INTRODUCTION TO JOSHUA
I. NAME
OF THE BOOK
A. The
name comes from Moses' successor and the chief character of the book
B. His
name (BDB 221) is made up of two Hebrew terms:
1. YHWH
(J plus a vowel)
2. salvation
(Hoshea)
C. It
is exactly the same Hebrew name (cf. Acts 7:45) as Jesus (Matt. 1:21).
II. CANONIZATION—Joshua
is the first book of the section of the Hebrew canon known as "the
Prophets." This section is divided into two parts:
A. the
former prophets which included Joshua—Kings (except Ruth)
B. the
latter prophets which included Isaiah—Malachi (except Daniel and Lamentations)
III. GENRE
A. These
historical books continue the history of God's people which began in Genesis.
It is not a western chronological history, but a selective theological history.
This does not mean to imply that it is not true or accurate, but it does mean
that it selected out certain events to teach theological truths about God, man,
sin, salvation, etc. In this sense it is similar to the Gospels and Acts of the
New Testament.
B. History
for the Jews was not cyclical, like its surrounding neighbors, based on the
cycles of nature, but it was "teleological." It had a goal, a
purpose. God was moving toward a predetermined goal, i.e., the redemption of a
fallen world.
IV. AUTHORSHIP
A. The
book itself is anonymous.
B. The
traditional author is the chief character of the book
1. His
name was originally Hoshea ("salvation"), Num. 13:8
2. Moses
changed his name to Joshua ("YHWH" and "salvation"), Num.
13:16; Deut. 32:44
3. For
some unknown reason his name is spelled in four different ways
a. Yeshoshu's,
(common) Joshua 1
b. Yehoshu's
Deut. 3:21
c. Hoshe'a,
Deut. 32:44
d. Yeshu'a,
Neh. 8:17
C. Baba
Bathra 14b (a book of the Talmud) says that Joshua wrote the book except
for the account of his death which was recorded by Eleazar, the priest (Jos. 24:29-30).
Eleazar's son, Phinehas (Num. 25:7-13; 31:6-8; Jos. 22:10-34), wrote the
portion of the book which records Eleazar's death (Jos. 24:31-33).
D. Joshua
the man
1. born
in slavery in Egypt
2. one
of the twelve spies (from the tribe of Ephraim cf. Jos. 19:50; 24:30; 1 Chr.
7:27), only he and Caleb brought a faith report (Num. 14:26-34)
3. Moses'
faithful helper throughout the Exodus experience. The only one who went up Mt.
Sinai with Moses (half-way—Exod. 24:13-14)
4. Commander
of the Israeli army (Exod. 17:8-13)
5. Named
Moses' successor in Num. 27:15-23; Deut. 3:18-22; 31:1-8
6. Led
the conquest of Canaan as Moses' successor (Deut. 31:23)
E. Some
evidence for contemporary (immediately after Joshua's day) authorship:
1. The
book states Joshua could write (cf. Jos. 8:32; 24:26).
2. It
is obviously eye-witness material.
a. "We"
Jos. 5:1 (MSS variation)
b. "Joshua
circumcised them" (Jos. 5:7-8)
c. Joshua's
private encounter with the Angel of the Lord (Jos.
5:13-15).
d. "She
(Rahab) has lived in the midst of Israel to this day" (Jos. 6:25). This is
not a later editor but an eye-witness contemporary.
3. He
used some written sources.
a. The
Book of Jashar, (10:13, cf. 2 Sam. 1:18) which were war poems of Israel.
b. "In
a book," Jos. 18:9
4. The
accurate listing of the names of ancient cities fits a contemporary author, not
a later editor(s).
a. Jerusalem
called Jebus (Jos. 15:8,63; 18:16, 28)
b. Hebron
called Kiriath-arba (Jos. 14:15; 15:13-14)
c. Kiriath—jerrim
is called Baalah (Jos. 15:9, 10)
d. Sidon
is referred to as the major Phoenician city, not Tyre (Jos. 11:8; 13:6; 19:28),
which later became the chief city.
5. Joshua,
like the Pentateuch, has some editorial additions.
a. Joshua's
death
b. the
later conquest of Hebron (Jos. 14:6-15, 15:13-14)
c. the
later conquest of Debir (Jos. 15:14, 49)
d. Dan's
migration north (Jos. 19:47)
e. the
phrase "until this day" occurs many times which shows a later edition
(Jos. 4:9; 5:9; 6:25; 7:26 [twice]; 8:28-29; 9:27; 10:27; 13:13; 14:14; 15:63;
16:10; 22:3).
E. Modern
Scholarship
1. Note
the similarities between the Pentateuch and Joshua (hexateuch theory).
a. style
b. vocabulary
2. The
Documentary Hypothesis of J, E, D, P sees the book as written over a long
period of time by an editorial process.
a. J
source wrote the parts of Jos. 1-12 which focus on individual battles (950-850 b.c.).
b. E
source wrote the parts of Jos. 1-12 which focus on united campaign (750 b.c.).
c. A
combination of J & E occurred around 650 b.c. in
which most of J was excluded.
d. The
book was reedited by the priest/prophet of Josiah's day who wrote Deuteronomy.
