| 
												
												Verse 1-2Joshua 23:1-2. A long time after 
												the Lord had given rest unto 
												Israel — That is, about fourteen 
												years after the conquest of the 
												country, and seven after the 
												division of it among the tribes: 
												see Joshua 11:23; Joshua 14:10. 
												Joshua called — Either to his 
												own city, or rather to Shiloh, 
												the usual place of such 
												assemblies, where his words, 
												being uttered before the Lord, 
												were likely to have the more 
												effect upon them. All Israel — 
												Not all the people in their own 
												persons, but in their 
												representatives, by their 
												elders, heads, judges, and 
												officers. Probably he took the 
												opportunity of one of the three 
												great feasts. You will not have 
												me long to preach to you; 
												therefore observe what I say, 
												and lay it up for the time to 
												come.
 
 Verse 3-4
 Joshua 23:3-4. And ye have seen 
												— Or rather, Behold ye have 
												seen; for so the particle ve, 
												which we translate and, 
												sometimes signifies, as Genesis 
												24:31. All that the Lord hath 
												done because of you — For your 
												good, that you might gain by 
												their losses. I have divided 
												unto you those nations that 
												remain — That are not yet 
												conquered. To be an inheritance 
												— You shall certainly subdue 
												them, and inherit their land, as 
												you have done the rest, if you 
												be not wanting to yourselves. 
												With all the nations — That is, 
												with the land of those nations, 
												the people put for their land, 
												as we have seen before; and as 
												sometimes, on the contrary, the 
												land is put for the people. The 
												great sea — Where the 
												Philistines, your most 
												formidable adversaries, yet 
												survive; but them also and their 
												land I have given to you, and 
												you shall undoubtedly destroy 
												them, if you will proceed 
												vigorously in your work.
 
 Verse 6
 Joshua 23:6. Be ye therefore 
												very courageous — For it would 
												require great courage and 
												resolution to execute all the 
												commands of Moses, and 
												particularly that of expelling 
												and destroying the residue of 
												the Canaanites. The right hand 
												or the left — That is, in one 
												kind or other, by adding to the 
												law, or diminishing from it. 
												Which was the condition upon 
												which God promised to continue 
												them in the possession of the 
												land. By this it is evident that 
												the book of the law of Moses was 
												extant in those days, and that 
												the people read it.
 
 Verse 7
 Joshua 23:7. That ye come not 
												among those nations — That ye 
												avoid all familiar converse and 
												contracts, but especially 
												marriage, with them. Neither 
												mention the name of their gods — 
												To wit, unnecessarily and 
												familiarly, lest the mention of 
												them should lead to discourse 
												about them, and so by degrees 
												bring them to the approbation 
												and worship of them. Nor cause 
												to swear by them — Not to 
												require or even admit a Gentile 
												to swear by his god, as was 
												usual, especially in leagues and 
												contracts; for this would have 
												been to suppose that these 
												imaginary deities were conscious 
												of men’s thoughts, and had power 
												to punish those who were guilty 
												of perjury. And the forbidding 
												this was also to secure them 
												against making leagues and 
												covenants with the Gentiles, 
												which they would not have 
												considered as binding without an 
												oath. It is to be lamented that, 
												among Christians, the names of 
												the heathen gods are so commonly 
												used, especially in poems. Let 
												those names, which have been set 
												up in rivalship with God, be for 
												ever loathed and lost. Nor bow — 
												Neither give them any inward 
												reverence, nor outward 
												adoration. Here is an observable 
												gradation, whereby he shows the 
												progress which sin usually 
												makes, and what need there is to 
												look to the beginnings of it; 
												forasmuch as a civil and common 
												conversation with their persons 
												was likely to bring them, and 
												indeed did actually bring them, 
												by insensible steps, to the 
												worship of their gods. It is no 
												wonder, therefore, if some 
												things, not simply and in 
												themselves evil, be forbidden by 
												God, as here the naming of false 
												gods is, because they are 
												occasions and introductions to 
												evil.
 
