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WE come now in earnest to the
distribution of the land. The two and a half tribes have already got their
settlements on the other side of Jordan; but the other side of Jordan, though
included in the land of promise, was outside the part specially consecrated as
the theatre of Divine manifestation and dealing. From Dan to Beersheba and from
Jordan to the sea was par excellence the land of Israel; it was here the
patriarchs had dwelt; it was here that most of the promises had been given; it
was here that Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob had been buried; and here also, though
in another tomb, that the bones of Joseph had been laid. This portion was the
kernel of the inheritance, surrounded by a wide penumbra of more feeble light
and fewer privileges. In due time there arose a holy of holies within this
consecrated region, when Jerusalem became the capital, the focus of blessing and
holy influence.
Now that the distribution of
this part of the country begins, we must give special attention to the
operation. The narrative looks very bare, but important principles and lessons
underlie it. These lists of unfamiliar names look like the debris of a quarry -
hard, meaningless, and to us useless. But nothing is inserted in the Bible
without a purpose, - a purpose that in some sense bears on the edification of
the successive generations and the various races of men. We are not to pass the
distribution over because it looks unpromising, but rather to inquire with all
the greater care what the bearing of it is on ourselves.
Now, in the first place, there
is something to be learned from the maintenance of the distinction of the twelve
tribes, and the distribution of the country into portions corresponding to each.
In some degree this was in accordance with Oriental usage; for the country had
already been occupied by various races, dwelling in a kind of unity - the
Canaanites, Amorites, Hittites, Hivites, Jebusites, Perizzites, and Girgashites.
What was peculiar to Israel was, that each of the tribes was descended from one
of Jacob's sons, and that their relation to each other was conspicuously
maintained, though their dwelling-places were apart. It was an arrangement
capable of becoming a great benefit under a right spirit, or a great evil under
the opposite. As in the case of the separate states of North America, or the
separate cantons of Switzerland, it provided for variety in unity; it gave a
measure of local freedom and independence, while it maintained united action; it
contributed to the life and vigour of the commonwealth, without destroying its
oneness of character, or impairing its common purpose and aim. It promoted that
picturesque variety often found in little countries, where each district has a
dialect, or a pronunciation, or traditions, or a character of its own; as
Yorkshire differs from Devon, or Lancashire from Cornwall; Aberdeenshire from
Berwick, or Fife from Ayr. As in a garden, variety of species enlivens and
enriches the effect, so in a community, variety of type enriches and enlivens
the common life. A regiment of soldiers clothed in the same uniform, measuring
the same stature, marching to the same step, may look very well as a contrast to
the promiscuous crowd; but when a painter would paint a striking picture it is
from the promiscuous crowd in all their variety of costume and stature and
attitude that his figures are drawn. In the case of the Hebrew commonwealth, the
distinction of tribes became smaller as time went on, and in New Testament times
the three great districts Judaea, Samaria, and Galilee showed only the survival
of the fittest. A larger individuality and a wider variety would undoubtedly
have prevailed if a good spirit had continued to exist among the tribes, and if
all of them had shown the energy and the enterprise of some.
But the wrong spirit came in,
and came in with a witness, and mischief ensued. For distinctions in race and
family are apt to breed rivalry and enmity, and not only to destroy all the good
which may come of variety, but to introduce interminable mischief. For many a
long day the Scottish clans were like Ishmael, their hand against every man, and
every man's hand against them; or at least one clan was at interminable feud
with another, and the country was wretched and desolate. Among the twelve tribes
of Israel the spirit of rivalry soon showed itself, leading to disastrous
consequences. In the time of the judges, the men of Ephraim exhibited their
temper by envying Gideon when he subdued the Midianites, and Jephthah when he
subdued the Ammonites; and under Jephthah a prodigious slaughter of Ephraimites
resulted from their unreasonable spirit. In the time of the kings, a permanent
schism was caused by the revolt of the ten tribes from the house of David. Thus
it is that the sin of man often perverts arrangements designed for good, and so
perverts them that they become sources of grievous evil. The family order is a
thing of heaven; but let a bad spirit creep into a family, the result is
fearful. Let husband and wife become alienated; let father and son begin to
quarrel; let brother set himself against brother, and let them begin to scheme
not for mutual benefit but for mutual injury, no limits can be set to the
resulting mischief and misery.
