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IT was at Shechem that
Joshua's last meeting with the people took place. The Septuagint makes it Shiloh
in one verse (Joshua 24:1), but Shechem in
another (Joshua 24:25); but there is no
sufficient reason for rejecting the common reading. Joshua might feel that a
meeting which was not connected with the ordinary business of the sanctuary, but
which was more for a personal purpose, a solemn leave-taking on his part from
the people, might be held better at Shechem. There was much to recommend that
place. It lay a few miles to the northwest of Shiloh, and was not only
distinguished (as we have already said) as Abraham's first resting-place in the
country, and the scene of the earliest of the promises given in it to him; but
likewise as the place where, between Mounts Ebal and Gerizim, the blessings and
curses of the law had been read out soon after Joshua entered the land, and the
solemn assent of the people given to them. And whereas it is said (Joshua
24:26) that the great stone set up as a witness was "by the sanctuary of
the Lord," this stone may have been placed at Shiloh after the meeting, because
there it would be more fully in the observation of the people as they came up to
the annual festivals (see 1 Samuel 1:7; 1 Samuel 1:9).
Shechem was therefore the scene of Joshua's farewell address. Possibly it was
delivered close to the well of Jacob and the tomb of Joseph; at the very place
where, many centuries later, the New Testament Joshua sat wearied with His
journey, and unfolded the riches of Divine grace to the woman of Samaria.
1. In the record of Joshua's
speech contained in the twenty-fourth Chapter, he begins by rehearsing the
history of the nation. He has an excellent reason for beginning with the revered
name of Abraham, because Abraham had been conspicuous for that very grace,
loyalty to Jehovah, which he is bent on impressing on them. Abraham had made a
solemn choice in religion. He had deliberately broken with one kind of worship,
and accepted another. His fathers had been idolaters, and he had been brought up
an idolater. But Abraham renounced idolatry for ever. He did this at a great
sacrifice, and what Joshua entreated of the people was, that they would be as
thorough and as firm as he was in their repudiation of idolatry. The rehearsal
of the history is given in the words of God to remind them that the whole
history of Israel had been planned and ordered by Him. He had been among them
from first to last; He had been with them through all the lives of the
patriarchs; it was He that had delivered them from Egypt by Moses and Aaron,
that had buried the Egyptians under the waters of the sea, that had driven the
Amorites out of the eastern provinces, had turned the curse of Balaam into a
blessing, had dispossessed the seven nations, and had settled the Israelites in
their pleasant and peaceful abodes.
We mark in this rehearsal the
well-known features of the national history, as they were always represented;
the frank recognition of the supernatural, with no indication of myth or legend,
with nothing of the mist or glamour in which the legend is commonly enveloped.
And, seeing that God had done all this for them, the inference was that He was
entitled to their heartiest loyalty and obedience. "Now therefore fear the Lord,
and serve Him in sincerity and in truth: and put away the gods which your
fathers served on the other side of the flood, and in Egypt; and serve ye the
Lord." It seems strange that at that very time the people needed to be called to
put away other gods. But this only shows how destitute of foundation the common
impression is, that from and after the departure from Egypt the whole host of
Israel were inclined to the law as it had been given by Moses. There was still a
great amount of idolatry among them, and a strong tendency towards it. They were
not a wholly reformed or converted people. This Joshua knew right well; he knew
that there was a suppressed fire among them liable to burst into a
conflagration; hence his aggressive attitude, and his effort to foster an
aggressive spirit in them; he must bind them over by every consideration to
renounce wholly all recognition of other gods, and to make Jehovah the one only
object of their worship. Never was a good man more in earnest, or more
thoroughly persuaded that all that made for a nation's welfare was involved in
the course which he pressed upon them.
2. But Joshua did not urge
this merely on the strength of his own conviction. He must enlist their reason
on his side; and for this cause he now called on them deliberately to weigh the
claims of other gods and the advantages of other modes of worship, and choose
that which must be pronounced the best. There were four claimants to be
considered: (1) Jehovah; (2) the Chaldaean gods worshipped by their ancestors;
(3) the gods of the Egyptians; and (4) the gods of the Amorites among whom they
dwelt. Make your choice between these, said Joshua, if you are dissatisfied with
Jehovah. But could there be any reasonable choice between these gods and
Jehovah? It is often useful, when we hesitate as to a course, to set down the
various reasons for and against, - it may be the reasons of our judgment against
the reasons of our feelings; for often this course enables us to see how utterly
the one outweighs the other. May it not be useful for us to do as Joshua urged
Israel to do?
