Verse 1
Joshua 8:1. And the Lord said
unto Joshua — Who, it is
probable, now consulted God
about the progress of the war,
which he had omitted to do
before, thinking himself, it
seems, sufficiently authorised
to proceed according to his own
judgment, by what God had often
said to him, and his success
against Jericho. Take all the
people of war with thee — This
order may seem strange, since
the people themselves thought
that two or three thousand men
would be sufficient, if God were
with and not against them. But
God would have them all to share
in the spoil of Ai, the first
spoil of the country, that they
might be encouraged to go on
with the work, and that they,
who had obeyed him in abstaining
from taking any thing in
Jericho, might now be rewarded
by the prey of the city.
Verse 2
Joshua 8:2. Thou shalt do to Ai
— as thou didst unto Jericho —
That is, overcome and destroy
the city and people. This was
enjoined to chastise their last
insolence, and the triumphs and
blasphemies which doubtless
their success had produced: and
to revive the dread and terror
which had been impressed upon
the Canaanites by Jericho’s
ruin, and had been much abated
by the late success of Ai. The
spoil thereof — shall ye take
for a prey — Neither the silver
nor gold, nor any thing else,
was separated to the use of the
tabernacle, nor ordered to be
destroyed, but the people were
to enjoy it entirely themselves.
Lay thee an ambush for the city
behind it — Ai was not to be
taken by miracle, as Jericho had
been; now they must exercise
their own wisdom. Having seen
God work for them, whereby they
might learn to depend on him,
and give him the glory of all
their success, they must now
exert themselves, and be inured
to self-denial and diligence,
and to labour, toil, and
hardship. And they must learn to
outwit as well as to overpower
their enemies. God himself
commands them to take the town
by stratagem; and therefore we
may be sure that to do the like
is lawful in other wars. But it
must be well observed that no
treaty was here violated, no
oath or promise broken, no
untruth told: to do any thing of
this kind cannot be allowable or
excusable in any war or case
whatsoever. Nay, nothing was
here concealed by the Israelites
but their own counsels, which
surely their enemies had no
right to be intrusted with;
nothing was dissembled and
nothing counterfeited but a
retreat, which was no necessary
indication at all of their
inability to maintain their
attack, or of a design not to
renew it. Common prudence, had
they been governed by it, would
have directed the men of Ai to
have been upon their guard, and
either to have kept within their
own walls, or at least not to
have ventured forward rashly in
pursuit of an army which they
saw to be very superior to them
in number.
Verse 10
Joshua 8:10. Joshua — numbered
the people — Not all the people,
which was needless, and would
now have required more time than
could have been spared, but that
part of the army which he
designed to take with him. And
this, it seems, he did, that it
might be evident the conquest of
Ai was effected without any loss
of men, and that they might be
encouraged hereby to trust in
God, and proceed resolutely and
boldly in the work of subduing
the Canaanites. The elders of
Israel — Their chief magistrates
and rulers under Joshua. These,
it is probable, went with Joshua
and the army to take care that
the cattle and the spoil of the
city, which were given by God to
all Israel for a prey, might be
justly and equally divided
between those that went to
battle, and the rest of the
people.
Verse 12
Joshua 8:12. He took about five
thousand men and set them to lie
in ambush — Here commentators
are divided. The learned Bishop
Patrick, with many others, (see
Le Clerc and Calmet,) has given
it as his opinion, that, besides
the thirty thousand whom Joshua
had sent off before to lie in
ambush, (Joshua 8:3-4,) he now
detached five thousand more to
guard the roads, and intercept
such as might endeavour to save
themselves by flight; or to
strengthen those that were first
sent and that he appeared in
arms against the city; with his
whole force, according to God’s
express command, (Joshua 8:1,)
to take all the people of war
with him. And certainly the
letter of the text favours this
interpretation. Many, however,
think, that all the people were
taken only to encamp near the
city, and that out of them
Joshua chose thirty thousand to
be employed in the action, out
of which he detached five
thousand to lie in ambush, which
were as many, they think, as
could be supposed to march
without being discovered, and
then, that with the remaining
twenty-five thousand he made the
open attack. Or else that the
attack was made with the thirty
thousand, and that the five
thousand formed a separate
detachment drawn from the rest
of the people. The matter is not
perfectly clear, or free from
difficulty, either way; and the
reader is left to form his own
judgment of it from the
statement now given.
