Justice | Mercy | Faith

Justice | Mercy | Faith

God’s Strategy and God’s Oneness: Why His Ways Defy Human Logic but Reveal His Nature

Difficulty Level: Intermediate-Advanced

God’s Strategy and God’s Oneness: Why His Ways Defy Human Logic but Reveal His Nature

Biblical Themes | God & His Attributes | Holy Spirit

How can God command something that seems completely counterintuitive—like weakening His own people right before battle—and still be acting with perfect wisdom?

This question opens the door to a deeper realization: what we often call God’s strategy cannot be understood apart from God’s oneness. His actions are never random, contradictory, or divided. They flow from who He is—one God, revealed in three persons, with a unified purpose, power, and will.

From the moment God instructed Joshua to circumcise Israel in enemy territory (Joshua 5:2), to the reminder that “the battle is the Lord’s” (1 Samuel 17:47), to the recognition that His power operates “not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit” (Zechariah 4:6), we begin to see a consistent pattern: God works in ways that dismantle human confidence in order to establish divine dependence.

Along the way, this leads us into a profound tension we all face—the tendency to fragment our understanding of God, imagining differences in character between the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Yet Scripture calls us back to a unified vision: “The Lord our God, the Lord is one” (Deuteronomy 6:4), and “I and My Father are one” (John 10:30).

This Q&A traces that journey—from God’s unexpected strategies to the deeper truth of His unified nature—revealing that what may seem confusing at first becomes trustworthy when seen in light of who He is.

And perhaps most humbling of all: just when we begin to grasp it, we realize we have only stepped into the shallow edge of an infinite God whose depth we will never fully reach.

God is God, and no human strategy can contain or define Him. What commander-in-chief would deliberately wound his own soldiers in enemy territory just before a battle? And yet, at that very moment, “the Lord said to Joshua, ‘Make flint knives for yourself, and circumcise the sons of Israel again the second time’” (Joshua 5:2). 🫣😫😁

That moment in Joshua 5:2 is almost shocking when you slow down and really feel it.

God brings Israel across the Jordan—into enemy territory—and instead of strengthening them for battle… He weakens them. 😳

From a human standpoint, it feels almost reckless.

But that’s exactly the point.

🩸 Before Victory, There Must Be Covenant

God wasn’t preparing an army first.
He was restoring a people.

“This is the reason why Joshua circumcised them: all the people who came out of Egypt… had not been circumcised.” (Joshua 5:4–5)

Circumcision was not just a ritual—it was the sign of the covenant given to Abraham:

“And you shall be circumcised… and it shall be a sign of the covenant between Me and you.” (Genesis 17:10–11)

So before Israel could take possession of the land, they had to be realigned with God Himself.

Not strategy first.
Not strength first.
Identity first.

💔 God Weakens to Establish Dependence

Think about the vulnerability of that moment.

They are:

  • In enemy land
  • Physically incapacitated
  • Unable to defend themselves

And God says: Now you’re ready.

Why?

Because their safety was never in their swords—it was in His presence.

“Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit,” says the Lord. (Zechariah 4:6)

God often removes what we would rely on so that we are forced to rely on Him alone.

🔥 The Rolling Away of Egypt

After this, something profound happens:

“Today I have rolled away the reproach of Egypt from you.” (Joshua 5:9)

Circumcision here is not just physical—it represents:

  • The cutting away of the past
  • The removal of slavery identity
  • A fresh beginning in God’s promise

They left Egypt 40 years earlier… but Egypt had not fully left them.

Now, before conquest, God deals with the heart.

🧠 A Strange Military Strategy… or a Perfect One?

No human commander would do this.

But God is not trying to win a conventional war.

He is showing that:

  • Victory is not earned by human readiness
  • Victory is given to a consecrated people

This same pattern repeats:

  • The walls of Jericho fall without battle (Joshua 6)
  • Gideon wins with fewer men (Judges 7)
  • David defeats Goliath without armor (1 Samuel 17:45–47)

God deliberately dismantles human confidence so that His glory is unmistakable.

