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GraciousCall.org - Calvin's Commentary on Joshua 1-18
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CHAPTER 7
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Joshua 7:1-9
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1. 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.
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1. Transgressi
autem sunt transgressione filii Israel in anathemate: quia Achan, filius
Chermi filii Zabdi, filii Zerah de tribu Jehudae abstulit de anathemate: et
accensa est excandescentia Jehovae contra filios Israel.
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2. And Joshua sent
men from Jericho to Ai, which is beside Bethaven, on the east side of
Bethel, and spoke unto them, saying, Go up and view the country. And the men
went up and viewed Ai.
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2. Porro misit Josue
viros e Jericho contra Hai, quae erat juxta Bethaven ad orientem Bethel, et
loquutus est cum illis, dicendo, Ascendite et explorate terram. Ascenderunt
itaque viri, et exploraverunt Hai.
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3. And they returned to
Joshua, and said unto him, Let not all the people go up; but let about two or
three thousand men go up and smite Ai; and make not all the people to
labor thither; for they are but few.
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3. Qui reversi ad
Josuam, dixerunt ei, Ne ascendat totus populus; circiter duo millia virorum
aut circiter tria millia virorum ascendant, et percutient Hai. ft65
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4. So there went up
thither of the people about three thousand men: and they fled before the men
of Ai.
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4. Ascenderunt ergo
illuc e populo fere fria millia virorum, et fugerunt coram viris Hai.
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5. And the men of
Ai smote of them about thirty and six men: for they chased them from
before the gate even unto Shebarim, and smote them in the going down:
wherefore the hearts of the people melted, and became as water.
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5. Percusseruntque
ex eis circiter triginta et sex viros, et persequuti sunt eos a porta usque
ad Sebarim, et percusserunt eos in descensu; atque ita liquefactum est cor
populi, fuitque velut aqua.
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6. And Joshua rent
his clothes, and fell to the earth upon his face before the ark of the LORD
until the eventide, he and the elders of Israel, and put dust upon their
heads.
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6. Porro Josue sicidit
vestimenta sua, prociditque in faciem suam in terram coram arca Jehovae usque
ad vesperam, ipse et seniores Israel, et posuerunt pulverem super caput suum.
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7. And Joshua said,
Alas, O Lord GOD, wherefore has thou at all brought this people over Jordan,
to deliver us into the hand of the Amorites, to destroy us? would to God we
had been content, and dwelt on the other side Jordan!
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7. Dixitque Josue, Ah,
ah, Dominator Jehova, ut quid traduxisit populum hunc trans Jordanem, ut
traderes nos in manum Amorrhaei qui perdat nos? Atque utinam libuisset nobis
manere in deserto trans Jordanem!
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8. O Lord, what
shall I say, when Israel turns their backs before their enemies!
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8. O Domine quid
dicam postquam vertit Israel cervicem coram inimicis suis?
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9. For the Canaanites
and all the inhabitants of the land shall hear of it, and shall
environ us round, and cut off our name from the earth: and what wilt thou do
unto thy great name?
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9. Audientque
Channanaeus et omnes incolae terrae, et vertent se contra nos, disperdentque
nomen nostrum e terra: quid vero facies nomini tuo magno?
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1. But the children
of Israel committed, etc Reference is made to the crime, and indeed
the secret crime, of one individual, whose guilt is transferred to the whole
people; and not only so, but punishment is at the same time executed against
several who were innocent. But it seems very unaccountable that a whole people
should be condemned for a private and hidden crime of which they had no
knowledge. I answer, that it is not new for the sin of one member to be visited
on the whole body. Should we be unable to discover the reason, it ought to be
more than enough for us that transgression is imputed to the children of
Israel, while the guilt is confined to one individual. But as it very often
happens that those who are not wicked foster the sins of their brethren by
conniving at them, a part of the blame is justly laid upon all those who by
disguising become implicated in it as partners. For this reason Paul, (1 Corinthians 5:4-6) upbraids
all the Corinthians with the private enormity of one individual, and inveighs
against their pride in presuming to glory while such a stigma attached to them.
But here it is easy to object that all were ignorant of the theft, and that
therefore there is no room for the maxim, that he who allows a crime to be
committed when he can prevent it is its perpetrator. I certainly admit it not
to be clear why a private crime is imputed to the whole people, unless it be
that they had not previously been sufficiently careful to punish misdeeds, and
that possibly owing to this, the person actually guilty in the present instance
had sinned with greater boldness. It is well known that weeds creep in
stealthily, grow apace and produce noxious fruits, if not speedily torn up. The
reason, however, why God charges a whole people with a secret theft is deeper
and more abstruse. He wished by an extraordinary manifestation to remind
posterity that they might all be criminated by the act of an individual, and
thus induce them to give more diligent heed to the prevention of crimes.
