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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Joshua 1:3

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Joshua 1:3

Every place that the sole of your foot shall tread upon, that have I given unto you, as I said unto Moses.

3. as I said unto Moses ] Comp. Deu 11:24; Jos 14:9.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Verse 3. The sole of your foot shalt tread upon] That is, the whole land occupied by the seven Canaanitish nations, and as far as the Euphrates on the east; for this was certainly the utmost of the grant now made to them; and all that was included in what is termed the promised land, the boundaries of which have already been defined. See De 34:1-4, and see Jos 1:4 below. It has been supposed that the words, Every place that the sole of your foot shall tread upon, were intended to express the ease with which they were to conquer the whole land, an instance of which occurs in the taking of Jericho. It was only their unfaithfulness to God that rendered the conquest in any case difficult.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

Every place, to wit, within the following bounds.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

3, 4. Every place that the sole ofyour foot shall tread upon that have I given youmeaning, ofcourse, not universal dominion, but only the territory comprisedwithin the boundaries here specified (see on De19:8).

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

Every place that the sole of your feet shall tread upon,…. That is, in the land of Canaan:

that have I given unto you, as I said unto Moses:

[See comments on De 11:24]; though the Jews extend this to all without the land subdued by them, and even to all the countries they now tread on, and are exiles in; but the limits of what the Lord gave them are fixed in Jos 1:4.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Namely, every place that the sole of your foot shall tread upon,” i.e., I have given you the whole land, not excepting a single foot’s breadth. The perfect, “ I have given,” refers to the counsel of God as having been formed long before, and being now about to be carried into execution. These words, which are connected with Deu 11:24, so far as the form is concerned, rest upon the promise of God in Exo 23:30-31, to which the words “as I said unto Moses” refer.

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

CRITICAL NOTES.

Jos. 1:3. Every place that the sole] Every place against which your faith and courage lead you to go up, shall be yours. Your inheritance in the land shall have no limits but those set by your own unbelief and fears. As far as you will tread, you shall possess.

Jos. 1:6. Be strong and firm(Schroeder)] The words signify not firmness and strength in general, but the strength in the hands and the firmness in the knees, Isa. 35:3, cf. Heb. 12:12-13 (J. H. Michaelis).

MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.Jos. 1:3-9

SERVING THE LORD

In the service of God

I. There is no honour without work. Joshua is placed at the head of the host, not merely to be a chief, but a leader. Every place must be won. Israel must go up against each. The sole of the foot must tread, and that often in the tramp of battle, wherever the people would inherit. And the man who is at their head must lead them to the war. He, too, must divide the inheritance for them. Not least, he must meditate day and night in the law; for how shall he secure obedience if he be ignorant of that which is to be obeyed? Leading in such a case means arduous toil, perpetual care, ceaseless interest, and unrest. There can be no honour in the mere position. Idleness there would be simply exalted shame and prominent disgrace. It is always thus. The height of our position is the measure either of our honour or dishonour, according to the work done. High position is vantage ground for work, not rest. It is so socially, ecclesiastically, mentally, and even morally. He who climbs high in order to lie down, only exposes his slothfulness. He may lie more quietly in altitudes which the din of honest labour does not reach; for all that, he is simply a conspicuous sluggard.

II. There is no work without encouragement. The whole passage is emphatic with promise. Wherever God gives arduous duties. He supplies bright hopes. Probably there is no position in which humanity ever stood, saving that of impenitence and persistent sin, which has not its own specific illumination in the Scripture promises. The day has its sun, the night its moon and stars, and even the arctic zone its aurora borealis. Gods love has beams of light strong enough to reach every spot in that part of the sphere of moral being where His name is had in reverence. Scripture has light for the darkness of penitence, of labour, of suffering in all its forms, of bereavement, and of death.

1. Our gloom and darkness are not essentials of life. He who supposes they are must begin by assuming the light of Divine encouragement to be insufficient.
2. Our gloom and darkness are not desirable. They cannot be; God has sought to remove them in every form.
3. Our gloom and darkness are of our own choosing. Our Heavenly Father has provided light for all who seek light, and invites all to walk therein.
4. Our gloom and darkness are harmful and sinful. They prevent our work, discourage others, shew our neglect of the Bible, or they shew that reading and meditating we do not believe.

III. There is no encouragement apart from obedience. (Jos. 1:7; Jos. 1:9.) In the sphere of moral life wicked men always walk opposite to the Sun of righteousness, and thus are ever in the night. In order to be strong for conflict, Joshua is to be strong in the comfort of hope; in order to be strong in hope, he is to be strong in obedience.