✂️ Circumcision of the Heart

This moment also points beyond itself.

Later, Scripture reveals the deeper meaning:

“Circumcise the foreskin of your heart, and be stiff-necked no longer.” (Deuteronomy 10:16)

“Circumcision is that of the heart, in the Spirit…” (Romans 2:29)

So what happened in Joshua 5 is both:

  • A physical act
  • A spiritual picture

God is saying: Before I fight for you outwardly, I will deal with you inwardly.

🤍 A Gentle but Piercing Question

What if God sometimes “weakens” us… not to harm us—but to align us?

Moments where:

  • You feel exposed
  • Not ready
  • Stripped of strength

And yet… strangely positioned right at the edge of promise.

That’s Joshua 5.

🌅 God’s Way: Consecration Before Conquest

“Sanctify yourselves, for tomorrow the Lord will do wonders among you.” (Joshua 3:5)

That’s the order:

  1. Consecration
  2. Dependence
  3. Then… victory

And honestly, there’s something deeply comforting in this—even if it’s unsettling at first 😅

Because it means the outcome was never resting on how battle-ready they were…
but on how faithful God is.

And He had already gone ahead of them.

We must continually be reminded that “the battle is the Lord’s”, and that victory belongs entirely to Him. Our participation is real, but it is always under His power and leadership, never independent of Him.

Yes… this is one of those truths we know, but need to be reminded of again and again—because everything in us tends to drift back to self-reliance.

And God, in His mercy, keeps bringing us back to this center:

“The battle is the Lord’s…” (1 Samuel 17:47)

David didn’t say that as poetry—he said it in the face of a giant.
And then he stepped forward… not in his own strength, but in alignment with God’s.

🧭 Participation, Not Ownership

What you said is so key: our participation is real, but it is never independent.

We are not spectators… but neither are we originators.

“The Lord will fight for you, and you shall hold your peace.” (Exodus 14:14)

And yet, just a few verses later, they must move forward into the sea (Exodus 14:15–16).

There’s the tension:

  • God fights
  • We move

But even our movement is under His command and enabled by His power.

🔥 Led by Him, Sustained by Him

It’s not just that God helps us fight—
He defines the battle, sets the terms, and ensures the outcome.

“For it is God who works in you both to will and to do for His good pleasure.” (Philippians 2:13)

Even:

  • The willingness
  • The strength
  • The perseverance

…all flow from Him.

So our role is not to produce victory, but to walk in step with the One who already secured it.

🛡️ When We Forget…

The danger is subtle.

We don’t usually say, “I will win this without God.”
But we start to act like:

  • It depends on our consistency
  • Our clarity
  • Our strength

And then anxiety creeps in… because deep down we know we’re not enough.

That’s when God gently reorients us:

“Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit,” says the Lord. (Zechariah 4:6)

🌿 A Restful Kind of Fighting

There is a kind of “fighting” that is actually restful.

Not passive—but dependent.

Like Jehoshaphat:

“You will not need to fight in this battle. Position yourselves, stand still and see the salvation of the Lord…” (2 Chronicles 20:17)

They still showed up.
They still stood in place.
But the victory did not come from their swords.

🤍 The Beauty of It All

This changes everything.

Because it means:

  • Your weakness is not a disqualification
  • Your limitations are not a threat to God’s plan

In fact, they are often the very setting where He chooses to act most clearly.

“My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness.” (2 Corinthians 12:9)

And so we walk…
Not as independent warriors trying to win something for God,
but as those who follow the Captain who has already secured the outcome.