This person or group is called the Deuteronomist source. This source also wrote
the book of Deuteronomy in order to strengthen Josiah's reform in 621 b.c. by focusing on Jerusalem as the only true sanctuary.
e. The
P source was a group of priests who wrote Jos. 13-21 in the 400 b.c. period.
f. Still
further supposed additions were made in the third century b.c.
3. Notice
the presuppositions of the theory! Notice how it cuts the text from its
historical setting and contemporary author. I reject this as a modern attempt
to analyze ancient texts in light of modern literary theories. However, it must
be stated:
a. The
book is anonymous.
b. Joshua's
death, like Moses, is recorded in the book.
c. There
has been some on-going editing of the OT books.
d. We
accept the process of formation that produced the OT as inspired.
4. Evidence
against a Hexateuch (Genesis — Joshua).
a. in
Jewish tradition there is clear distinction between the five books of Moses
(the Pentateuch) and Joshua, which starts "the prophets" section of
the Hebrew canon:
(1)
Ben Sira, the author of Ecclesiasticus written about 185 b.c., makes a distinction, Jos. 48:22-45:12.
(2) Flavius
Josephus in his book Contra Apioness 1:7ff makes a distinction.
(3) The
closing scribal note of the Masoretic Text (MT) of the Pentateuch makes a
distinction.
(4) The
weekly Bible readings of the Synagogue called "the Haphtaroth" make a
distinction.
(5) the
Samaritans took the Pentateuch as Scripture but not Joshua.
b. Internal
evidence (Young, p. 158).
(1)
There is a special use of the personal pronoun in Joshua that is not in the
Pentateuch.
(2) The
city of Jericho is spelled differently.
(3)
The title for Deity, "the God of Israel," occurs in Joshua 14 times
but never in the Pentateuch. We must admit that there is so much we do not know
about the formation of these OT books into their current state.
V. SOURCES
FOR CORROBORATION OF HISTORICAL SETTING
A.
Archaeology has shown that most of the large walled cities of Canaan were
destroyed and rapidly rebuilt about 1250 b.c.
1. Hazor
2. Lachish
3. Bethel
4. Debir
(formerly called Kerioth Sepher, Jos. 15:15).
B. Archaeology
has not been able to confirm or reject the biblical account of the fall of
Jericho. This is because the site is in such poor condition.
1. Weather/location
2. Later
rebuildings on old sites using older materials
3. Uncertainty
as to the dates of the layers
C. Archaeology
has found an altar on Mt. Ebal that might be connected to Jos. 8:30-31 (Deut.
27:2-9). It is very similar to a description found in the Mishnah (Talmud).
D. The
Ras Shamra texts found at Ugarit show the Canaanite life and religion of 1400s b.c.
1. Theirs
was a polytheistic nature worship (fertility cult).
2. El
was chief deity.
3. El's
consort was Asherah (later she is consort to Ba'al).
4. Their
son was Ba'al (Haddad), the storm god.
5. Ba'al
became the "high god" of the Canaanite pantheon. Anat was his
consort.
6. Their
ceremonies were similar to Isis and Osiris of Egypt
7. Ba'al
worship was focused on local "high places" or stone platforms (ritual
prostitution)
8. Ba'al
was symbolized by a raised stone pillar (phallic symbol), while Asherah or
Astarte was symbolized by a carved wooden stake, or live tree, which symbolized
"the tree of life"
E. Archaeology
has confirmed that the major empires of the region (Anatolia, Egypt, or
Mesopotamia) were unable to exercise influence in Palestine during this period
known as the Late Bronze Age (1550-1200 b.c.)
F. The
accurate listing of the names of ancient cities fits a contemporary author, not
a later editor(s).
1. Jerusalem
called Jebus (Jos. 15:8; 18:16, 28)
2. Hebron
called Kiritath-arba (Jos. 14:15; 15:13, 54; 20:7; 21:11)
3. Kiriath-jearim
is called Baalah (Jos. 15:9, 10)
4. Sidon
is referred to as the major Phoenician city not Tyre (Jos. 11:8; 19:28), which
later became the chief city
G. The
Hittite Treaty Pattern of the Second Millennium b.c.
1. The
Hittite treaties of the second millennium b.c. offer
us an ancient, historically contemporary parallel to the structure of
Deuteronomy (as well as Exodus - Leviticus and Joshua 24). This treaty pattern
changed by the first millennium b.c. This gives us
evidence for the historicity of Deuteronomy. For further reading in this area,
see G. E. Mendenhall's Law and Covenants in Israel and the Ancient Near East.
