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												Verse 1Joshua 11:1. King of Hazor — 
												This was the principal city of 
												the northern part of Canaan, 
												Joshua 11:10; and fell to the 
												share of the tribe of Naphtali 
												in the division of the land, 
												Joshua 19:36. Jabin was the name 
												of the king of the Canaanites in 
												this part of the country, in 
												future times, as well as now. 
												Had heard — This was a 
												remarkable instance of the 
												wisdom and goodness of Divine 
												Providence, which so governed 
												the minds of the Canaanites, 
												that they were not all united 
												under one king but divided among 
												many petty kings; and next, that 
												these did not all unanimously 
												join their counsels and forces 
												together to oppose the 
												Israelites at their first 
												entrance, but quietly suffered 
												the destruction of their 
												brethren, thereby preparing the 
												way for their own.
 
 Verse 2
 Joshua 11:2. On the north of the 
												mountains — Rather, according to 
												the Hebrew, On the north in the 
												mountain. That is, either mount 
												Lebanon, called the mountain by 
												way of eminence, or in the 
												mountainous country. This seems 
												to be the general designation of 
												all the particular places 
												following: they were in the 
												northern parts of Canaan, as 
												those mentioned chap. 10 were in 
												the southern parts. And of the 
												plain, &c. — Hebrew, in the 
												plain, southward from Chinneroth, 
												on the lake of Gennesareth. Dor 
												— A place upon the coast of the 
												midland sea.
 
 Verse 3
 Joshua 11:3. The Canaanites on 
												the east and on the west — The 
												Canaanites, properly so called, 
												lived part of them on the east, 
												near Jordan, and part on the 
												west, near the sea, and both are 
												here united. And to the Amorite, 
												&c.— There were other Amorites 
												scattered up and down the 
												country, besides those who were 
												subject to the five kings 
												mentioned in the preceding 
												chapter, Joshua 11:5, who were 
												all now assembled by Jabin, 
												together with the rest of the 
												Hittites and Perizzites, who 
												were in several parts of the 
												country, that they might form as 
												powerful an army as could be 
												raised. The Jebusite in the 
												mountains — About Jerusalem, 
												where they kept a strong hold, 
												till the time of David. The 
												Hivite under Hermon — On the 
												north of Canaan, whereby they 
												were distinguished from those 
												Hivites who lived in Gibeon. In 
												the land of Mizpeh — That Mizpeh 
												which was in the northern part 
												of Gilead. But there were other 
												cities called by that name; for 
												as it signifies a watchtower, or 
												watching-place, it is no wonder 
												that several places of good 
												prospect should be so named.
 
 Verse 5
 Joshua 11:5. These kings — 
												pitched at the waters of Merom — 
												A lake made by the river Jordan 
												in the northern part of it, 
												which was in the territory of 
												the king of Shimron, near Hazor, 
												Jabin’s royal city, and almost 
												in the middle of these 
												confederate kings.
 
 Verse 6
 Joshua 11:6. I will deliver them 
												up all slain — The Seventy 
												translate this τετροπωμενους, 
												put to flight: and it is certain 
												they were not all slain, but 
												many of them fled. The meaning 
												therefore can only be, that they 
												should be so broken and 
												scattered by that time, as to 
												have no more power to resist 
												than dead men. Thou shalt hough 
												their horses — Disable them for 
												war, by cutting the sinews of 
												the ham. They might, however, be 
												still fit for other uses. God 
												forbade them to keep many 
												horses, now especially, that 
												they might not trust to their 
												horses, nor ascribe the conquest 
												of the land to their own 
												strength, but wholly to God, by 
												whose power alone a company of 
												raw and unexperienced footmen 
												were able to subdue so potent a 
												people, who, besides their great 
												numbers, and giants, and walled 
												cities, had the advantage of 
												many thousands of horses and 
												chariots.
 
 Verse 7
 Joshua 11:7. Joshua came — 
												against them — When they least 
												expected him, intending there to 
												refresh, and prepare, and order 
												themselves for the offensive war 
												which they designed.
 
 Verse 8
 Joshua 11:8. Great Zidon — A 
												great city in the northwest part 
												of Canaan, upon the sea. 
												Misrephoth-maim — A place not 
												far from Zidon, supposed to be 
												so called from the salt or glass 
												which they made there. Valley of 
												Mizpeh — Under mount Hermon, as 
												appears by comparing this with 
												verses
 
 3 and 17, where it seems to be 
												called the valley of Lebanon. 
												This lay on the east, as Zidon 
												did on the west; and so it seems 
												they fled several ways, and the 
												Israelites also divided 
												themselves into two bodies, one 
												pursuing east, and the other 
												west.
 