Many arrangements of our
modern civilization that conduce to our comfort when in good order, become
sources of unexampled evil when they go wrong. The drainage of houses conduces
much to comfort while it works smoothly; but let the drains become choked, and
send back into our houses the poisonous gases bred of decomposition, the
consequences are appalling. The sanitary inspector must be on the alert to
detect mischief in its very beginnings, and apply the remedy before we have well
become conscious of the evil. And so a vigilant eye needs ever to be kept on
those arrangements of providence that are so beneficial when duly carried out,
and so pernicious when thoughtlessly perverted. What a wonderful thing is a
little forbearance at the beginning of a threatened strife! What a priceless
blessing is the soft answer that turneth away wrath! There is a pithy tract
bearing the title ''The Oiled Feather." The oiled feather has a remarkable power
of smoothing surfaces that would otherwise grate and grind upon each other, and
so of averting evil. Among Christians it should be always at hand; for surely,
if the forbearance and love that avert quarrels ought to be found anywhere, it
is among those who have received the fulness of Divine love and grace in Jesus
Christ. Surely among them there should be no perversion of Divine arrangements;
in their homes no quarrels, and in their hearts no rivalry. They ought, instead,
to be the peacemakers of the world, not only because they have received the
peace that passeth understanding, but because their Master has said, "Blessed
are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God."
2. Again, in the allocation of
the tribes in their various territories we have an instance of a great natural
law, the law of distribution, a law that, on the whole, operates very
beneficially throughout the world. In society there is both a centripetal and a
centrifugal force; the centripetal chiefly human, the centrifugal chiefly
Divine. Men are prone to cluster together; God promotes dispersion. Through the
Divine law of marriage, a man leaves his father's house and cleaves to his wife;
a new home is established, a new centre of activity, a new source of population.
In the early ages they clustered about the plain of Shinar; the confusion of
tongues scattered them abroad. And generally, in any fertile and desirable spot,
men have been prone to multiply till food has failed them, and either starvation
at home or emigration abroad becomes inevitable. And so it is that, in spite of
their cohesive tendency, men are now pretty well scattered over the globe. And
when once they are settled in new homes, they acquire adaptation to their
locality, and begin to love it. The Esquimaux {eS module note: eskimo} is
not only adapted to his icy home, but is fond of it. The naked negro has no
quarrel with the burning sun, but enjoys his sunny life. We of the temperate
zone can hardly endure the heat of the tropics, and we shiver at the very
thought of Lapland. It is a proof of Divine wisdom that a world that presents
such a variety of climates and conditions has, in all parts of it, inhabitants
that enjoy their life.
The same law operates in the
vegetable world. Everywhere plants seem to discover the localities where they
thrive best. Even in the same country you have one flora for the valley and
another for the mountain. The lichen spreads itself along the surface of rocks,
or the hard bark of ancient trees; the fungus tarries in damp, unventilated
corners; the primrose settles on open banks; the fern in shady groves. There is
always a place for the plant, and a plant for the place. And it is so with
animals too. The elephant in the spreading forest, the rabbit in the sandy down,
the beaver beside the stream, the caterpillar in the leafy garden. If we could
explore the ocean we should find the law of distribution in full activity there.
There is one great order of fishes for fresh water, another for salt; one great
class of insects in hot climates, another in temperate; birds of the air, from
the eagle to the humming-bird, from the ostrich to the bat, in localities
adapted to their habits. We ask not whether this result was due to creation or
to evolution. There it is, and its effect is to cover the earth. All its
localities, desirable and undesirable, are more or less occupied with
inhabitants. Some of the great deserts that our imagination used to create in
Africa or elsewhere do not exist. Barren spots there are, and "miry places and
marshes given to salt," but they are not many. The earth has been replenished,
and the purpose of God so far fulfilled.
And then there is a
distribution of talents. We are not all created alike, with equal dividends of
the gifts and faculties that minister in some way to the purposes of our life.
