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WE now resume the thread of
the story interrupted by the narrative of the transaction at Ebal and Gerizim.
We learn from the testimony of Rahab of Jericho, as uttered to the spies (Joshua
2:9), that the terror of Israel had caused the hearts of the inhabitants
of the country to faint, and that the fame of all that had been done for them by
Jehovah had quite paralysed them. But when the host of Israel actually entered
Western Palestine, and began their conquest by the destruction of Jericho and
Ai, the inhabitants seem to have plucked up courage, and begun to consider what
could be done in self-defence. It is very probable that they found considerable
encouragement from what happened at Ai. There it had been seen that Israel was
not invincible. Insignificant though Ai was, its people had been able to repel
with great success the first attack of the Israelites. And though they had been
destroyed in the second, this was achieved only by the combined influence of
stratagem and an overwhelming force. The supernatural power under which Jericho
had fallen had not been shown at Ai, and might not come into play in the future.
There was therefore yet a chance for the Canaanites, if they should combine and
act in concert. Steps were therefore taken for such a union. The kings or chiefs
who occupied the hills, or central plateau of the country; those of the valleys,
interspersed between the mountains; and those occupying the Shephelah, or
maritime plains of Philistia, Sharon, and Phoenicia; - all the nations comprised
under the well-known names Hittites, Amorites, Canaanites, Perizzites, Hivites,
and Jebusites, entered into a league of defence, and prepared to confront Joshua
and the Israelites with a determined resistance. The news of the confederacy
would bring a tremor over some timid hearts in the camp of Israel, but would
cause no serious anxiety to Joshua and all the men of faith, who, like him, felt
assured that the Lord was with them.
There was one native
community, however, that determined to follow another course. The Gibeonites
were a branch of the Hivite race, inhabiting the town of Gibeon, and some other
prominent towns in the great central plateau of the country. Gibeon is
undoubtedly represented now by the village of El Jib, situated about half-way
between Jerusalem and Bethel, four or five miles distant from each. Dr.
Robertson describes El Jib as situated in a beautiful plain of considerable
extent, on an oblong hill or ridge, composed of layers of limestone, rising as
if by regular steps out of the plain. In the days of Joshua, it was a place of
great importance, a royal city, and it had under its jurisdiction the towns of
Beeroth, Chephirah, and Kirjath-jearim. Its inhabitants were in no humour to
fight with Joshua. They had faith enough to understand what would be the
inevitable result of that, and therein they were right, and the confederate
kings were wrong. On the other hand, they were not prepared to make an honest
and unconditional surrender. They probably knew that the orders under which
Joshua was acting called on him to destroy all the people of the land, and they
had no assurance that, being of the doomed nations, open submission would secure
their lives. They resolved therefore to proceed by stratagem. A detachment was
appointed to wait on Joshua at his camp at Gilgal, as if they were ambassadors
from a distant country, and represent to him in pious tone that they had come
from afar, "because of the name of the Lord his God, having heard the fame of
Him, and all that He did in Egypt, and all that He did to the two kings of the
Amorites that were beyond Jordan, to Sihon King of Heshbon, and to Og King of
Bashan." They came with the desire to show respect to the people whose God was
so powerful, and to be allowed, though far off, to live at peace with them. Then
they presented their credentials, as it were; showing the old sacks, the
shrivelled bottles, the musty bread they had brought with them, and the clouts
upon their feet and ragged garments which attested the great length of their
journey. ''Those old Gibeonites," says the "Land and the Book," "did indeed
'work wilily' with Joshua. Nothing could be better calculated to deceive than
their devices. I have often thought that their ambassadors, as described in the
narrative, furnish one of the finest groups imaginable for a painter; with their
old sacks on their poor asses; their wine bottles of goat skin, patched and
shrivelled up in the sun, old, rent, and bound up; old shoes and clouted upon
their feet; old garments, ragged and bedraggled, with bread dry and mouldy, -
the very picture of an over-travelled and wearied caravan from a great distance.
It is impossible to transfer to paper the ludicrous appearance of such a
company. No wonder that, having tasted their mouldy victuals, and looked upon
their soiled and travel-worn costume, Joshua and the elders were deceived,
especially as they did not wait to ask counsel at the mouth of the Lord."
