ask each person to name one line that confronts their comfort zone and one line that strengthens their hope.

Then, connect that line to a real situation: a relationship conflict, a temptation cycle, a season of grief, a fear about provision, or a decision that requires courage. Scripture becomes most powerful when it meets a real moment with a real promise.

  • Identify the pressure: What circumstance is pushing you right now?
  • Name the heart response: What did you feel—fear, anger, shame, control, despair?
  • Anchor in truth: What does this passage say about God that answers that pressure?
  • Choose one act of faith: What is one obedient step you can take in the next few days?


The gospel connection is not a “tacked on” ending; it’s the foundation. Jesus doesn’t only give you an example to copy—He gives you a new heart and His Spirit to help you obey. Ask God to move this passage from insight into transformation.

Prayer

God, thank You for being present in transitions. Give us strength and courage rooted in Your Word. Help us obey with faith, move forward with wisdom, and trust that You are with us wherever we go. Amen.

Community Prompt

If you want to Keep exploring, start a discussion in the Good Christian Network community. Share what stood out, what challenged you, and one step you want to take this week.

Keep Exploring God’s Word on This Theme

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This assistant is for encouragement and information and may make mistakes. Check Scripture and use wise counsel.

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