“The Lord your God is He who goes with you, to fight for you against your enemies, to save you.” (Deuteronomy 20:4)

There’s something deeply freeing in that 😊

We often quote, “Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit,” says the Lord (Zechariah 4:6), but sometimes we subtly reduce the Holy Spirit to something like the gentle or softer expression of God—the negotiator or mediator—when in reality He is God Almighty Himself, the very One who raised Jesus from the dead, conquering our greatest enemy.

That perception you’re pointing out… it’s more common than we admit.

We tend to think:

  • The Father → authority
  • The Son → sacrifice
  • The Spirit → comfort

Almost like the Spirit is the “gentle negotiator” of the Trinity.

But Scripture simply doesn’t allow that kind of division.

The Holy Spirit is not a part of God.
He is fully God—same power, same authority, same glory.

⚡ The Power That Raised Jesus

What you said is absolutely striking—and biblical.

“If the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you…” (Romans 8:11)

The resurrection is not just a miracle—it is the ultimate defeat of death, sin, and the grave.

And Scripture attributes that act to the Spirit.

Think about that:

  • Death—the final enemy (1 Corinthians 15:26)
  • Completely overturned
  • By the power of the Spirit

This is not softness.
This is absolute, unstoppable divine power.

🕊️ Gentleness ≠ Weakness

The Spirit does comfort, guide, and gently lead:

“When He, the Spirit of truth, has come, He will guide you into all truth…” (John 16:13)

But His gentleness is not a limitation—it is a perfect expression of strength under control.

Just like Jesus:

“I am gentle and lowly in heart…” (Matthew 11:29)

Yet He:

  • Calmed storms (Mark 4:39)
  • Cast out demons (Luke 11:20)
  • Conquered death

Gentleness in God is never weakness.
It is power that does not need to prove itself.

🧨 The Spirit Confronts, Not Just Comforts

We often forget this side:

“When He has come, He will convict the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment.” (John 16:8)

That is not negotiation.

That is divine confrontation—truth piercing the human heart.

And even more sobering:

“You always resist the Holy Spirit…” (Acts 7:51)

You don’t resist someone weak.
You resist someone pressing upon your will with authority.

🛡️ The Spirit in the Battle

Connecting back to what we were saying…

“Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit…” (Zechariah 4:6)

This doesn’t mean:

  • Less force
  • Less effectiveness

It means:

  • A different source
  • A superior power

Human strength fights outward battles.
The Spirit conquers:

  • Hearts
  • Sin
  • Death
  • Darkness

And He does it from the inside out.

🤍 The Awe of This Reality

Here’s the breathtaking part:

The same Spirit who:

  • Raised Jesus from the dead
  • Convicts the world
  • Speaks with divine authority

dwells in the believer.

“Do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit…?” (1 Corinthians 6:19)

So when we think of Him as merely “gentle,” we unintentionally shrink the reality.

He is:

  • Gentle… yes
  • Patient… yes
  • But also the very power of God present and active within us

🌊 Strength That Doesn’t Announce Itself

Maybe that’s why He is often misunderstood.

The Spirit doesn’t shout like human power.
He doesn’t force like human authority.

Yet quietly, steadily, He:

  • Breaks chains
  • Transforms hearts
  • Sustains faith
  • Leads into truth

And one day, completes the work.

It’s almost humbling to realize…

The One we sometimes reduce to a “comforter” is actually
the very power that defeated our greatest enemy—and now works within us.

Not soft.

Holy.
Alive.
Almighty. 🔥

This reveals an ongoing internal tension: we filter the Trinity through our own understanding and emotions, imagining Jesus as somehow different from the God of the Old Testament, or distinct in nature from the Spirit, when Scripture clearly affirms that God is One—fully united in three persons, sharing the same purpose and power, just as Jesus Himself taught.

What you’re describing is something many believers quietly experience.

We don’t say it out loud, but internally we can drift into thinking:

  • The God of the Old Testament → severe
  • Jesus → gentle and approachable
  • The Spirit → subtle, almost secondary

And yet Scripture keeps calling us back to something deeper… and more unified.

