Verse 1
Joshua 24:1. Joshua gathered —
It is likely that Joshua, living
longer than he expected when he
delivered the foregoing
discourse to the Israelites,
called the people together once
more, that he might give them
still further advice before he
died; as Moses addressed them in
several pathetic speeches before
his departure from them. Or
perhaps it was Joshua’s custom
to assemble them frequently, in
order that he might remind them
of their duty, and enforce it
upon them. All the tribes of
Israel — Namely, their
representatives, or, as it
follows, their elders, their
heads, their judges, and
officers. To Shechem — To the
city of Shechem, a place
convenient for the purpose, not
only because it was a Levitical
city, and a city of refuge, and
a place near Joshua’s city, but
especially for the two main ends
for which he summoned them
thither. 1st, For the solemn
burial of the bones of Joseph,
and probably of some others of
the patriarchs, for which this
place was designed. 2d, For the
solemn renewing of their
covenant with God; which in this
place was first made between God
and Abraham, (Genesis 12:6-7,)
and afterward renewed by the
Israelites at their first
entrance into the land of
Canaan, between the two
mountains of Ebal and Gerizim,
(chap. Joshua 8:30, &c.,) which
were very near Shechem: and
therefore this place was most
proper, both to remind them of
their former obligations to God,
and to engage them to a further
ratification of them. Before God
— As in God’s presence, to hear
what Joshua was to speak to them
in God’s name, and to receive
God’s commands from his mouth.
He had taken a solemn farewell
before: but as God renewed his
strength, he desired to improve
it for their good. We must never
think our work for God done till
our life be done.
Verse 2
Joshua 24:2. Joshua said unto
all the people — To the elders,
by whom it was to be imparted to
all the rest, and to as many of
the people as came thither. He
spake to them in God’s name, and
as from him, in the language of
a prophet. Thus saith the Lord —
Jehovah, the great God, and the
God of Israel, whom you are
peculiarly bound to hear. This
is an argument that he uttered
all that follows by the divine
inspiration and impulse. Indeed
he was no less the prophet than
the political head of the
nation. Your fathers dwelt on
the other side of the flood —
Or, the river, namely,
Euphrates, so called by way of
eminence. They served other gods
— That is, both Abraham and
Nahor were no less idolaters
than the rest of mankind. This
is said to prevent their vain
boasting in their worthy
ancestors, and to assure them
that whatsoever good was in, or
had been done by their
progenitors, was wholly from
God’s free grace, and not for
their own merit or
righteousness.
Verse 3
Joshua 24:3. I took — I snatched
him out of that idolatrous
place, and took him into
acquaintance and covenant with
myself, which was the highest
honour and happiness he was
capable of. And led — That is, I
brought him after his father’s
death into Canaan, (Genesis
12:1,) and I conducted and
preserved him in all his travels
through the several parts of
Canaan. And multiplied — That
is, gave him a numerous
posterity, not only by Hagar and
Keturah, but even by Sarah and
Isaac. Gave him Isaac — By my
special power and grace, to be
heir of my covenant, and all my
promises, and the seed in or by
which all the nations were to be
blessed.
Verse 4
Joshua 24:4. I gave unto Esau
mount Seir — That he might leave
Canaan entire to his brother
Jacob and his posterity, Genesis
36:7-8. But Jacob went down into
Egypt — Compelled by a grievous
famine, and because the time was
not come when God intended to
plant him and his posterity in
Canaan. In Egypt they suffered a
long and grievous bondage, from
which God having delivered us, I
shall now pass it over.
Verse 7
Joshua 24:7. Your eyes hare seen
what I have done in Egypt — He
speaks this to the elders,
(Joshua 24:1,) who were such not
only in power and dignity, but
many of them by age; and as
there were not sixty years past
since the plagues were inflicted
on Egypt, it is probable that a
considerable number of those
present had been witnesses of
them, and had seen with their
own eyes the Egyptians lie dead
upon the sea-shore, Exodus
14:30. And, not being twenty
years old at that time, they
were exempted from the dreadful
sentence denounced and executed
upon all that were older.
Verse 9-10
Joshua 24:9-10. Balak warred
against Israel — Not indeed by
open force, but by crafty
counsels, warlike stratagems,
and wicked devices. I would not
hearken unto Balaam — It appears
by this that Balaam had a great
inclination to do what Balak
desired, and that he asked leave
of God to curse Israel; and
therefore it is not strange that
God, who permitted him simply to
go, was highly angry with him
for going with so wicked an
intent, Numbers 22:22; Numbers
22:32. So I delivered you — From
Balak’s malicious designs
against you.