 Verse 10
 Joshua 11:10. The king — In his 
												royal city, to which he fled out 
												of the battle. Head of those 
												kingdoms — Not of all Canaan, 
												but of all those who were 
												confederate with him in this 
												expedition.
 
 Verse 13
 Joshua 11:13. In their strength 
												— Hebrew, with their fence, 
												walls, or bulwarks, that is, 
												which were not ruined with their 
												walls in taking them. Save Hazor 
												— Because this city began the 
												war, and, being the chief and 
												royal city, might renew the war, 
												if the Canaanites should ever 
												seize upon it: which in fact 
												they did, and settled there, 
												under a king of the same name, 
												4:2.
 
 Verse 15
 Joshua 11:15. As the Lord 
												commanded Moses, &c. — See 
												Exodus 34:11,
 
 12; Deuteronomy 31:7. So did 
												Joshua: he left nothing undone — 
												This is a demonstration that 
												Moses left in writing what the 
												Lord commanded, as we read in 
												the foregoing books, and that 
												they were not written, as some 
												have pretended, in later times. 
												For it would have been 
												impossible for Joshua to have 
												executed every thing which had 
												been commanded by Moses, unless 
												he had had the book of the law 
												before him for his direction.
 
 Verse 16
 Joshua 11:16. All that land — Of 
												Canaan, whose parts here follow. 
												The hill — Or, the mountain, 
												that is, the mountainous 
												country, namely, of Judea. A 
												considerable part of Judea was 
												called the hilly or the 
												mountainous country, Luke 1:39; 
												Luke 1:65. The south country — 
												That is, not only the 
												mountainous part, but all the 
												country of Judea, which lay in 
												the southern part of Canaan, and 
												often comes under the name of 
												the south. The vale — The low 
												countries. The plain — The 
												fields, or campaign grounds. The 
												mountain of Israel — It is very 
												uncertain whether the 
												mountainous country of Israel, 
												in general, be meant by this 
												expression, or whether a 
												particular place be not rather 
												intended. Many think it probable 
												that Beth-el is meant, where God 
												appeared to Jacob as he went to 
												Padan-Aram, and promised to give 
												him this land, (Genesis 28:11,) 
												and where he dwelt, by God’s 
												direction, after his return; 
												where God appeared to him again, 
												repeated the same promise, and 
												changed his name from Jacob to 
												Israel, Genesis 35:1; Genesis 
												35:9-10.
 
 Verse 17
 Joshua 11:17. That goeth up to 
												Seir — That is, to the country 
												of Seir or Edom, namely, to that 
												part of it which was south from 
												Judea. Unto Baal-gad, in the 
												valley of Lebanon, &c. — As the 
												preceding words express the 
												bounds of Joshua’s conquest 
												southward, so hither they 
												extended northward. And this 
												seems to be a description of the 
												length of the country which he 
												took from the king of Hazor, and 
												all those who joined with him, 
												as Archbishop Usher understands 
												it.
 
 Verse 18
 Joshua 11:18. Joshua made war a 
												long time — For divers years 
												together, five or six at least, 
												according to Josephus. And this 
												is here expressed, lest it 
												should be thought that as all 
												these wars are here recorded in 
												a short narration, so they were 
												despatched in a short time. God 
												would have the land to be 
												conquered gradually, for many 
												weighty reasons; 1st, Lest the 
												sudden extirpation of those 
												nations should have made a great 
												part of the land desert, and 
												thereby have increased the 
												number of wild beasts, which is 
												particularly noticed by Moses, 
												Exodus 23:29; Deuteronomy 7:22. 
												2d, Lest, being done suddenly 
												and easily, it should soon be 
												forgotten and despised. 3d, That 
												by long exercise the Israelites 
												might grow skilful in the art of 
												war. 4th, For the trial and 
												exercise of their patience and 
												courage, and trust in God. 5th, 
												To keep them in awe, and 
												chastise them by these 
												Canaanites when they forsook 
												God; and to oblige them to be 
												more careful to please him, 
												since they saw they still needed 
												his help and protection against 
												their enemies.
 
 Verse 19-20
 Joshua 11:19-20. All other they 
												took in battle — That is, all 
												that were taken by Joshua were 
												taken by the sword, and 
												therefore it is no wonder that 
												the war was long, when the enemy 
												was so obstinate. It was of the 
												Lord to harden their hearts — In 
												the same sense in which he 
												hardened the heart of Pharaoh. 
												He did not soften their hearts 
												through the influence of his 
												almighty grace, but gave them up 
												to their own animosity, pride, 
												confidence, and stubbornness; 
												and so ordered things, in the 
												course of his wise and righteous 
												providence, that they were 
												imboldened to fight with the 
												Israelites, notwithstanding they 
												had heard of the wonders that 
												were repeatedly wrought for 
												them. And this he did in order 
												that their abominable and 
												incorrigible wickedness might be 
												punished, and that the 
												Israelites might not be mixed 
												with them, but be entire among 
												themselves in the possession of 
												the land. That he might destroy 
												them utterly, and they might 
												have no favour — Which they 
												might have obtained if they had 
												not been so inconsiderate, and 
												self-confident, and rash as to 
												imagine they could withstand 
												those before whom the river 
												Jordan fled back, and the walls 
												of Jericho fell down flat; and 
												so would not hearken to the 
												terms that Joshua offered to 
												them.
 
