Conquest of Canaan—Jericho (II)
Based on a sermon by Caleb Lee—Singapore
In our previous issue, we studied two of the protagonists of the
conquest of Jericho: Rahab and the inhabitants of Jericho. The latter serves as
a reminder to us to quickly repent when we have stepped out of God’s love. In
contrast, Rahab serves as an example of faith that is demonstrated through
immediate action. Part 2 of this article focuses on Joshua and the people of
Israel who went to war.
JOSHUA
Acknowledging the True Leader
So He said, “No, but as Commander of the army of the Lord I have now come.” And Joshua fell
on his face to the earth and worshipped, and said to Him, “What does my Lord
say to His servant?” Then the Commander of the Lord’s army said to Joshua, “Take your sandal off your foot,
for the place where you stand is holy.” And Joshua did so. (Josh 5:14–15)
Being the leader of the people of
Israel, Joshua may have considered himself to be the commander of the Lord’s army. But this encounter reminded
him who was actually in charge. Joshua might have been appointed to lead the
people of Israel, but God was the true ruler and commander. To his credit,
Joshua responded immediately and appropriately to acknowledge God as the commander
of the Israelites.
The consequences of being too
presumptuous can be deadly, as the following example illustrates.
In the year that King Uzziah died, I saw the Lord sitting on a throne,
high and lifted up, and the train of His robe filled the temple. Above it stood
seraphim; each one had six wings: with two he covered his face, with two he
covered his feet, and with two he flew. And one cried to another and said:
“Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of
hosts; The whole earth is full of His glory!” … And the posts of the door were
shaken by the voice of him who cried out, and the house was filled with smoke.
So I said: “Woe is me, for I am undone! Because I am a man of unclean lips, And
I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips; For my eyes have seen the
King, The Lord of hosts.”
(Isa 6:1–5)
In this passage, there are two persons
who had made the same mistake. One of these is King Uzziah who started off as a
very good king. He did what was right in God’s eyes; he sought out the Lord (2 Chr 26:4–5). He modernized
agriculture and improved the nation’s economy; he was a brilliant military
tactician and weapons inventor (2 Chr 26:6–15). Unfortunately, he let fame get
to his head; he forgot who the true ruler of the Israelite nation was. He
overstepped the boundaries of his royal office by burning incense, which was
the exclusive duty of priests. When warned of his error, he reacted by losing
his temper. Consequently, he died a leper (cf. 2 Chr 26:16–23).
The other is Isaiah, narrator of
the above passage. Being the prophet entrusted with the task of proclaiming
judgment on the people of Israel and reprimanding them for their sins may have
led him to think more highly of himself than he ought (cf. Isa 1–5). But at the
sight of God’s awesome glory, he realized his own lowliness and immediately
acknowledged his uncleanness (Isa 6:5). In response, God sent a seraphim to
touch his mouth with a piece of coal, and he was cleansed of his iniquity.
We can thus see the dramatically
different ends befalling two leaders. Both had received reminders of their
error. But one persisted in pride and died; the other realized his error and
was cleansed.
Taking God’s Side
And it came to pass, when Joshua was by Jericho, that he lifted his
eyes and looked, and behold, a Man stood opposite him with His sword drawn in
His hand. And Joshua went to Him and said to Him, “Are You for us or for our
adversaries?” (Josh 5:13)
Joshua’s question “Are You for us
or for our adversaries?” is a very natural one. Humans are wont to divide the world
into different camps—friend or foe; ally or competitor. Such categorization may
be useful in society or at the workplace to help us guard against danger. However,
we may unknowingly bring such a mindset into church—dividing our brethren into
“friend” or “foe” camps, depending on whether their stances on issues align
with ours; or claiming our spiritual “lineage” from different leaders (cf. 1
Cor 3:4). Worse, we begin to think of God in this way as well. When things go
well for us, we are full of praise and thanksgiving. When we encounter
obstacles, we wonder whether God is on our side.