Nothing, therefore, is better than to keep our minds in
suspense until the books are opened, when the divine judgments which are now
obscured by our darkness will be made perfectly clear. Let it suffice us that
the whole people were infected by a private stain; for so it has been declared
by the Supreme Judge, before whom it becomes us to stand dumb, as having one
day to appear at his tribunal. The stock from which Achan was descended is
narrated for the sake of increasing, and, as it were, propagating the ignominy;
just as if it were said, that he was the disgrace of his family and all his
race. For the writer of the history goes up as far as the tribe of Judah. By
this we are taught that when any one connected with us behaves himself basely
and wickedly, a stigma is in a manner impressed upon us in his person that we
may be humbled — not that it can be just to insult over all the kindred of a
wicked man, but first, that all kindred may be more careful in applying
mutual correction to each other, and secondly, that they may be led to
recognize that either their connivance or their own faults are punished.
A greater occasion of scandal, fitted to produce general
alarm, was offered by the fact of the crime having been detected in the tribe
of Judah, which was the flower and glory of the whole nation. It was certainly
owing to the admirable counsel of God, that a pre-eminence which fostered the
hope of future dominion resided in that tribe. But when near the very outset
this honor was foully stained by the act of an individual, the circumstance
might have occasioned no small disturbance to weak minds. The severe
punishment, however, wiped away the scandal which might otherwise have existed;
and hence we gather that when occasion has been given to the wicked to blaspheme,
the Church has no fitter means of removing the opprobrium than that of visiting
offences with exemplary punishment.
2. And Joshua sent
men from Jericho, etc To examine the site of the city and
reconnoiter all its approaches was an act of prudence, that they might not, by
hurrying on at random through unknown places, fall into an ambuscade. But when
it would be necessary shortly after to advance with all the forces, to send
forward a small band with the view of taking the city, seems to betray a want
of military skill. Hence it would not have been strange that two or three
thousand men, on a sudden sally were panic-struck and turned their backs. And
it was certainly expedient for the whole body that twenty or thirty thousand
should have spread in all directions in foraging parties. We may add, that even
the act of slaying, though no resistance were offered, was of itself sufficient
to wear out a small body of troops. Therefore, when the three thousand or
thereabouts were repulsed, it was only a just recompense for their confidence
and sloth. The Holy Spirit, however, declares that fewness of numbers was not
the cause of the discomfiture, and ought not to bear the blame of it. The true
cause was the secret counsel of God, who meant to show a sign of his anger, but
allowed the number to be small in order that the loss might be less serious.
And it was certainly a rare display of mercy to chastise the people gently and
without any great overthrow, with the view of arousing them to seek an instant
remedy for the evil. Perhaps, too, the inhabitants of Ai would not have dared
to make an attack upon the Israelites had they advanced against the city in
full force. The Lord therefore opened a way for his judgment, and yet modified
it so as only to detect the hidden crime under which the people might otherwise
have been consumed as by a lingering disease.
But although there is nothing wonderful in the defeat of
the Israelites, who fought on disadvantageous terms on lower ground, it was,
however, perfectly obvious that they were vanquished by fear and the failure of
their courage before they came to close quarters; for by turning their backs
they gave up the higher ground and retired to the slope of a valley. The enemy,
on the other hand, showed how thoroughly they despised them by the confidence
and boldness with which they ventured to pursue the fugitives at full speed in
the direction of their camp. In the camp itself, such was the trepidation that
all hearts melted. I admit, indeed, that there was cause for fear when, after
having gained so many victories as it were in sport, they saw themselves so
disgracefully defeated. In unwonted circumstances we are more easily disturbed.
But it was a terror from heaven which dismayed them more than the death of
thirty men and the flight of three thousand.
6. And Joshua rent
his clothes, etc Although it was easy to throw the blame of the
overthrow or disgrace which had been sustained on others, and it was by no
means becoming in a courageous leader to be so much cast down by the loss of
thirty men, especially when by increasing his force a hundred-fold it would not
have been difficult to drive back the enemy now weary with their exertions, it
was not, however, without cause that Joshua felt the deepest sorrow, and gave
way to feelings bordering on despair. The thought that the events of war are
doubtful — a thought which sustains and reanimates the defeated — could not be
entertained by him, because God had promised that they would always be
victorious. Therefore when the success did not correspond to his hopes, the
only conclusion he could draw was, that they had fought unsuccessfully merely
because they had been deprived of the promised assistance of God.
Accordingly, both he and the elders not only gave
themselves up to sorrow and sadness, but engage in solemn mourning, as used in
the most calamitous circumstances, by tearing their garments and throwing dust
on their heads. That mode of expressing grief was used also by the heathen, but
was specially appropriate in the pious worshippers of God in suppliantly
deprecating his wrath. The rending of the garments and other accompanying acts
contained a profession of repentance, as may also be inferred from the annexed
prayer, which, however, is of a mixed nature, dictated partly by faith and the
pure spirit of piety, and partly by excessive perturbation. In turning
straightway to God and acknowledging that in his hand, by which the wound was
inflicted, the cure was prepared, they are influenced by faith; but their
excessive grief is evidently carried beyond all proper bounds. Hence the
freedom with which they expostulate, and hence the preposterous wish, Would God
we had remained in the desert! ft66
It is not a new thing, however, for pious minds, when
they aspire to seek God with holy zeal, to obscure the light of faith by the
vehemence and impetuosity of their affections. And in this way all prayers
would be vitiated did not the Lord in his boundless indulgence pardon them, and
wiping away all their stains receive them as if they were pure. And yet while
in thus freely expostulating, they cast their cares upon God, though this blunt
simplicity needs pardon, it is far more acceptable than the feigned modesty of
hypocrites, who, while carefully restraining themselves to prevent any confident
expression from escaping their lips, inwardly swell and almost burst with
contumacy.
