Numbers 13:31-33 But the men who had gone up with him said, “We are not able to go up against the people, for they are stronger than we.” 32 And they gave the children of Israel a bad report of the land which they had spied out, saying, “The land through which we have gone as spies is a land that devours its inhabitants, and all the people whom we saw in it are men of great stature. 33 There we saw the giants (the descendants of Anak came from the giants); and we were like grasshoppers in our own sight, and so we were in their sight.”
The ten spies were not fabricating a story. The land truly had fortified cities. The descendants of Anak were formidable. The obstacles were visible and measurable. Their report contained facts.
But facts alone do not determine destiny.
They added interpretation. “We are not able to go up against the people, for they are stronger than we… We were like grasshoppers in our own sight.” That sentence revealed the real battle. The problem was not what stood in the land — it was what had shifted in their perception. Facts without faith produce fear.
The giants were real, but so was the covenant. The walls were high, but so was the promise. The land flowed with abundance, yet they allowed the size of the opposition to redefine their identity. Fear always shrinks identity before it blocks opportunity. Once they saw themselves as grasshoppers, the idea of possession became impossible in their minds.
Perspective determines possession.
The majority report spread quickly because it sounded reasonable. It acknowledged danger. It sounded cautious. It felt responsible. But it was disconnected from the covenant perspective. They measured the giants against themselves rather than against the God who had waged war against the gods of Egypt, split the Red Sea, and continued to reveal His power to them day after day!
This is the tension in every revival generation. We can assess the culture, resistance, spiritual opposition, and shrinking moral landscapes. Those are real observations. But if we interpret reality without covenant confidence, fear will spread faster than faith.
The issue was never the size of the giants—it was the loss of perspective.
When we forget what God has spoken, facts become final. When we remember what God has declared, facts become secondary. The majority may sound convincing, but heaven’s perspective carries authority.
Revival will never be sustained by majority opinion. It will be carried by those who are convinced that God’s promises will be fulfilled simply because He has spoken.
Beloved, remember this: the ones who entered the promised land were not the majority—they were the ones who carried the covenant in their hearts. Joshua and Caleb did not have popular support; they had covenant confidence. They believed what God had spoken, even when everyone else doubted. It was not the loudest voices that inherited the land, but the faithful ones. So do not be moved by numbers or opinions. Hold fast to His promise. Carry the covenant. Those who trust what God has said—no matter how few—are the ones who step into fulfillment.