Verse 11-12
Joshua 24:11-12. I delivered
them into your hand — Namely,
successively; for in these few
words he seems to comprise all
their wars, which, being fresh
in their memories, he thought it
needless particularly to
mention. I sent the hornet
before you — This may signify,
either that before the
Israelites came into those
parts, God sent hornets, which
so infested the inhabitants,
that many of them were compelled
to leave their country; or that,
when they were actually engaged
in battle with their enemies,
these dreadful swarms, which
first appeared in their war with
Sihon and Og, tormented the
Canaanites with their stings,
and terrified them with their
noise, so that they became an
easy prey to Israel. God had
promised to do this for them,
Exodus 23:27-28; and here Joshua
reminds them of the fulfilment
of the promise.
Verse 14
Joshua 24:14. Put away the gods
— By this it appears, that
although Joshua had doubtless
prevented and purged out all
public idolatry, yet there were
some of them who practised it in
their private houses and
retirements. Your fathers —
Terah, and Nahor, and Abraham,
as Joshua 24:2, and others of
your ancestors. In Egypt — See
Ezekiel 23:3; Ezekiel 23:8;
Ezekiel 23:19; Ezekiel 23:21;
Ezekiel 23:27. Under these
particulars, no doubt, he
comprehends all other false gods
which were served by the nations
among whom they were, but only
mentions these, as the idols
which they were in more danger
of worshipping than those in
Canaan; partly because those of
Canaan had been now lately and
palpably disgraced by their
inability to preserve their
worshippers from total ruin; and
partly because the other idols
came recommended to them by the
venerable name of antiquity, and
the custom of their forefathers.
Verse 15
Joshua 24:15. Seem evil —
Unjust, unreasonable, or
inconvenient. Choose ye — Not
that he leaves them to their
liberty, whether they would
serve God or idols; for Joshua
had no such power himself, nor
could give it to any other; and
both he and they were obliged by
the law of Moses to give their
worship to God only, and to
forbear all idolatry in
themselves, and severely to
punish it in others; but his
words are a powerful
insinuation, which implies that
the worship of God is so highly
reasonable, necessary, and
beneficial, and the service of
idols so absurd, vain, and
pernicious, that if it were left
free for all men to take their
choice, every man in his right
senses must needs choose the
service of God before that of
idols. And he provokes them to
bind themselves faster to God by
their own choice. We will serve
the Lord — But know this, if you
should all be so base and
brutish as to prefer senseless
and impotent idols before the
true and living God, it is my
firm purpose that I will, and my
children and servants (as far as
I can influence them) shall be,
constant and faithful to the
Lord. And that, whatever others
do. They that resolve to serve
God must not start at being
singular in it. They that are
bound for heaven must be willing
to swim against the stream, and
must do, not as most do, but as
the best do.
Verse 19
Joshua 24:19. Ye cannot — He
speaks not of an absolute
impossibility, (for then both
his resolution to serve God
himself, and his exhortation to
them, had been vain,) but of a
moral impossibility, or a very
great difficulty, which he
alleges not to discourage them
from God’s service, but to make
them more considerate in
obliging themselves, and more
resolved in answering their
obligations. The meaning is,
God’s service is not, as you
seem to fancy, a slight and easy
thing, but it is a work of great
difficulty, and requires great
care, and courage, and
resolution; and when I consider
the infinite purity of God, that
he will not be mocked or abused,
and withal your proneness to
superstition and idolatry, even
during the life of Moses, and in
some of you while I live, and
while the obligations which God
has laid upon you in this land
are fresh in remembrance, I
cannot but fear that, after my
decease, you will think the
service of God burdensome, and
therefore will cast it off and
revolt from him, if you do not
carefully avoid all occasions of
idolatry. A jealous God — In the
Hebrew, He is the holy Gods,
holy Father, holy Son, holy
Spirit. He will not endure a
partner in his worship; you
cannot serve him and idols
together. Will not forgive — If
you who own yourselves his
people and servants shall
wilfully transgress his laws, he
will not let this go unpunished
in you, as he doth in other
nations; therefore consider what
ye do, when you take the Lord
for your God; weigh your
advantages and inconveniences
together; for as, if you be
sincere and faithful in God’s
service, you will have admirable
benefits by it; so, if you be
false to your professions, and
forsake him whom you have so
solemnly avouched to be your
God, he will deal more severely
with you than with any people in
the world.
