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Joshua 7 Lange Commentary on the Holy Scriptures

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The Crime<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="supe">1</span>But the children [sons] of Israel committed a trespass in the accursed thing [in respect to what was devoted]: for [and] Achan, the son of Carmi, the son of Zabdi, the son of Zerah, of the tribe of Judah, took of the accursed thing [of what was devoted]: and the anger of the Lord [Jehovah] was kindled against the children [sons] of Israel.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="ital">b</span>. Its evil Effects in the unfortunate Expedition against Ai<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="purpl">CHAPTER 7:2–5</span><span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="supe">2</span>And Joshua sent men from Jericho to Ai, which <span class="ital">is</span> beside Beth-aven, on the east side of Beth-el, and spake unto them, saying, Go up and view the country [spy out the land]. And the men went up, and viewed [spied out] Ai. <span class="supe">3</span>And they returned to Joshua, and said unto him, Let not all the people go up; but [omit: but] let about two or three thousand men go up and smite Ai: <span class="ital">and</span> [omit: and] make <span class="supe">4</span>not all the people to labour thither; for they <span class="ital">are but</span> [omit: but] few. So [And] there went up thither of the people about three thousand men: and they fled before the men of Ai. <span class="supe">5</span>And the men of Ai smote of them about thirty and six men: for [and] they chased them <span class="ital">from</span> before the gate <span class="ital">even</span> unto Shebarim, and smote them in the going down: wherefore [and] the hearts of the people melted, and became as [omit: as] water.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="ital">c</span>. Joshua’s humble Prayer and God’s Answer thereto<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="purpl">CHAPTER 6–15</span><span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="supe">6</span>And Joshua rent his clothes, and fell to the earth upon his face before the ark of the Lord [Jehovah] until the even-tide, he and the elders of Israel, and put dust upon their heads. <span class="supe">7</span>And Joshua said, Alas! O Lord God [Jehovah], wherefore hast thou at all brought this people over [the] Jordan, to deliver us into the hand of the Amorites, to destroy us? would to God [O that] we had been content, and <span class="supe">8</span>dwelt on the other side [of the] Jordan. O Lord [Fay: Pray, Lord; Bunsen: Forgive, Lord; De Wette: Pray, my Lord], what shall I say, when Israel turneth their backs [has turned the back] before their [his] enemies? <span class="supe">9</span>For the Canaanites [Canaanite], and all the inhabitants of the land shall hear <span class="ital">of it,</span> and shall environ us round, and cut off our name from the earth: and what will thou do unto thy great name?<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="supe">10</span>And the Lord [Jehovah] said unto Joshua: Get thee up; wherefore liest thou thus upon thy face? <span class="supe">11</span>Israel hath sinned, and they have also transgressed my covenant which I commanded them; for [and] they have even [also<span class="supe"><span class="greekheb2">1</span></span>] taken of the accursed [devoted] thing, and have also stolen, and dissembled also, and they have put <span class="ital">it</span> even [also put it] among their own stuff. <span class="supe">12</span>Therefore the children [sons] of Israel could not stand before their enemies, <span class="ital">but</span> turned <span class="ital">their</span> backs before their enemies, because they were accursed [have become a devoted thing]: neither will I be with you any more, except ye destroy the accursed [devoted] thing from among you. <span class="supe">13</span>Up, sanctify the people, and say, Sanctify yourselves against tomorrow: for thus saith the Lord [Jehovah] God of Israel, <span class="ital">There is</span> an accursed [a devoted] thing in the midst of thee, O Israel: thou canst not stand before thine enemies, until ye have put away the accursed [devoted] thing from among you. <span class="supe">14</span>In the morning therefore [And in the morning] ye shall be brought according to your tribes: and it shall be, <span class="ital">that</span> the tribe which the Lord [Jehovah] taketh shall come according to the families <span class="ital">thereof;</span> and the family which the Lord [Jehovah] shall take [taketh] shall come by [the] households; and the household which the Lord [Jehovah] shall take [taketh] shall come man by man. <span class="supe">15</span>And it shall be, <span class="ital">that</span> he that is taken with the accursed [devoted] thing shall be burnt with fire, he and all that he hath: because he hath transgressed the covenant of the Lord [Jehovah], and because he hath wrought folly in Israel.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="ital">d</span>. Discovery and Punishment of Achan the Transgressor<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="purpl">CHAPTER 16–26</span><span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="supe">16</span>So Joshua rose up early in the morning, and brought Israel by their tribes; and the tribe of Judah was taken: <span class="supe">17</span>And he brought the family [Fay: families<span class="supe"><span class="greekheb2">2</span></span>] of Judah; and he took the family of the Zarhites [of Zarhi]: and he brought the family of the Zarhites [of Zarhi] man by man;<span class="supe"><span class="greekheb2">3</span></span> and Zabdi was taken: <span class="supe">18</span>And he brought his household man by man; and Achan the son of Carmi, the son of Zabdi, the son of Zerah, of the tribe of Judah, was taken. <span class="supe">19</span>And Joshua said unto Achan, My son, give, I pray thee, glory to the Lord [Jehovah] God of Israel, and make confession unto him [Gesen.; so De Wette and Bunsen; Fay: give him [the] praise]; and