 Verse 21
 Joshua 11:21. At that time — 
												That is, in the war before 
												mentioned, and probably toward 
												the conclusion of it; after he 
												had left none to oppose him in 
												other places, but only in those 
												mountainous parts which were of 
												difficult access. Joshua cut off 
												the Anakims — “A wild, 
												barbarous, and gigantic people, 
												who were of a different original 
												from that of the Canaanites, and 
												inhabited certain mountains of 
												the country. It would have been 
												dangerous to let them remain, 
												nor were they worthy of such an 
												indulgence. Joshua, therefore, 
												marched against them, and 
												crowned his victories by their 
												utter defeat.” — Dodd. From the 
												mountains — Hebrew, The 
												mountain; but the singular 
												number seems to be put for the 
												plural. From Hebron, &c. — That 
												is, from the territories 
												belonging to these cities. For, 
												as we have often seen in this 
												history, cities are mentioned 
												for the country subject to them. 
												From all the mountains of Judah 
												— All the mountainous country 
												that fell afterward by lot to 
												the tribe of Judah. And from all 
												the mountains of Israel — The 
												mountainous country that was 
												allotted to the rest of the 
												tribes of Israel, to which 
												mountains these people, it is 
												likely, fled for safety. Joshua 
												destroyed them utterly with 
												their cities — But how could 
												Joshua be said to have utterly 
												destroyed either the Anakims or 
												their cities, when Caleb and 
												Othniel destroyed some of them 
												after Joshua’s death? Joshua 
												14:12;
 
 1:10-12. This might be either, 
												1st, Because these places, 
												though in part destroyed, yet, 
												being neglected by the 
												Israelites, were repossessed by 
												the giants, and by them kept 
												until Caleb destroyed them: or 
												rather, 2d, Because this work, 
												though done by the particular 
												valour of Caleb, is ascribed to 
												Joshua as the general of the 
												army, according to the manner of 
												all historians; and therefore it 
												is here attributed to Joshua; 
												though afterward, that Caleb 
												might not lose his deserved 
												honour, the history is more 
												particularly described, and 
												Caleb owned as the great 
												instrument of it.
 
 Verse 22
 Joshua 11:22. Only in Gaza, in 
												Gath, and in Ashdod — These were 
												three cities of the Philistines, 
												into which either some of the 
												Anakims escaped, and there took 
												shelter, or they had been there 
												from ancient time, and the 
												Israelites could not yet expel 
												them. For they did not possess 
												themselves of the country of the 
												Philistines till the time of 
												David, when we find some of 
												these giants still there.
 
 Verse 23
 Joshua 11:23. So Joshua took the 
												whole land — Which either the 
												Canaanites or the Anakims 
												possessed; that is, subdued it, 
												so that none rose up against 
												him, though many places were not 
												yet in the possession of the 
												Israelites. According to all 
												that the Lord said unto Moses — 
												See Deuteronomy 31:7-8. God had 
												promised to drive out the 
												nations before them: and now he 
												had fulfilled his promise. Our 
												successes and enjoyments are 
												then doubly comfortable when we 
												see them flowing to us from 
												God’s faithfulness to his 
												promise. This is according to 
												what the Lord hath said — Just 
												as our obedience is the more 
												acceptable when it has an eye to 
												the precept. And if we make 
												conscience of our duty, we need 
												not question the performance of 
												the promise. And the land rested 
												from war — None of the lords of 
												the Philistines, nor any others, 
												presumed to give them any 
												disturbance, so that they now 
												became “peaceable possessors of 
												that fine land of promise, and 
												thought only how to divide it 
												among them, as we shall see in 
												chap. 13.
 
 Here begins the seventh year, 
												reckoning from their first 
												seed-time, after the passage 
												over Jordan; the first 
												sabbatical year celebrated by 
												them after Joshua had brought 
												them into rest; that rest which 
												is a type of the eternal rest, 
												which the great Joshua of the 
												new covenant prepares for his 
												people in heaven, Hebrews 4:8-9. 
												&c. From this same epocha we are 
												to reckon the jubilees.” — Dodd. 
												See on Leviticus 25:8-10.
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