Preamble:
Before Israel enters the land, they must learn how to see.
Before Deborah enters the battle, she must teach others how to see.
The giants are real.
The chariots are real.
The danger is real.
Yet Scripture refuses to let visible realities become ultimate realities.
Numbers gives us a generation that sees giants and imagines itself as grasshoppers.
Judges gives us a generation that sees iron chariots and hears that the Lord is already marching ahead.
Both stories ask the same question:
Who gets to interpret what we see?
Because most people do not see reality as it is. They see reality through the habits, fears, memories, and expectations that shaped them.
The spies see a future, but they interpret it through Egypt.
Deborah sees a battlefield, but she interprets it through covenant.
That tension feels surprisingly familiar.
We live in a time when every headline arrives with an interpretation attached. Every crisis comes with a narrative. Every challenge is quickly declared either proof of collapse or proof of victory. We are surrounded by voices telling us what the facts mean before we have time to wrestle with them ourselves.
Yet Scripture slows us down.
The giants are real.
The chariots are real.
But neither story asks whether the obstacle exists.
The question is whether the obstacle becomes the dominant fact.
A few weeks ago, Knicks fans spent another season hearing what they have heard for years: the odds, the rankings, the predictions, the reasons it cannot happen. Some of those facts were true. Most were reasonable. Yet every game still had to be played. Because statistics can describe a situation, but they cannot fully determine a future.
Joshua and Caleb understood that.
Deborah understood that.
The obstacle may be real, but the obstacle is never the whole story.
Because freedom is not only leaving Egypt.
Freedom is learning not to think like Egypt after you leave.