tell me now what thou hast done, hide <span class="ital">it</span> not from me. <span class="supe">20</span>And Achan answered Joshua, and said, Indeed I have sinned against the Lord [Jehovah] God of Israel, and thus and thus have I done. <span class="supe">21</span>When [And<span class="supe"><span class="greekheb2">4</span></span>] I saw among the spoils a goodly Babylonish garment [mantle of Shinar], and two hundred shekels of silver, and a wedge [tongue] of gold of fifty shekels weight, then [and] I coveted them, and took them, and behold they <span class="ital">are</span> hid in the earth in the midst of my tent, and the silver under it. <span class="supe">22</span>So Joshua sent messengers, and they ran unto the tent, and behold, <span class="ital">it was</span> hid in his tent, and the silver under it. <span class="supe">23</span>And they took them out of the midst of the tent, and brought them unto Joshua, and unto all the children of Israel, and laid them out before the Lord [Jehovah]. <span class="supe">24</span>And Joshua, and all Israel with him, took Achan the son of Zerah, and the silver, and the garment [mantle], and the wedge of gold, and his sons, and his daughters, and his oxen, and his asses, and his sheep, and his tent, and all that he had: and they brought them unto the valley of Achor. <span class="supe">25</span>And Joshua said, Why hast thou troubled us ? [or, What trouble hast thou brought upon us ?] The Lord [Jehovah] shall trouble thee this day. And all Israel stoned him with stones, and they burned them with fire, after they had stoned [and pelted] them with stones. <span class="supe">26</span>And they raised over him a great heap of stones unto this day. So [And] the Lord [Jehovah] turned from the fierceness of his anger: wherefore the name of that place was called, The valley of Achor, unto this day.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="purpl"><span class="bld">EXEGETICAL AND CRITICAL</span></span><span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="ital">a.</span> Joshua 7:1. <span class="ital">The Crime of Achan.</span> The very first words with which the account of Achan’s theft begins show that the sin of the individual is regarded as compromising all; for it is said: <span class="ital">The children of Israel</span> committed a trespass in that which was devoted. <span class="greekheb">מָעַל</span> signifies properly to cover, from which <span class="greekheb">מְעִיל</span> a mantle; hence to act underhandedly, treacherously, Prov. 16:10; 2 Chron. 26:18; 29:6, 19; Neh. 1:8; specially frequent in the combination which we find here <span class="greekheb">מָעַל מַעַל</span> = to sin through falsehood, treachery, namely, <span class="greekheb">בַּיִהוָֹה</span>, 1 Chron. 5:25; 10:13; 2 Chron. 12:2, here <span class="greekheb">בחרם</span> therefore indirectly <span class="greekheb">ביהוה</span> Joshua 22:20; 1 Chron. 2:7.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">Achan.</span> In 1 Chron. 2:7 the man is called <span class="greekheb">עָכָר</span> = the troubler, with which chaps, 6:18; 7:26, may be compared. “Josephus also calls him, therefore,<span class="greekheb">’́Αχαρος</span>” , the LXX. in Cod. Vat. <span class="greekheb">’́Αχαρ</span>, while Cod. Alex, has <span class="greekheb">’́Αχαν</span>” (Keil). Stier and Theile’s polyglott reads with Vat. <span class="greekheb">’́Αχαρ</span>. Instead of Zabdi we read in 1 Joshua 2:6 Zimri, arising perhaps, as Keil supposes, from confounding letters.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">Then the anger of Jehovah was kindled against the children of Israel.</span> Luther: “was fierce;” but “blazed,” “was kindled to a blaze,” is perhaps more adequately suggestive, since the anger itself is regarded as a flame which blazes up and turns its destructive force in this or that direction. It is said concerning men: Gen. 4:5; 2 Sam. 12:5; Ex. 32:19, 22; 1 Sam. 18:8; 20:7 and often; Acts 17:16; but by preference concerning God; Num. 11:1, 10; 22:22; Job 19:11; 42:7; Zech. 10:3; Hab. 3:8. In the N. T. also concerning Christ, John 11:33, 38; God himself is a consuming fire; Ex. 24:17; Deut. 4:24; 9:3; Heb. 12:29. Fire goes before him: Deut. 9:3; Joel 2:3; Ps. 18:9, 16. His anger is therefore a destructive anger when it is revealed from heaven against the unrighteousness of men, Rom. 1:18. Here it blazes not against Achan only, but against the whole people, because Achan, a member of the people, has through his crime brought the whole people into a partnership of suffering. The consequences of his deed show themselves immediately in the unfortunate expedition against Ai.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="ital">b.</span> Joshua 7:2–5. <span class="ital">Its evil Effects in the unfortunate Expedition against Ai,</span> Joshua sends men from Jericho to Ai, to explore the land, pursuing the same course as before (Joshua 2). They bring back a favorable report, advise to let only two or three thousand men go forward, and persuade Joshua so to do. The ill success of the movement shows that they had underrated the strength of Ai.<span class="supe"><span class="greekheb2">5</span></span> Although the loss of thirty-six men is comparatively small, the people are disheartened. Their heart melts and becomes water.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:2. <span class="bld">Ai, Beth-aven,</span> Joshua 18:23.—<span class="bld">Bethel,</span>18:13.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:3. <span class="bld">They are few.</span> According to Joshua 8:25, Ai had 12,000 inhabitants. The scouts had not estimated rightly.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:5. <span class="bld">Shebarim</span>. <span class="greekheb">שְׁבָרִים</span>, probably “stone quarries” which lay in that vicinity but have not yet been found by travellers, while there are such near Anathoth, according to Robinson (ii. 110), and Tobler (<span class="ital">Topography of Jerusalem,</span> ii. p. 395, in Knobel). Noticeable is the translation of the LXX <span class="greekheb">ἕως συνέτριψαν ἀυτόυς</span>, which supposes instead of the Masoretic <span class="greekheb">עַד־הַשְּׁבָרִים</span> the reading <span class="greekheb">הַשְׁבִּירִים עַד־</span>. According to that the defeat should have been total, and the discouragement of the people more intelligible than when only the thirty-six were lost.