Joshua oversteps the bounds of moderation when he
challenges God for having brought the people out of the desert; but he proceeds
to much greater intemperance when, in opposition to the divine promise and
decree, he utters the turbulent wish, Would that we had never come out of the
desert! That was to abrogate the divine covenant altogether. But as his object
was to maintain and assert the divine glory, the vehemence which otherwise
might have justly provoked God was excused.
We are hence taught that saints, while they aim at the
right mark, often stumble and fall, and that this sometimes happens even in
their prayers, in which purity of faith and affections framed to obedience
ought to be especially manifested. That Joshua felt particularly concerned for
the divine glory, is apparent from the next verse, where he undertakes the
maintenance of it, which had been in a manner assigned to him. What shall I
say, he asks, when it will be objected that the people turned their backs? And
he justly complains that he is left without an answer, as God had made him the
witness and herald of his favor, whence there was ground to hope for an
uninterrupted series of victories. Accordingly, after having in the loftiest
terms extolled the divine omnipotence in fulfillment of the office committed to
him, it had now become necessary for him, from the adverse course of events, to
remain ignominiously silent. We thus see that nothing vexes him more than the
disgrace brought upon his calling. He is not concerned for his own reputation,
but fears lest the truth of God might be endangered in the eyes of the world. ft67 In short, as it was only by the order of
God that he had brought the people into the land of Canaan, he now in adversity
calls upon him as author and avenger, just as if he had said, Since thou has
brought me into these straits, and I am in danger of seeming to be a deceiver,
it is for thee to interfere and supply me with the means of defense.
9. For the
Canaanites and all the inhabitants, etc He mentions another ground
of fear. All the neighboring nations, who, either subdued by calamities or
terrified by miracles, were quiet, will now resume their confidence and make a
sudden attack upon the people. It was indeed probable, that as the divine power
had crushed their spirit and filled them with dismay, they would come boldly
forward to battle as soon as they knew that God had become hostile to the
Israelites. He therefore appeals to God in regard to the future danger,
entreating him to make speedy provision against it, as the occasion would be
seized by the Canaanites, who, though hitherto benumbed with terror, will now
assume the aggressive, and easily succeed in destroying a panic-struck people.
It is manifest, however, from the last clause, that he
is not merely thinking of the safety of the people, but is concerned above all
for the honor of the divine name, that it may remain inviolable, and not be
trampled under foot by the petulance of the wicked, as it would be if the
people were ejected from the inheritance so often promised. We know the
language which God himself employed, as
recorded in the song of Moses, (Deuteronomy
32:26, 27)
“I would scatter them into corners, I would make the
remembrance of them cease among men; were it not that I feared the wrath
(pride) of the enemy, lest their adversaries should behave themselves
strangely, and lest they should say, Our hand is high, and the Lord has not
done all this.”
The very thing, then, which God declares that he was,
humanly speaking, afraid of, Joshua wishes now to be timelessly prevented;
otherwise the enemy, elated by the defeat of the people, will grow insolent and
boast of triumphing over God himself.
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Joshua 7:10-18
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10.
And the LORD said unto Joshua, Get thee up; wherefore liest thou thus upon
thy face?
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10.
Tunc dixit Jehova ad Josuam, Surge. Ut quid tu ita procidis super faciem
tuam?
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11.
Israel has sinned, and they have also transgressed my covenant which I
commanded them: for they have even taken of the accursed thing, and have also
stolen, and dissembled also, and they have put it even among their own
stuff.
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11. Peccavit
Israel, atque adeo transgressi sunt pactum meum quod praecepi illis, atque
etiam tulerunt de anathemate, atque etiam furati sunt, atque etiam mentiti,
atque etiam reposuerunt in vasa sua.
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12.
Therefore the children of Israel could not stand before their enemies, but
turned their backs before their enemies, because they were accursed:
neither will I be with you any more, except you destroy the accursed from
among you.
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12.
Itaque non potuerunt filii Israel stare coram inimicis suis: cervicem
vertent coram inimicis suis: ft68quia
sunt in anathema, non perseverabo esse vobiscum, nisi deleatis anathema e
medio vestri.
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13.
Up, sanctify the people, and say, Sanctify yourselves against to morrow: for
thus says the LORD God of Israel, There is an accursed thing in the
midst of thee, O Israel: thou canst not stand before thine enemies, until you
take away the accursed thing from among you.
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13. Surge,
sanctifica populum et dicas, Sanctificate vos in crastinum: sic enim dicit
Jehova Deus Israel, Anathema est in medio tui Israel: non poteris stare coram
inimicis tuis, donec abstuleris anathema e medio vestri.
