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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Joshua 23:11

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Joshua 23:11

Take good heed therefore unto yourselves, that ye love the LORD your God.

Jos 23:11

Take good heed therefore unto yourselves.

The Christian warfare

The Christian life is a warfare, and there are several common mistakes made thereupon. For example–


I.
When it is supposed that the enemies to be fought against are all external foes. This is a very prevalent error. Where conversion is believed to be always a sudden change, and not a matter of growth, there converts are cautioned against dangers that lie without, while left in ignorance of the greater dangers that are still within. There are external foes, but these are not all. There are inward foes, such as–

(1) Evil tempers;

(2) passionate and ungovernable wills;

(3) covetousness;

(4) selfishness;

(5)pride;

(6) anger, &c.


II.
It is also a mistake to suppose that the enemies to be fought against are chiefly external ones. With all his warnings against surrounding foes, Joshua was most emphatic in his exhortation to watchfulness over ones own heart, Take good heed therefore unto yourselves. In this sense a mans enemies are they of his own house. The greatest temptations arise from that inner tendency to corruption, but for which the outward influences would be well-nigh powerless. Many a man has been his own tempter (Jam 1:14).


III.
It is a great christian duty, therefore, for every man to bring his own heart into subjection.

1. This cannot be done except by the exercise of constant watchfulness.

2. Self-cultivation also is necessary. When will men learn that religion is no dreamy sentimentalism, but a stern and living reality? The grace of God in the heart of man is a tender plant in a strange, unkindly soil, and, therefore, cannot well prosper and grow without much care and pains, and that of a skilful hand. Let us, then, take heed to ourselves. Let us keep the fortress of our own heart. Let us do battle with the foes of our own household. Thus shall we be more than conquerors; for he that ruleth his own spirit is better than he that taketh a city. (Frederic Wagstaff.)

Self-consideration

We can have no aspirations unless we know what we lack, and we cannot properly cultivate our spiritual life unless we recognise the symptoms of its vitality or decay. A gardener would be failing in his duty if he did not notice the withering of a flower, which was only wanting more room in which to spread its roots. A mother would be justly blamed if she was too absorbed in making her childs dress for a coming party to notice the pale face and heavy eyes which fore told an illness demanding instant attention. Far heavier is the responsibility resting on us to consider our own condition. (A. Rowland, B. A.)

Self-judgment

No sane man fails to form some opinion of himself. We cannot help knowing, for example, whether our temper is quick or dull, whether our imagination is vivid or torpid, any more than we can be ignorant of the fact that we are tall or short. But we ought not to leave this self-judgment to transient feelings, or to spasmodic revelations–but should try to shape it by sober thought. Some people tell us that it is best not to think of ourselves at all, but to absorb ourselves in daily duty, leaving ourselves simply in Gods hands, so far as religious life is concerned. No doubt this is partly true: and we must not forget that self-introspection has its dangers as well as its uses. It would, for example, be quite possible to subject our motives to such close and constant scrutiny as to take away all momentum from life: but no sensible man would be so particular about dust on the engine, as to neglect keeping up steam. (A. Rowland, B. A.)

That ye love the Lord.

Take heed to love God

1. Because if you do not love God, your obedience will be worthless.

2. Because if you do love Him, obedience will be easy.

3. Because there are so many things that compete for your love.

4. Because if you love God, you will love only good things, and those in a proper measure.

5. Because if you love God, you will love what God loves, and especially His Son Jesus Christ. (The Hive.)

God demands our love


I
. It is for this very end that national mercies are bestowed.


II.
We are in danger of perverting his goodness to a very different purpose. The caution given in the text plainly implies this, and the subsequent history of the Jewish nation as plainly proves that the caution was necessary.


III.
To love the Lord our God is not only the return He expects for His benefits, but the return he demands. It is not only just and reasonable in its own nature, but it is likewise absolutely necessary on our part–nay, it is the one thing needful, the withholding of which shall unavoidably be attended with the most fatal consequences. (R. Walker.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 11. Take good heed – unto yourselves that ye love the Lord] lenaphshotheychem, Take heed TO YOUR SOULS, literally; but nephesh and [Arabic] nefs, both in Hebrew and Arabic, signify the whole self, as well as soul and life; both soul and body must be joined in this work, for it is written, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, soul, mind, and strength.