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">Wherefore the heart of the people melted and became water</span>. Joshua 2:11; 5:1; Deut. 1:28. A very striking addition: “became water.” Is it perhaps, that they wept?<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="ital">c.</span> Joshua 7:6–16. <span class="ital">Joshua’s humble Prayer and God’s Answer thereto.</span> The section falls into two divisions: (<span class="ital">a.</span>) Joshua 7:6–9. Filled with deep distress, Joshua, with the elders of Israel, falls down before the ark of God, and continues with them in penitent prayer till evening. (<span class="ital">b.</span>) Joshua 7:10–15. God answers that there is one devoted among the Israelites, who must be destroyed, after he has been discovered by casting lots.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="ital">a.</span> Joshua 7:6–9, <span class="ital">Joshua’s Prayer.</span><span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:6. <span class="bld">And Joshua rent his clothes.</span> A sign of mourning and distress. The clothes were torn in front over the breast, yet not for more than a hand-breadth (Othon. <span class="ital">Lex. Rabb.</span> p. 360, apud Winer). The custom appears also among Greeks and Romans. Suet. <span class="ital">Cœs.</span> 33 (<span class="ital">veste a pectore discissa</span>). In the O. T. many passages remind us of it, yet in Winer precisely the passage before us is wanting. It is remarkable that in 2 Sam. 3:31, the rending of the garments is commanded by the king, “but it is no more strange,” as Winer well observes, “than if among us, on the death of the ruler of the land, the mode of personal mourning were prescribed by an edict.” Tearing the clothes had gradually become among the Jews, as we can not but think, the fashion in mourning, precisely as among us the wearing of black garments and crape badges for a specified time. [See <span class="ital">Bibl. Dict.</span> art. “Mourning.”] Hence the prophet Joel admonishes the people: “Rend your hearts and not your garments” (2:13). But when the high-priest (Matt. 26:65), or Paul and Barnabas tear their clothes (Acts 14:14), it was in the deepest displeasure, when the feelings were excited, since such a state is related to mourning.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">Dust</span>. Likewise a sign of mourning. 1 Sam. 4:12; 2 Sam. 1:2; Lam. 2:10, and often, Iliad xviii. 23 ff.; xxiv. 164.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:7. Joshua first asks God why He has brought his People over the Jordan, if He would now destroy them; for it would have been better if they had been content to stay in the land east of that river.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">Would that we had been content and dwelt on the other side of the Jordan</span>. Luther: O that we had remained on the other side of the Jordan <span class="ital">as we had commenced,</span>—the <span class="ital">ut cœpimus</span> of the Vulgate, by which <span class="greekheb">הוֹאַלְנוּ</span> is translated. Unquestionably <span class="greekheb">הוֹאִיל</span> means to commence, and is eleven times rendered by the LXX., according to Gesenius, <span class="greekheb">ἄρχομαι</span>; here, however, as Judg. 19:617:11, it means, to let one’s self be pleased, and with the accessory notion, of “to be content.” The translation of the Vulgate and of Luther is tame, while the LXX. hits the correct sense: <span class="greekheb">Εἰ κατεμείναμεν καὶ κατωκίσθημεν παρὰ τὸν ’Ιορδάνην</span>.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:8. Continuation of the complaint, with the additional element that Israel has <span class="ital">fled</span> before his enemies.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:9. Portrays the great danger if the Canaanites hear of this, and finally, Joshua 7:10: “What wilt thou do for thy great name? God himself is, as it were, concerned.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>ß<span class="greekheb">.</span> Joshua 7:10–15. <span class="ital">God’s Reply.</span> The entire tone of this answer attests that God’s anger is indeed kindled against the children of Israel. Israel is himself to blame for the defeat (Joshua 7:10, 11) because he has sinned, nor will he hereafter be able to stand before his enemies on this account; and God will not be among the children of Israel unless they destroy that which is devoted from among them (Joshua 7:12). Joshua must therefore rise up, sanctify the people against the following day, and discover the guilty man by casting lots (Joshua 7:13, 14). When he is discovered, he and all which he has must be burned up with fire (Joshua 7:15). It is a mighty and deeply impressive word from God which is here imparted to Joshua.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:10. <span class="bld">Get thee up! Wherefore</span>, etc. Divine displeasure. “Joshua might well divine that they had merited Jehovah’s ill-will. Hence God’s somewhat impatient question, why he lay there on his face. He should rather be up and trying to detect and put away the sin” (Knobel).<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:11. “The <span class="greekheb">גּם</span> is scarcely more than <span class="ital">and,</span>” Knobel remarks, but we would call attention to the rhetorical climax—suited to express God’s vehement displeasure—in the several designations of their sin as connected by <span class="greekheb">גַם</span>: transgressed—taken—stolen—dissembled—put among their <span class="ital">own</span> stuff. For here was the culmination of the crime, that they had appropriated to <span class="ital">themselves</span> what belonged to <span class="ital">God.</span> [Cf. Joshua 6:18.] Thus conceived, the language is more dramatic, laden with the most intense emotion.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:12. <span class="bld">They have become a devoted thing</span>, Joshua 6:18.