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GraciousCall.org - Calvin's Commentary on Joshua 1-18
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COMMENTARIES
ON
THE BOOK OF JOSHUA
BY JOHN CALVIN
Translated From The
Original Latin, And Collated With The French Edition
BY HENRY BEVERIDGE, ESQ
Translator’s Preface.
The Commentary On
Joshua was the last literary labor of its venerable Author. When he
engaged in it, his constitution, which had never been strong, was completely
worn out by excessive exertion, and almost every line of it must have been
dictated to his amanuensis during momentary intervals of relief from severe
bodily pain. On this point we possess authentic documents which leave no room
for doubt.
In a letter dated 30 ft November 1563, not
quite six months before his death, after alluding to the difficulty he felt in
continuing his studies, while both mind and body were exhausted by sickness, he
states that he had undertaken a Commentary on Joshua, in compliance with the
wishes of his friends, but had not then been able to advance beyond the third
Chapter, though he had endeavored to be as brief as possible.
Little more than two months after this letter was
written, on 6 ft February 1564, he made his appearance in the pulpit
for the last time; and on 10 ft March following, the complication of
diseases which too plainly indicated that his earthly career was about to
close, had become so alarming as to cause an entry in the Register of Geneva in
the following terms: — “Arrete que chacun prie Dieu pour la sante de M. Calvin,
qui est indispose depuis longtemps, et meme en danger de mort:” — “Decreed that
every one pray to God for the health of Mr. Calvin, who has been indisposed for
a long time, and even in danger of death.”
Such are the circumstances in which this Commentary was
composed, and it is impossible, in reflecting on them, not to admire the
indomitable energy which Calvin displayed in proceeding with his task, and in
meeting the remonstrance’s of those who would have withdrawn him from it, with
the heroic exclamation, “Would you that the Lord, when He comes, should find me
idle!”
A Work written at such a time, and in such a spirit,
might justly claim exemption from criticism; but it has no need of indulgence,
and can well afford to be judged by its own intrinsic merits. Viewed merely as
an intellectual effort, it displays all the excellencies which characterize the
other Commentaries of its distinguished Author: viewed in a higher and better
light, it is his dying bequest to the Church — a solemn ratification of the
whole System of Doctrine which he had so long, so earnestly, and so
successfully promulgated.
As an appropriate conclusion both to the present Volume
and the others which have preceded it, a valuable Tract, first published in
this country in 1845, has been appended. It contains a Preface by the Rev.
William Pringle, its original editor, an Essay from the German of Professor
Theoluck, and a series of Extracts from Writers often differing widely from
each other, but all concurring in a united testimony to the greatness of
Calvin’s talents, or the excellence of his character. In the present reprint,
the chief change consists in the insertion of Additional Testimonies.
The list of Calvin’s Writings, which completes the
present Volume, is in accordance with that furnished by his greatest
Biographer, Henri of Berlin, and will enable the reader to comprehend at a
single glance the amazing extent of his literary labors.
H.B.
December 30, 1854.
ARGUMENT OF THE BOOK OF JOSHUA.
As to the Author of this Book, it is better to suspend
our judgment than to make random assertions. Those who think that it was
Joshua, because his name stands on the title page, rest on weak and
insufficient grounds. The name of Samuel is inscribed on a part of the Sacred
History containing a narrative of events which happened after his death; and
there cannot be a doubt that the book which immediately follows the present is
called Judges, not because it was written by them, but because it recounts
their exploits. Joshua died before the taking of Hebron and Debir, and yet an
account of it is given in the 15th chapter of the present Book. The probability
is, that a summary of events was framed by the high priest Eleazar, and
furnished the materials out of which the Book of Joshua was composed. It was a
proper part of the high priest’s duty not only to give oral instruction to the
people of his own time, but to furnish posterity with a record of the goodness
of God in preserving the Church, and thus provide for the advancement of true
religion. And before the Levites became degenerate, their order included a
class of scribes or notaries who embodied in a perpetual register everything in
the history of the Church which was worthy of being recorded. Let us not
hesitate. therefore, to pass over a matter which we are unable to determine, or
the knowledge of which is not very necessary, while we are in no doubt
as to the essential point — that the doctrine herein contained was dictated by
the Holy Spirit for our use, and confers benefits of no ordinary kind on those
who attentively peruse it. ft1
Although the people had already gained signal victories,
and become the occupants of a commodious and tolerably fertile tract of
country, the Divine promise as to the land of Canaan still remained suspended.