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14.
In the morning therefore you shall be brought according to your tribes: and
it shall be, that the tribe which the LORD takes shall come according
to the families thereof; and the family which the LORD shall take
shall come by households; and the household which the LORD shall take shall
come man by man.
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14.
Accedetis ergo mane per tribus vestras, et tribus quam deprehendet Jehvoa
accedet per domos: et domus quam deprehendet Jehova accedet per viros.
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15. And it shall be, that
he that is taken with the accursed thing shall be burnt with fire, he and all
that he has: because he has transgressed the covenant of the LORD, and
because he has wrought folly in Israel.
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15. Qui autem deprehensus
fuerit in anathemate, comburetur igni, ipse, et omnia quae ejus sunt: quod
transgressus fuerit pactum Jehovae, et quod fecerit nefas in Israel.
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16. So Joshua rose
up early in the morning, and brought Israel by their tribes; and the tribe of
Judah was taken:
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16. Surrexit igitur
Josue mane, et accedere fecit Israelem per tribus suas, et deprehensa est
tribus Juda.
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17. And he brought
the family of Judah; and he took the family of the Zarhites: and he brought
the family of the Zarhites man by man; and Zabdi was taken:
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17. Tunc applicuit
cognationes Juda, et deprehendit cognationem Zari, applicuit deinde familiam
Zari per viros, et deprehensa est familia Zabdi.
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18. 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.
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18. Et applicuit domum
ejus per viros, et deprehensus est Achan filius Carmi, filii Zabdi, filii
Zera, de tribu Juda.
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10. And the Lord
said unto Joshua, etc God does not reprimand Joshua absolutely for
lying prostrate on the ground and lamenting the overthrow of the people, since
the true method of obtaining pardon from God was to fall down suppliantly
before him; but for giving himself up to excessive sorrow. The censure,
however, ought to be referred to the future rather than to the past; for he
tells him to put an end to his wailing, just as if he had said, that he had
already lain too long prostrate, and that all sloth must now be abandoned, as
there was need of a different remedy. But he first shows the cause of the evil,
and then prescribes the mode of removing it. He therefore informs him that the
issue of the battle was disastrous, because he was offended with the wickedness
of the people, and had cast off their defense.
We formerly explained why the punishment of a private
sacrilege is transferred to all; because although they were not held guilty in
their own judgment or that of others, yet the judgment of God, which involved
them in the same condemnation, had hidden reasons into which, though it may
perhaps be lawful to inquire soberly, it is not lawful to search with prying
curiosity. At the same time we have a rare example of clemency in the fact,
that while the condemnation verbally extends to all, punishment is inflicted
only on a single family actually polluted by the crime. What follows tends to
show how enormous the crime was, and accordingly the particle µg is not repeated without
emphasis; as they might otherwise have extenuated its atrocity. Hence, when it
is said that they have also transgressed the covenant, the meaning is,
that they had not sinned slightly. The name of covenant is applied to the
prohibition which, as we saw, had been given; because a mutual stipulation had
been made, assigning the spoils of the whole land to the Israelites, provided
He received the first fruits. Here, then, he does not allude to the general
covenant, but complains that he was defrauded of what had been specially set
apart; and he accordingly adds immediately after, by way of explanation, that
they had taken of the devoted thing, and that not without sacrilege, inasmuch
as they had stolen that which he claimed as his own. The term lying is
here used, as in many other passages, for frustrating a hope entertained, or
for deceiving. The last thing mentioned, though many might at first sight think
it trivial, is set down, not without good cause, as the crowning act of guilt,
namely, that they had deposited the forbidden thing among their vessels.
Persons who are otherwise not wholly wicked are sometimes tempted by a love of
gain; but in the act of hiding the thing, and laying it up among other goods, a
more obstinate perseverance in evil doing is implied, as the party shows
himself to be untouched by any feelings of compunction. In the last part of the
12th verse, the term anathema is used in a different sense for execration;
because it was on account of the stolen gold that the children of Israel were
cursed, and almost devoted to destruction.
13. Up, sanctify
the people, etc Although the word çdq has a more extensive meaning, yet as the subject in
question is the expiation of the people, I have no doubt that it prescribes a
formal rite of sanctification. Those, therefore, who interpret it generally as
equivalent to prepare, do not, in my judgment, give it its full force.
Nay, as they were now to be in a manner brought into the divine presence, there
was need of purification that they might not come while unclean. It is also to
be observed in regard to the method of sanctifying, that Joshua intimates to
the people a legal purgation. But though the ceremony might be in itself of
little consequence, it had a powerful tendency to arouse a rude people. The
external offering must have turned their thoughts to spiritual cleanness, while
their abstinence from things otherwise lawful reminded them of the very high
and unblemished purity which was required. And they are forewarned of what is
to take place, in order that each may be more careful in examining himself.
Nay, the Lord proceeds step by step, as if he meant to give intervals for
repentance; for it is impossible to imagine any other reason for descending
from tribe to family, and coming at length to the single individual.
In all this we see the monstrous stupor of Achan.
