
Israel Enters the Promised Land
The people of Israel left the land of Egypt.
Their leader was Moses. It took forty years for the people to travel to
the land of Canaan. Canaan was the Promised Land. God had promised it to
Abraham and his children for all time. Now God was going to keep His
promise.
Moses had died, and the new leader was Joshua.
Joshua was a military leader. He was good at leading the army, because
that was what was needed to take over the land of Canaan and to remove
the wicked people who lived there.
You can read about how Israel took the land of
Canaan in the book of Joshua.
Crossing the Jordan River
If you look at a map of Canaan, or Israel as it
is now known, you can see the Jordan River runs from the mountains in
the north to the Dead Sea in the south.
The Israelites came towards Canaan from the
east, and their first problem was how to cross the Jordan River. There
may have been several thousand people with all their animals and
possessions. At that time of the year, the Jordan River was in flood;
there was water everywhere, so it was even harder to cross over. There
were no bridges. There were no boats. How could so many people cross the
River into the Promised Land?
God’s answer was simple. Let them walk across
through the dry riverbed! And this is what the people did. With Joshua
and the priests leading the way, God stopped the Jordan River from
flowing for several hours while the Israelites walked over on dry
ground. It was another miracle, just like God had done at the Red Sea
forty years earlier. See Joshua chapter 3 for the details.
So the Israelites were now in the land of
Canaan. But there were many people to overcome. Canaan was made up of a
number of small states. There were cities that were strongly built to
stop invaders. Each city-state had a king. Peasants and slaves grew
crops in the fields. Some of these city-states traded with each other,
and with countries beyond the Land. The people of Canaan worshipped
statues of wood and stone. Their religion was cruel and wicked. It had
things such as human sacrifice and other barbaric acts.
The destruction of Jericho
The first city that stood before the Israelites
was Jericho. Jericho was a big city with strong, high walls. It would
not be easy to take. God also told the Israelites that all of the
treasures of Jericho had to be given to God.
God helped them to take the city. God told
Joshua to march around the city once each day for six days. The army was
not to make any noise. Then on the seventh day, the army had to march
around the city seven times. Then all the army was to shout with all
their might. When the army did so, the walls of Jericho came crashing
down. Each soldier was able to go forward into the city and take it. It
was a great victory that God made possible by a miracle. You can read
about Jericho in Joshua 6.
But one soldier, Achan, saw some treasures in
Jericho and kept them for himself. He should have given everything to
God. No-one knew Achan had done this, except God, who sees and knows
everything.
The city of Ai
Joshua sent some spies to the next city, called
Ai. The spies said that the city was small; only a small army was
needed. So a small group of men went to take Ai. But the people of Ai
defeated the army of Israel. Thirty-six Israelite soldiers were killed.
Joshua 7.
Joshua and the people were so upset. Had God
left them? Had God brought them to Canaan only to destroy them? God told
Joshua that there was a thief in the camp. Soon Achan confessed what he
had done, and he was stoned to death for his sin.
The army of Israel made another attack on Ai.
This time, God helped the soldiers of Israel. You can read about the
battle in Joshua 8.
After these large battles, the people of Canaan
were terrified of Joshua and the Israelites. Some groups joined together
to fight Israel. Others decided that they should try a peace treaty.
The Gibeon deception
One group lived in a city called Gibeon. They
decided to make a peace treaty with Israel. But God had told the
Israelites that they were not to make peace with anyone in Canaan.
Everyone had to be destroyed, or they would make Israel stop worshipping
God. But the people of Gibeon were very clever. They sent some men to
the camp of Israel, but they told Joshua that they were from a country
far beyond Canaan. To prove it, the men from Gibeon had old, torn
clothes. They carried dry mouldy bread. The men said to Joshua and the
Israelites, "We have come from a far country; now therefore, make a
covenant (peace treaty) with us." Joshua 9:6
Joshua and the Israelites believed the men and
their story. They did not ask God, and they made a peace treaty with
them to protect them from harm.
The Israelites were very angry when they found
out the Gibeonites lived just a few kilometres away. But they had made a
treaty, and so the Israelites let the people of Gibeon live. Read Joshua
9 for more about Gibeon.
Other groups in Canaan joined their armies to
fight against Israel. There was a big battle in Joshua 10, and Israel
was winning. God sent a huge hailstorm that killed many of the enemy.
But alas, the night was coming, and there would not be enough time. So
Joshua prayed to God that the sun would stand still. God answered
Joshua’s prayer. How God did this we do not know. But there was another
big victory for the Israelites that day.
Peace comes to the land of Canaan
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The land was
divided between the twelve tribes |
And so after a few more battles, the land had
peace. Joshua and the elders of Israel divided up the land between the
tribes (the tribes were named after the sons of Jacob [Israel]).
The land had peace, and the Israelites went to
their allotted areas of lands to settle down in cities and in the
country.
How was Israel governed? God had set up the
tribe of Levi as the teachers of the people. The Levites studied God’s
Law, and then taught all the people. The tribes were united because they
were descended from Abraham, and now God had kept His promise to give
Abraham’s descendants the land of Canaan. The main centre of worship was
the Tabernacle in the town of Shiloh.
Israel had been chosen by God to show the world
that He was the true and living God. We know that God has looked after
the Israelites, or Hebrews, or Jews throughout history. Soon, Jesus
Christ will return from heaven to be the King of Israel and the King of
the world.
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