Nay, the leading article in the Covenant was unaccomplished, as if God, after cooping
up his people in a corner, had left his work in a shapeless and mutilated form.
This Book, then, shows how, when the intolerable impiety of the people had
interrupted the course of deliverance, God, while inflicting punishment, so
tempered the severity of justice as ultimately to perform what he had promised
concerning the inheritance of Canaan.
This suggests the very useful reflection, that while men
are cut off by death, and fail in the middle of their career, the
faithfulness of God never fails. On the death of Moses a sad change seemed
impending; the people were left like a body with its head lopped off. While
thus in danger of dispersion, not only did the truth of God prove itself to be
immortal, but it was shown in the person of Joshua as in a bright mirror, that
when God takes away those whom he has adorned with special gifts, he has others
in readiness to supply their place, and that though he is pleased for a time to
give excellent gifts to some, his mighty power is not tied down to them, but he
is able, as often as seems to him good, to find fit successors, nay, to raise
up from the very stones persons qualified to perform illustrious deeds.
First, we see how, when the wandering of forty years in
the wilderness had almost effaced the remembrance of the passage of the Red
Sea, the course of deliverance was proved to have been uninterrupted by the
repetition of the same miracle in the passage of the Jordan. The renewal of
circumcision was equivalent to a re-establishment of the Covenant which had
been buried in oblivion by the carelessness of the people, or abandoned by them
from despair. Next, we see how they were conducted by the hand of God into
possession of the promised land. The taking of the first city was an earnest of
the perpetual aid which they might hope for from heaven, since the walls of
Jericho fell of their own accord, shaken merely by the sound of trumpets. The
nations, however, were not completely routed by a single battle, nor in one
short campaign, but were gradually worn out and destroyed by many laborious
contests.
Here, it is to be observed, that arduous difficulties
were thrown in the way of the people when the kings entered into a league, and
came forth to meet them with united forces, because it became necessary not
only to war with single nations, but with an immense body which threatened to
overwhelm them by one great onset. Ultimately, however, all these violent
attempts had no other effect than to make the power of God more manifest, and
give brighter displays of mercy and faithfulness in the defense of his chosen
people. In fact, their uninterrupted course of success, and their many
unparalleled victories, showed the hand of God as it were visibly stretched
forth from heaven.
More especially, a signal proof that they were warring
under divine auspices was given when the sun was checked in his course at the
mere prayer of Joshua, as if the elements had been armed for his assistance,
and were waiting ready to obey him. Again, while the delays which occurred in
the progress of the war were useful trials of the constancy of the people, we
must not lose sight of another admirable use of which Moses, to prevent them
from fainting in their minds, had at an earlier period forewarned them, viz.,
that God was unwilling to destroy the nations at once, lest the country, from
being converted into a kind of desert, might be overrun by wild beasts.
But the provision which God had thus most graciously
made for their security, they wickedly perverted to their own destruction: for
having obtained what they deemed a large enough space for commodious
habitation, they turned backwards to indulge in sloth and cowardice. This one
crime brought others along with it. For after they had been enrolled under the
banners of the Lord, they treacherously and disobediently refused to fulfil
their period of service, in the very same way as deserters, regardless of the
military oath, basely quit their standards. ft2The
dominion of the land, which had been divinely offered, they, with flagrant
ingratitude, rejected, by taking possession of only a part.
Moreover, though they had been ordered to purge the
sacred territory of all pollutions, in order that no profanation of the pure
and legitimate worship might remain, they allowed the impious superstitions
which God abhorred to be practiced as before; and though they also knew that
the order had been partly given as a security for their own safety, lest,
through intermixture with the nations, they might be ensnared by their
impostures and insidious arts, yet, as if they had determined to court danger,
they left them to furnish the fuel of a dire conflagration.
Their obstinate incredulity betrays itself in their disregard
of the penalty denounced against such transgression. But they at length learned
by experience that God had not threatened in vain, that those nations whom they
had wickedly ft3spared, would
prove to them thorns and stings. For they were harassed by constant incursions,
pillaged by rapine, and at length almost oppressed by tyrannical violence. In
short, it was not owing to any merit of theirs that the truth of God did not
utterly fail. ft4
On this point, indeed, a question may be raised: for if
the promise given to Abraham was founded on the mere good pleasure of God, ft5then, be the character of the people what
it might, it is absurd to say that it could be defeated by their fault. How are
we to reconcile the two things, — that the people did not obtain the full and
complete inheritance promised to them, and that yet God was true? I answer,
that so far was the faithfulness of God ft6from
being overthrown, or shaken, or in any way impaired, that we here perceive more
clearly how wonderful are His workings, who, in unsearchable wisdom, knows how
to bring light out of darkness.
