The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 49: The Last Words of Joshua
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The wars and conquest ended, Joshua had withdrawn to the
peaceful retirement of his home at Timnath-serah. "And it
came to pass, a long time after that the Lord had given rest unto
Israel from all their enemies round about, that Joshua . . . called
for all Israel, and for their elders, and for their heads, and for
their judges, and for their officers."
Some years had passed since the people had settled in their
possessions, and already could be seen cropping out the same evils
that had heretofore brought judgments upon Israel. As Joshua
felt the infirmities of age stealing upon him, and realized that
his work must soon close, he was filled with anxiety for the future
of his people. It was with more than a father's interest that he
addressed them, as they gathered once more about their aged
chief. "Ye have seen," he said, "all that the Lord your God hath
done unto all these nations because of you; for the Lord your God
is He that hath fought for you." Although the Canaanites had
been subdued, they still possessed a considerable portion of the
land promised to Israel, and Joshua exhorted his people not to
settle down at ease and forget the Lord's command to utterly
dispossess these idolatrous nations.
The people in general were slow to complete the work of
driving out the heathen. The tribes had dispersed to their
possessions, the army had disbanded, and it was looked upon as a
difficult and doubtful undertaking to renew the war. But Joshua
declared: "The Lord your God, He shall expel them from before
you, and drive them from out of your sight; and ye shall possess
their land, as the Lord your God hath promised unto you. Be
ye therefore very courageous to keep and to do all that is written
in the book of the law of Moses, that ye turn not aside therefrom
to the right hand or to the left." [p. 522]
Joshua appealed to the people themselves as witnesses that, so
far as they had complied with the conditions, God had faithfully
fulfilled His promises to them. "Ye know in all your hearts and
in all your souls," he said, "that not one thing hath failed of all
the good things which the Lord your God spake concerning you;
all are come to pass unto you, and not one thing hath failed
thereof." He declared to them that as the Lord had fulfilled His
promises, so He would fulfill His threatenings. "It shall come to
pass, that as all good things are come upon you, which the Lord
your God promised you; so shall the Lord bring upon you all
evil things. . . . When ye have transgressed the covenant of the
Lord, . . . then shall the anger of the Lord be kindled against
you, and ye shall perish quickly from off the good land which He
hath given unto you."
Satan deceives many with the plausible theory that God's love
for His people is so great that He will excuse sin in them; he
represents that while the threatenings of God's word are to serve
a certain purpose in His moral government, they are never to be
literally fulfilled. But in all His dealings with his creatures God
has maintained the principles of righteousness by revealing sin
in its true character—by demonstrating that its sure result is
misery and death. The unconditional pardon of sin never has
been, and never will be. Such pardon would show the abandonment
of the principles of righteousness, which are the very
foundation of the government of God. It would fill the unfallen
universe with consternation. God has faithfully pointed out the
results of sin, and if these warnings were not true, how could we
be sure that His promises would be fulfilled? That so-called
benevolence which would set aside justice is not benevolence but
weakness.
God is the life-giver. From the beginning all His laws were
ordained to life. But sin broke in upon the order that God had
established, and discord followed. So long as sin exists, suffering
and death are inevitable. It is only because the Redeemer has
borne the curse of sin in our behalf that man can hope to escape,
in his own person, its dire results.
Before the death of Joshua the heads and representatives of the
tribes, obedient to his summons, again assembled at Shechem.
No spot in all the land possessed so many sacred associations,
carrying their minds back to God's covenant with Abraham
and Jacob, and recalling also their own solemn vows upon their [p. 523] entrance into Canaan. Here were the mountains Ebal and
Gerizim, the silent witnesses of those vows which now, in the
presence of their dying leader, they had assembled to renew. On
every side were evidences of what God had wrought for them;
how He had given them a land for which they did not labor, and
cities which they built not, vineyards and oliveyards which they
planted not. Joshua reviewed once more the history of Israel,
recounting the wonderful works of God, that all might have a
sense of His love and mercy and might serve Him "in sincerity
and in truth."
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