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:13 begins with a repeated admonition to Joshua to arise. God gives him this admonition, as indeed the entire answer, directly, not as Clericus supposes, through the high-priest, of whom the context has not a word.—<span class="bld">Sanctify yourselves against to-morrow</span>, Joshua 3:5.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:14. <span class="bld">The tribe which Jehovah shall take</span>. That is through the lot (<span class="greekheb">גּוֹרָל</span>) which is here used, as in 1 Sam. 14:42 (Jonah 1:7), in a criminal investigation; elsewhere in divisions of land and people, of prisoners, in elections, warlike undertakings. “Commonly dice were thrown, as is probable (“to cast lots,” 18:8, “to throw,” 18:6, “the lot falls,” Jon. 1:7; Ezek. 24:6), or drawn out of a vessel (“the lot came forth”) Num. 33:54, “came up” Lev. 6:9.” Winer. First the tribe, then the clan, then the household, (“father-house”), finally the particular man was to be discovered. The manner itself in which this was done is not known; it is natural to suppose that white and black stones were used, especially as <span class="greekheb">גּוֹרָל</span> from <span class="greekheb">גּרר = גּרל</span> to be rough, signifies properly a small stone, <span class="greekheb">ψῆφος</span>. Farther particulars may be found in Mauritius, <span class="ital">De Sortitione apud Hebrœos,</span> Basil, 1692. [<span class="ital">Diet, of the Bible,</span> art. “Lot.”]. Like the Hebrews, the Romans also resorted to the lot in divisions (<span class="ital">sortes divisoriœ</span>), and elections (“<span class="ital">sors urbana</span>” and “<span class="ital">peregrina</span>” in the choice of a prætor) as also to explore the will of the divinity (staff oracle, rhabdomancy). The Homeric heroes cast lots (<span class="greekheb">κληροῦν κλῆρος</span>) whenever the accomplishment of any heroic deed was in question, as was done also Judg. 22:10. They too had rhabdomancy as well as the Romans (see Pierer <span class="ital">s. v.</span> “Loos”).<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:15. <span class="bld">Shall be burnt with fire</span>. “Not alive, but according to Joshua 7:25 he was first stoned to death, and then his corpse burned as an aggravation of the death penalty” (Keil).<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">Folly</span>, <span class="greekheb">נְבָלָה</span>. The <span class="greekheb">נבל</span> is not so much a fool in an intellectual respect as in a moral; hence <span class="greekheb">נְבָלָה</span> is more the moral than the intellectual folly = to iniquity, comp. Gen. 34:7; Deut. 22:21; Judg. 19:23, 24; 2 Sam. 13:12. For the idea of <span class="greekheb">נבל</span>, Ps. 14:1; 53:2, are classical texts.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="ital">d. The Discovery and Punishment of Achan the Evil-doer.</span> Joshua 7:16–20. Conformably to God’s command, Joshua the next morning brings the tribes of Israel before Jehovah, when Achan is indicated by the lot as the transgressor (Joshua 7:16–18). Being exhorted to confess his fault Achan owns all (Joshua 7:19–21). The stolen property is found in his tent according to his statement (Joshua 7:22–23); he himself with what belonged to him is stoned and burnt (Joshua 7:24–26).<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:16–18. The difficulty which the text offers, Joshua 7:17, has been already intimated above. In <span class="greekheb">משפחת</span> it requires only a different punctuation to bring it into harmony with Joshua 7:14. We therefore read the plural without hesitation instead of the singular of the Masoretes. It is different with <span class="greekheb">לגברים</span>. Here we have a different word before us, and a more difficult one, which we can the less make up our minds to change, since, as Keil, following Vatablus, has happily remarked, not the father-houses or family groups, but only the men representing the clan, the heads of the several father-houses, came forward to the lot. So also Bunsen: “Man, that is, house, Joshua 7:14.”<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>We may perhaps best represent the whole process thus:—<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="purpl">THE PEOPLE OF ISRAEL</span>.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>First lot<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Tribe of Judah.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Second lot<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Clan of Zerah.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Third lot<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>House of Zabdi.<span class="supe"><span class="greekheb2">6</span></span><span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Fourth lot<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Man Achan.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:19–21. <span class="bld">My son, give, I pray thee, glory to the Lord God of Israel, and give him (the) praise</span> [or, make confession to him]; <span class="bld">and tell me now what thou hast done; hide it not from me,</span> Joshua 7:19. The demand of Joshua upon Achan was certainly meant by him honestly and frankly, not craftily, as some of the Rabbins assume. Achan should confess his sin in order to receive inward forgiveness, although he has outwardly fallen under the irrevocable sentence of God. The form of the demand is the same as in John 9:24. Reverence for the Omniscient God should move to the confession of the truth. The circumstances, indeed, are here essentially different from those in John 9. Honest and frank Joshua stands before Achan, crafty and treacherous the Pharisees seek, under an appeal for honor to God, to extort from the man born blind a confession injurious to our Lord.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:20. Achan humbly confesses his sin as a sin against Jehovah, God of Israel.