landmark
when the finally-suddenly is just ahead
“Right there, that one.” Still going highway speed, the road to Grandma’s house rapidly approached on the passenger side.
Vin hit the brakes to slow down in time, and flicked the blinker. “I was looking for the sign...it’s not there anymore,” he said, making the turn.
I never look for the street sign, so I didn’t even notice it was missing. Grinning, I pointed through the cracked windshield at the Butte looming in front of us.
“It’s right there. There’s your sign.”
I don’t mean to brag. The man drives us everywhere and keeps a map in his head, while I almost took out an ornamental tree the last time I made a u-turn in the library parking lot.
But this road, I know. I’ve driven it so many times I could do it with my eyes shut...figuratively, of course.
I’ve been driving it more and more, too. The plan, for now, is to take it weekly because time is flying and Grandma is 94 and things that weren’t a concern a year ago are now quite different. A year adds miles to all of us.
Meanwhile, I’ve worked my way through Numbers but got hung up in chapter 33 because it is the end of the year and that chapter seems parallel to life right now. Because ready or not, change is here, and so many other markers we thought we’d never get to.
Promises fulfilled. Breakthroughs achieved. Milestones that were always in the distance, so far off we never really thought we’d see them up close – but here they are, rapidly looming larger and larger as the safe space between us shortens.
It’s finally, suddenly. And there are no brakes for slowing this down.
So let me tell you about Numbers 33, which summarizes the Israelites’ journey from Egypt to the Promised Land. They had been slaves, and went from bondage and captivity to freedom and fulfillment. You probably know this story almost as well as you know your own, so you know it wasn’t an easy-peasy, quick trip.
Just because you’re no longer a slave doesn’t mean you suddenly know how to live in freedom.
So the Israelites, like us, had a journey to make. And Numbers 33 gives us the landmarks:
They set out from Rameses in the first month, on the fifteenth day of the first month; on the day after the Passover the Israelites went out boldly in the sight of all the Egyptians...
– Numbers 33:3
During this journey, the Israelites wrestled with the same questions we do when we’re being honest: Is obedience worth it? Can we trust God? Are we who He really says we are, and can we really do what He tells us to?
Are we willing to go where He sends us?
Some of us have been promised something before, and it didn’t turn out the way we thought it would. It took too long, or maybe we confused the middle for the end. Maybe it was super messy, and came with trial or trauma. We feel like the promise burned us and we stopped trusting.
So now when we see a new landmark of promise and fulfillment looming ahead, we hit the brakes.
Dig in our heels.
Backpedal.
We do all the metaphors because we’ve (mis)learned that promises can also feel very much like threats.
You know the story of the twelve spies; this is exactly what ten of them did. The enemy wants us to see the worst case scenario and assume that all is lost.
We should, of course, be looking at Jesus, but problems (current or potential ones) are loud and flashy and demanding. They get in our face and try to become idols, because if they can command more of our attention than we give to Jesus...well, that’s what we’re worshiping, don’t you know.
But when we know the land, know the hand of God, and understand Romans 8:28 (and the rest of scripture), we know better: All is not lost. All is gain. There is nothing the enemy can do that, when surrendered to the Lord, cannot result in our gain.
When we understand that, it’s easier to stand our ground instead of shrinking back and looking for excuses to avoid what we’re called to do.
So, friend...in this season, what are you called to do?
We have to be free from fear. If we’re afraid of the landmark looming in the distance, we won’t confront it; we’ll be ruled by it, instead. But our wild exploits are rooted in our fearless movement forward.
Teach me your way, O Lord, and lead me on a level path because of my enemies.
Do not give me up to the will of my adversaries, for false witnesses have risen against me, and they are breathing out violence.
I believe that I shall see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living.– Psalm 27:11-13
Still though, so many things we thought were down the road are now right in front of us. We’re almost-finally-suddenly there, and so is the temptation to stall our engines or shrink back.
How many times have we sensed the “suddenly” coming, and we sabotaged it out of fear? Are we allowing God to be as big as He is – and trusting Him for all that He says – or are we making Him small and safe, in the terrain of our own choosing?
Maybe it will help to look back, and see how far we’ve come.
They set out from Pi-hahiroth, passed through the sea into the wilderness...
Look at what you’ve done: You faced the event you’d been dreading. You rose above fear and found a mantle of authority on the high ground. You confronted dishonor, you let go of betrayal, you forgave the one who repented, and you continued to love, even in new ways, the one who still doesn’t know how.
They set out from Marah and came to Elim...
You read this book and then that one, and you stumbled into a curriculum that was clearly the Lord’s design because it was not of your choosing. You learned so many lessons you never planned for, and you grew in deeper humility along with them.
They set out from Elim and camped by the Red Sea. They set out from the Red Sea and camped in the wilderness of Sin...
You had that hard conversation and made that brave confession, you learned that you could articulate those thoughts and feelings you’ve held onto for years, because you finally had a receptive audience. And you learned that the Lord is always receptive, too.
They set out from the wilderness of Sin and camped at Dophkah. They set out from Dophkah and camped at Alush.
You saved and invested, put the work in, milestone after milestone. Some of the markers are invisible to everyone but you – but you know how you carved out time to make way for a service that that no one else would see.
They set out from Alush and camped at Rephidim, where there was no water for the people to drink.
When you didn’t see the answer or the provision, you waited and it came. No, it didn’t look at all like you thought it would, but it came.
They set out from Rephidim and camped in the wilderness of Sinai.
You learned about balancing graciousness with firmness, and discerned between overlooking mistakes and confronting sin. Wisdom has taught you more about which concerns should be shared and which should stay private and prayed about. And you’ve gotten better at magnifying righteousness, instead of venting frustrations and giving the enemy the satisfaction of having volume added to his harassment.
Look at how you’ve grown, how far you’ve come. Look at what He’s done.
He reached down from on high; he took me;
he drew me out of mighty waters.
He delivered me from my strong enemy
and from those who hated me,
for they were too mighty for me.
They confronted me in the day of my calamity,
but the Lord was my support.
He brought me out into a broad place;
he delivered me because he delighted in me.– Psalm 18:16-19
Can you believe it? Look back and see all the landmarks you’ve made it through, all the posts you held, all the places you stopped to build an altar and worship. A little wonder and amazement is called for.
He has been training us to take the land, drive out idolatry, expand the Kingdom, root out lies and deception, heal trauma, free the captives, and prepare the way of the Lord. We’ve learned that we have to start with the land in our own hearts first, because if we are still living as captives, we cannot free anyone else.
Toward the end of Numbers 33, there’s this little phrase in verse 54: “according to your ancestral tribes you shall inherit.” They, of course, were talking about boundaries of the land of each tribe, but there’s truth here for us, too.
According to your family culture (the way you hold your charge, the way you bear your calling, what you invest in, focus on, attend to, and cultivate)...you will inherit.
Our lives – and what our children will inherit from us – are wrapped up in these promises and how we follow Him into them.
We want each one of you to show the same diligence so as to realize the full assurance of hope to the very end, so that you may not become sluggish but imitators of those who through faith and patience inherit the promises.
– Hebrews 6:11-12
His goodness is the lay of the land – and you don’t need a sign if you’re familiar with the territory. You just need to know the landmarks.
He has been, and will continue to be, before and behind us.
He is leading, but He is also coming.
And He’s teaching us to prepare the way for it.




A wonderful message, thankful to have found it!🫶