It had been said to Abraham, (Genesis 15:18) To thy seed will
I give this land, from the river of Egypt to the great river Euphrates. Joshua
affirms that the event drew near, and was actually at hand. But the Israelites,
overcome by sloth, do not reach those boundaries; nay, in settling down of
their own accord within narrow limits, they in a manner oppose barriers to the
divine liberality. In this way the covenant of God seemed to suffer a kind of
eclipse.
And there is no doubt that pious minds were often filled
with anxiety when they saw His work cut short. But the punishment inflicted on
the people for their wickedness was so tempered, that what might otherwise have
been a grievous and perilous trial of faith, was converted into a powerful
support. The apparent failure reminded the children of God that they were to
look forward to a more excellent state, where the divine favor would be more
clearly displayed, nay, would be freed from every obstruction, and shine forth
in full splendor. Hence their thoughts were raised to Christ, and it was made
known to them that the complete felicity of the Church depended on its Head. In
arriving at this conclusion, they were assisted by new prophecies. For the
rehearsal which Joshua here makes of the ancient covenant is applied in the
Psalms (Psalms 72
and 89) to the
Messiah’s reign, unto which time, the Lord had, for the purpose of rendering it
more glorious, deferred the full fruition of the promised land. The same thing
was exemplified in David, who bore a typical resemblance to Christ, and in whom
it was shown that the divine promises were only established and confirmed in
the hand of a Mediator.
No longer, therefore, does it seem strange that the
result promised, after being retarded by the wickedness of the people, was not,
fully accomplished till the state of the Church was rightly arranged, seeing
that in the person of David the image of the Mediator, on whom the perfect the
moderate foretaste which believers received of the divine favor, must have
sufficed to sustain ft7them,
preparatory to the more complete realization.
Nor, indeed, was the partition made by Joshua and the
heads of the tribes, to whom that duty was intrusted, elusory or fallacious;
but the inheritance, in possession of which God had placed them by His own
hand, was truly and distinctly divided by His orders. In this respect, too, the
sacred observance of the covenant made with Abraham was conspicuous. Jacob,
when about to die, had destined certain settlements to some of his children.
Had each tribe received its portion simply by the determination and suffrages
of men, it might have been thought that they had merely followed the directions
of the Patriarch. But when the lot, than which nothing is deemed more
fortuitous, confirmed the prophecy, the stability of the donation ft8was as clearly ratified as if God had
visibly appeared. Accordingly, after the sluggishness of the people put an end
to the war, Joshua sent back the tribes of Reuben and Gad, with the half tribe
of Manasseh, as if their period of service had expired.
Next follows a remarkable narrative, clearly showing how
zealous the Israelites who dwelt in the land of Canaan were to maintain the pure
worship of God. For when these two tribes and half tribe had erected a monument
of fraternal alliance, the others, thinking that it was an altar intended for
sacrifice, and consequently an abomination, immediately determine to declare
war, and prepare sooner to destroy their kindred ft9war, and prepare sooner to destroy their kindred f9
than allow religion to be torn asunder by a bastard worship. At
the same time they are commended for their moderation, in being so easily
appeased on obtaining satisfaction, after a sacred zeal had suddenly roused
them to arms.
In the end of the book it is shown how anxious Joshua
was to advance the glory of God, ft10
and how diligently he endeavored to obviate the fickleness and treachery of the
people. With this view, not only the most impressive exhortations, but
protestations, were employed, and more especially the covenant was renewed in
regular form with the solemnity of an oath. ft11
A BRIEF COMMENTARY
ON
THE BOOK OF JOSHUA
BY JOHN CALVIN,
A SHORT TIME BEFORE HIS DEATH
Footnotes
ft1This
practical conclusion, which is indeed the only one of real importance, is
founded partly on the general consent of the Church, evinced by the place which
the Book of Joshua has always held in the Sacred Canon, and partly on the
strong sanction given to it by the direct or indirect references and quotations
of the other inspired writers both of the Old and the New Testament, e.g.,
1 Kings 16:34; Psalm
44; James 2:25. The authorship,
however, is so uncertain that there is scarcely a writer of eminence from the
period of the history itself down to the time of Ezra, for whom the honor has
not been claimed. Among others may be mentioned Phinchas, Samuel, and Isaiah.