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:21. <span class="bld">Babylonish garment,</span> prop. mantle of Shinar=Babylon (Gen. 11:2, 8, 9; 10:10). What it was made of we know not, since particular statements are wanting. Starke suspects it was of gold and silken threads, and that it was wrought in many colors mixed, Jon. 3:6; 2 K. 2:13. “Concerning the elaborate and beautiful products of the Babylonian looms, see Heeren, <span class="ital">Asiat. Nations,</span> i. 2, p. 422 ff. [Bohn’s Eng. ed.]. Movers’ <span class="ital">Phœnicians,</span> ii. 3, p. 258 ff.” (Knobel). [See further particulars in <span class="ital">Dict. of the Bibl.,</span> art. “Babylonish Garment.”]<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">Two hundred shekels of silver</span> = 200 × 0.60 = 120. For details concerning the calculation, vid. in Winer, <span class="ital">Realw.</span> s. v. “Sekel,” or in Herzog’s <span class="ital">Realencyk.</span> vol. iv. p. 764. [Gesen. s. v. <span class="greekheb">שֶׁקֶל</span>, <span class="ital">Dict. of the Bibl.</span> art. “Money,” “Shekel,” and “Weights and Measures.”]<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">A wedge</span> (prop. tongue) <span class="bld">of gold.</span> Vulg. <span class="ital">regula aurea,</span> a golden bar. Rather, “a tongue-shaped article made of gold” (Knobel). The weight is given at fifty shekels, equal in value to <span class="ital">cir.</span> thirty dollars.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">I coveted them,</span>Gen. 3:6; Jas. 4:13–15. <span class="greekheb">האהלי</span>, the article as Lev. 27:33.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">Under it.</span> The mantle lay probably on the top, and the tongue of gold next below, and the silver lowest.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:22, 23. <span class="ital">Discovery of the stolen Goods in Achan’s Tent.</span> The messengers laid it down, after they had found it, <span class="ital">before Jehovah.</span><span class="greekheb">הִצֹיק</span> from <span class="greekheb">יָצַק</span>, to pour out, is equivalent to <span class="greekheb">הִצִּיג</span>, to set, to place, 2 Sam. 15:24.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">Before Jehovah</span> = before the ark of Jehovah, where He was enthroned, 6:8.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:24–26. <span class="bld">Achan, son of Zerah;</span> in a wide sense son of Zerah; strictly he was his great grandson. He is now, together with the articles appropriated by him, as well as his whole property, and also all his <span class="ital">sons</span> and <span class="ital">daughters,</span> given up to destruction. How does this sentence passed on Achan, under which his innocent sons and daughters also fell, agree with the decision of the law, Deut. 24:16, according to which the fathers should not die for the children, nor the children for the fathers, but every one for his own sin? This difficulty has been met in various ways: (1) Some Rabbins, Schulz, Hess, and others suppose that Achan’s family were brought into the valley of Achor merely as spectators, to take a terrifying example, contrary to what is written, Joshua 7:25. (2) C. a Lapide, Cler., Mich., Rosenmüller, think they had had a share in their father’s crime. For this an analogous case might be cited in Acts 5:1 ff., but while there it is made conspicuous that Sapphira was privy to the sin of Ananias; here every intimation of that kind is wanting. Hence (3) Calvin, Masius, Seb. Schmidt, leave the matter undecided, appealing to the unfathomableness of God’s counsels; while others again, like Knobel, and Starke also, at least by intimations, remark that we have here to do with a judgment executed by the immediate direction of God, and therefore a divine judgment, similar to the case, Num. 16:32, whereas the ordinance in Deut. 24:16, holds good only for the usual every-day administration of justice. Before God, the searcher of hearts, the sons and daughters of Achan were guilty of participation in their father’s sin, because in them the same “corrupted nature and disposition,” which Keil rightly notices, was present, which in the father produced the evil deed [?]. God visits the sins of the fathers on the children, Ex. 20:5; Num. 14:33. <span class="ital">Accurately considered, the decision pertaining to private rights, in Deut. 24:16, has no application to this higher public right of God.</span><span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:24. <span class="bld">Valley of Achor.</span> Joshua 15:7; Hos. 2:15; Is. 65:10. The origin of the name is given, Joshua 7:25. It lay north of Jericho on the northern border of the tribe of Judah. In Jerome’s time the name was still in use.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:25. <span class="bld">And all Israel stoned him.</span> Here <span class="greekheb">רָגַם</span> is used, afterwards at the close of the verse, in an addition which the LXX omit, <span class="greekheb">סָקַל</span>. Both words are used in the Bible of stoning, but <span class="greekheb">רגם</span> has the more general signification, and is found only once, Lev. 24:14, without <span class="greekheb">אֶבֶך</span>. Achan is condemned to be stoned because he had by his robbery violated the honor of God, as did blasphemers, Sabbath breakers, idolaters, sorcerers, wizards, etc. The addition <span class="greekheb">סקלו אתם באבנים</span> is superfluous, and may perhaps be intended, as Knobel conjectures, to obviate a misunderstanding of <span class="greekheb">אֹתוֹ</span> in the former half of the verse. Not only the LXX. but the Vulg. omits it. Luther has aimed to avoid the difficulty by attaching the words to the following verse, and translating: “And when they <span class="ital">had</span> stoned them they raised,” etc. [Nearly so the Eng. vers.]<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua 7:26. Over Achan they raised a great heap of stones which served to commemorate his disgrace (Joshua 8:29; 2 Sam. 18:17); and that even to the writer’s time. The casting of stones on certain graves was customary in other nations also, <span class="ital">e.g.</span> among the Arabs (Schulte’s <span class="ital">Hist. Joctanidarum,</span> pp. 118, 144), and the Romans (Propert. 