Overcome perhaps by shame, he doubles his impudence, and putting on a bold
front, hesitates not to insult his Maker. For why, when he sees himself
discovered, does he not voluntarily come forward and confess the crime, instead
of persisting in his effrontery till he is dragged forward against his will?
But such is the just recompense of those who allow themselves to be blinded by
the devil. Then when first by the taking of his tribe and next by that of his
family, he plainly perceived that he was urged and held fast by the hand of
God, why does he not then at least spring forward, and by a voluntary surrender
deprecate punishment? It appears, then, that after he had hardened himself in
his wickedness, his mind and all his senses were charmed by the devil.
Though God does not bring all guilty actions to light at
the very moment, nor always employ the casting of lots for this purpose, he has
taught us by this example that there is nothing so hidden as not to be revealed
in its own time. The form of disclosure will, indeed, be different; but let
every one reflect, for himself, that things which escape the knowledge of the
whole world are not concealed from God, and that to make them public depends
only on his pleasure. For though a sin may seem as it were to have fallen
asleep, it is however awake before the door, and will beset the miserable man
till it overtake and crush him.
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Joshua 7:19-26
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19. And Joshua said
unto Achan, My son, give, I pray thee, glory to the LORD God of Israel, and
make confession unto him; and tell me now what thou has done; hide it
not from me.
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19. Tunc dixit Josue ad
Achan, Fili mi, da nunc gloriam Jehovae Deo Israel, et ede ei confessionem,
atque indica mihi quid feceris, ne abscondas a me.
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20. And Achan
answered Joshua, and said, Indeed I have sinned against the LORD God of
Israel, and thus and thus have I done:
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20. Respondit Achan
ad Josuam, et ait, Vere ego peccavi Jehovae Deo Israel, et sic et sic feci.
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21. When I saw
among the spoils a goodly Babylonish garment, and two hundred shekels of
silver, and a wedge of gold of fifty shekels weight, then I coveted them, and
took them; and, behold, they are hid in the earth in the midst of my
tent, and the silver under it.
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21. Vidi inter spolia
pallium, Babylonicum bonum, et ducentos siclos argenteos, et ligulam auream
unam, cujus pondus erat quinquaginta siclorum, quae concupivi et abstuli; et
ecce abscondita sunt in terra, in medio tabernaculi mei, et argentum subtus.
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22. So Joshua sent
messengers, and they ran unto the tent; and, behold, it was hid in his
tent, and the silver under it.
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22. Misit itaque Josue
nuncios qui currerunt ad tabernaculum; ecce absconditum erat in tabernaculo
ejus et argentum sub eo.
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23. 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.
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23. Acceperuntque ea e
medio tabernaculi, et attulerunt ea ad Josuam et ad omnes filios Israel,
statueruntque coram Jehova.
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24. And Joshua, and
all Israel with him, took Achan the son of Zerah, and the silver, and the
garment, 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.
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24. Tollensque
igitur Josue Achan filium Zera, et argentum, et pallium, et ligulam auream,
et filios ejus, et filias ejus, et boves ejus, et asinos ejus, et pecudes
ejus, et tabernaculum ejus, et omnia quae erant ejus, simulque universus
Israel cum eo deduxerunt in vallem Achor.
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25. And Joshua
said, Why has thou troubled us? the LORD shall trouble thee this day. And all
Israel stoned him with stones, and burned them with fire, after they had
stoned them with stones.
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25. Et dixit Josue,
Cur turbasti nos? Turbet te Jehova hodie, et obruerunt eum universus Israel
lapidibus combusseruntque eos igni postquam lapidaverunt eos lapidibus.
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26. And they raised over
him a great heap of stones unto this day. So the LORD turned from the
fierceness of his anger. Wherefore the name of that place was called, The
valley of Achor, unto this day.
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26. Et statuerunt super
eum acervum lapidum magnum usque ad hunc diem, et aversus est Jehova ab ira
excandescentiae suae; ideo vocarunt nomen loci illius vallem Achor usque in
hunc diem.
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19. And Joshua said
unto Achan, etc Although only by lot, which seems to fall out
fortuitously, Achan is completely caught; yet, as God has declared that he will
point out the guilty party, as if with the finger, Joshua interrogates without
having any doubt, and when the discovery is made, urges Achan to confess it. It
is probable, indeed, that this was the usual form of adjuration, as we read in
John’s Gospel, (John
9:24) that the scribes and priests used the same words in adjuring the blind
man whose sight our Savior had restored, to answer concerning the miracle. But
there was a special reason why Joshua exhorted Achan to give God the glory,
because by denying or equivocating he might have impaired the credit of the
decision. The matter had already been determined by lot. Joshua, therefore,
simply orders him to subscribe to the divine sentence, and not aggravate the
crime by vain denials.
