Joshua, The Book of: Contains a history of the Israelites from the death of Moses to that
of Joshua. It consists of three parts:1. The history of the conquest of the land (1-12)
2. The allotment of the land to the different tribes, with the
appointment of cities of refuge, the provision for the Levites
(13-22) and the dismissal of the eastern tribes to their homes.
This section has been compared to the Domesday Book of the
Norman conquest.
3. The farewell addresses of Joshua, with an account of his death
(23, 24)
This book stands first in the second of the three sections,
1. the Law,
2. the Prophets,
3. the "other writings" Hagiographa, into which the Jewish Church
divided the Old Testament.
There is every reason for concluding that the uniform tradition of the
Jews is correct when they assign the authorship of the book to Joshua,
all except the concluding section; the last verses
(Joshua 24:29-33)
were added by some other hand. There are two difficulties connected
with this book which have given rise to much discussion,
1. The miracle of the standing still of the sun and moon on Gibeon.
The record of it occurs in Joshua's impassioned prayer of faith,
as quoted
(Joshua 10:12-15) from the "Book of Jasher" (q.v.). There
are many explanations given of these words. They need, however,
present no difficulty if we believe in the possibility of God's
miraculous interposition in behalf of his people. Whether it was
caused by the refraction of the light, or how, we know not.
2. Another difficulty arises out of the command given by God
utterly to exterminate the Canaanites. "Shall not the Judge of
all the earth do right?" It is enough that Joshua clearly knew
that this was the will of God, who employs his terrible
agencies, famine, pestilence, and war, in the righteous
government of this world. The Canaanites had sunk into a state
of immorality and corruption so foul and degrading that they had
to be rooted out of the land with the edge of the sword. "The
Israelites' sword, in its bloodiest executions, wrought a work
of mercy for all the countries of the earth to the very end of
the world." This book resembles the Acts of the Apostles in the
number and variety of historical incidents it records, and in
its many references to persons and places; and as in the latter
case the epistles of Paul (see Paley's Horae Paul.) confirm its
historical accuracy by their incidental allusions and
"undesigned coincidences," so in the former modern discoveries
confirm its historicity. The Amarna tablets
(See ADONIZEDEC)
are among the most remarkable discoveries of the age. Dating
from about B.C. 1480 down to the time of Joshua, and consisting
of official communications from Amorite, Phoenician, and
Philistine chiefs to the king of Egypt, they afford a glimpse
into the actual condition of Palestine prior to the Hebrew
invasion, and illustrate and confirm the history of the
conquest. A letter, also still extant, from a military officer,
"master of the captains of Egypt," dating from near the end of
the reign of Rameses II., gives a curious account of a journey,
probably official, which he undertook through Palestine as far
north as to Aleppo, and an insight into the social condition of
the country at that time. Among the things brought to light by
this letter and the Amarna tablets is the state of confusion and
decay that had now fallen on Egypt. The Egyptian garrisons that
had held possession of Palestine from the time of Thothmes III.,
some two hundred years before, had now been withdrawn. The way
was thus opened for the Hebrews. In the history of the conquest
there is no mention of Joshua having encountered any Egyptian
force. The tablets contain many appeals to the king of Egypt for
help against the inroads of the Hebrews, but no help seems ever
to have been sent. Is not this just such a state of things as
might have been anticipated as the result of the disaster of the
Exodus? In many points, as shown under various articles, the
progress of the conquest is remarkably illustrated by the
tablets. The value of modern discoveries in their relation to
Old Testament history has been thus well described: "The
difficulty of establishing the charge of lack of historical
credibility, as against the testimony of the Old Testament, has
of late years greatly increased. The outcome of recent
excavations and explorations is altogether against it. As long
as these books contained, in the main, the only known accounts
of the events they mention, there was some plausibility in the
theory that perhaps these accounts were written rather to teach
moral lessons than to preserve an exact knowledge of events. It
was easy to say in those times men had not the historic sense.
But the recent discoveries touch the events recorded in the
Bible at very many different points in many different
generations, mentioning the same persons, countries, peoples,
events that are mentioned in the Bible, and showing beyond
question that these were strictly historic. The point is not
that the discoveries confirm the correctness of the Biblical
statements, though that is commonly the case, but that the
discoveries show that the peoples of those ages had the historic
sense, and, specifically, that the Biblical narratives they
touch are narratives of actual occurrences."