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NEXT to Judah, the most
important tribe was Joseph; that is, the double tribe to which his two sons gave
names, Ephraim and Manasseh. In perpetual acknowledgment of the service rendered
by Joseph to the family, by keeping them alive in the famine, it was ordained by
Jacob that his two sons should rank with their uncles as founders of tribes (Genesis
48:5). It was also prophetically ordained by Jacob that Ephraim, the
younger son, should take rank before Manasseh (Genesis
48:19). The privilege of the double portion, however, remained to
Manasseh as the elder son. Hence, in addition to his lot in Gilead and Bashan,
he had also a portion in Western Palestine. But Ephraim was otherwise the more
important tribe; and when the separation of the two kingdoms took place, Ephraim
often gave his name to the larger division. And in the beautiful prophetic
vision of Ezekiel, when the coming re-union of the nation is symbolized, it is
on this wise: "Son of man, take thou one stick and write upon it, For Judah, and
for the children of Israel his companions; then take another stick and write
upon it. For Joseph, the stick of Ephraim, and for all the house of Israel his
companions, and join them for thee one to another into one stick, that they may
become one in thine hand" (Ezekiel 37:16-17).
The superiority allotted to Ephraim was not followed by very happy results; it
raised an arrogant spirit in that tribe, of which we find some indications in
the present Chapter, but more pronounced and mischievous manifestations further
on.
The delimitation of the tribes
of Ephraim and Manasseh is not easy to follow, particularly in the Authorized
Version, which not only does not translate very accurately, but uses some
English expressions of uncertain meaning. The Revised Version is much more
helpful, correcting both classes of defects in its predecessor. Yet even the
Revised Version sometimes leaves us at a loss. It has been supposed, indeed,
that some words have dropped out of the text. Moreover, it has not been found
possible to ascertain the position of all the places mentioned. Uncertainty as
to the precise boundaries cannot but prevail, and differences of opinion among
commentators. But the uncertainty applies only to the minuter features of the
description, it bears chiefly on the points at which one tribe adjoined another.
The portion of the land occupied by Ephraim and Manasseh is, on the whole, very
clearly known, just as their influence on the history of the country is very
distinctly marked.
In point of fact, the lot of
Joseph in Western Palestine was, in many respects, the most desirable of any. It
was a fertile and beautiful district. It embraced the valley of Shechem, the
first place of Abraham's sojourn, and reckoned by travellers to be one of the
most beautiful spots, some say the most beautiful spot, in Palestine. Samaria,
at the head of another valley celebrated for its "glorious beauty," and for its
"fatness " or fertility (Isaiah 28:1), was at
no great distance, Tirzah, a symbol of beauty, in the Song of Solomon (Song
of Solomon 6:4) was another of its cities, as was also Jezreel, "a lovely
position for a capital city" (Tristram). On the other hand, this portion of the
country laboured under the disadvantage of not having been well cleared of its
original inhabitants. The men of Ephraim did not exert themselves as much as the
men of Judah. This is apparent from what is said in
Joshua 16:10, ''They drove not out the Canaanites that dwelt in Gezer ";
and also from Joshua's answer to the request of Ephraim for more land (Joshua
17:15-18).
As we have said already, we
have no information regarding Joshua's conquest of this part of the country. It
seems to have been run over more superficially than the north and the south.
Consequently the ancient inhabitants were still very numerous, and they were
formidable likewise, because they had chariots of iron.