If we set down the reasons for
making God, God in Christ, the supreme object of our worship, against those in
favour of the world, how infinitely will the one scale outweigh the other! In
the choice of a master, it is reasonable for a servant to consider which has the
greatest claim upon him; which is intrinsically the most worthy to be served;
which will bring him the greatest advantages; which will give him most inward
satisfaction and peace; which will exercise the best influence on his character,
and which comes recommended most by old servants whose testimony ought to weigh
with him. If these are the grounds of a reasonable choice in the case of a
servant engaging with a master, how much more in reference to the Master of our
spirits! Nothing can be plainer than that the Israelites in Joshua's time had
every conceivable reason for choosing their fathers' God as the supreme object
of their worship, and that any other course would have been alike the guiltiest
and the silliest that could have been taken. Are the reasons a whit less
powerful why every one of us should devote heart and life and mind and soul to
the service of Him who gave Himself for us, and has loved us with an everlasting
love?
3. But Joshua is fully
prepared to add example to precept. Whatever you do in this matter, my mind is
made up, my course is clear - "as for me and my house, we will serve Jehovah."
He reminds us of a general exhorting his troops to mount the deadly breach and
dash into the enemy's citadel. Strong and urgent are his appeals; but stronger
and more telling is his act when, facing the danger right in front, he rushes
on, determined that, whatever others may do, he will not flinch from his duty.
It is the old Joshua back again, the Joshua that alone with Caleb stood faithful
amid the treachery of the spies, that has been loyal to God all his life, and
now in the decrepitude of old age is still prepared to stand alone rather than
dishonour the living God. ''As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord." He
was happy in being able to associate his. house with himself as sharing his
convictions and his purpose. He owed this, in all likelihood, to his own firm
and intrepid attitude throughout his life. His house saw how consistently and
constantly he recognised the supreme claims of Jehovah. Not less clearly did
they see how constantly he experienced the blessedness of his choice.
4. Convinced by his arguments,
moved by his eloquence, and carried along by the magnetism of his example, the
people respond with enthusiasm, deprecate the very thought of forsaking Jehovah
to serve other gods, and recognise most cordially the claims he has placed them
under, by delivering them from Egypt, preserving them in the wilderness, and
driving out the Amorites from their land. After this an ordinary leader would
have felt quite at ease, and would have thanked God that his appeal had met with
such a response, and that such demonstration had been given of the loyalty of
the people. But Joshua knew something of their fickle temper. He may have called
to mind the extraordinary enthusiasm of their fathers when the tabernacle was in
preparation; the singular readiness with which they had contributed their most
valued treasures, and the grievous change they underwent after the return of the
spies. Even an enthusiastic burst like this is not to be trusted. He must go
deeper; he must try to induce them to think more earnestly of the matter, and
not trust to the feeling of the moment.
5. Hence he draws a somewhat
dark picture of Jehovah's character. He dwells on those attributes which are
least agreeable to the natural man, His hohness, His jealousy, and His
inexorable opposition to sin. When he says, "He will not forgive your
transgressions nor your sins," he cannot mean that God is not a God of
forgiveness. He cannot wish to contradict the first part of that gracious
memorial which God gave to Moses: ''The Lord, the Lord God merciful and
gracious, longsuffering and abundant in goodness and truth, forgiving iniquity
and transgression and sin." His object is to emphasize the clause, "and that
will by no means clear the guilty." Evidently he means that the sin of idolatry
is one that God cannot pass over, cannot fail to punish, until, probably through
terrible judgments, the authors of it are brought to contrition, and humble
themselves in the dust before him. "Ye cannot serve the Lord," said Joshua;
"take care how you undertake what is beyond your strength!" Perhaps he wished to
impress on them the need of Divine strength for so difficult a duty. Certainly
he did not change their purpose, but only drew from them a more resolute
expression. ''Nay; but we will serve the Lord, And Joshua said unto the people,
Ye are witnesses against yourselves that ye have chosen the Lord to serve Him.
And they said, We are witnesses."
