In 2005, amid the devastating aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in the US, a leading politician summed up the response to the disaster with these words: “One of the problems that we’re facing at the federal level and at the state level and at the local level is a total system-wide failure, because people making decisions hesitated.”

This was a clear example of the proverb: “He who cannot come to a decision will suffer for it.” A biblical example of this idiom is the statement of the men who went to explore the land of Canaan. They brought back a negative report and influenced the people of Israel to not enter the Promised Land (Numbers 13:31-32).

After the people of Israel had been liberated from slavery, Moses began leading them to Canaan, the land that God had promised them. As they moved closer and closer to the land, the Lord told Moses to send some men to explore Canaan (Numbers 13:2). The men scouted out the land, and—though it was spacious and fertile—they brought back a bad report about it.

This negative report—the people were too powerful and big, the cities were fortified, the land devours those living in it, and we seemed like grasshoppers to the inhabitants—spread throughout the congregation, causing great angst and hesitation among the people (Numbers 14:1-2). They hesitated in the face of a divine promise and command because of fear.

Though God has given us commands and promises, sometimes we find ourselves hesitating on account of fear. When faced with tough decisions, let’s ask God to give us a spirit like Caleb’s—a spirit of “at once” obedience, unswerving faith (Numbers 13:30), and unstoppable courage to stand in the power of God.

NLT 365-day reading plan passage for today: Mark 15:6-24