Joshua 7


Joshua 7 is the seventh chapter of the Book of Joshua in the Hebrew Bible or in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. According to Jewish tradition the book was attributed to Joshua, with additions by the high priests Eleazar and Phinehas, but modern scholars view it as part of the Deuteronomistic History, which spans the books of Deuteronomy to 2 Kings, attributed to nationalistic and devotedly Yahwistic writers during the time of the reformer Judean king Josiah in 7th century BCE. This chapter focuses on the first battle against Ai under the leadership of Joshua and Achan's sin, a part of a section comprising Joshua 5:13–12:24 about the conquest of Canaan.

Text

This chapter was originally written in the Hebrew language. It is divided into 26 verses.

Textual witnesses

Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Codex Cairensis, Aleppo Codex, and Codex Leningradensis. Fragments containing parts of this chapter in Hebrew were found among the Dead Sea Scrolls including 4Q47 with extant verses 12–17.
Extant ancient manuscripts of a translation into Koine Greek known as the Septuagint include Codex Vaticanus and Codex Alexandrinus. Fragments of the Septuagint Greek text containing this chapter is found in manuscripts such as Washington Manuscript I, and a reduced version of the Septuagint text is found in the illustrated Joshua Roll.

Analysis

The narrative of Israelites conquering the land of Canaan comprises verses 5:13 to 12:24 of the Book of Joshua and has the following outline:
The narrative of Joshua 7–8 combines the story of Achan's offence against the 'devoted things', and the battle report concerning Ai, as the two themes are linked.
Chapter 7 has the following chiastic structure:

Defeat at Ai (7:1–15)

After the triumphant conquest of Jericho, it emerges that the herem on Jericho was not completely executed by the Israelites, indicated by the word 'break faith' to mean 'rebellion against God' that brings severe punishment and the whole nation is affected by the sin of one person. Meanwhile, Joshua turns his attention to Ai a city east of Bethel in the central mountain ridge, to get an important foothold in the heartland. Joshua first sends spies, recalling both the first mission that he had authorized, and the earlier one sent by Moses. Whereas the account of fearful spies to Moses gave way to a false confidence which resulted in ignominious defeat, this time the message from the spies gave a false confidence resulting in similar defeat, and in both cases the people's hearts 'melt' at the apparent invincibility of the enemy, because YHWH withdraws his presence from them. Ironically, the fear felt by the Israelites here also directly reverses the fear felt by the Amorites before their own advance.
Joshua assumes the Mosaic role of intercessor when he prays together with the 'elders of Israel', while Israel, as a whole, cries to YHWH during this crisis. YHWH's reply to Joshua is the theological centre of the passage, revealing the problem, known to the reader since verses 1–2, but not yet to Joshua, that Israel was unfaithful in respect of the "ban", so now has become subject to the "ban" itself, as the sin against the "ban" is a 'breach of the covenant'. God now prescribes the harsh penalty for infringement of the "ban".

Verse 1

  • "Accursed thing" from, , also rendered as "devoted" thing, thing "under the ban", "what was set apart ".
  • "Achan": spelled as "Achar" in 1 Chronicles 2:7, thus declaring him "bringer of disaster of Israel"., although both verses use the same language to recount the "unfaithfulness" or "trespass" regarding the "accursed thing".

    Verse 6

Joshua's prostration and the elders dust-strewn heads as signs of mourning are also evident in other biblical text as well as in extrabiblical texts, such as in Ugaritic Baal epic that even the gods mourn in similar ways..

Sin of Achan (7:16–26)

The sin of Achan consists not only in having stolen the goods, a kind of robbery of God, but also in having illegitimately transferred them from the holy realm to the profane one, the penalty for the infringement of holiness conventions or regulations was death. The culprit must be found because otherwise all Israel must bear the guilt. The method of discovering the guilty party is by sacred lot. The remaining narrative records the execution of the divine command including to collectively stone Achan and his family to death. The call to 'probity before God', and the 'solemnity of commitment', is also found in the New Testament.

Verse 26

  • "Achor": meaning "trouble", is explained by association with 'Achan'. The "valley of Achor" is later mentioned in Joshua 15:7 among the places forming the northern border of Judah, not repeated for Benjamin, so Achan and his family was buried within the territory of his tribe.The name "valley of Achor" as "valley of disaster" is used for messianic promises in other books of the prophets, where it would be changed into "a resting place" for God's people and "a door of hope".

    Archaeology

Archaeological works in the 1930s at the location of Et-Tell or Khirbet Haijah showed that the city of Ai, an early target for conquest in the putative Joshua account, had existed and been destroyed, but in the 22nd century BC. Some alternate sites for Ai, such as Khirbet el-Maqatir or Khirbet Nisya, have been proposed which would partially resolve the discrepancy in dates, but these sites have not been widely accepted.