1. He who disobeys the precepts has no right to the promises. It is as though a child should steadfastly ignore his fathers wishes, and then presume upon his unrestrained gifts and his undiminished love.
2. He who disobeys the precepts lacks the spirit which alone can use the promises. Lax obedience shews lax faith, and promise yields its value only to trust. Lax obedience shews lax interest, and no man can really delight where he is careless.

IV. There can be no sufficient obedience without meditation. (Jos. 1:8.) We are responsible, not only to do what we know, but to know what there is to be known. The ambassador who refused to open the despatches of his government would plead ignorance in vain. When Nelson shut his eye against his admirals signal, he was none the less guilty of disobedience. Men may neglect to read the Scriptures, and then say, I knew not that I transgressed, but the very ignorance which they plead is an aggravated form of guilt. God complains of Ephraim, I have written to him the great things of my law, but they were counted as a strange thing.

V. There can be no satisfactory meditation which does not centre in God Himself. (Jos. 1:9.) Have not I commanded thee? We must look through the written word up to God, whom it is meant to reveal. We must look through all revelation on to Him. The Bible is light on God. The miracles of Christ are not recorded to excite wonder, they are to reveal God. It is possible to make Gethsemane, the Lords Supper, and even the Cross so many superstitions. The brazen serpent became a relic at which men stopped, rather than a memory through which they went on to God. Hezekiah did holy work, then, to break it in pieces, and to call it Nehushtan. If Christ be not risen again, even Calvary is worthless; Your faith is vain; ye are yet in your sins. Gethsemane, the Supper, the Cross, are only good as they reveal the finished atonement and love of the living Saviour, and through Him the pardon and love of God. Riddling all superstitions of mere Bible-reading and formal religion through and through, the living Son of God looks down from heaven, and says to Saul of Tarsus, That they may receive forgiveness of sins and inheritance among them which are sanctified BY FAITH THAT IS IN ME. (Act. 26:18.) Faith is to be in the living Christ, not in cold duties and dead things. Trench has somewhere said, Our blessedness is that Christ does not declare to us a system, and say, This is the truth; so doing He might have established a school: but He points to a person, even to Himself, and says, I am the Truth; and thus He founded, not a school, but a Church, a fellowship which stands in its faith upon a person, not in its tenure of a doctrine, or at least upon this only in a sense which is mediate and secondary.

SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS ON THE VERSES

Jos. 1:3-5. GODS SUFFICIENT PROMISES.

I. They reveal their value only as far as we use them. Where men tread, there shall they inherit. This can only be known by going on in the strength of them. Each says, like its Divine Author, Prove me now herewith.

II. They have respect to all preceding promises. As I said unto Moses. Vested interests. No one promise ignores the property which men may have in another. Christ destroyed nothing of the O.T. Scriptures; He fulfilled them. Nowhere so much as on and around the cross do we read the words, That the Scripture might be fulfilled.

III. They have regard to all that which might weaken and limit them from without. (Jos. 1:4.) The boundary had military fitness. Strasbourg and Metz. God loves to give so that we can hold. A Christian with only penitence, only humility, only zeal, must ever be weak,too weak to stand. He who sets foot on the whole circle of the graces, and inherits them all, has not only a broader and richer possession, but a more secure.

IV. They are not merely general, but personal. Before thee. They are each for all the people, all for each of the people, and most for him who most needs them.

V. They are as continuous as human want. All the days of thy life. As good on weekdays as on Sundays; and on sad days as on days of song. Good for all kinds of days, to the end of our days.

VI. They are made clear by illustration, and thrice blessed by precedent. As I was with Moses, so I will be with thee. So of all in the Scriptures. Somebody has tried and proved each of them. The increasing value of the Scriptures. The interest of mans experience is ever accumulating on the capital of the written word. The Bible is richer today than it ever was before.

VII. They have their foundation and worth in the Divine character. I will not fail thee, nor forsake thee.

Jos. 1:5.

I. Gods presence gives perpetual and unvarying victory. Any man may conquer, who fights with the Lord on his side. Victory is then as sure in one place as in another. Pharaoh, Red Sea, Wilderness, or Canaanites,it matters not which, nor when.

II. Gods presence is given irrespective of everything but sin.

1. Irrespective of ability, disposition, or temperament. Men choose their companions in view of traits of character. God walks with all who fear Him. Variety in O.T. prophets. So the apostles.

2. Irrespective of social condition and particular circumstances. The various instances under which this same promise was given: To Jacob, the outcast (Gen. 28:15); to the church in the wilderness (Deu. 31:6); to Joshua as well as Moses; to Solomon, the king, in his work of building the temple (1Ch. 28:20); to the poor and needy (Isa. 41:17); to the persecuted Hebrew Christians (Heb. 13:5).

