Rethinking Jericho, the Walls, and the God Who Does the Impossible
Most people imagine Jericho as massive.
A sprawling city.
Miles of walls.
An overwhelming obstacle.
But that picture is not entirely accurate.
Jericho was not large.
It was formidable.
A Small City With an Impossible Defense
Archaeology and historical estimates suggest something surprising.
Jericho was roughly about a kilometer in circumference.
Less than a mile.
That means a single lap around the city may have taken 15–20 minutes.
Even with a large group, it was not an all-day journey.
Which changes everything.
Because the story was never about distance.
It was about defense.
Jericho was known for its walls.
Not just one wall.
Two.
A retaining wall at the base.
A thick upper wall above it.
Some estimates suggest the walls together could reach heights that made the city impregnable by normal warfare.
Cities like this did not fall easily.
They were not taken by force.
They were taken by:
Betrayal.
Starvation.
Internal compromise.
You don’t break walls like Jericho from the outside.
And Yet… God Didn’t Go Around It
This is where the story becomes deeply personal.
God did not tell Israel to avoid Jericho.
He did not say:
“Go around it.”
“Wait it out.”
“Find another path.”
He said:
“Go through it.”
Because some obstacles are not meant to be bypassed.
They are meant to be publicly defeated.
The Strategy That Made No Sense
Walk around the city.
Once a day.
For six days.
Then seven times on the seventh day.
No weapons raised.
No battering rams.
No siege towers.
Just walking.
And silence.
Imagine it.
A fortified city watching an army… walk.
Day one.
Day two.
Day three.
No attack.
Just movement.
From a military standpoint, this was absurd.
From a spiritual standpoint, it was precise.
Why Silence Was Necessary
Because doubt speaks.
Fear speaks.
Logic argues.
And if the people were allowed to talk, they would have questioned the process.
“Is this really working?”
“What are we doing?”
“This makes no sense.”
So God removed their ability to sabotage the moment.
Sometimes, breakthrough requires silence before release.
The Seventh Day
Then comes the moment.
Seven laps.
Longer. Slower. Heavier.
Tension building with every step.
And then:
A shout.
Not a strategy.
Not an attack.
A sound.
And suddenly…
The walls collapse.
⸻
The Detail Most People Miss
The walls did not fall inward.
They fell outward.
Which means something extraordinary happened.
The very structure that kept them out…
became the pathway that brought them in.
The obstacle turned into access.
What No Army Could Do
In ancient warfare, a city like Jericho would take months to conquer.
Sometimes years.
Many would simply avoid it.
Too costly. Too complex.
But in seven days…
Without conventional warfare…
The system collapsed.
This was not just victory.
This was announcement.
God Was Saying Something
To Israel:
“You are not winning because of your strength.”
To Jericho:
“You are not as secure as you think.”
To surrounding nations:
“There is a force here you cannot calculate.”
And Then… Rahab
In the middle of all this power, there is a quiet, beautiful detail.
Rahab.
A woman who lived on the wall.
The same wall that collapsed.
Yet her house remained.
Why?
Because alignment preserves what destruction touches.
While the system fell…
Faith was protected.
The Deeper Meaning
Jericho was never just about a city.
It was about systems that look unbreakable.
Structures that seem permanent.
Barriers that feel final.
And God chose a method that made one thing clear:
This is not human.
Why God Works This Way
Because if the strategy made sense…
People would take the credit.
If the method was familiar…
It would be repeatable without Him.
So God chose a method that removed all doubt.
The Personal Question
What is your Jericho?
Not the obvious obstacle.
But the one that feels:
Engineered against you.
Too strong to break.
Too complex to confront.
The kind of thing people usually avoid.
The Final Insight
God does not always remove obstacles.
Sometimes, He collapses them in a way that cannot be explained.
Not gradually.
Not logically.
But undeniably.
So that when it happens, everyone watching understands:
This was not strategy.
This was God.
A Closing Thought
The walls of Jericho were not defeated by force.
They were defeated by:
Obedience.
Alignment.
Timing.
And a moment of release.
And maybe that is the point.
That the strongest systems in your life…
Will not break because you are powerful.
They will break because God is involved.