We depend more or less on one another; women on men, and men on women; the young
on the old, and sometimes the old on the young; persons of one talent on those
of another talent, those with strong sinews on those with clear heads, and those
with clear heads on those with strong sinews; in short, society is so
constituted that what each has he has for all, and what all have they have for
each. The principle of the division of labour is brought in; and in a
wellordered community the general wealth and well-being of the whole are better
promoted by the interchange of offices, than if each person within himself had a
little stock of all that he required.
The same law of distribution
prevails in the Church of Christ. It was exemplified in an interesting way in
the case of our Lord's apostles. No one of these was a duplicate of another.
Four of them, taking in Paul, were types of varieties which have been found in
all ages of the Church. In a remarkable paper in the Contemporary Review,
Professor Godet of Neuchatel, after delineating the characteristics of Peter,
James, John, and Paul, remarked what an interesting thing it was, that four men
of such various temperaments should all have found supreme satisfaction in Jesus
of Nazareth, and should have yielded up to Him the homage and service of their
lives. And throughout the history of the Church, the distribution of gifts has
been equally marked. Chrysostom and Augustine, Jerome and Ambrose, Bernard and
Anselm, were all of the same stock, but not of the same type. At the Reformation
men of marked individuality were provided for every country. Germany had Luther
and Melancthon; France, Calvin and Coligny; Switzerland, Zwingle and Farel,
Viret and OEcolampadius; Poland, A-Lasco; Scotland, Knox; England, Cranmer,
Latimer, and Hooper. The missionary field has in like manner been provided for.
India has had her Schwartz, her Carey, her Duff, and a host of others; China her
Morrison, Burmah her Judson, Polynesia her Williams, Africa her Livingstone. The
most unattractive and inhospitable spots have been supplied. Greenland was not
too cold for the Moravians, nor the leper-stricken communities of India or
Africa too repulsive. And never were Christian men more disposed than to-day to
honour that great Christian law of distribution - "Go ye into all the world, and
preach the gospel to every creature."
It was a great providential
law, therefore, that was recognised in the partition of the land of Canaan among
the tribes. Provision was thus made for so scattering the people that they
should occupy the whole country, and become adapted to the places where they
settled, and to the pursuits proper to them. Even where there seems to us to
have been a mere random distribution of places, there may have been underlying
adaptations for them, or possibilities of adaptation known only to God; at all
events the law of adaptation would take effect, by which a man becomes adapted
and attached to the place that not only gives him a home but the means of
living, and by which, too, he becomes a greater adept in the methods of work
which ensure success.
3. Still further, in the
allocation of the tribes in their various territories we have an instance of the
way in which God designed the earth to minister most effectually to the wants of
man. We do not say that the method now adopted in Canaan was the only plan of
distributing land that God ever sanctioned; very probably it was the same method
as had prevailed among the Canaanites; but it is beyond doubt that, such as it
was, it was sanctioned by God for His chosen people.
It was a system of peasant
proprietorship. The whole landed property of the country was divided among the
citizens. Each freeborn Israelite was a landowner, possessing his estate by a
tenure, which, so long as the constitution was observed, rendered its permanent
alienation from his family impossible. At the fiftieth year, the year of
jubilee, every inheritance returned, free of all encumbrance, to the
representatives of the original proprietor. The arrangement was equally opposed
to the accumulation of overgrown properties in the hands of the few, and to the
loss of all property on the part of the many. The extremes of wealth and poverty
were alike checked and discouraged, and the lot eulogised by Agur - a moderate
competency, neither poverty nor riches, became the general condition of the
citizens.
It is difficult to tell what
extent of land fell to each family. The portion of the land divided by Joshua
has been computed at twenty-five million acres. Dividing this by 600,000, the
probable number of families at the time of the settlement, we get forty-two
acres as the average size of each property. For a Roman citizen, seven acres was
counted enough to yield a moderate maintenance, so that even in a country of
ordinary productiveness the extent of the Hebrew farms would, before further
subdivision became necessary, have been ample. When the population increased the
inheritance would of course have to be subdivided. But for several generations
this, so far from an inconvenience, would be a positive benefit. It would bring
about a more complete development of the resources of the soil. The great rule
of the Divine economy was thus honoured - nothing was lost.
See Wines
on the "Laws of the Ancient Hebrews," p. 388.