III. Gods presence once given is intended to be given for ever. The doctrine is full of consolationshould be as fully received as it is absolutely statedmust be carefully guarded from presumption. He who reverently listens to the cry of Saul, The Lord is departed from me, or marks with Christian spirit the pitiable weakness of Samson, who wist not that he was in like manner left to himself in his deliberate sinfulness, will not rashly blindfold himself with a creed.

To be forsaken of God implies utter loneliness, utter helplessness, utter friendlessness, utter hopelessness, and unutterable agony.Met, Tab. Pulpit, Jos. 1:8., pp. 603605.

Joshua was sensible how far he came short of Moses in wisdom and grace; but what Moses did was done by virtue of the presence of God with him. Joshua, though he had not always the same presence of mind that Moses had, yet if he had always the same presence of God, would do well enough. What Joshua had himself encouraged the people with long ago (Num. 14:9), God here encourageth him with.

Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell

(3) Every place that the sole of your foot shall tread upon, that have I given unto you.The conquest of Canaan was the special duty assigned to Joshua by the word of Moses. (Hence the order for the extermination of Amalek was written for Joshua [Exo. 17:14] as the representative conqueror, though he did not actually carry it out.) But the conquest of Canaan, as effected by Joshua, must be carefully defined. It was a limited conquest. He took a certain number of strongholds throughout the country, and utterly crushed the armies that were opposed to him in the field. He established the people of Israel in the position that he had won. (See Jos. 12:9-24 for an outline of the position.) He then divided to the tribes of Israel the whole territory, conquered and unconquered alike (see Jos. 13:1-7). The Philistines and Sidonians (or Phoenicians) are examples of two great nations not conquered by Joshua, but assigned to Israel for an inheritance. Thus it appears that what Israel would conquer, the sole of his foot must tread. The conquest which Joshua began for the people, must be carried out in detail by the several tribes themselves. For a further discussion of the relation of Joshuas conquest to the whole history of Israel, see Note on Jos. 13:2.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

3. Every place that the sole of your foot shall tread upon Compare the similar language in Deu 11:24. The entire land was before them, and their own faith, and courage were to decide how much of it they would actually possess.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

“Every place that the sole of your feet shall tread on, to you I have given it, as I said to Moses.”

The land was to be theirs, but it had to be possessed. Step by step they would receive it as they went forward by faith in YHWH. Sometimes it would be two steps forward and one step back, but always they should go onwards until the whole was theirs. For once they had trodden it, it belonged to them. And all this was in accordance with His promise to Moses. Moses may be dead but God had not forgotten Moses, and He had not forgotten His promises to him. They still stood firm.

These verses (Jos 1:3-5) echo the words of Moses in Deu 11:24-25. There too possession would depend on going forward in obedience to YHWH.

We too must remember that those who would accomplish things in God’s name must be prepared to go forward step by step. As we do so He will lead us in the way (Gen 24:27) and grant us our part in His work.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Ver. 3. Every placehave I given unto you See the note on Deu 11:24.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

The persons here mentioned to whom this land is given, are expressly named, both in the former verse and again in this. Is not this exactly conformable to what Jesus said to the mother of Zebedee’s children. Mat 20:23 ; Gen 35:12 .

Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

Jos 1:3 Every place that the sole of your foot shall tread upon, that have I given unto you, as I said unto Moses.

Ver. 3. Every place that the sale, &c. ] I, who am the true proprietary and lord paramount, Psa 24:1 do give you this land, but yet you must fight for it: and so must the saints for the heavenly Canaan.

Nunquam bella bonis, nunquam diserimina desunt.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

as = according as. Compare Deu 11:24.

said unto Moses. Compare Deu 11:24. Deu 14:9.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Every place

The law of appropriation. God gives, but we must take.

Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes

Jos 14:9, Deu 11:24, Tit 1:2

Reciprocal: Gen 15:18 – Unto thy Jos 12:7 – Joshua gave Ezr 4:20 – beyond Jer 27:5 – and have

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Jos 1:3-4. Every place That is, within the following bounds. This Lebanon Emphatically, as being the most eminent mountain in Syria, and the northern border of the land: or this which is within thy view. Hittites Of the Canaanites, who, elsewhere, are called Amorites, (Gen 15:16,) and here Hittites, the Hittites being the most considerable and formidable of them all. The greater sea The midland sea, great in itself, and especially compared with those lesser collections of waters, which the Jews called seas. But the Israelites never possessed all this land. To which it may be answered, 1st, That was from their own sloth and cowardice, and disobedience to God, and breach of those conditions upon which this promise was suspended: 2d, Though their possessions extended not to Euphrates, yet their dominions did, and all those lands were tributary to them in Davids and Solomons time.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

God had promised all the land that the Israelites would tread under foot to the patriarchs and Moses (Gen 13:17; Exo 23:30-31; Deu 11:24). The Israelites were now to claim it as their own by taking possession of it.

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)