It was just the completeness
of the disguise that threw Joshua and the men of Israel off their guard. For at
first the idea did occur to them that the strangers might be neighbours, and
therefore of the nations that they were called on to destroy. On closer
inspection, however, that seemed out of the question; indeed, the supposition
was so utterly preposterous that it was deemed hardly fitting to bring the
matter before the Lord. It is as plain as day, Joshua and the elders would
reason; the evidence of what they say is beyond question; theirs is no case of
perplexity requiring us to go to God; we may surely exercise our common sense
and make a league with these far-travelled men. In a short time they will be
back in their own country, far beyond our boundaries, and the only effect of
their visit and of our league will be a fresh tribute to the name and power of
Jehovah, a fresh testimony to His presence with us, and a fresh pledge that He
will bear us to success in the enterprise in which we are engaged. And when the
confederate kings that are now leaguing against us hear that this distant people
have come to us to propitiate our favour, they will be struck by a new terror
and will be the more easily subdued.
We see in all this the simple,
unsuspecting spirit of men who have spent their lives in the wilderness. As for
the Gibeonites, there was a combination of good and bad in their spirit. They
remind us in a measure of the woman with the issue of blood. In her there was
certainly faith; but along with the faith, extraordinary superstition. In the
Gibeonites there was faith - a belief that Israel was under the protection of a
remarkable Divine power, under a Divine promise the truth of which even Balaam
had very recently acknowledged - "I will bless them that bless thee, and curse
him that curseth thee." Undoubtedly a religious feeling lay at the bottom of the
proceeding. A great divine Being was seen to be involved, who was on Israel's
side and against his enemies, and it would not do to trifle with Him. But in
their way of securing exemption from the effects of His displeasure, the
grossest superstition appeared. They were to gain their object by deceit. They
were to get Him to favour them above their neighbours through an elaborate
system of fraud, through a tissue of lies, through unmitigated falsehood. What a
strange conception of God! What blindness to His highest attributes, - His
holiness and His truth! What amazing infatuation to suppose that they could
secure His blessing through acts fitted to provoke His utmost displeasure! What
a miserable God men fashion to themselves when they simply invest Him with
almighty power, or perhaps suppose Him to be moved by whims and prejudices and
favouritisms like frail man, but omit to clothe Him with His highest glory -
forget that "justice and judgment are the habitation of His throne, mercy and
truth go before His face."
The conduct of the men was the
more strange that it was impossible that they should not be speedily found out.
And it was quite possible that, when found out, they would be dealt with more
severely than ever. True, indeed, Joshua, when he did detect their plot, did not
so act; he acted on a high, perhaps a mistaken sense of honour; but they had no
right to count on that. Timidity is a poor adviser. All it can do is to turn the
next corner. True faith, resting on eternal truth, acts for eternity. True faith
is often blind, but in the deepest darkness it knows that it is on the right
track, and under the guidance of the eternal light. Blind faith is very
different from blind fear. Faith holds on in full expectation of deliverance;
fear trembles and stumbles, in perpetual dread of exposure and humiliation.
"A lying tongue is but for a
moment;" and the Gibeonite fraud lived just three days. Then it was discovered
by Joshua that the Gibeonites lived in the immediate neighbourhood. But before
that, he had made peace with them, and entered into a league to let them live,
and the princes of the congregation had confirmed it by an oath. Nothing could
have been more provoking than to discover that they had been duped and swindled.
It is always a very bitter experience to find that our confidence has been
misplaced. Men whom we thought trustworthy, and whom we commended to others as
trustworthy, have turned out knaves. It is hard to bear, for we have committed
ourselves to our friends in the matter. What would Joshua and his people think
now of the supposed tribute to the God of Israel, and the impression expected to
be made on the confederate kings? Before all the inhabitants of Canaan he and
his people were befooled, humiliated. Not a man in all the country but would be
making merry at their expense. Yet even that was not the worst of it. They had
been guilty of over-confidence, and of neglect of means that were in their
hands; they had neglected to get counsel of their God. They had trusted in their
own hearts when they ought to have sought guidance from above. The trouble was
their own creation; they were alone to blame.
We cannot but respect the way
in which Joshua and the princes acted when they discovered the fraud. It might
have been competent to repudiate the league on the ground that it was agreed to
by them under false pretences. It was made on the representation that the
Gibeonites had come from a far country, and when that was seen to be utterly
untrue there would have been an honourable ground for repudiating the
transaction. But Joshua did not avail himself of this loophole. He and the
princes had such respect for the sanctity of an oath that, even when they
discovered that they had been grossly deceived, they would not resile from it.