4, 5, 74 ff. Serv. ed. Lion, i. p. 1), but had not always that dishonorable import. It had not, <span class="ital">e.g.</span> among the Bedouins who often heap up stones over one buried (Burkhardt, <span class="ital">Beduinen</span>, p. 81), Knobel.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">And Jehovah turned from the fierceness of his anger,</span>Ex. 32:12.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="purpl"><span class="bld">THEOLOGICAL AND ETHICAL</span><span class="p"><br /><br /></span></span>1. God’s <span class="ital">anger</span> is not an ebullition of blind passion, but a holy displeasure against the unrighteousness of men. When this unrighteousness is removed God’s anger ceases, as the close of our chapter, Joshua 7:26, shows. All which has been injuriously said concerning the blood-thirsty and wrathful God of the O. T. rests on a failure to apprehend this holy displeasure of God against the unrighteousness of men. That brings upon them indeed judgment and penalty, but never goes so far as to shut up his compassion, although men may think so and with Asaph sigh: Hath God for gotten to be gracious, hath He in anger shut up his tender mercies? (Ps. 77:10.) Eternal justice which belongs as a constitutive element to the nature of God, without which we cannot conceive of any government at all of the world, is constantly limited by his love. But conversely his love towards men is not a blind love, but rather a truly paternal affection which leaves no fault, no transgression of his commands, unreproved. Both justice and love coexist in God, and are mutually blended in him with an interpenetration of the most intimate, highest, absolute kind. Hence the jurists may say: <span class="ital">Fiat justitia pereat mundus!</span> God never has and never can.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">2. Properly Achan alone is the transgressor, but</span> since he is a <span class="ital">member</span> of the body politic his act compromises all the children of Israel, and hence draws after it injurious consequences upon all, so that the anger of God is kindled against all. In the eyes of God the whole community appears infected by the sin of the one, so that they stand before him, not as a pure and holy congregation, as they should be according to their high vocation, (Ex. 19:6; Deut. 7:6; 1 Pet. 2:9). If we keep firmly to this point of view, we shall cease from complaining of God as being in any way unrighteous, as if He recklessly punished the innocent with the guilty. We shall rather, in this matter, agree with Keil when he says: “As member of a community established by God, the good or evil action of the individual involves the whole congregation in blessing or destruction.” As Paul writes: “if one member suffer, all the members suffer with it; and if one member be honored all the members rejoice with it” (1 Cor. 12:26). So may we also say, that if one member becomes guilty, all the members share the guilt, and if one of the members does well, all the members share the blessing of this good deed. It is important in these matters to look not only at the individual but also at the community, that we may comprehend at least <span class="ital">in some measure</span> the procedure of the divine justice over against the guilt of mankind. We emphasize “in some measure,” because we need yet to lay to heart the advice which Calvin here gives: “<span class="ital">Suspensas tenere nostras mentes, donec libri aperiuntur, ubi clare patebunt quœ nunc nostra caligine obtenebrantur Dei judicia.</span>”<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>[As clearly as the whole Scripture makes the individual an object of the divine mercy and justice, so clearly does it teach us also to regard the totality of a people as an organic unity, in which the individuals are only members of the body, and not capable of being separated, as so many atoms, from the whole. The state as a divine institution is built on the family, to promote the mutual love of the members, and the common love of all to the one invisible head of all.… But if the state is of divine appointment, not a mere civil establishment, not a human institution, conventionally agreed upon by men, the fact following as a necessary consequence from the moral unity of the organism, that the good or evil deed of the one member is reckoned to the whole body, loses the appearance of caprice and unrighteousness which it has while one, without perceiving their fundamental connection, has only a one sided regard to the infliction, of the consequences of the sin. Keil—<span class="purpl">TR.</span>]<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>3. The deep humility of Joshua before the Lord reminds us of Moses, Ex. 32:32, of Ezra (9:3), of his own and Caleb’s course when the people murmured (Num. 14:6). How mighty appear these O. T. saints in their grief because of the sins of their people, how independently they stand up against God, in behalf of God’s honor, and yet how humbly! Their sorrow is truly a <span class="greekheb">λύπη κατὰ θεὸν</span> (2 Cor. 7:10), from which proceeds the <span class="greekheb">μετάνοια ἀμεταμέλητος</span>. Hence God raises them up again, and gives them again fresh courage for his work, for He knows that their grief, in its deepest root, is a grief for him, for his name’s glory and honor. Themselves pure and clean, they mourn over the misdeeds of the people, while an Ahab (1 K. 21:27) if he does this has to exercise penitence for his own sin. <span class="ital">Si duo faciunt idem, non est idem.</span> Compare still Ps. 85; 102:14–19; 130:7, 8.