Verse 14
Joshua 8:14. He and all his
people — That is, the king of Ai
and his men of war, for the rest
were left in the city, Joshua
8:16. At a time appointed — At a
certain hour agreed on between
the king and people of Ai, and
Bethel too, who were confederate
with them in this enterprise.
Possibly they might appoint the
same hour of the day on which
they had fought against Israel
with success, looking upon it as
a lucky hour. Before the plain —
That is, toward, or in sight of
that plain or valley in which
the Israelites were, that so
they might put themselves in
battle array. He knew not there
were liers in ambush — The
former success having made him
secure, as is usual in such
cases, God also blinding his
mind, and infatuating him, as he
is wont to do with those who
have filled up the measure of
their iniquities, and whom,
therefore, he purposes to
destroy.
Verses 15-17
Joshua 8:15-17. All Israel made
as if they were beaten — That
is, they fled from them, as it
were for fear of a second blow.
The wilderness — Which lay
between Ai and Jericho, whither
they now seemed to flee. All the
people that were in Ai — Namely,
all that were able to bear arms,
for old men and children were
unfit for the pursuit or fight;
and that they were yet left,
appears from Joshua 8:24-25. Not
a man — Namely, fit for war.
Bethel — Which, being a
neighbouring city, and
encouraged by the former
success, had sent some forces to
assist them; and now, upon
notice sent to them of the
flight of their common enemies,
or upon some other signal given,
all their men of war joined with
those of Ai in the pursuit.
Verse 18
Joshua 8:18. Stretch out thy
spear — Probably a long spear,
with a flag or streamer at the
top of it, for a signal to the
liers in wait, as well as for a
sign to his host present to stop
their flight, and make head
against the pursuers, and as a
token of God’s presence and
assistance with them, and of
their victory. The Hebrew word
כידון, kidon, however, here
rendered spear, also signifies a
shield, and is so interpreted in
the Vulgate. This, if made of
polished brass or steel, might
be seen from a great distance,
by reason of its brightness.
Verses 19-23
Joshua 8:19-23. They entered and
set the city on fire — That is,
some part of it, sufficient to
raise a smoke, and give notice
to their brethren of their
success. But certainly not all
of it, because in that case they
would have lost the prey which
God had allowed them. Indeed, it
is evident from verse
28, that the main part of the
city was not burned till after
the battle, and they had taken
out all the cattle and other
spoils that were therein. The
people that fled turned back —
That is, the Israelites, who had
counterfeited a flight, turned
upon the men of Ai, who pursued
them. The other issued out of
the city — Namely, those who lay
in ambush, and were now in
possession of the city. The king
they took alive — Reserved him
to a more ignominious death.
Verse 24-25
Joshua 8:24-25. The Israelites
returned unto Ai, and smote it —
That is, the inhabitants of it,
the men who, through age and
infirmity, were unfit for war,
and the women, Joshua 8:25.
Twelve thousand, even all the
men of Ai — Not strictly, but
largely so called; all who were
now in Ai, either as constant
and settled inhabitants, or as
sojourners, and such as came to
them for their help.
Verse 26
Joshua 8:26. Joshua drew not his
hand back — That is, he
continued the battle, and ceased
not to fight, spear in hand,
till he had utterly routed them.
Or, as some think, it means that
he kept his hand and spear in
the same posture, both stretched
out, and lifted up, as a sign to
encourage and direct his army to
go on with their work till the
enemy were destroyed.
