|
CALEB is one of those men whom
we meet with seldom in Bible history, but whenever we do meet them we are the
better for the meeting. Bright and brave, strong, modest and cheerful, there is
honesty in his face, courage and decision in the very pose of his body, and the
calm confidence of faith in his very look and attitude. It is singular that
there should be cause to doubt whether his family were originally of the
promised seed. When introduced to us in the present passage he is emphatically
called "Caleb, the son of Jephunneh the Kenezite" (R.V., Kenizzite, rightly,
same as Kenizzite in Genesis 15:19), as if he
had been a descendant of Kenaz, a son of Esau (Genesis 36:11; Genesis 36:15), and a member of the Kenizzite
tribe. It was not customary to distinguish Israelites in this way, but only
those who had come among them from other tribes, like "Heber the Kenite," "Jael,
the wife of Heber the Kenite" (Judges 4:11; Judges
4:17), Uriah the Hittite, Hushai the Archite, etc. Moreover, Othniel,
Caleb's younger brother, is called the son of Kenaz (Joshua
15:17); and further, when it is recorded in the fourteenth verse of this
Chapter that Hebron became the possession of Caleb, the reason assigned is that
he "wholly followed the Lord God of Israel." On the other hand, in the
genealogical list of 1 Chronicles 4:13; 1 Chronicles
4:15, Othniel and Caleb occur as if they were regular members of the
tribe; but that list shows obvious signs of imperfection. On the whole, the
preponderance of evidence is in favour of the opinion that Caleb's family were
originally outside the covenant, but had become proselytes, like Hobab, Rahab,
Ruth, and Heber. Their faith was pre-eminently the fruit of conviction, and not
the accident of heredity It had a firmer basis than that of most Israelites. It
was woven more closely into the texture of their being, and swayed their lives
more powerfully. It is pleasing to think that there may have been many such
proselytes; that the promise to Abraham may have attracted souls from the east,
and the west, and the north, and the south; that even beyond the limits of the
twelve tribes many hearts may have been cheered, and many lives elevated and
purified by the promise to him, "In thee and in thy seed shall all the families
of the earth be blessed."
*There is
some difficulty in adjusting the three passages in which the settlement of Caleb
is referred to. From this first passage of the three, we are led to think that
it was before the tribe of Judah obtained its portion. Again, from
Joshua 15:13 we might suppose that it was
simultaneously with the rest of the tribe. From Judges
1:10, again, it might be thought that the subduing of the natives in
Hebron was effected, not by Caleb alone, but by the tribe of Judah, and that it
took place "after the death of Joshua " (Judges 1:1).
Putting all these together, it would appear that Hebron was assigned to Caleb
before the tribe of Judah was settled; that this allocation was ratified at the
general settlement; that as Caleb was a member of the tribe, his services
against the Canaanites, and especially the Anakim, were ascribed to his tribe;
and that the process of dispossessing the Canaanites went on for some time after
the death of Joshua. The repetitions in the narrative concerning Caleb form one
of the considerations that favour the idea of more sources than one having been
made use of in the composition of this book.
Caleb and Joshua had believed
and acted alike, in opposition to the other ten spies; but Caleb occupies the
more prominent place in the story of their heroism and faith. It was he that
"stilled the people before Moses, and said, Let us go up at once, and possess
it; for we are well able to overcome it " (Numbers 13:30); and at first his name occurs alone, as exempted
from the sentence of exclusion against the rest of his generation: ''But my
servant Caleb, because he had another spirit with him, and hath followed Me
fully, him will I bring into the land whereinto he went: and his seed shall
possess it " (Numbers 14:24). As we have said
before, it is probable that Caleb was the readier speaker, and it is possible
that he was the firmer man. Joshua seems to have wanted that power of initiation
which Caleb had. It was because he had always been a good follower that Joshua
in his old age was fitted to be a leader. Because he had been a good servant he
became a good master. As long as Moses lived, Joshua was his servant. After
Moses died, Joshua set himself simply to carry out his instructions. It was a
happy thing for him on the return of the ten spies that Caleb was one of them,
otherwise he might have found himself in a condition of embarrassment. Caleb was
evidently the man who led the opposition to the ten, not only asserting the
course of duty, but manifesting the spirit of contempt and defiance toward the
faithless cowards that forgot that God was with them. In his inmost heart Joshua
was quite of his mind, but probably he wanted the energetic manner, the ringing
voice, the fearless attitude of his more demonstrative companion. Certain it is
that Caleb reaped the chief honour of that day*.