In the definition of
boundaries we have first a notice applicable to Joseph as a whole, then
specifications applicable to Ephraim and Manasseh respectively. The southern
border is delineated twice with considerable minuteness, and its general course,
extending from near the Jordan at Jericho, past Bethel and Luz, and down the
pass of Bethhoron to the Mediterranean, is clear enough. The border between
Ephraim and Manasseh is not so clear, nor the northern border of Manasseh. It is
further to be remarked that, while we have an elaborate statement of boundaries,
we have no list of towns in Ephraim and Manasseh such as we have for the tribe
of Judah. This gives countenance to the supposition that part of the ancient
record has somehow dropped out. We find, however, another statement about towns
which is of no small significance. At Joshua 16:9
we find that several cities were appropriated to Ephraim that were situated in
the territory of Manasseh. And in like manner several cities were given to
Manasseh which were situated in the tribes of Issachar and Ashen Of these last
the names are given. They were Bethshean, Ibleam, Dor, Endor, Taanach, and
Megiddo. Some of them were famous in after history. Bethshean was the city to
whose wall the bodies of Saul and his sons were fixed after the fatal battle of
Gilboa; Ibleam was in the neighbourhood of Naboth's vineyard (2
Kings 9:25; 2 Kings 9:27); Endor was the place of abode of the woman with
a familiar spirit whom Saul went to consult; Taanach was the battle-field of the
kings of Canaan whom Barak defeated, and of whom Deborah sung, -
"The kings
came and fought; Then fought the kings of Canaan, In Taanach by the waters of
Megiddo: They took no gain of money " (Judges 5:19).
As for Megiddo, many a battle
was fought in its plain. So early as the days of Thotmes III. of Egypt (about
1600 B.C.) it was famous in battle, for in an inscription on the temple of
Karnak, containing a record of his conquests in Syria, Megiddo flourishes as the
scene of a great conflict. The saddest and most notable of its battles was that
between King Josiah and the Egyptians, in which that good young king was killed.
In fact, Megiddo obtained such notoriety as a battle-field that in the
Apocalypse (Revelation 16:16) Armageddon
(Har-magedon, R.V.) is the symbol of another kind of battle-ground - the
meeting-place for ''the war of the great day of God the Almighty."
We can only conjecture why
these cities, most of which were in Issachar, were given to Manasseh. They were
strongholds in the great plain of Esdraelon, where most of the great battles of
Canaan were fought.
For the defence of the plain
it seemed important that these places should be held by a stronger tribe than
Issachar. Hence they appear to have been given to Manasseh. But, like Ephraim,
Manasseh was not able to hold them at first. ''The children of Manasseh could
not drive out the inhabitants of those cities; but the Canaanites would dwell in
that land. And it came to pass, when the children of Israel were waxen strong
that they put the Canaanites to task-work, and did not utterly drive them out"
(R.V.). This last verse appears to have been inserted at a later date, and it
agrees with 1 Chronicles 7:29, where several of
the same towns are enumerated, and it is added, "In these dwelt the children of
Joseph, the son of Israel."
Undoubtedly these sons of
Joseph occupied a position which gave them unrivalled opportunities of
benefiting their country. But with the exception of the splendid exploit of
Gideon, a man of Manasseh, and his little band, we hear of little in the history
that redounded to the credit of Joseph's descendants. Nobility of character is
not hereditary. Sometimes nature appears to spend all her intellectual and moral
wealth on the father, and almost to impoverish the sons. And sometimes the sons
live on the virtues of their fathers, and cannot be roused to the exertion or
the sacrifice needed to continue their work and maintain their reputation. A
humorous saying is recorded of an eminent pastor of the Waldensian Church who
found his people much disposed to live on the reputation of their fathers, and
tried in vain to get them to do as their fathers did; he said that they were
like the potato - the best part of them was under the ground. If you say, ''We
have Abraham for our father," take care that you say "it in the proper sense. Be
sure that you are following hard in his footsteps, and using his example as a
spur to move your languid energies, and not as a screen to conceal your
miserable defects. If you think of Abraham or of any forefather or body of
forefathers as a cover for your nakedness, or a compensation for your defects,
you are resorting to a device which has never proved successful in past ages,
and is not likely to change its character with you.
After the division, the vain,
self-important spirit of Ephraim broke out in a characteristic way. ''Why," said
he to Joshua, ''hast thou given me but one lot and one part for an inheritance,
seeing I am a great people, forasmuch as hitherto the Lord hath blessed me?" A
grumbling reference seems to be made here to his brother Manasseh, who had
received two lots, one on each side of the Jordan. At first it appears that
there was some reason in the complaint of Ephraim. The free part of his lot
seems to have been small, that is, the part not occupied by Canaanites. But we
cannot think that the whole inheritance of Ephraim was so small as we find
represented in the map of Major Conder, of the Palestine Exploration Fund, in
his "Handbook to the Bible," because it is said, both in the Authorized and in
the Revised Version, that his western boundary extended to the sea, while Major
Conder makes it cease much sooner. But, looking at the whole circumstances, it
is probable that Ephraim's complaint was dictated by jealousy of Manasseh, who
certainly had received the double inheritance.