Verse 20
Joshua 24:20. He will turn and
do you hurt — That is, he will
alter his course, and the manner
of his dealing with you, and
will be as severe as ever he was
kind and gracious. He will
repent of his former kindnesses,
and his goodness abused will be
turned into fury.
Verse 21-22
Joshua 24:21-22. Nay, but we
will serve the Lord — Namely,
him only, and not strange gods.
Ye are witnesses against
yourselves — This solemn
profession will be a swift
witness against you, if
hereafter ye apostatize from
God. They said, We are witnesses
— Here they renew their choice
of Jehovah for their God and
king, which their forefathers
made when they came out of
Egypt, Exodus 19:7; Exodus 24:7;
and acknowledge they should be
self-condemned if they did not
make it good.
Verse 23
Joshua 24:23. Put away the
strange gods which are among you
— Meaning those idols which they
had either brought out of Egypt,
or had taken in Canaan, and
which some of them kept,
contrary to God’s command,
whether for the preciousness of
the matter, or rather from some
secret inclination to
superstition and idolatry.
Verse 25
Joshua 24:25. So Joshua made a
covenant with the people that
day — Engaged them to make good
this solemn profession, by
renewing the covenant they had
formerly entered into, both in
the days of Moses and in his
time, wherein they promised to
worship God alone, and be
obedient to him. Some think this
covenant was now established by
sacrifice, as it was when they
came out of Egypt, (Exodus
24:4-5,) and when they came into
Canaan, Joshua 8:31. But as
there is no mention of an altar
or any offering, so it is not
likely that Joshua would offer
any sacrifice but in the place
which God had chosen, which was
Shiloh.
Verse 26
Joshua 24:26. Joshua wrote these
words — Namely, this covenant,
or agreement of the people with
the Lord. In the book of the law
of God — That is, in the volume
which was kept in the ark,
(Deuteronomy 31:9; Deuteronomy
31:26,) whence it was taken and
put into this book of Joshua;
this he did for the perpetual
remembrance of this great and
solemn action, to lay the
greater obligation upon the
people to be true to their
engagement; and as a witness for
God against the people, if
afterward he punished them for
their defection from him, to
whom they had so solemnly and
freely obliged themselves. Set
it up — As a witness and
monument of this great
transaction, according to the
custom of those ancient times.
Possibly this agreement was
written upon this stone, as was
then usual; under an oak that
was by the sanctuary — That is,
near the place where the ark and
tabernacle then were; for though
they were forbidden to plant a
grove of trees near unto the
altar, as the Gentiles did, yet
they might for a time set up an
altar, or place the ark, near a
great tree which had been
planted there before.
Verse 27
Joshua 24:27. It hath heard — It
shall be as sure a witness
against you as if it had heard.
This is a common figure, whereby
the sense of hearing is often
ascribed to the heavens and the
earth, and other senseless
creatures.
Verse 32
Joshua 24:32. The bones of
Joseph — Joseph died two hundred
years before in Egypt, but gave
commandment concerning his
bones, that they should not rest
in a grave till Israel rested in
the land of promise. Now,
therefore, they were deposited
in that piece of ground which
his father gave him near
Shechem. One reason why Joshua
called all Israel to Shechem,
might be to attend Joseph’s
bones to the grave. So that he
now delivered, as it were, both
Joseph’s funeral sermon, and his
own farewell sermon. And if it
was in the last year of his
life, the occasion might well
remind him of his own death now
at hand. For he was just of the
same age with his illustrious
ancestor, who died, being one
hundred and ten years old,
Genesis 50:26.
Verse 33
Joshua 24:33. They buried him in
a hill which was given him — By
special favour, and for his
better conveniency in attending
upon the ark, which then was,
and for a long time was to be,
in Shiloh, near this place:
whereas the cities which were
given to the priests were in
Judah, Benjamin, and Simeon,
which were remote from Shiloh,
though near the place where the
ark was to have its settled
abode; namely, at Jerusalem. It
is probable Eleazar died about
the same time with Joshua, as
Aaron did in the same year with
Moses. While Joshua lived,
religion was kept up, under his
care and influence; but after he
and his cotemporaries were gone,
it swiftly went to decay. How
well is it for the gospel church
that Christ, our Joshua, is
still with it by his Spirit, and
will be always, even to the end
of the world! |