He calls him son, neither ironically nor hypocritically,
but truly and sincerely declares that he felt like a father toward him whom he
had already doomed to death. By this example, judges are taught that, while
they punish crimes, they ought so to temper their severity as not to lay aside
the feelings of humanity, and, on the other hand, that they ought to be
merciful without being reckless and remiss; that, in short, they ought to be as
parents to those they condemn, without substituting undue mildness for the
sternness of justice. Many by fawning kindness throw wretched criminals off
their guard, pretending that they mean to pardon them, and then, after a
confession has been extracted, suddenly hand them over to the executioner,
while they were flattering themselves with the hope of impunity. But Joshua,
satisfied with having cited the criminal before the tribunal of God, does not
at all flatter him with a vain hope of pardon, and is thus more at liberty to
pronounce the sentence which God has dictated.
20. And Achan
answered Joshua, etc As he was now struck with astonishment, he
neither employs subterfuge, nor palliates the crime, nor endeavors to give any
coloring to it, but rather ingeniously details the whole matter. Thus the
sacred name of God was more effectual in extorting a confession than any
tortures could have been. Nor was the simplicity he thus displayed a sure
indication of repentance; being, as it were, overcome with terror, he openly
divulged what he would willingly have concealed. And it is no new thing for the
wicked, after they have endeavored for some time to escape, and have even grown
hardened in vice, to become voluntary witnesses against themselves, not
properly of their own accord, but because God drags them against their will,
and, in a manner, drives them headlong. The open answer here given will condemn
the hypocrisy of many who obscure the clear light by their subterfuges. The
expression is emphatic — thus and thus did I; meaning that each part of the
transaction was explained distinctly and in order. Nor does he only acknowledge
the deed, but by renouncing all defense, and throwing aside all pretext, he
condemns himself in regard to its atrocity. I have sinned, he says; this he
would not have said had he not been conscious of sacrilege, and hence it
appears that he did not pretend mistake or want of thought.
22. So Joshua sent
messengers, etc Although it is not singular for messengers to prove
their obedience by running and making haste, yet the haste which is here
mentioned, shows how intent all were to have the work of expiation performed as
speedily as possible, as they had been filled with the greatest anxiety in
consequence of the stern denunciation — I will not be with you until you are
purged of the anathema. They therefore ran swiftly, not merely to execute the
commands of Joshua, but much more to appease the Lord. The things carried off
by stealth, when placed before their eyes, were more than sufficient to explain
the cause of the disgrace and overthrow which had befallen them.
It had been said that they had turned their backs on the
enemy, because, being polluted with the accursed thing, they were deprived of
the wonted assistance of God; it is now easy to infer from the sight of the
stolen articles, that the Lord had deservedly become hostile to them. At the
same time, they were reminded how much importance God attached to the delivery
of the first-fruits of the whole land of Canaan in an untainted state, in order
that his liberality might never perish from their memory. They also learned
that while the knowledge of God penetrates to the most hidden recesses, it is
in vain to employ concealment’s for the purpose of eluding his judgment. ft69
24. And Joshua, and
all Israel with him, etc Achan is led without the camp for two
reasons; first, that it might not be tainted and polluted by the execution, (as
God always required that some trace of humanity should remain, even in the
infliction of legitimate punishments,) and secondly, that no defilement might
remain among the people. It was customary to inflict punishment without the
camp, that the people might have a greater abhorrence at the shedding of blood:
but now, a rotten member is cut off from the body, and the camp is purified
from pollution. We see that the example became memorable, as it gave its name
to the spot.
If any one is disturbed and offended by the severity of
the punishment, he must always be brought back to this point, that though our
reason dissent from the judgments of God, we must check our presumption by the
curb of a pious modesty and soberness, and not disapprove whatever does not
please us. It seems harsh, nay, barbarous and inhuman, that young children,
without fault, should be hurried off to cruel execution, to be stoned and
burned. That dumb animals should be treated in the same manner is not so
strange, as they were created for the sake of men, and thus deservedly follow
the fate of their owners. Everything, therefore, which Achan possessed perished
with him as an accessory, but still it seems a cruel vengeance to stone and
burn children for the crime of their father; and here God publicly inflicts
punishment on children for the sake of their parents, contrary to what he
declares by Ezekiel. But how it is that he destroys no one who is innocent, and
visits the sins of fathers upon children, I briefly explained when speaking of
the common destruction of the city of Jericho, and the promiscuous slaughter of
all ages. The infants and children who then perished by the sword we bewail as
unworthily slain, as they had no apparent fault; but if we consider how much
more deeply divine knowledge penetrates than human intellect can possibly do,
we will rather acquiesce in his decree, than hurry ourselves to a precipice by
giving way to presumption and extravagant pride. It was certainly not owing to
reckless hatred that the sons of Achan were pitilessly slain. Not only were
they the creatures of God’s hand, but circumcision, the infallible symbol of
adoption, was engraved on their flesh; and yet he adjudges them to death. What
here remains for us, but to acknowledge our weakness and submit to his
incomprehensible counsel? It may be that death proved to them a medicine; but
if they were reprobate, then condemnation could not be premature. ft70
It may be added, that the life which God has given he
may take away as often as pleases him, not more by disease than by any other
mode. A wild beast seizes an infant and tears it to pieces; a serpent destroys
another by its venomous bite; one falls into the water, another into the fire,
a third is overlain by a nurse, a fourth is crushed by a falling stone; nay,
some are not even permitted to open their eyes on the light. It is certain that
none of all these deaths happens except by the will of God. But who will
presume to call his procedure in this respect in question? Were any man so
insane as to do so, what would it avail? We must hold, indeed, that none perish
by his command but those whom he had doomed to death. From the enumeration of
Achan’s oxen, asses, and sheep, we gather that he was sufficiently rich, and
that therefore it was not poverty that urged him to the crime. It must
therefore be regarded as a proof of his insatiable cupidity, that he coveted
stolen articles, not for use but for luxury.