*Some
readers may no doubt prefer the explanation that when Caleb is mentioned alone
one document was followed, and when Caleb and Joshua are coupled, another.
It is beautiful to see that
there was no rivalry between them. Not only did Caleb interpose no remonstrance
when Joshua was called to succeed Moses, but he seems all through the wars to
have yielded to him the most loyal and hearty submission. God had set His seal
on Joshua, and the people had ratified the appointment, and Caleb was too
magnanimous to allow any poor ambition of his, if he had any, to come in the way
of the Divine will and the public good. His affectionate and cordial bearing on
the present occasion seems to show that not even in the corner of his heart did
there linger a trace of jealousy toward the old friend and companion whom on
that occasion he had surpassed, but who had been set so much higher than
himself. He came to him as the recognised leader of the people - as the man
whose voice was to decide the question he now submitted, as the judge and
arbiter in a matter which very closely concerned him and his house.
And yet there are indications
of tact on the part of Caleb, of a thorough understanding of the character of
Joshua, and of the sort of considerations by which he might be expected to be
swayed. There were two grounds on which he might reasonably look for the
conceding of his request - his personal services, and the promise of Moses.
Caleb knows well that the promise of Moses will influence Joshua much more than
any other consideration; therefore he puts it in the foreground. "Thou knowest
the thing that the Lord said unto Moses, the man of God, concerning me and thee
in Kadesh-barnea." "Moses, the man of God." Why does Caleb select that
remarkable epithet? Why add anything to the usual name, Moses? The use of the
epithet was honouring to all the three.
That which constituted the
highest glory of Moses was that he was so much at one with God. God's will was
ever his law, and he was in such close sympathy with God that whatever
instructions he gave on any subject might be assumed to be in accordance with
God's will. Moreover, in calling him "the man of God" when addressing Joshua,
Caleb assumed that Joshua would be impressed by this consideration, and would be
disposed to agree to a request which was not only sanctioned by the will of
Moses, but by that higher will which Moses constantly recognised. In short, when
Joshua considered that the particular wish of Moses which Caleb now recalled was
only the expression of the Divine will, Caleb felt assured that he could not
withhold his consent. The three men were indeed a noble trio, worthy descendants
of their father Abraham, even if one of the three was no son of Jacob. Long
before our Lord taught the petition "Thy will be done on earth as it is in
heaven," it had become habitual to them all. Moses was indeed ''the man of God,"
- preeminently in fellowship with Him; in a lower sphere both Caleb and Joshua
were of the same order, men who tried to live their lives, and every part of
them, only in God.
Having fortified his plea with
this strong reference at once to Moses and to God, Caleb proceeds to rehearse
the service which had led to the promise of Moses. The facts could not but be
well known to Joshua. "Forty years old was I when Moses, the servant of the
Lord, sent me from Kadesh-barnea to spy out the land, and I brought him word
again as it was in my heart. Nevertheless, my brethren that went up with me made
the heart of the people melt; but I wholly followed the Lord my God." Why does
Caleb put the matter in this way? Why does he not couple Joshua with himself as
having been faithful on that never-to-be- forgotten occasion? The only
explanation that seems feasible is, that from the pre-eminent position of Joshua
this was unnecessary, perhaps it might have appeared even unbecoming. A soldier
making a request of the Duke of Wellington, and recalling some service he had
done at the battle of Waterloo, would hardly think it necessary, or even
becoming, to say how the Duke, too, had been there, and what surpassing service
he had rendered on that day. A soldier like the Duke occupying a position of
unrivalled pre-eminence on account of long and brilliant service, does not need
to be told what he has done, Joshua was now the leader of Israel, and the last
few years had crowned him with such manifold glory that his whole life was
transfigured, and individual acts of service did not need to be spoken of Caleb
was comparatively an obscure individual, whose fame rested on a single service
now nearly half a century old, which could not, indeed, be quite forgotten, but
amid the brilliant events of later times might easily pass out of sight and out
of mind. There was no disparagement of Joshua, therefore, in his not being
mentioned by Caleb, but, on the contrary, a silent tribute to his exalted office
as chief ruler of Israel, and to his all but unparalleled services, especially
during these later years.
"I brought him word again,
as it was in my heart." The statement is made in no boasting spirit, and yet
what a rare virtue it denotes! Caleb, as we now say, had the courage of his
convictions. He had both an honest heart and an honest tongue. We can have but
little idea what temptations he lay under not to speak what was in his heart.