2. The
Hittite Treaty of the Second Millennium b.c. and it
Deuteronomy parallels
a. preamble
(Deut. 1:1-5, introduction of speaker, YHWH)
b. review
of the past acts of the King (Deut. 1:6-4:49, God's past acts for Israel)
c. treaty
terms (Deut. 5-26)
(1) general
(Deut. 5-11)
(2) specific
(Deut. 12-26)
d. results
of treaty (Deut. 27-29)
(1) benefits
(Deut. 28)
(2) consequences
(Deut. 27)
e. witness
of deity (Deut. 30:19; 31:19, also 32, Moses' son functions as a witness)
(1) a
copy in temple of the deity
(2) a
copy with the vassal to be read annually
(3) uniqueness
of the Hittite treaties from the later Assyrian and Syrian treaties
(a) the
historical review of the past acts of the king
(b) the
cursing section was last pronounced
3. The
Hittite Treaty Pattern of the Second Millennium and Its Parallels in Joshua
a. identification
of the King (Jos. 24:2)
b. narrative
of the King's great acts (Jos. 24:2-13)
c. covenant
obligations (Jos. 24:14,23)
d. instructions
for depositing the treaty in the sanctuary (Jos. 24:25-26)
e. the
deities of the parties involved invoked as witnesses (Jos. 24:22)
f. blessing
of fidelity; curses for violation (Jos. 24:20)
VII. LITERARY
UNITS (context)
A. The
geographical movements also form an outline for the book.
1. on
the Plains of Moab, Jos. 1-2
2. crossing
the Jordan River to Gilgal near Jericho, Jos. 3-4
3. the
central Canaan military campaign, Jos. 5:1-10:15
4. the
southern Canaan military campaign , Jos. 10:16-43
5. the
northern Canaan military campaign, Jos. 11:1-23
6. geographical
division of the land among the tribes, Jos. 13-21
B. A
Brief Outline
1. the
conquest of Canaan, Jos. 1-12
2. the
dividing of the Promised Land among the tribes, Jos. 13-21
3. Joshua's
final words and death, Jos. 22-24
VIII.
MAIN TRUTHS
A. It
demonstrates God's faithfulness to His promise to Abraham (Gen. 12:1-3) about
the land (Gen. 15:16).
B. It
continues the history begun in Genesis and brings it into a new period. During
this time, tribal associations were the central unifying factor. There was no
central government.
C. The
concept of "Holy War" seems so cruel to us but God warned the
Israelites against the sins of the Canaanites. As God removed them from the
land because of their sins (cf. Gen. 15:16; Deut. 9:5), so too, will He remove
the Jews for the same sins (the Exile, by Assyria and Babylon).
IX.
TERMS AND/OR PHRASES AND PERSONS TO BRIEFLY DEFINE
A.
Terms and/or phrases:
1.
the fords, 2:7 (NASB & NIV)
2.
flint knives, 5:2 (NASB & NIV)
3.
"a land flowing with milk and honey," 5:6 (NASB & NIV)
4.
"remove your sandals," 5:15 (NIV, "take off your sandals")
5.
"holy" (kadosh), 5:15
6.
"under the ban," (herem), 6:17 (NIV, "devoted")
7.
"sun stand still at Gibeon," 10:12 (NASB & NIV)
8.
"put your feet on the necks of these kings," 10:24 (NASB & NIV)
9.
(levitical cities), 21:1-3 (NIV, "Moses commanded that you give us cities
to live in")
10.
"the servant of the Lord," 24:29 (NASB & NIV)
B.
Persons to briefly identify:
1. Rahab,
2:1 3. Achan, 7:1
2.
"captain of the hosts of the Lord," 5:14 4. Zelophehad, 17:3 (NIV,
"commander of the army of the Lord,") 5. Phinehas, 22:12
X.
MAP LOCATIONS (by number)
1.
Great Sea, 1:4 9. the brook of Egypt (wadi al ‘arish),
2.
Shittim, 2:1 15:4 (NIV, "wadi of Egypt")
3.
Adam, 3:16 10. valley of Hinnom, 15:8
4.
Ai, 7:2 (NIV, "Valley of Ben Hinnom")
5.
Gibeon, 9:3 11. Shechem, 17:7
6.
Negev, 11:16 12. Megiddo, 17:11
7.
Arabah, 11:16 13. Shiloh, 18:1
8.
Heshbon, 12:5 14. Beersheba, 19:2
XI.
STUDENT CONTENT QUESTIONS TO BRIEFLY ANSWER
1.
How does God encourage Joshua as He did Moses (1:1ff; 5:13-15)?
2.
Explain how the Israelites had to cross the Jordan by faith (3).
3.
Why did the manna cease?
4.
Why was the Israeli army defeated at Ai?
5.
How did Gibeon trick Joshua?
6.
Is it certain that chapter 10 is a miracle? Why/why not?
7.
Explain the relationship between Levitical cities and cities of refuge.
8.
What is the problem that occurs in chapter 22?
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