Alas, how apt is the spirit of
discontent still to crop up when we compare our lot with that of others! Were we
quite alone, or were there no case for comparison, we might be content enough;
it is when we think how much more our brother has than we, that we are most
liable to murmur. And, bad though murmuring and grieving at the good of our
brother may be, it is by no means certain that the evil spirit will stop there.
At the very dawn of history we find Cain the murderer of his brother because the
one had the favour of God and not the other. What an evil feeling it is that
grudges to our brother a larger share of God's blessing; if at the beginning it
be not kept under it may carry us on to deeds that may well make us shudder.
Joshua dealt very wisely and
fearlessly with the complaint of Ephraim, though it was his own tribe. You say
you are a great people - be it so; but if you are a great people, you must be
capable of great deeds. Two great undertakings are before you now. There are
great woodlands in your lot that have not been cleared - direct your energies to
them, and they will afford you more room for settlements. Moreover, the
Canaanites are still in possession of a large portion of your lot; up and attack
them and drive them out, and you will be furnished with another area for
possession. Joshua accepted their estimate of their importance, but gave it a
very different practical turn. What they had wished him to do was to take away a
portion from some other tribe and give it as an extra allotment to them, so that
it would be theirs without labour or trouble. What Joshua did was to spur them
to courageous and self-denying exertion, in order that their object might be
gained through the instrumentality of their own labour. For the sickly sentiment
that desires a mine of gold to start into being and scatter its untold treasure
at our feet, he substituted the manly sentiment of the proverb, "No gains
without pains." ''The soul of the sluggard desireth and hath nothing; but the
hand of the diligent maketh rich." If they wished more land they must work for
it; they must not take idleness for their patron-saint.
We have all heard of the dying
father who informed his sons that there was a valuable treasure in a certain
field, and counselled them to set to work to find it. With great care they
turned up every morsel of the soil; but no treasure appeared, till, observing in
autumn what a rich crop covered the field, they came to understand that the
fruit of persevering labour was the treasure which their father meant. We have
heard, too, of a physician who was consulted by a rich man suffering cruelly
from gout, and asked if he had any cure for it. ''Yes," said the doctor, "live
on sixpence a day, and work for it." The same principle underlay the counsel of
Joshua. Of course it gratifies a certain part of our nature to get a mass of
wealth without working for it. But this is not the best part of our nature.
Probably in no class has the great object of life been so much lost, and the
habit of indolence and selfindulgence become so predominant as in that of young
men born to the possession of a great fortune, and never requiring to turn a
hand for anything they desired. After all, the necessity of work is a great
blessing. We speak of the curse of toil, but except when the labour is
excessive, or unhealthy in its conditions, or when it has to be prosecuted in
sickness or failing strength, it is not a curse but a blessing. Instead of being
ashamed of labour, we have cause rather to be proud of it. It guards from
numberless temptations; it promotes a healthy body and a healthy mind; it
increases the zest of life; it promotes cheerfulness and flowing spirits; it
makes rest and healthy recreation far sweeter when they come, and it gives us
affinity to the great Heavenly Worker, by whom, and through whom, and for whom
are all things.
This great principle of
ordinary life has its place too in the spiritual economy. The age is now past
that had for its favourite notion, that seclusion from the world and exemption
from all secular employment was the most desirable condition for a servant of
God. The experiment of the hermits was tried, but it was a failure. Seclusion
from the world and the consecration of the whole being to private acts of
devotion and piety were no success. He who moves about among his fellows, and
day by day knows the strain of labour, is more likely to prosper spiritually
than he who shuts himself up in a cell, and looks on all secular work as
pollution. It is not the spiritual invalid who is for ever feeling his pulse and
whom every whiff of wind throws into a fever of alarm, that grows up to the full
stature of the Christian; but the man who, like Paul, has his hands and his
heart for ever full, and whose every spiritual fibre gains strength and vitality
from his desires and labours for the good of others. And it is with churches as
with individuals. An idle church is a stagnant church, prone to strife, and to
all morbid experiences. A church that throws itself into the work of faith and
labour of love is far more in the way to be spiritually healthy and strong. It
was not for the good of the world merely, but of the church herself likewise,
that our Lord gave out that magnificent mot d'ordre - "Go ye into all the
world, and preach the gospel to every creature."