For six weeks these ten men had been his close companions. They had eaten
together, slept under the same canvas, walked by the same paths, beguiled the
long way by story and anecdote, and no doubt by joke and play of humour, and
done kind offices to each other as circumstances required. To break away from
your own set, from the comrades of your campaign, to upset their plans, and
counsel those in power to a course diametrically opposed to theirs, is one of
the most difficult of social duties. And in these days of ours there is no duty
more commonly set aside. Moral cowardice has been well said to be one of the
most common vices of our age.
What more common in
Parliament, for example, than for men to differ strongly from some of the
measures of their party, and yet, because it is their party, support them by
their votes? And in the ranks of the Church and of its various sections the same
tendency prevails, though it may be in a less degree. Of the many able and
seemingly honest prelates of the Roman Church who dissented, often with
vehemence, from the Vatican decree of the pope's infallibility, what became
finally of their opposition? Were there more than one or two who did not
surrender in the end, and agree to profess what they did not believe? And to
come to more ordinary matters, when our opinions on religious subjects are at a
discount, when they are met with ridicule, how often do we conceal them, or trim
and modify them in order that we may not share in the current condemnation? The
men that have the courage of their convictions are often social martyrs, shut
out from the fellowship of their brethren, shut out from every berth of honour
or emolument, and yet, for their courage and honesty, worthy of infinitely
higher regard than whole hundreds of the time-servers that ''get on" in the
world by humouring its errors and its follies.
Nevertheless, though most of
us show ourselves miserably weak by not speaking out all that is "in our
hearts," especially when the honour of our Lord and Master is concerned, we are
able to appreciate and cannot fail to admire the noble exhibitions of courage
that we sometimes meet with. That beautiful creation of Milton's, the Seraph
Abdiel, "faithful found among the faithless, faithful only he," is the type and
ideal of the class. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego resisting the enthusiasm of
myriads and calmly defying the fiery furnace; the Apostle Paul clinging to his
views of the law and the gospel when even his brother Peter had begun to waver;
Martin Luther, with his foot on the Bible confronting the whole world; John Knox
defying sovereign and nobles and priests alike, determined that the gospel
should be freely preached; Carey, going out as a missionary to India amid the
derision of the world, because he could not get the words out of his head, "Go
ye into all the world, and preach the gospel unto every creature," - have all
exemplified the Caleb spirit that must utter what is in the heart; nor has any
new idea commonly laid hold of mankind till the struggles of some great hero or
the ashes of some noble martyr have gone to sanctify the cause.
"He that believeth shall not
make haste." Caleb believed, and therefore he was patient. Five-and-forty long
years had elapsed since Moses, the man of God, speaking in the Spirit of God,
had promised him a particular inheritance in the land. It was a long time for
faith to live on a promise, but, like a tree in the face of a cliff that seems
to grow out of the solid rock, it derived nourishment from unseen sources. It
was a long time to be looking forward; but Caleb, though he did not receive the
promise during all that time, was persuaded of it and embraced it, and believed
that at last it would come true. He did not anticipate the proper time, though
he might have had as plausible reasons for doing so as the two tribes and a half
had for asking leave to settle on the east side of the river. He bore his share
of warlike work, bore the burden and heat of the day, waited till the proper
time for dividing the land. Nor did he rush forward selfishly by himself,
disregarding the interests of the rest of his tribe; for the children of Judah,
recognising his claim, draw near to Joshua along with him. Nor was it a portion
of the land which any tribe might be eager to enter upon that he asked; for it
was still so harassed by the Anakim, that there would be no peace till that
formidable body of giants were driven out.
It seems that when acting as
one of the twelve spies, Caleb had in some emphatic way taken his stand on
Hebron. "The land on which thy foot hath trodden will be an inheritance to
thee." Perhaps the spies were too terrified to approach Hebron, for the sons of
the Anakim were there, and, in the confidence of faith, Caleb, or Caleb and
Joshua, had gone into it alone. Moses had promised him Hebron, and now he came
to claim it. But he came to claim it under circumstances that would have induced
most men to let it alone. The driving out of the Anakim was a formidable duty,
and the task might have seemed more suitable for one who had the strength and
enthusiasm of youth on his side. But Caleb, though eighty-five, was yet young.
Age is not best measured by years. He was a remarkable instance of prolonged
vigour and youthful energy. "As yet I am as strong this day as I was in the day
that Moses sent me; as my strength was then, even so is my strength now, for
war, and to go out and to come in." Faith, and temperance, and cheerfulness are
wonderful aids to longevity. As one reads these words of Caleb, one recalls the
saying of a well-known physician, Dr. Richardson, that the human frame might
last for a hundred years if it were only treated aright.