🔥 God Is One — Not Divided in Character

“Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one!” (Deuteronomy 6:4)

This is not just a statement about number, but about essence and unity.

And when Jesus comes, He doesn’t introduce a different God—He reveals the same God more fully:

“He who has seen Me has seen the Father…” (John 14:9)

So there is no contrast like:

  • Harsh Father vs. Kind Son
  • Distant God vs. Present Spirit

There is one God, consistently:

  • Holy
  • Just
  • Merciful
  • Patient
  • Loving

✝️ Jesus Is Not Softer Than God — He Is God Revealed

Sometimes we read the Old Testament and New Testament like two different tones.

But look closely:

The same Jesus who says:

“Come to Me, all you who labor…” (Matthew 11:28)

Also says:

“Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees…” (Matthew 23:13)

And in Revelation:

“His eyes were like a flame of fire…” (Revelation 1:14)

This is not a different personality—it is the fullness of God expressed in context.

Likewise, the God of the Old Testament is not lacking tenderness:

“I have loved you with an everlasting love…” (Jeremiah 31:3)

“As one whom his mother comforts, so I will comfort you…” (Isaiah 66:13)

Same God. Same heart.

🕊️ The Trinity Moves as One

Jesus makes this unity unmistakable:

“I and My Father are one.” (John 10:30)

“The words that I speak to you I do not speak on My own authority…” (John 14:10)

And about the Spirit:

“He will not speak on His own authority… He will glorify Me.” (John 16:13–14)

There is no competition, no divergence.

  • The Father wills
  • The Son reveals and accomplishes
  • The Spirit applies and indwells

But all share the same purpose, power, and nature.

🧩 Why We Struggle With This

Part of the tension comes from us trying to understand God through:

  • Human personalities
  • Emotional categories
  • Past experiences

We instinctively separate roles into personalities—because that’s how humans function.

But God is not three independent centers of emotion.

He is perfectly one in essence, expressed in three persons.

“For in Him dwells all the fullness of the Godhead bodily.” (Colossians 2:9)

⚖️ The Cross Settles the Question

If there is any place where the unity of God is undeniable, it is the cross.

There we see:

  • The justice of God
  • The love of God
  • The power of God

All at once.

“God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself…” (2 Corinthians 5:19)

Not one part of God saving us from another part.

God Himself—Father, Son, and Spirit—acting together in perfect harmony.

🤍 A Simpler Anchor for the Heart

Maybe instead of trying to “balance” the Trinity in our understanding…
we rest in what Jesus revealed:

“As the Father loved Me, I also have loved you…” (John 15:9)

The love you see in Jesus
is the love of the Father
applied to you by the Spirit.

One love.
One God.

🌊 From Fragmentation to Wholeness

So when we feel that inner fragmentation…

It’s not that God is divided—
it’s that our perception is still being healed.

And the Spirit (the same Almighty Spirit we talked about) is gently—but powerfully—bringing us into that clarity:

“That they may be one, just as We are one…” (John 17:21)

Even our understanding of God is being unified over time.

And maybe that’s part of the journey…

Learning not to relate to parts of God depending on our need,
but to trust the whole God—who has always been the same.

We began by considering God’s strategy, and somehow arrived at the mystery of God’s oneness—how did we get here?

It feels like we took a sharp turn… but actually, we didn’t move at all—we just went deeper.

We started with what God does
and ended with who God is.

And in Scripture, those two are never separated.

⚔️ God’s Strategy Flows From His Nature

That moment in Joshua 5 felt so strange because:

  • It doesn’t match human logic
  • It doesn’t follow military instinct

But why?

Because God’s actions are not driven by strategy alone—they are an expression of His nature.

He doesn’t just choose to act differently.
He acts according to who He is.