6. And now Joshua comes to a
point which had doubtless been in his mind all the time, but which he had been
waiting for a favourable opportunity to bring forward. He had pledged the people
to an absolute and unreserved service of God, and now he demands a practical
proof of their sincerity. He knows quite well that they have "strange gods"
among them. Teraphim, images, or ornaments having a reference to the pagan gods,
he knows that they possess. And he does not speak as if this were a rare thing,
confined to a very few. He speaks as if it were a common practice, generally
prevalent. Again we see how far from the mark we are when we think of the whole
nation as cordially following the religion of Moses, in the sense of renouncing
all other gods. Minor forms of idolatry, minor recognitions of the gods of the
Chaldaeans and the Egyptians and the Amorites, were prevalent even yet. Probably
Joshua called to mind the scene that had occurred at that very place hundreds of
years before, when Jacob, rebuked by God, and obliged to remove from Shechem,
called on his household: ''Put away the strange gods that are among you, and be
clean, and change your garments. . . . And they gave unto Jacob all the strange
gods which were in the land, and all the ear-rings which were in their ears; and
Jacob hid them under the oak which was by Shechem." Alas! that, centuries later,
it was necessary for Joshua in the same place to issue the same order, - Put
away the gods which are among you, and serve ye the Lord. What a weed sin is,
and how it is for ever reappearing! And reappearing among ourselves too, in a
different variety, but essentially the same. For what honest and earnest heart
does not feel that there are idols and images among ourselves that interfere
with God's claims and God's glory as much as the teraphim and the ear-rings of
the Israelites did? The images of the Israelites were little images, and it was
probably at by-times and in retirement that they made use of them; and so, it
may not be on the leading occasions or in the outstanding work of our lives that
we are wont to dishonour God. But who that knows himself but must think with
humiliation of the numberless occasions on which he indulges little whims or
inclinations without thinking of the will of God; the many little acts of his
daily life on which conscience is not brought to bear; the disengaged state of
his mind from that supreme controlling influence which would bear on it if God
were constantly recognised as his Master? And who does not find that, despite
his endeavour from time to time to be more conscientious, the old habit, like a
weed whose roots have only been cut over, is ever showing itself alive?
7. And now comes the closing
and clinching transaction of this meeting at Shechem. Joshua enters into a
formal covenant with the people; he records their words in the book of the law
of the Lord; he takes a great stone and sets it up under an oak that was by the
sanctuary of the Lord; and he constitutes the stone a witness, as if it had
heard all that had been spoken by the Lord to them and by them to the Lord. The
covenant was a transaction invested with special solemnity among all Eastern
peoples, and especially among the Israelites. Many instances had occurred in
their history, of covenants with God, and of other covenants, like that of
Abraham with Abimelech, or that of Jacob with Laban. The wanton violation of a
covenant was held an act of gross impiety, deserving the reprobation alike of
God and man. When Joshua got the people bound by a transaction of this sort, he
seemed to obtain a new guarantee for their fidelity; a new barrier was erected
against their lapsing into idolatry. It was natural for him to expect that some
good would come of it, and no doubt it contributed to the happy result; "for
Israel served the Lord all the days of Joshua, and all the days of the elders
which overlived Joshua, and which had known all the works of the Lord that He
had done for Israel." And yet it was but a temporary barrier against a flood
which seem.ed ever to be gathering strength unseen, and preparing for another
fierce discharge of its disastrous waters.
At the least, this meeting
secured for Joshua a peaceful sunset, and enabled him to sing his "Nunc
dimittis." The evil which he dreaded most was not at work as the current of life
ebbed away from him; it was his great privilege to look round him and see his
people faithful to their God. It does not appear that Joshua had any very
comprehensive or far-reaching aims with reference to the moral training and
development of the people. His idea of religion seems to have been, a very
simple loyalty to Jehovah, in opposition to the perversions of idolatry. It is
not even very plain whether or not he was much impressed by the capacity of true
religion to pervade all the relations and engagements of men, and brighten and
purify the whole life. We are too prone to ascribe all the virtues to the good
men of the Old Testament, forgetting that of many virtues there was only a
progressive development, and that it is not reasonable to look for excellence
beyond the measure of the age. Joshua was a soldier, a soldier of the Old
Testament, a splendid man for his day, but not beyond his day. As a soldier, his
business was to conquer his enemies, and to be loyal to his heavenly Master. It
did not lie to him to enforce the numberless bearings which the spirit of trust
in God might have on all the interests of life - on the family, on books, on
agriculture and commerce, or on the development of the humanities, and the
courtesies of society. Other men were raised up from time to time, many other
men, with commission from God to devote their energies to such matters.
It is quite possible that,
under Joshua, religion did not appear in very close relation to many things that
are lovely and of good report. A celebrated English writer (Matthew Arnold) has
asked whether, if Virgil or Shakespeare had sailed in the Mayflower with the
puritan fathers, they would have found themselves in congenial society. The
question is not a fair one, for it supposes that men whose destiny was to fight
as for very life, and for what was dearer than life, were of the same mould with
others who could devote themselves in peaceful leisure to the amenities of
literature, Joshua had doubtless much of the ruggedness of the early soldier,
and it is not fair to blame him for want of sweetness and light. Very probably
it was from him that Deborah drew somewhat of her scorn, and Jael, the wife of
Heber, of her rugged courage. The whole Book of Judges is penetrated by his
spirit. He was not the apostle of charity or gentleness. He had one virtue, but
it was the supreme virtue - he honoured God. Wherever God's claims were
involved, he could see nothing, listen to nothing, care for nothing, but that He
should obtain His due. Wherever God's claims were acknowledged and fulfilled,
things were essentially right, and other interests would come right. For his
absolute and supreme loyalty to his Lord he is entitled to our highest
reverence. This loyalty is a rare virtue, in the sublime proportions in which it
appeared in him. When a man honours God in this way, he has something of the
appearance of a supernatural being, rising high above the fears and the
feebleness of poor humanity. He fills his fellows with a sort of awe.