It seems to have been the princes that took up this ground, and they did so in
opposition to the congregation (Joshua 9:18).
The fact that the name of the Lord God of Israel had been invoked in the oath
sworn to the Gibeonites constrained them to abide by the transaction. It is a
good sign of their spirit that they were so jealous of the honour of their God,
and of the sanctity of their oath. They came out of the transaction with more
honour than we should have expected. Personal interests were subordinated to
higher considerations. They carried out that great canon of true religion -
first and foremost giving ''glory to God in the highest."
But though the lives of the
Gibeonites were spared, that was all. They were to be reduced to a kind of
slavery - to be "hewers of wood and drawers of water for the congregation and
the altar of God." The expression has become a household word to denote a life
of drudgery, but perhaps we fail to recognise the full significance of the
terms. "I was forcibly reminded of this," says the author of ''The Land and the
Book," "by long files of women and children (near El Jib) carrying on their
heads heavy bundles of wood. . . . It is the severest kind of drudgery, and my
compassion has often been enhsted in behalf of the poor women and children, who
daily bring loads of wood to Jerusalem from these very mountains of the
Gibeonites. To carry water, also, is very laborious and fatiguing. The fountains
are far off, in deep wadies with steep banks, and a thousand times have I seen
the feeble and the young staggering up long and weary ways with large jars of
water on their heads. It is the work of slaves, and of the very poor, whose
condition is still worse. Among the pathetic lamentations of Jeremiah there is
nothing more affecting than this: 'They took the young men to grind, and the
children fell under the wood' (Lamentations 5:13).
Grinding at the hand-mill is a low, menial work, assigned to female slaves, and
therefore utterly humiliating to the young men of Israel. And the delicate
children of Zion falling under the loads of hard, rough wood, along the mountain
paths! Alas! 'for these things I weep; mine eye, mine eye runneth down with
water, because the comforter that should relieve my soul is far from me: my
children are desolate, because the enemy prevailed.'"
Respecting the after history
of Gibeon and the Gibeonites we find some notices in the Old Testament, but none
in the New. At one time there was a sanctuary at Gibeon, even after the ark had
been removed to Mount Zion; for it was at Gibeon that Solomon offered his great
sacrifice of a thousand burnt offerings, and had that remarkable dream in which,
in reply to the Divine offer of a choice of gifts, he chose wisdom in preference
to any other (1 Kings 3:4-5). But the most
remarkable reappearance of the Gibeonites in history is in the reigns of Saul
and David. For some unknown reason, and probably quite unjustly, Saul had put
some of them to death. And in the reign of David, probably the early part of it,
when a succession of famines desolated the land, and inquiry was made as to the
cause, the reply of the oracle was: "It is for Saul and his bloody house,
because he slew the Gibeonites." And it was to avenge this unjust slaughter that
seven descendants of Saul were put to death, on that occasion when Rizpah, the
mother of two of them, showed such remarkable affection by guarding their dead
bodies from the beasts and birds of prey. It is possible that even after the
Babylonian captivity some Gibeonites survived under their old name, because it
is said in Nehemiah that among the others who repaired the wall of Jerusalem
were "Melatiah the Gibeonite, and Jadon the Meronothite, the men of Gibeon, and
of Mizpah" (Nehemiah 3:7). Only it is uncertain
whether Melatiah was of the old Gibeonite stock, or an Israelite who had Gibeon
for his city. While the old Gibeonites did survive they seem to have had a
miserable lot, and the question might have been often asked by them - Did our
fraud bring us any real good? Is life worth living?