 Verse 8
 Joshua 23:8. But cleave to the 
												Lord — By constant obedience, 
												entire affection, faithful 
												service, and worship of him 
												alone. As ye have done to this 
												day — To wit, since you came 
												into Canaan; since which time 
												the body of the people (for of 
												them he speaks, not of every 
												particular person) had behaved 
												themselves much better than they 
												did in the wilderness, and had 
												not been guilty of any gross and 
												general apostacy from God, or 
												rebellion against him.
 
 Verse 9-10
 Joshua 23:9-10. No man hath been 
												able, &c. — To wit, whom you 
												have attacked; otherwise some of 
												those people did yet remain 
												unconquered. He fighteth — 
												Impute not this therefore to 
												your own valour, as you will be 
												apt to do, but to God’s gracious 
												and powerful assistance.
 
 Verse 11
 Joshua 23:11. Take good heed — 
												Now it requires more 
												watchfulness and diligence than 
												it did in the wilderness, 
												because your temptations are now 
												stronger, from the examples and 
												insinuations of your bad 
												neighbours, the remainders of 
												this wicked people; and from 
												your own peace and prosperity; 
												and the pride, security, 
												forgetfulness of God, and 
												luxury, which usually attend 
												that condition.
 
 Verse 12-13
 Joshua 23:12-13. If ye in any 
												wise go back — From God, and 
												from his worship and service. 
												They shall be snares and traps 
												to you — By your converse with 
												them, you will be drawn by 
												degrees into their errors, and 
												impieties, and brutish lusts. 
												Thorns in your eyes — When they 
												have seduced, and thereby 
												weakened you, then they will 
												molest and vex you, no less than 
												a severe scourge doth a man’s 
												sides which are lashed by it, or 
												than a small thorn doth the eye 
												when it is got within it. Till 
												ye perish — They shall so 
												persecute you, and fight against 
												you with such success, that you 
												shall be forced to quit your own 
												land, and wander, you know not 
												whither. Which must needs have 
												been very terrible to them to 
												think of, when they compared 
												their present ease, and plenty, 
												and safety, with the pains, and 
												weariness, and hazards, and 
												wants of their former 
												wanderings.
 
 Verse 14
 Joshua 23:14. I am going the way 
												of all the earth — That is, of 
												all flesh, or of all men; the 
												way which all men go; I am about 
												to die, as all men must. To die 
												is to go a journey, a journey to 
												our long home. And Joshua 
												himself, though he could so ill 
												be spared, cannot be exempted 
												from this common lot. He takes 
												notice of it, that they might 
												look on these as his dying 
												words, and regard them 
												accordingly. Ye know — That is, 
												you know assuredly: your own 
												experience puts it out of all 
												question.
 
 Verse 15
 Joshua 23:15. Bring upon you all 
												evil things — According to what 
												Moses had predicted at large, 
												Leviticus 26. and Deuteronomy 
												28. For God’s faithfulness is no 
												less visible in fulfilling his 
												threatenings than his promises. 
												Indeed the accomplishment of his 
												promises is a pledge that he 
												will also fulfil his 
												threatenings, both of them 
												standing on the same ground, the 
												truth of God.
 
 Verse 16
 Joshua 23:16. Ye shall perish 
												quickly from off the good land — 
												It would aggravate their misery 
												in their destruction, that the 
												land from which they perished 
												was a good land, and a land 
												which God himself had given 
												them: and which therefore he 
												would have secured to them, if 
												they had not thrown themselves 
												out of it. “Thus the goodness of 
												the heavenly Canaan,” says Mr. 
												Henry, “and the free and sure 
												grant God has made of it, will 
												aggravate the misery of those 
												who shall for ever be shut out 
												and perish from it. Nothing will 
												make them see how wretched they 
												are, so much so as to see how 
												happy they might have been.”
 |