Among the reformers, the
puritans, and the covenanters such men were often found. The best of them,
indeed, were men of this type, and very genuine men they were. They were not men
whom the world loved; they were too jealous of God's claims for that, and too
severe on those who refused them. And we have still the type of the fighting
Christian. But alas! it is a type subject to fearful degeneration. Loyalty to
human tradition is often substituted, unconsciously no doubt, for loyalty to
God. The sublime purity and nobility of the one passes into the obstinacy, the
self-righteousness, the self-assertion of the other. When a man of the genuine
type does appear, men are arrested, astonished, as if by a supernatural
apparition. The very rareness, the eccentricity of the character, secures a
respectful homage. And yet, who can deny that it is the true representation of
what every man should be who says, "I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Maker
of heaven and earth"?
After a life of a hundred and
ten years the hour comes when Joshua must die. We have no record of the inner
workings of his spirit, no indication of his feelings in view of his sins, no
hint as to the source of his trust for forgiveness and acceptance. But we
readily think of him as the heir of the faith of his father Abraham, the heir of
the righteousness that is by faith, and as passing calmly into the presence of
his Judge, because, like Jacob, he has waited for His salvation. He was well
entitled to the highest honours that the nation could bestow on his memory; for
all owed to him their homes and their rest. His name must ever be coupled with
that of the greatest hero of the nation: Moses led them out of the house of
bondage; Joshua led them into the house of rest. Sometimes, as we have already
said, it has been attempted to draw a sharp antithesis between Moses and Joshua,
the one as representing the law, and the other as representing the gospel. The
antithesis is more in word than in deed. Moses represented both gospel and law,
for he brought the people out of the bondage of Egypt; he brought them to their
marriage altar, and he unfolded to the bride the law of her Divine husband's
house. Joshua conducted the bride to her home, and to the rest which she was to
enjoy there; but he was not less emphatic than Moses in insisting that she must
be an obedient wife, following the law of her husband. It were difficult to say
which of them was the more instructive type of Christ, both in feeling and in
act. The love of each for his people was most intense, most self-denying; and
neither of them, had he been called on, would have hesitated to surrender his
life for their sake.
It is probably a mere
incidental arrangement that the book concludes with a record of the burial of
Joseph, and of the death and burial of Eleazar, the son of Aaron. In point of
time, we can hardly suppose that the burial of Joseph in the field of his father
Jacob in Shechem was delayed till after the death of Joshua. It would be a most
suitable transaction after the division of the country, and especially after the
territory that contained the field had been assigned to Ephraim, Joseph's son.
It would be like a great doxology - a Te Deum celebration of the fulfilment of
the promise in which, so many centuries before, Joseph had so nobly shown his
trust.
But why did not Joseph's bones
find their resting-place in the time-honoured cave of Macpelah? Why was he not
laid side by side with his father, who would doubtless have liked right well
that his beloved son should be laid at his side? We can only say in regard to
Joseph as in regard to Rachel, that the right of burial in that tomb seems to
have been limited to the wife who was recognised by law, and to the son who
inherited the Messianic promise. The other members of the family must have their
resting-place elsewhere; moreover, there was this benefit in Joseph having his
burial-place at Shechem, that it was in the very centre of the country, and near
the spot where the tribes were to assemble for the great annual festivals. For
many a generation the tomb of Joseph would be a memorable witness to the people;
by it the patriarch, though dead, would continue to testify to the faithfulness
of God; while he would point the hopes of the godly people still onward to the
future, when the last clause of the promise to Abraham would be emphatically
fulfilled, and that Seed would come forth among them in whom all the families of
the earth would be blessed.
Was there a reason for
recording the death of Eleazar? Certainly there was a fitness in placing
together the record of the death of Joshua and the death of Eleazar. For Joshua
was the successor of Moses, and Eleazar was the successor of Aaron. The
simultaneous mention of the death of both is a significant indication that the
generation to which they belonged had now passed away. A second age after the
departure from Egypt had now slipped into the silent past. It was a token that
the duties and responsibilities of life had now come to a new generation, and a
silent warning to them to remember how
"Time like an ever-rolling
stream Bears all its sons away; They fly forgotten, as a dream Dies at the
opening day."
How short the life of a
generation seems when we look back to these distant days! How short the life of
the individual when he realizes that his journey is practically ended! How vain
the expectation once cherished of an indefinite future, when there would be
ample time to make up for all the neglects of earlier years! God give us all to
know the true meaning of that word, ''the time is short," and "so teach us to
number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom!" |