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>4. It is to be observed that God (Joshua 7:14 ff.) reserves to himself the discovery of the crime. Jehovah will strike, take (<span class="greekheb">לָקַד</span>, properly, “select,”) the tribe, the clan, the house, the particular man, by the <span class="ital">lot,</span> the disposing of which is ascribed (Prov. 16:33) to the Lord. Such an employment of the lot as is here presented, could only be brought in at the immediate direction of God, or with special appeal to him (1 Sam. 14:41), and belonged to the extraordinary measures which He prescribed for his people. The certainty with which the whole process goes forward, the quiet which accompanies it, makes a very solemn impression. The control of the divine justice is most directly brought to our thought when we read the narrative of the transaction, distinguished as it is by an unadorned simplicity; how much more powerful must have been the original impression which this judgment of God made on the assembled people at its actual occurrence! An analogous example is presented in the N. T., Acts 5:1 ff.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>5. That all wickedness is folly (<span class="greekheb">נְבָלָה</span>, that every sinner is a fool (<span class="greekheb">נבל</span>), not indeed so much in an intellectual but above all things in a moral respect, this cutting truth is proclaimed by the O. T. loudly and impressively. A very significant hint for hamartiology; the nature of sin is so difficult to explain because it is merely absolute irrationality, because it is foolishness!<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="purpl"><span class="bld">HOMILETICAL AND PRACTICAL</span></span><span class="p"><br /><br /></span>How human iniquity provokes divine anger.—The sin of an individual in its destructive effects on an entire people shown in the case of Achan.—Of God’s anger. (1) What are we to understand thereby? (2) How can we guard against it so that it may not be kindled against us?—The unfortunate expedition of Joshua against Ai.—Human sagacity alone helps not if God be not with us.—Despise no enemy; for you may in meeting him be greatly deceived concerning his strength.—How soon, alas, is the heart of man discouraged!—Against despondency of the heart helps God’s grace alone, Heb. 13:9.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>Joshua’s humble prayer before God.—God withstands the proud but giveth grace unto the humble. Joshua’s grief for his people compared with the lamentation of Moses and Ezra.—Joshua as an example of mourning before God.—Parallel between Joshua’s penitence and that of Ahab.—Rending of the garments a significant symbol of the rending of the heart, Joel 2:13.—How God hears prayer.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>The discovery and punishment of Achan the transgressor, a case of the divine administration of Justice.—(1) How Achan was hit upon; (2) how he confessed his sin; (3) what punishment he received; or (1) the discovery of the criminal; (2) his confession; (3) his punishment.—Joshua and Achan; (1) How Joshua seeks to bring Achan to a confession of his guilt; (2) how the latter actually confesses it.—We give honor to God when we say the truth.—Achan’s lowly confession of sin.—Every sin a sin against the Lord.—Covetousness, unlawful desire, a source of every sin.—The stoning of Achan.—The judgment in the valley of Achor.—The monument of the crime a warning to Israel.—The stoning of Achan, and that of Stephen—what a contrast?<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="purpl">STARKE:</span> He who has done iniquity should own the truth to the honor of God. But woe to those who deny their misdeeds, Ps. 32:1. <span class="ital">Si fecisti</span> <span class="ital">nega</span>, is not a divine but a devilish rule. Ye advocates, put nothing of such into any man’s head.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="purpl">CRAMER:</span> However shrewdly men begin a thing it does no good except in so far as God gives it success. For if God is not with us all is lost.—The heart of man can nowhere observe a just proportion. In prosperity it is too proud, in adversity too pusillanimous.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="purpl">BIBL. TUB.:</span> When God goes with us into the field the mightiest foe cannot hurt us, but where God is not we cannot resist the weakest enemy.—God lets us not sink away in our mourning, but when He has sufficiently humbled us and laid us in the dust, and sees in us a true repentance for our sins, He himself also raises us up again and exalts the miserable from the dust, Ps. 113:7; 1 Cor. 10:13.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="purpl">HEDINGER:</span> If, in the spiritual conflict also we are left to come off worsted, there is often nothing to blame but some, perhaps hidden, sin which yet lurks in us and of which we have not yet repented.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="purpl">GERLACH, CALVIN:</span> That they in this prayer turn straight to God, and recognize that He who has wounded can heal them, springs from their faith; but carried away by excess of grief they transgress all limits. Hence the boldness of their controversy with God; hence the perverse wish: O that we had remained in the wilderness! But it is nothing new that when men with holy zeal seek God, the light of their faith is dimmed by the intensity, the tempest of their emotions…… And yet when they thus strive with God and pour out before Him all which weighs them down, though this their simplicity needs forgiveness, it is still far more agreeable to God than the mock-humility of hypocrites, who take great care that no word of assurance may cross their lips, while they are inwardly filled with pride.—It is a fine trait in this narrative that the criminal, detected by the lot, should be condemned only on his own confession. Joshua does not promise him exemption from punishment, but by his confession God was honored before all the people, since the accuracy of the lot was confirmed. At the same time there lies in these words a hint of a divine judgment hereafter, before which guilt and penalty will be abated when one has given himself up to suffer the earthly penalty ordained by God, confessing that he has deserved it. There is manifested here a truly holy, paternal disposition in Joshua, as a judge who relaxes nothing of the rigor of the divine command, but, so far as is possible in consistency with that, deals mercifully with the transgressor.