Does anything resembling this
fraud of the Gibeonites ever take place among ourselves? In answer, let us ask
first of all, what is the meaning of pious frauds? Are they not transactions
where fraud is resorted to in order to accomplish what are supposed to be
religious ends? Granting that the fraud of the Gibeonites was not for a
religious but for a secular object - their deliverance from the sword of Joshua
- still they professed, in practising it, to be doing honour to God. It is the
part of superstition at once to lower the intellectual and the moral attributes
of God. It often represents that the most frivolous acts, the uttering of
mysterious words, or the performance of senseless acts have such a power over
God as to bring about certain desired results. More frequently it holds that
cruelty, falsehood, injustice, and other crimes, if brought to bear on religious
or ecclesiastical ends, are pleasing in God's sight. Is there anything more
truly odious than this severance of religion from morality and humanity, - this
representation that fraud and other immoral acts have value before God? How can
anything be a real religious gain to a man, how can it be otherwise than
disastrous in the last degree, if it develops a fraudulent spirit, if it
perverts his moral nature, if it deepens and intensifies the moral disorder of
his heart? If men saw "The beauty of holiness," "the beauty of the Lord," they
could never bring their minds to such miserable distortions. It is pure
blasphemy to suppose that God could thus demean Himself. It is self-degradation
to imagine that anything that can be gained by oneself through such means, could
make up for what is lost, or for the guilt incurred by such wickedness.
And this suggests a wider
thought - the fearful miscalculation men make whensoever they resort to fraud in
the hope of reaping benefit by means of it. Yet what practice is more common?
The question is, Does it really pay? Does it pay, for instance, to cheat at
cards? Have we not seen recently what swift and terrible retribution that may
bring, making us feel for the culprit as we might have felt for Cain. Does it
pay the merchant to cheat as to the quality of his goods? Does it not leak out
that he is not to be trusted, and does not that suspicion lose more to him in
the long run than it gains? Does it pay the preacher to preach another man's
sermon as his own? Or, to vary the illustration? When one has entrapped a maiden
under false promises, and then forsakes her; or when he conceals the fact that
he is already married to another; or when he controls himself for a time, to
conceal from her his ill temper, or his profligate habits, or his thirst for
strong drink, does it pay in the end? The question is not, Does he succeed in
his immediate object? but, How does the matter end? Is it a comfortable thought
to any man that he has broken a trustful heart, that he has brought misery to a
happy home, that he has filled some one's life with lamentation and mourning and
woe? We are not thinking only of the future life, when so many wrongs will be
brought to light, and so many men and women will have to curse the infatuation
that made fraud their friend and evil their good. We think of the present
happiness of those who live in an atmosphere of fraud, and worship daily at its
shrine. Can such disordered souls know aught of real peace and solid joy? In the
case of some of them, are there not occasional moments of sober feeling, when
they think what their life was given them for, and contrast their selfish and
heartless devices with the career of those who deal truly and live to do good?
Bitter, very bitter is the feeling which the contrast raises. It is bitter to
think how unfit one is for the society of honest men; how the master one is
serving is the father of lies; and how, even when the master does grant one a
momentary success, it is at the sacrifice of all selfrespect and conscious
purity, and with a dark foreboding of wrath in the life to come.
All Eastern nations get the
character of being deceitful; but indeed the weed may be said to flourish in
every soil where it has not been rooted out by living Christianity. But if it be
peculiarly characteristic of Eastern nations, is it not remarkable how
constantly it is rebuked in the Bible, even though that book sprang from an
Eastern soil? No doubt the record of the Bible abounds with instances of deceit,
but its voice is always against them. And its instances are always instructive.
Satan gained nothing by deceiving our first parents. Jacob was well punished for
deceiving Isaac. David's misleading of the high priest when he fled from Saul
involved ultimately the slaughter of the whole priestly household. Ananias and
Sapphira had an awful experience when they lied unto the Holy Ghost. All through
the Bible it is seen that lying lips are an abomination to the Lord, but they
that deal truly are His delight. And when our blessed Lord comes to show us the
perfect life, how free He is from the slightest taint or vestige of deceit! How
beautifully transparent is His whole life and character! No little child with
his honest smile and open face was ever more guileless. In the light of that
perfect example, who among us does not blush for our errors - for our many
endeavours to conceal what we have done, to appear better than we were, to seem
to be pleasing God when we were pleasing ourselves, or to be aiming at God's
glory when we were really consulting for our own interests? Is it possible for
us ever to be worthy of such a Lord? First, surely, we must go to His cross,
and, bewailing all our unworthiness, seek acceptance through His finished work.
And then draw from His fulness, even grace for grace; obtain through the
indwelling of His Spirit that elixir of life which will send a purer life-blood
through our souls, and assimilate us to Him of whom His faithful apostle wrote:
"He did not sin, neither was guile found in His mouth." |