There is no reason to suppose
that the peasant proprietorship of the Israelites induced a stationary and
stagnant condition of society, or reduced it to one uniform level - a mere
conglomeration of men of uniform wealth, resources, and influence. Though the
land was divided equally at first, it could not remain so divided long. In the
course of providence, when the direct heirs failed, or when a man married a
female proprietor, two or more properties would belong to a single family.
Increased capital, skill and industry, or unusual success in driving out the
remaining Canaanites, would tend further to the enlargement of properties.
Accordingly we meet with "men of great possessions," like Jair the Gileadite,
Boaz of Bethlehem, Nabal of Carmel, or Barzillai the Gileadite, even in the
earlier periods of Jewish history.* There was a sufficient number of men of
wealth to give a pleasing variety and healthful impulse to society, without
producing the evils of enormous accumulation on the one hand, or frightful
indigence on the other.**
*Judges 10:4;
Ruth
2:1; 1 Samuel 25:2; 2 Samuel 17:27. **See the
author's essay “An Old Key to our Social Problems" in "Counsel and Cheer for the
Battle of Life."
We in this country, after
reaching the extreme on the opposite side, are now trying to get back in the
direction of this ancient system. All parties seem now agreed that something of
the nature of peasant proprietorship is necessary to solve the agrarian problem
in Ireland and in Great Britain too. It is only the fact that in Britain
commercial enterprise and emigration afford so many outlets for the energies of
our landless countrymen that has tolerated the abuses of property so long among
us, - the laws of entail and primogeniture, the accumulation of property far
beyond the power of the proprietor to oversee or to manage, the employment of
land agents acting solely for the proprietor, and without that sense of
responsibility or that interest in the welfare of the people which is natural to
the proprietor himself. It is little wonder that theories of land-possession
have risen up which are as impracticable in fact as they are wild and lawless in
principle. Such desperate imaginations are the fruit of despair - absolute
hopelessness of getting back in any other way to a true land law, - to a state
of things in which the land would yield the greatest benefit to the whole
nation. Not only ought it to supply food and promote health, but also a
familiarity with nature, and a sense of freedom, and thus produce contentment
and happiness, and a more kindly feeling among all classes. It seems to us one
of the most interesting features of the land law recently brought in for Ireland
that it tends towards an arrangement of the land in the direction of God's early
designs regarding it. If it be feasible for Ireland, why not have it for England
and Scotland? Some may scout such matters as purely secular, and not only
unworthy of the interference of religious men, but when advocated by them as
fitted to prejudice spiritual religion. It is a narrow view. All that is right
is religious; all that is according to the will of God is spiritual. Whatever
tends to realize the prayer of Agur is good for rich and poor alike: ''Give me
neither poverty nor riches; feed me with food convenient for me."
4. Lastly, in the arrangements
for the distribution of the land among the twelve tribes we may note a proof of
God's interest in the temporal comfort and prosperity of men. It is not God that
has created the antithesis of secular and spiritual, as if the two interests
were like a see-saw, so that whenever the one went up the other must go down.
Things in this world are made to be enjoyed, and the enjoyment of them is
agreeable to the will of God, provided we use them as not abusing them. If
Scripture condemns indulgence in the pleasures of life, it is when these
pleasures are preferred to the higher joys of the Spirit, or when they are
allowed to stand in the way of a nobler life and a higher reward. In ordinary
circumstances God intends men to be fairly comfortable; He does not desire life
to be a perpetual struggle, or a dismal march to the grave. The very words in
which Christ counsels us to consider the lilies and the ravens, instead of
worrying ourselves about food and clothing, show this; for, under the Divine
plan, the ravens are comfortably fed, and the lilies are handsomely clothed.
This is the Divine plan; and if those who enjoy a large share of the comforts of
life are often selfish and worldly, it is only another proof how much a wrong
spirit may pervert the gifts of God and turn them to evil. The characteristic of
a good man, when he enjoys a share of worldly prosperity, is, that he does not
let the world become his idol, - it is his servant, it is under his feet; he
jealously guards against its becoming his master. His effort is to make a friend
of the mammon of unrighteousness, and to turn every portion of it with which he
may be entrusted to such a use for the good of others, that when at last he
gives in his account, as steward to his Divine Master, he may do so with joy,
and not with grief. |