25. And Joshua said,
etc The invective seems excessively harsh; as if it had been his intention
to drive the wretched man to frantic madness, when he ought rather to have
exhorted him to patience. I have no doubt that he spoke thus for the sake of
the people, in order to furnish a useful example to all, and my conclusion,
therefore, is, that he did not wish to overwhelm Achan with despair, but only
to show in his person how grievous a crime it is to disturb the Church of God.
It may be, however, that the haughty Achan complained that his satisfaction, by
which he thought that he had sufficiently discharged himself, was not accepted, ft71 and that Joshua inveighed thus bitterly
against him with the view of correcting or breaking his contumacy. The question
seems to imply that he was expostulating, and when he appeals to God as judge,
he seems to be silencing an obstinate man. The throwing of stones by the whole
people was a general sign of detestation, by which they declared that they had
no share in the crime which they thus avenged, and that they held it in
abhorrence. The heap of stones was intended partly as a memorial to posterity,
and partly to prevent any one from imprudently gathering particles of gold or
silver on the spot, if it had remained unoccupied. For although the Lord had
previously ordered that the gold of Jericho should be offered to him, he would
not allow his sanctuary to be polluted by the proceeds of theft.
From A Translation of Calivn’s Translation
1 Now the children of
Israel transgressed with transgression (grievously) in the anathema, inasmuch
as Achan, son of Charmi, son of Zabdi, son of Zerah, of the tribe of Judah,
took of the anathema; and the wrath of Jehovah was kindled against the children
of Israel.
2 Moreover, Joshua sent
men from Jericho against Hai, which was near Bethaven to the east of Bethel,
and he spoke with them, saying, Go up and explore the land. The men accordingly
went up and explored Hai.
3 And
having returned to Joshua, they said to him, Let not the whole people go up;
let about two thousand men, or about three thousand men go up, and they shall
smite Hai.
4 About three thousand
men therefore went up from the people, and they fled before the men of Hai.
5 And
they smote about thirty-six men of them, and pursued them from the gate even to
Sebarim, and smote them in the descent; and thus the heart of the people was
melted, and was like water.
6 Moreover, Joshua rent
his clothes, and fell on his face to the ground before the ark of Jehovah even
till evening, himself and the elders of Israel, and they put dust upon their
head.
7 And
Joshua said, Ah, ah! Sovereign Jehovah, how is it that thou has brought this
people across the Jordan, that thou might deliver us into the hand of the
Amorite, who will destroy us? Would that it had pleased us to remain in the
desert beyond the Jordan!
8 O
Lord, what shall I say after Israel turns his back before his enemies?
9 And
the Canaanite and all the inhabitants of the land will hear, and will turn
against us, and will destroy our name from the earth; and what wilt thou do to
thy great name?
10 Then Jehovah said to
Joshua, Arise. Why is it that thou thus falls upon thy face?
11 Israel has sinned,
and they have even transgressed my paction which I enjoined upon them, and they
have also taken of the anathema, and they have also stolen, and they have also
lied, and they have also deposited it among their vessels.
12 Therefore the
children of Israel have not been able to stand before their enemies; they will
turn their back before their enemies; because they are in anathema, I will not
continue to be with you, unless you destroy the anathema from the midst of you.
13 Arise, sanctify the
people, and say, Sanctify yourselves against to-morrow; for thus says Jehovah,
God of Israel, there is anathema in the midst of thee, Israel.
14 You
shall therefore come near in the morning by your tribes; and the tribe which
Jehovah shall detect will come near by families; and the family which Jehovah
shall detect shall come near by houses; and the house which Jehovah shall
detect will come near by men.
15 And
the man who shall be detected in the anathema, will be burnt with fire, himself
and all things which are his, because he has transgressed the paction of
Jehovah, and has done iniquity in Israel.
16 Joshua accordingly
rose early in the morning, and caused Israel to draw near by their tribes, and
the tribe of Judah was taken.
17 Then he put in the
kindreds of Judah, and took the kindred of Zera; then he put in the families of
Zari by men, and the family of Zabdi was taken.
18 And
he took his house by men, and Achan, son of Charmi, son of Zabdi, son of Zera,
was taken.
19 Then said Joshua to
Achan, My son, now give glory to Jehovah, God of Israel, and make confession to
him, and discover to me what thou has done; do not conceal it from me.
20 Achan replied to
Joshua and says, Truly I have sinned to Jehovah God of Israel, and thus and
thus have I done.