Doubting God’s support is
tantamount to making ourselves—instead of God—the center of our faith. In
contrast, we can make God the center by asking whether we are on His side. This
question can also help us examine ourselves to see whether we have
unnecessarily placed ourselves in different camps. The most important position
for us to be in is to be on the side of God. How do we do this?
When the Commander of the Lord’s army replied that He had come “as
Commander of the Lord’s army,”
Joshua fell on his face to the earth and worshiped. He did not stop there but
continued to ask what God’s command was and went on to fulfill it. Because of
his obedience, the walls of Jericho crumbled before Israel.
Besides acknowledging his true
leader, Joshua’s example highlights what a person on God’s side will do—he
seeks to know what God wants and immediately does what God commands. And each
time we take God’s side, we shall fell the strongest of walls; the seemingly
impossible becomes possible.
THE PEOPLE OF ISRAEL
Obeying God’s Word
At that time the Lord
said to Joshua, “Make flint knives for yourself, and circumcise the sons of
Israel again the second time.” So Joshua made flint knives for himself, and
circumcised the sons of Israel at the hill of the foreskins. … So it was, when
they had finished circumcising all the people, that they stayed in their places
in the camp till they were healed.”
(Josh 5:2–3, 8)
It took a certain amount of faith
for the men of Israel to obey God’s command to be circumcised at that
particular moment. Geographically, they were very near the city of Jericho. It
does not take a veteran soldier to know that alertness and top-level fitness would
be absolutely critical if one’s enemies were just a stone’s throw away. While
these able-bodied men were recovering from circumcision, their enemies could
have easily attacked and slaughtered everybody. Despite such a risk, the
Israelites obeyed God’s command, for they understood that circumcision was the
sign of the covenant between them and God, which the Lord had established with Abraham (Gen 17:10–14). Wandering in
the wilderness, they had no chance to be circumcised. This would have rendered
them ineligible to receive God’s promised blessings under the terms of the
covenant between God and Abraham.
Apart from physical circumcision,
God also expected His people to circumcise their hearts:
“The Lord delighted only
in your fathers, to love them; and He chose their descendants after them, you
above all peoples, as it is this day. Therefore circumcise the foreskin of your
heart, and be stiff-necked no longer.” (Deut 10:15–16)
When the people of Israel
willingly subjected themselves to God’s command and underwent physical
circumcision at Gilgal (Josh 5:9), their hearts were also truly circumcised.
After their circumcision, the
people were able to partake of the Passover (Josh 5:10–11). The purpose of the
Passover was to remind the Israelites how God had delivered them from Egypt.
But this particular Passover in Joshua chapter 5 was more significant: during
the first Passover, the people of Israel had physically come out of Egypt, but
their hearts had remained there. In contrast, during this particular Passover
observance, Egypt had been totally removed from their hearts, and the people
finally enjoyed true deliverance.
This incident reminds us that if
we want true blessing and deliverance, our obedience to God must not be
contingent on the surrounding conditions. Even though it may be inconvenient or
even dangerous to fulfill God’s command, we must still do it, for God neither
speaks nor commands frivolously.
Listening and Persisting
And seven priests shall bear seven trumpets of rams’ horns before the
ark. But the seventh day you shall march around the city seven times, and the
priests shall blow the trumpets. It shall come to pass, when they make a long
blast with the ram’s horn, and when you hear the sound of the trumpet, that all
the people shall shout with a great shout; then the wall of the city will fall
down flat. And the people shall go up every man straight before him. (Josh 6:4–5)
The people of Israel were
commanded to circle the city for a total of thirteen times. Even more unusual,
the people were to remain silent as they walked. Why was silence so important?
There are two possible reasons.
Listening to God’s Signal
First, silence was crucial so that
the people could hear the trumpets sounded by the priests. The function of the
trumpets was to rally the people to march as well as to shout (cf. Josh 6:4–5,
8). Although it was the same trumpets, different sounds signaled different
things. The people had to know what they were supposed to do. Today, are we
familiar with the sounds of God’s trumpets? Are we able to hear God’s voice? Do
we understand what God wants us to do?