The obvious inference is, that the question of authorship is one of those
destined only to be agitated but never satisfactorily determined. The opinion
above stated by Calvin is perhaps as plausible as any other, though he scarcely
appreciates the claims which may be urged in favor of Joshua himself. It is, of
course, impossible to attribute to him either the narrative of his own death,
or the references to one or two events which happened subsequent to it. Such
anachronisms, if they may be so called, only prove what has never been denied,
that some insertions or interpolations have been made in the original work. But
as the account of the death of Moses in the last book of the Pentateuch is not
allowed to cast any doubt on the claim of Moses to have been the true author,
it is not easy to see why similar insertions should be supposed to have any
stronger effect in regard to the claim of Joshua. In addition to the evidence
furnished by those passages in which the writer speaks as an eye-witness, and
an actor in the events recorded, those who attribute the Book of Joshua find a
strong argument in the position which Joshua occupied. He was not only the
divinely appointed successor, but the ardent admirer and diligent imitator of
Moses. It is reasonable to suppose, that while imitating him in the general
principles of his government, he forgot to imitate him in the use of his pen,
or that he was not as careful as Moses had been to draw up a written narrative
of the wonderful events which the Lord performed by his hand? The important
fact that Joshua did write is distinctly stated in Joshua 24:26; and though the
writing there referred to seems to have been confined to the narrative of a
special event, analogy goes far to justify the inference, that what he did on
this occasion was in accordance with his usual practice, and that the record
which we now possess of his eventful life, is, in substance at least, the
production of his pen. — Ed.
ft2The French
here is, — “Car tout ainsi comme des gendarmes fuyars, qui laissent vilainement
leur enseigne, oublians le serment par lequel ils se sont obligez, ils furent
traitres et perjures a Dieu, sous lequel ils estoyent enrollez pour servir tout
le temps par hiy ordonne;” “For just like fugitive soldiers, who villanously
desert their standards, forgetting the oath by which they have bound
themselves, they became perjured traitors to God under whom they were enlisted
to serve for the whole period ordained by him.” — Ed.
ft3“Wickedly.”
Latin, “Male.” French, “Contre leur devoir;” “Contrary to their duty.” — Ed.
ft4“Did not
utterly fail.” Latin, “Irrita caderet.” French, “Ne tombast tout a plat sans
avoir son effet;” “Did not fall quite flat without producing its effect.” — Ed.
ft5“Was
founded on the mere good pleasure of God.” French, “A este purement et
simplement fondee au bon plaisir de Dieu, et non ailleurs;” “Was founded purely
and simply on the good pleasure of God, and not on anything else.” — Ed.
ft6“Faithfulness
of God.” Latin, “Dei fides.” French, “La certitude de la promesse de Dieu;”
“The certainty of the promise of God.” — Ed.
ft7“Sustain.”
French, “Consoler et soustenir;” “Comfort and sustain.” — Ed.
ft8“Stability
of the donation.” Latin, “Donationis stabilitas.” French, “La verite de la
prophetie;” “The truth of the prophecy.” — Ed.
ft9“Sooner to
destroy their kindred.” Latin, “Suos consanguineos potius delere.” French, “De
plutost exterminer leur cousins, c’est a dire ces lignees-la qui estoyent de
leur sang;” “Sooner to exterminate their cousins, (kindred,) that is to say,
lineage which was of their own blood.” — Ed.
ft10Latin,
“Quantopere solicitus fuerit Josue de propaganda Dei gloria.” French, “Combien
Josue a ete songneux de procurer qu’apres sa mort Dieu fust glorifie;” “How
careful Joshua was to provide that God should be glorified after his death.” — Ed.
ft11In
addition to the above excellent summary, it may be proper to mention that the
Book of Joshua extends over a period, estimated by Josephus at twenty-five, and
by other Jewish chronologists at twenty-seven, though others attempt to reduce
it to only seventeen years, and that its contents are naturally divided into
three great sections, — the first extending from Joshua 1-7 inclusive,
and giving a continuous narrative of Joshua’s conquests; the second from
Joshua 13-23 inclusive, consisting chiefly of a description more or less
detailed of the division of the country among the different tribes; and the third
occupying the remainder of the book, Joshua 24, principally with an account of
the great convention of the tribes held at Shechem, on Joshua’s summons, and of
the interesting and important proceedings which then took place. — Ed.
CALVIN’S VERSION OF
THE BOOK OF JOSHUA
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