21 I
saw among the spoils a good Babylonish cloak, and two hundred shekels of
silver, and one wedge of gold, whose weight was fifty shekels, which I coveted
and carried off; and, behold, they are hidden in the ground, in the midst of my
tent, and the silver beneath.
22 Joshua therefore sent
messengers, who ran to the tent; behold it was hid in his tent, and the silver
under it.
23 And
they took them from the midst of the tent, and they brought them to Joshua, and
to all the children of Israel, and placed them before Jehovah.
24 Joshua, therefore,
taking Achan, the son of Zera, and the silver, and the cloak, and the golden
wedge, and his sons, and his daughters, and his oxen, and his asses, and his
flocks, and his tent, and all things which were his, and at the same time all
Israel with him, led them down into the valley of Achor.
25 And
Joshua said, Why has thou troubled us? Jehovah trouble thee this day. And all
Israel overwhelmed him with stones, and burnt them with fire after they stoned
them with stones.
26 And
they placed over him a great heap of stones, even to this day, and Jehovah was
turned from his hot anger; therefore they called the name of that place The
valley of Achor, even to this day.
Footnotes
ft65Calvin’s
Latin as well as the French version omit the concluding clause of this verse, “Make
not the whole people to labor thither: for they are few.” The omission, for
which no reason is assigned, is the more remarkable, as there appears to be no
doubt as to the genuineness of the original clause, and its meaning is very
exactly given not only in the Septuagint but other versions, such as Luther’s,
with which Calvin was well acquainted. — Ed.
ft66French, “O
que je voudrove que nous eussions prins a plaisir de demeurer au dela du
Jordain;” “O how I wish that we had been pleased to remain beyond the Jordan.”
— Ed.
ft67French,
“Soit revoquee en doute, ou moins estimee devant le monde;” “Be called in
question, or less esteemed before the world.” — Ed.
ft68The
English version puts the verb in the past tense, and translates “turned their
backs;” Calvin’s “vertent cervicem,” “will turn their neck;” making the
expression not a declaration of what had taken place, but a denunciation of
what was still to take place, is truer to the original, and has also the
sanction of the Septuagint, which has aujce>na uJpostre>yousin. Luther even adds to the
force of the expression by saying, “muffen ihren Feinven ven Ruden fehren;”
“must turn the back on their enemies.” Calvin’s punctuation of the same verse
is peculiar. By making a colon at enemies, he separates the words “quia sunt in
anathema,” from the end of the first, and makes it the beginning of the second
clause, which accordingly reads thus: “Because they are in anathema, (have
taken of the accursed thing,) I will not continue to go with you,” etc. — Ed.
ft69French,
“C’est folie de chercher couverture et deguisement pour eschapper son jugement
et l’abuser;” “It is folly to seek cover and disguise in order to escape his
judgement and deceive him.” — Ed.
ft70These
admirable remarks are well fitted to satisfy every candid mind, not only as to
the nature of this very remarkable execution, but also as to its expediency and
strict justice, notwithstanding its admitted severity. Several expositors,
however, continue to be dissatisfied, and to bring it more into accordance with
their views, attempt to explain parts of it away by means of a minute and
forced criticism. On finding this process not very successful, they endeavor to
supply its deficiency by extraordinary conjectures. First, with regard to the
criticism, it is said that in the directions which the Lord gives to Joshua, (Joshua 8:10-15) he receives no
authority to put any person to death, except the one who should be found to
have actually committed the crime. When the words of the 15 ft verse,
“he and all that he has,” are quoted in opposition to this view, the answer is,
that the expressions does not necessarily mean more than the man himself, his
cattle, and other property, and therefore may not have included his
family, properly so called, or the persons who formed his household. Another
criticism, still more extraordinary, would scarcely be deserving of notice had
it not received the countenance of so distinguished a name as that of Grotius,
who insists that Achan was the only person who actually suffered death, though
his children were taken out to the place of execution and verse, in which it is
said that “All Israel stoned him (Achan) with stones, and burned them
with fire;” i.e., as he explains, stoned Achan only, and then burnt his
dead body, and his cattle, and other effects designated by them. Such
are specimens of the criticism which this transaction has called forth, and it
would almost be aninsult to the reader to give a serious refutation of them.
The conjectures to which we have referred are equally extravagant. One
of them is given in the Cyclopaedia of Biblical Literature, under the article
Achan, and as the writer appears both to have invented it, and to plume himself
on the invention, it is but fair to give it in his own words; — “We prefer the
supposition that they (Achan’s family) were included in the doom by one of
those sudden impulses of indiscriminate popular vengeance, to which the Jewish
people were exceedingly prone, and which, in this case, it would not have been
in the power of Joshua to control by any authority which he could, under such
circumstances, exercise.” — Ed.
ft71French,
“Combien qu’il se peut faire, qu’Achan estant fier se soit plaint de ce qu’on
ne se contentoit pas de la reparation, et payement qu’il avoit fait, par lequel
il pensoit s’estre bien acquitte, et avoir grand devoir;” “Although it may be
that Achan complained of their not being contented with the reparation and
payment which he had made, and by which he thought that he had acquitted
himself well, and performed a great duty.” — Ed.
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