Rahab: Insolence; pride,
1. a poetical name applied to Egypt in
(Psalms 87:4; 89:10; Isaiah 51:9)
as "the proud one." Rahab, (Heb. Rahab; i.e., "broad," "large").
2. When the Hebrews were encamped at Shittim, in the "Arabah" or
Jordan valley opposite Jericho, ready to cross the river, Joshua,
as a final preparation, sent out two spies to "spy the land." After
five days they returned, having swum across the river, which at
this season, the month Abib, overflowed its banks from the melting
of the snow on Lebanon. The spies reported how it had fared with
them
(Joshua 2:1-7) They had been exposed to danger in Jericho, and
had been saved by the fidelity of Rahab the harlot, to whose house
they had gone for protection. When the city of Jericho fell
(Joshua 6:17-25) Rahab and her whole family were preserved
according to the promise of the spies, and were incorporated among
the Jewish people. She afterwards became the wife of Salmon, a
prince of the tribe of Judah
(Ruth 4:21; 1 Chronicles 2:11; Matthew 1:5) "Rahab's
being asked to bring out the spies to the soldiers
(Joshua 2:3)
sent for them, is in strict keeping with Eastern manners, which
would not permit any man to enter a woman's house without her
permission. The fact of her covering the spies with bundles of flax
which lay on her house-roof
(Joshua 2:6) is an 'undesigned
coincidence' which strictly corroborates the narrative. It was the
time of the barley harvest, and flax and barley are ripe at the
same time in the Jordan valley, so that the bundles of flax stalks
might have been expected to be drying just then" (Geikie's Hours,
etc., ii., 390)