The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 48: The Division of Canaan
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The victory at Beth-horon was speedily followed by the
conquest of southern Canaan. "Joshua smote all the country of
the hills, and of the south, and of the vale. . . . And all these
kings and their land did Joshua take at one time, because the
Lord God of Israel fought for Israel. And Joshua returned, and
all Israel with him, unto the camp at Gilgal."
The tribes of northern Palestine, terrified at the success which
had attended the armies of Israel, now entered into a league
against them. At the head of this confederacy was Jabin, king
of Hazor, a territory to the west of Lake Merom. "And they
went out, they and all their hosts with them." This army was
much larger than any that the Israelites had before encountered
in Canaan—"much people, even as the sand that is upon the
seashore in multitude, with horses and chariots very many. And
when all these kings were met together, they came and pitched
together at the waters of Merom, to fight against Israel." Again
a message of encouragement was given to Joshua: "Be not afraid
because of them: for tomorrow about this time will I deliver
them up all slain before Israel."
Near Lake Merom he fell upon the camp of the allies and
utterly routed their forces. "The Lord delivered them into the
hand of Israel, who smote them, and chased them . . . until they
left them none remaining." The chariots and horses that had
been the pride and boast of the Canaanites were not to be
appropriated by Israel. At the command of God the chariots were
burned, and the horses lamed, and thus rendered unfit for use
in battle. The Israelites were not to put their trust in chariots or
horses, but "in the name of the Lord their God."
One by one the cities were taken, and Hazor, the stronghold
of the confederacy, was burned. The war was continued for [p. 511] several years, but its close found Joshua master of Canaan. "And
the land had rest from war."
But though the power of the Canaanites had been broken,
they had not been fully dispossessed. On the west the Philistines
still held a fertile plain along the seacoast, while north of them
was the territory of the Sidonians. Lebanon also was in the
possession of the latter people; and to the south, toward Egypt, the
land was still occupied by the enemies of Israel.
Joshua was not, however, to continue the war. There was
another work for the great leader to perform before he should
relinquish the command of Israel. The whole land, both the parts
already conquered and that which was yet unsubdued, was to be
apportioned among the tribes. And it was the duty of each tribe
to fully subdue its own inheritance. If the people should prove
faithful to God, He would drive out their enemies from before
them; and He promised to give them still greater possessions if
they would but be true to His covenant.
To Joshua, with Eleazar the high priest, and the heads of the
tribes, the distribution of the land was committed, the location of
each tribe being determined by lot. Moses himself had fixed the
bounds of the country as it was to be divided among the tribes
when they should come in possession of Canaan, and had
appointed a prince from each tribe to attend to the distribution.
The tribe of Levi, being devoted to the sanctuary service, was not
counted in this allotment; but forty-eight cities in different parts
of the country were assigned the Levites as their inheritance.
Before the distribution of the land had been entered upon,
Caleb, accompanied by the heads of his tribe, came forward with
a special claim. Except Joshua, Caleb was now the oldest man
in Israel. Caleb and Joshua were the only ones among the spies
who had brought a good report of the Land of Promise, encouraging
the people to go up and possess it in the name of the Lord.
Caleb now reminded Joshua of the promise then made, as the
reward of his faithfulness: "The land whereon thy feet have
trodden shall be thine inheritance, and thy children's forever,
because thou hast wholly followed the Lord." He therefore
presented a request that Hebron he given him for a possession. Here
had been for many years the home of Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob; and here, in the cave of Machpelah, they were buried. [p. 512] Hebron was the seat of the dreaded Anakim, whose formidable
appearance had so terrified the spies, and through them
destroyed the courage of all Israel. This, above all others, was the
place which Caleb, trusting in the strength of God, chose for his
inheritance.
"Behold, the Lord hath kept me alive," he said, "these forty
and five years, even since the Lord spake this word unto Moses:
. . . and now, lo, I am this day fourscore and five years old. As
yet I am as strong this day as I was in the day that Moses sent me:
as my strength was then, even so is my strength now, for war,
both to go out, and to come in. Now therefore give me this
mountain, whereof the Lord spake in that day: for thou heardest
in that day how the Anakim were there, and that the cities were
great and fenced: if so be the Lord will be with me, then I shall
be able to drive them out, as the Lord said." This request was
supported by the chief men of Judah. Caleb himself being the
one appointed from this tribe to apportion the land, he had
chosen to unite these men with him in presenting his claim, that
there might be no appearance of having employed his authority
for selfish advantage.
His claim was immediately granted. To none could the
conquest of this giant stronghold be more safely entrusted. "Joshua
blessed him, and gave unto Caleb the son of Jephunneh Hebron
for an inheritance," "because that he wholly followed the Lord
God of Israel." Caleb's faith now was just what it was when his
testimony had contradicted the evil report of the spies. He had
believed God's promise that He would put His people in possession
of Canaan, and in this he had followed the Lord fully. He
had endured with his people the long wandering in the wilderness,
thus sharing the disappointments and burdens of the guilty;
yet he made no complaint of this, but exalted the mercy of God
that had preserved him in the wilderness when his brethren were
cut off. Amid all the hardships, perils, and plagues of the desert
wanderings, and during the years of warfare since entering
Canaan, the Lord had preserved him; and now at upwards of
fourscore his vigor was unabated. He did not ask for himself a
land already conquered, but the place which above all others the
spies had thought it impossible to subdue. By the help of God he
would wrest his stronghold from the very giants whose power
had staggered the faith of Israel. It was no desire for honor or
aggrandizement that prompted Caleb's request. The brave old [p. 513] warrior was desirous of giving to the people an example that
would honor God, and encourage the tribes fully to subdue the
land which their fathers had deemed unconquerable.
Part: A
B
C
D
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