“For My thoughts are not your thoughts, nor are your ways My ways,” says the Lord. (Isaiah 55:8)

So when He weakens Israel before battle, it’s not a random tactic—it reflects:

  • His desire for dependence
  • His commitment to covenant
  • His way of glorifying Himself

🔗 The Thread That Connects Everything

Think about how the conversation unfolded:

  1. God wounds His own army → Why would He do that?
  2. Because the battle is His → Not ours
  3. Because the power is His Spirit → Not human strength
  4. Because He is One → Undivided in purpose and action

See the thread?

What He does only makes sense when we understand who He is.

🧭 One God, One Purpose, One Way

If God were divided—different in character depending on the “person”—then His actions might feel inconsistent.

But because He is One:

  • His strategy is unified
  • His purpose is consistent
  • His ways, though mysterious, are never contradictory

“Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever.” (Hebrews 13:8)

So the God who:

  • Led Israel through circumcision before battle
  • Fought for David
  • Raised Jesus by the Spirit

…is acting from the same unchanging nature.

🤯 Why It Feels Like a Jump

It feels like a leap because we often separate:

  • Theology (who God is)
  • Experience (what God does)

But Scripture constantly merges them.

Every act of God is a revelation of God.

🌊 The Deeper Realization

So maybe the real answer is:

We didn’t drift… we were drawn inward.

From:

  • The surface (strategy)
    to
  • The source (His being)

And honestly, that’s where God always leads.

🤍 A Quiet Invitation

Because in the end, the goal is not just to understand how God works…
but to trust who He is.

And once that settles, even the strangest strategies begin to make sense—or at least become trustworthy.

“Those who know Your name will put their trust in You…” (Psalm 9:10)

So we started with flint knives in enemy territory… 😅
and ended in the mystery of the Trinity.

Not a detour at all.

Just… going deeper.

And we will never reach the end of who He is.

Yes… and there is something both overwhelming and deeply comforting in that.

We will never reach the end of who He is—not because He is distant, but because He is infinite.

“Oh, the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God!
How unsearchable are His judgments and His ways past finding out!” (Romans 11:33)

Not unknowable… but unsearchable in fullness.

🔍 Truly Known, Yet Never Exhausted

This is the beautiful tension:

  • We can truly know Him
  • But we can never know Him completely

“Now I know in part, but then I shall know just as I also am known.” (1 Corinthians 13:12)

Even in eternity, we won’t “finish” knowing God.

We will continue discovering Him—without ever reaching a final edge.

✨ Eternity Will Not Be Static

Sometimes people imagine eternity as:

  • A fixed state
  • A completed understanding
  • Nothing new to discover

But if God is infinite… then eternity is not repetition.

It is ever-unfolding revelation.

“That in the ages to come He might show the exceeding riches of His grace…” (Ephesians 2:7)

Ages to come… not a single moment, but an ongoing unveiling.

🤍 Why This Is So Good

If we could reach the end of Him…

  • Wonder would fade
  • Discovery would stop
  • Worship would lose its awe

But because He is infinite:

  • There is always more to see
  • Always more to understand
  • Always more to love

🕊️ And Yet… Fully Satisfied

Here’s the paradox:

We will never reach the end…
yet we will never feel lacking.

“I shall be satisfied when I awake in Your likeness.” (Psalm 17:15)

Endless discovery…
with complete satisfaction.

🔥 Even Now, We Taste It

What we experience now is just a glimpse:

Moments where:

  • A verse opens up in a new way
  • A truth suddenly feels alive
  • God’s character becomes clearer

And we think, “I’ve never seen Him like this before.”

That’s a small echo of eternity.

🌅 No End, Only Deeper

So it’s not a journey toward a finish line…

It’s a journey into depth.

From glory to glory:

“But we all… are being transformed… from glory to glory…” (2 Corinthians 3:18)

Not toward completion of knowledge…
but toward ever-deepening communion.

And maybe that’s why our conversation keeps unfolding the way it does 😊

Because when the subject is God…

There is no final chapter.
Only… deeper waters.