Verse 29
Joshua 8:29. The king of Ai he
hanged on a tree — He dealt more
severely with the kings of
Canaan than with the people,
because the abominable
wickedness of that people was
not restrained and punished, (as
it ought to have been,) but
countenanced and encouraged by
their evil examples; and because
they were the principal authors
of the destruction of their own
people, by engaging them in an
obstinate opposition against the
Israelites. Down from the tree —
According to God’s command in
that case, Deuteronomy 21:22.
The gate of the city — Which
place he chose either as most
commodious, now especially, when
all the city within the gate was
already turned into a heap of
stones and rubbish; or because
this was the usual place of
judgment, and therefore proper
to bear the monument of God’s
just sentence against him, not
without reflection upon that
injustice which he had been
guilty of in that place.
Verse 30
Joshua 8:30. Then Joshua built
an altar — Namely, after the
taking of Ai. For they were
obliged to do this when they
were brought over Jordan into
the land of Canaan, Deuteronomy
11:29; Deuteronomy 27:2-3. But
this is not to be understood
strictly, as if it were to be
done the same day; for it is
manifest they were first to be
circumcised, and to eat the
passover, which they did, and
which was the work of some days;
but as soon as they had
opportunity to do it, which was
now when these two great
frontier cities were taken and
destroyed, and thereby the coast
cleared, and the bordering
people were under great
consternation, so that all the
Israelites might securely march
thither. Built an altar —
Namely, for the offering of
sacrifices, as appears from the
following verse. Mount Ebal —
God’s altar was to be put in one
place, (Deuteronomy 12:13-14,)
and this place was appointed to
be mount Ebal, Deuteronomy
27:4-5; which also seems to have
been most proper, that in that
place whence the curses of the
law were denounced against
sinners, there might also be the
tokens and means of grace, and
of peace and reconciliation with
God, for the removing of the
curses, and the procuring of
God’s blessing to sinners.
Verse 32
Joshua 8:32. Upon the stones —
Not upon the stones of the
altar, which, were to be rough
and unpolished, (Joshua 8:13,)
but upon other stones, smooth
and plastered, as is manifest
from Deuteronomy 27:2. A copy of
the law of Moses — Not certainly
the whole five books of Moses,
for what stones or time would
have sufficed for this? but the
most weighty parts of the law,
and especially the law of the
ten commandments.
Verse 33
Joshua 8:33. All Israel stood,
&c. — That is, the whole
congregation, old and young,
male and female. On this side
the ark and on that side — Some
on one side of it, and some on
the other. Mount Gerizim and
mount Ebal — These two places
were in the tribe of Ephraim,
not far from Shechem, as appears
from Scripture and from other
authors. That they should bless
— Or curse, which is easily
understood out of the following
verse.
Verse 34-35
Joshua 8:34-35. Afterward —
After the altar was built, and
the stones plastered and written
upon; he read — That is, he
commanded the priests or Levites
to read, Deuteronomy 27:14.
Blessings and cursings —
Which words come in, not by way
of explication, as if the words
of the law were nothing else
besides the blessings and
curses; but by way of addition,
to denote that these were read,
over and above the words of the
law. There was not a word which
Joshua read not — Therefore, he
read not the blessings and
curses only, as some think, but
the whole law, as the manner was
when all Israel, men and women,
were assembled together. The
strangers that were among them —
Who were proselytes, for no
others can be supposed to have
been with them at this time.
Thus, after Joshua had gained
these victories, and had had
such manifest proofs that God
was with the Israelites, and was
fighting for them, he laboured
the more earnestly to set before
them the whole of their duty,
and to engage them to walk
therein, that they might in that
way testify their thankfulness
to God at the same time when he
was fulfilling his promises to
them. Reader, learn from his
example thy duty to those whom
God hath committed to thy care
and government, and endeavour
that thy own faith and
confidence in the divine
goodness, as well as theirs, may
thus work by love! |