Before we pass from the
inheritance of the sons of Joseph, it is proper that we should direct attention
to an incident which may seem trifling to us, but which was evidently regarded
as of no little moment at the time. What we refer to is the petition presented
by the five daughters of Zelophehad, a member of the tribe of Manasseh, for an
inheritance in their tribe. Their father had no son, so that the family was
represented wholly by daughters. No fewer than four times the incident is
referred to, and the names of the five girls given in full (Numbers
26:33; Numbers 27:1-11; Numbers 36:11; Joshua
17:3). We know not if there be another case in Scripture of such
prominence given to names for no moral or spiritual quality, but simply in
connection with a law of property.
The question decided by their
case was the right of females to inherit property in land when there were no
heirs male in the family. We find that the young women themselves had to be
champions of their own cause. Evidently possessed of more than ordinary spirit,
they had already presented themselves before Moses, Eleazar the priest, and the
princes of the congregation, at the door of the tabernacle, and formally made a
claim to the inheritance that would have fallen to their father had he been
alive. The case was deemed of sufficient importance to be laid before the Lord,
because the decision on it would settle similar cases for the whole nation and
for all time. The decision was, that in such cases the women should inherit, but
under the condition that they should not marry out of their own tribe, so that
the property should not be transferred to another tribe. In point of fact, the
five sisters married their cousins, and thus kept the property in the tribe of
Manasseh.
The incident is interesting,
because it shows a larger regard to the rights of women than was usually
conceded at the time. Some have, indeed, found fault with the decision as not
going far enough. Why, they have asked, was the right of women to inherit land
limited to cases in which there were no men in the family? The decision implied
that if there had been one brother, he would have got all the land; the sisters
would have been entitled to nothing. The answer to this objection is, that had
the rights of women been recognised to this extent, it would have been too great
an advance on the public opinion of the time. It was not God's method to enjoin
laws absolutely perfect, but to enjoin what the conscience and public opinion of
the time might be fairly expected to recognise and support. It may be that under
a perfect system women ought to inherit property on equal terms with men. But
the Jewish nation was not sufficiently advanced for such a law. The benefit of
the enactment was that, when propounded, it met with general approval.
Certainly it was a
considerable advance on the ordinary practice of the nations. It established the
principle that woman was not a mere chattel, an inferior creature, subject to
the control of the man, with no rights of her own. But it was far from being the
first time when this principle obtained recognition. The wives of the patriarchs
- Sarah, Rebekah, Rachel - were neither chattels, nor drudges, nor concubines.
They were ladies, exerting the influence and enjoying the respect due to
cultivated, companionable women. And though the law of succession did not give
the females of the family equal rights with the males, it recognised them in
another way. While the eldest son succeeded to the family home and a double
portion of the land, he was expected to make some provision for his widowed
mother and unmarried sisters. In most cases the sisters came to be provided for
by marriage.
It is the circumstance that
among us so many women remain unmarried that has drawn so keen attention to
their rights, and already caused so much to be done, as no doubt more will be
done speedily, for enlarging their sphere and protecting their interests.
No doubt these spirited
daughters of Zelophehad conferred a great benefit on their sex in Israel. Their
names are entitled to grateful remembrance, as the names of all are who bring
about beneficial arrangements that operate in many directions and to all time.
Yet one would be sorry to think that this was the only service which they
rendered in their day. One would like to think of them as shedding over their
households and friends the lustre of those gentle, womanly qualities which are
the glory of the sex. Advocacy of public rights may be a high duty, for the
faithful discharge of which the highest praise is due; but such a career emits
little of the fragrance which radiates from a female life of faithful love,
domestic activity, and sacred devotion. What blessed ideals of life Christianity
furnishes for women even of middling talent and ordinary education! It is
beautiful to see distinguished talents, high gifts, and persuasive elements
directed to the advocacy of neglected claims. ''And yet I show unto you a more
excellent way." |