There is something singularly
touching in Caleb's asking as a favour what was really a most hazardous but
important service to the nation. Rough though these Hebrew soldiers were, they
were capable of the most gentlemanly and chivalrous acts. There can be no higher
act of courtesy than to treat as a favour to yourself what is really a great
service to another. Well done, Caleb! You do not ask for a berth which there
will be no trouble in taking or in keeping. You are not like Issachar, the
strong ass couching between the sheepfolds: "and he saw a resting-place that it
was good, and the land that it was pleasant; and he bowed his shoulder to bear,
and became a servant under task-work." The dew of youth is yet upon you, the
stirring of lofty purpose and noble endeavour; you are like the warhorse of Job
- " he paweth in the valley and rejoiceth in his strength; he mocketh at fear,
and is not dismayed; he smelleth the battle afar off, the thunder of the
captains and the shouting."
There is nothing we admire
more in military annals than a soldier volunteering for the most hazardous and
difficult of posts, - showing
"That
stern joy which warriors feel In foemen
worthy of their steel."
In the spiritual warfare, too,
we do not want instances of the same spirit. We recall Captain Allan Gardiner
choosing Tierra del Fuego as his mission sphere just because the people were so
ferocious, the climate so repulsive, and the work so difficult that no one else
was likely to take it up. We think of the second band who went out after
Gardiner and his companions had been starved to death; and still more after
these were massacred by the natives, of the third detachment who were moved
simply by the consideration that the case was seemingly so desperate. Or we
think of Livingstone begging the directors of the London Missionary Society,
wherever they sent him, to be sure that it was "Forward"; turning aside from all
previous mission stations, and the comparative ease they afforded, to grapple
with the barbarian where he had never begun to be tamed; his eyes thirsting for
unknown scenes and untried dangers, because he scorned to build on the
foundation of others, and thirsted for "fresh woods and pastures new." We think
of him persevering in his task from year to year in the same lofty spirit;
disregarding the misery of protracted pain, the intense longings of his weary
heart for home, the repulsive society of savages and cannibals, the vexations,
disappointments, and obstacles that seemed to multiply every day, the treachery
of so-called friends whom he had helped to raise, the indifference of a careless
world, and of a languid Church; but ever girding himself with fresh energy for
the task which he had undertaken, and of which the difficulties and trials had
never been absent from his thoughts. We think of many a young missionary turning
away from the comfortable life which he might lead at home and which many of his
companions will lead, that he may go where the need is greatest and the fight is
hottest, and so render to his Master the greatest possible service. A crowd of
noble names comes to our recollection - Williams, and Judson, and Morrison, and
Burns, and Patteson, and Keith- Falconer, and Hannington, and Mackay - men for
whom even the Anakim had no terrors, but rather an attraction; but who, serving
under another Joshua, differed from Caleb in this, that what they desired was
not to destroy these ferocious Anakim, but to conquer them by love, and to
demonstrate the power of the gospel of Jesus Christ to change the vilest
reprobates into sons of God.
And even now there are other
Anakim among us for whom the fate of the Canaanite giants ought to be reserved.
Anakim within us - greed, selfishness, love of ease, lust, passion, cruelty -
all, if we are faithful, to be put to the edge of the sword. And there are
Anakim, tremendous Anakim, around us - drunkenness, and all that fosters it,
despite the paltry excuses we so often hear; sensuality, that vile murderer of
soul and body together; avarice, so cruelly unjust, and content to gather its
hoard from the thews and sinews of men and women to whom life has become worse
than slavery; luxurious living, that mocks the struggles of thousands to whom
one crumb from the table or one rag from the wardrobe would bring such a blessed
relief. With giants like these we need to wage incessant war, and for the
necessary spirit we need constant supplies of the faith and courage that were so
remarkable in Caleb. He followed the Lord fully; believing that if the Lord
deserved to be followed at all. He deserved to be followed in full. What was
there to gain by following Him one half, and surrendering the other half to the
world? Could he count on God helping him if he went with but half his heart into
His service, and, like Lot's wife, looked back even when flying from Sodom?
"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and
with all thy strength, and with all thy might."
The tendency to compromise is
one of the besetting sins of the day. In the army or the navy, if one is to
serve God at all, one must serve Him wholly. Decision is eminently requisite
there, and Christians there are commonly more whole-hearted and consistent than
in many circles nominally Christian. Decision is manly, is noble; it brings rest
within, and in the end it conciliates the respect of the bitterest foes. Courage
is the ornament of Christianity, and the crown of the Christian youth. "Fear
not" is one of the brightest gems of the Bible. |