—By his robbery of the sanctuary Achan had entirely broken the covenant with God, and he and his had become the same as the Canaanites; as they had snatched for themselves what had been devoted to destruction, they must themselves now be destroyed. Similar in this respect was the punishment, which in ancient times was inflicted on the families of those guilty of high treason, and in some degree is still inflicted among us.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>[<span class="purpl">SCOTT:</span> Every failure in such undertakings as evidently accord to the will of God, and the duty of our place and station, should cause us to humble ourselves before him, to flee to his mercy seat, to pour out our hearts in prayer, and inquire “wherefore he contendeth with us;” and to plead his promises and the glory of his great name, as engaged to support that cause which we are endeavoring to promote whatever becomes of us and our worthless names.—Would we avoid the commission of gross iniquity, we must “make a covenant with our eyes” and all our senses; we must repress the first movements of concupiscence, and pray earnestly not to be led into temptation, we must habituate ourselves to meditate on the future consequences of sinful gratification; and to place ourselves, by an effort of the imagination, in those very circumstances in which we should be were the sin committed, and the infatuation vanished; and to consider what our judgment and feelings in that case would be.—Finally, though atrocious criminals, should be punished with unrelenting firmness, and all should unite in protesting against their crimes; yet their misery should not be insulted, nor their immortal souls forgotten; but calm expostulations, serious instructions, and compassionate exhortations, should be used to bring them to repentance, that they may obtain mercy from God in a future world.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>G. R. B: Jehovah is a prayer-hearing God—blessed be His name!—but with what impatience He listens to the cries of those, however proper the matter of their petitions, who have need themselves to act in order that their wishes may be granted! “Up! sanctify thyself,” we may hear Him saying to many an earnest suppliant; “put away thy sins, supply thy own deficiencies, and do thy part to remove the stumbling-blocks from among thy brethren; then expect my help towards what thou desirest further.” Happy for us if we get even this answer to our mistaken prayer!—<span class="purpl">TR.</span>]<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="bld">Footnotes:</span><span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="greekheb">1</span>[Ver 11.—<span class="greekheb">וְגַם</span> repeated to the fifth time very emphatically distinguishes the several <span class="ital">momenta</span> of their crime … sinned, and also taken .… and also stolen, and also dissembled, and also put it, etc. See Exeg Note.—<span class="purpl">TR.</span>]<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="greekheb">2</span>Different Codd., the LXX., the Vulg., instead of <span class="greekheb">מִשְׁפַּחַת יְהוּדָה</span> read <span class="greekheb">מִשׁפְּחֹת יְהוּדֻה</span>, which pointing we follow with Keil and Bunsen. [But it seems sufficient and quite consistent with the principle of the following foot-note to understand <span class="greekheb">מִיֹעְפַּחַת</span> to be “used axly for <span class="ital">tribe,</span> <span class="greekheb">שֶׁבֶט</span>.” Gesen.—<span class="purpl">TR.</span>]<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="greekheb">3</span>Different Codd., some old editions, the Syr., Vulg., have instead of <span class="greekheb">לגברים</span>, the reading <span class="greekheb">לַבָּתִּים</span> to make an agreement with Joshua 7:16. But since the former is the more difficult reading we hold fast to it with Keil and Bunsen See Exegetical Notes.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="greekheb">4</span> [Joshua 7:21.—<span class="greekheb">וָאֶרְאֵה</span>. The <span class="greekheb">וְ</span> is as nearly redundant here probably as it ever is (it is treated as if it were entirely so by De Wette, Zunz, and Fay), and yet is not redundant. It betrays the confusion of thought in which Achan spoke: Thus and thus have I done: and I saw .… and I coveted them, etc.<span class="p"><br /><br /></span>The manner in which our version, and perhaps all others, not unfrequently substitute a conditional sentence (“when I saw; then I coveted) for two coördinate, copulative sentences of narration (“and I saw—and I coveted”) sometimes gives a welcome variety to the monotonous succession of copulative clauses with which the Hebrew is content; but by just so much it misrepresents the child-like artlessness of the Hebrew. It is scarcely ever exactly equivalent to the original expression of the thoughts. It is strictly allowable only when, if ever, the former of two facts may be assumed as known or obvious, and the latter is to be represented in its dependence upon that.—<span class="purpl">TR.</span>]<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="greekheb">5</span>[And yet the subsequent statement (8:25) that the entire population of the city amounted to only twelve thousand, would imply on general principles that a few thousand chosen warriors would be sufficient to overcome its military force. Something must be allowed for the effect of the divine displeasure.—<span class="purpl">TR.</span>]<span class="p"><br /><br /></span><span class="greekheb">6</span>[“Father-house,” represented by Zabdi.—TR.]<span class="p"><br /><br /></span> <div class="versenum"><a href="/joshua/7-1.htm">Joshua 7:1</a></div><div class="verse">But the children of Israel committed a trespass in the accursed thing: for Achan, the son of Carmi, the son of Zabdi, the son of Zerah, of the tribe of Judah, took of the accursed thing: and the anger of the LORD was kindled against the children of Israel.</div> <div id="botbox"><div class="padbot"><div align="center">Lange, John Peter - Commentary on the Holy Scriptures: Critical, Doctrinal, and Homiletical<br /><br />Text Courtesy of <a href="//biblesupport.com" target="_top">BibleSupport.com</a>. 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