Test of Faith
Second, God commanded the people
to be silent in order to test their faith. Imagine walking around a city for
six days without anything happening. The people of Jericho may have initially
wondered what was going on and perhaps even had been slightly fearful. But as
the days passed without any attack, they may have started to mock the
Israelites.
If we were the people of Israel,
would we have endured the mockery and the seeming pointlessness and just
carried on fulfilling the routine until the seventh day? On the seventh day,
the Israelites still had to endure Jericho’s derision and go round the city
another seven times. But relief soon came—after the Israelites had completed
their seventh circuit of the city, the trumpets blasted, a signal to the
Israelites to shout. The power of God was manifested and the walls of Jericho
collapsed.
The Christian journey requires not
just obedience but also endurance. We must have the faith not just to do, but
to persist in doing what God has
commanded. We must continue to hold fast to the promise of God, even if our
efforts appear to have changed nothing and our present difficulties have not been
resolved.
An oft-cited but still highly important
example is praying for the Holy Spirit. We may have been praying for decades
without apparent effect. We may have fasted, wept, pleaded, or knelt for hours;
we may have been ridiculed by friends who do not believe in the Holy Spirit or
tongue-speaking and been urged to leave the true church. Through these, God
seems to be keeping silent. When the urge to give up seems strongest, recall
how the Israelites kept marching yet another round, on yet another day. And
trust that our God is a faithful God who is true to His promises.
Thoroughly Removing Sin
When the Israelites finally took
Jericho, they killed all the men and women, the young and the old, and the
animals. They had to destroy all the accursed things and burn down the entire
city. They were warned that anyone who tried to rebuild the city would lose his
son (Josh 6:16–21, 24, 26).
Many are puzzled by these
extremist instructions; some point to this as evidence that the Jewish /
Christian God is a cruel God. Understanding history and the context will give
us a clearer picture.
Jericho belonged to one of the
seven nations that God had marked for destruction in the land of Canaan. One of
these nations, the Amorites, can be taken as an example of God’s intention. The
wickedness of the Amorites can be inferred from God’s comment to Abraham that
the Amorites would be destroyed when their iniquities exceeded God’s tolerance
(cf. Gen15:16). Far from being cruel, God had been forgiving and longsuffering
towards Jericho. However, finally, their sin and recalcitrance reached a point
where God had to execute justice. The people of Israel were thus God’s
instruments for punishment.
The command to kill everyone in
the city ensured that there would be a thorough removal of all the iniquitous
practices and culture that had so displeased God. In addition, it also served
as a reminder to the Israelites:
“Then it shall be, if you by any means forget the Lord your God, and follow other gods,
and serve them and worship them, I testify against you this day that you shall
surely perish. As the nations which the Lord
destroys before you, so you shall perish, because you would not be obedient to
the voice of the Lord your God.”
(Deut 8:19–20)
God had promised that the
Israelites would be able to conquer nations much more powerful than they (Deut
9:1–4). This was not because the Israelites were righteous, but because the
Canaanites were unrighteous. So when God used the Israelites as an instrument
of judgment, He also wanted to remind them that if they were wicked and sinful,
they too would be removed from the land.
The holy God cannot tolerate any
sin. Hence, extreme measures must be taken to combat it. Jesus once taught that
if the right eye caused us to sin, it ought to be plucked out; a hand that
caused us to sin must be cut off. The Lord stressed, “It is better for you to
enter heaven blind or maimed, than to not enter heaven at all” (Mt 5:30; Mk
9:34). Therefore, sin must never be treated lightly; indeed, we must go to
extreme efforts to thoroughly remove it from our hearts and lives.
CONCLUSION
God had promised the Israelites to
help them conquer Jericho. Likewise, God has promised us victory over sin and
eventually, eternal life. However, we must also do our part. Joshua, the great
general of the Old Testament, teaches us to recognize who our Leader is; ensure
that we are on His side always by being eager to know and do His will. From the
Israelites, who successfully conquered the bastion of Jericho without a single
offensive blow (except on the trumpets), we learn to obey God by faith, even in
the face of inconvenience and danger. If we make an effort to listen to His voice,
persist in doing His will, and quickly remove sin from our hearts, God will
surely give us the victory.