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

Now it requires more watchfulness and diligence than it did in the wilderness, because your temptations are now more and stronger; partly from the examples and insinuations of your bad neighbours, the remainders of this wicked people; and partly from your own peace and prosperity, and the pride, security, forgetfulness of God, and luxury which usually attend upon that condition, as God had warned them, Deu 6:10-12.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

11. Take good heed, therefore, thatye love the Lord your GodThe sum of his exhortation iscomprised in the love of God, which is the end or fulfilment of thelaw (Deu 6:5; Deu 11:13;Mat 22:37).

Jos23:12. BY THREATENINGSIN CASE OFDISOBEDIENCE.

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

Take good heed therefore unto yourselves,…. To be upon their guard, and to be watchful, were very necessary to them, that they might not be ensnared by the Canaanites, and drawn aside by them into idolatry, and so apostatize from the Lord and his worship, since their temptations would be many:

that ye love the Lord your God; which would the most strongly influence and engage them to serve and worship the Lord, and obey his commands, and be the best preservative against idolatry and false worship.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

      11 Take good heed therefore unto yourselves, that ye love the LORD your God.   12 Else if ye do in any wise go back, and cleave unto the remnant of these nations, even these that remain among you, and shall make marriages with them, and go in unto them, and they to you:   13 Know for a certainty that the LORD your God will no more drive out any of these nations from before you; but they shall be snares and traps unto you, and scourges in your sides, and thorns in your eyes, until ye perish from off this good land which the LORD your God hath given you.   14 And, behold, this day I am going the way of all the earth: and ye know in all your hearts and in all your souls, 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.   15 Therefore 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, until he have destroyed you from off this good land which the LORD your God hath given you.   16 When ye have transgressed the covenant of the LORD your God, which he commanded you, and have gone and served other gods, and bowed yourselves to them; 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.

      Here, I. Joshua directs them what to do, that they might persevere in religion, v. 11. Would we cleave to the Lord, and not forsake him, 1. We must always stand upon our guard, for many a precious soul is lost and ruined through carelessness: “Take heed therefore, take good heed to yourselves, to your souls (so the word is), that the inward man be kept clean from the pollutions of sin, and closely employed in the service of God.” God has given us precious souls with this charge, “Take good heed to them, keep them with all diligence, above all keepings.” 2. What we do in religion we must do from a principle of love, not by constraint or from a slavish fear of God, but of choice and with delight. “Lord the Lord your God, and you will not leave him.”

      II. He urges God’s fidelity to them as an argument why they should be faithful to him (v. 14): “I am going the way of all the earth, I am old and dying.” To die is to go a journey, a journey to our long home; it is the way of all the earth, the way that all mankind must go, sooner or later. Joshua himself, though so great and good a man, and one that could so ill be spared, cannot be exempted from this common lot. He takes notice of it here that they might look upon these as his dying words, and regard them accordingly. Or thus: “I am dying, and leaving you. Me you have not always; but if you cleave to the Lord he will never leave you.” Or thus, “Now that I am near my end it is proper to look back upon the years that are past; and, in the review, I find, and you yourselves know it in all your hearts and in all your souls, by a full conviction on the clearest evidence, and the thing has made an impression upon you”–(that knowledge does us good which is seated, not in the head only, but in the heart and soul, and with which we are duly affected)–“you know that not one thing hath failed of all the good things which the Lord spoke concerning you” (and he spoke a great many); see ch. xxi. 45. God had promised them victory, rest, plenty, his tabernacle among them, c., and not one thing had failed of all he had promised. “Now,” said he, “has God been thus true to you? Be not you false to him.” It is the apostle’s argument for perseverance (Heb. x. 23), He is faithful that has promised.

      III. He gives them fair warning what would be the fatal consequences of apostasy (Jos 23:12Jos 23:13; Jos 23:15; Jos 23:16): “If you go back, know for a certainty it will be your ruin.” Observe,

      1. How he describes the apostasy which he warns them against. The steps of it would be (v. 12) growing intimate with idolaters, who would craftily wheedle them, and insinuate themselves into their acquaintance, now that they had become lords of the country, to serve their own ends. The next step would be intermarrying with them, drawn to it by their artifices, who would be glad to bestow their children upon these wealthy Israelites. And the consequence of that would be (v. 16) serving other gods (which were pretended to be the ancient deities of the country) and bowing down to them. Thus the way of sin is down-hill, and those who have fellowship with sinners cannot avoid having fellowship with sin. This he represents, (1.) As a base and shameful desertion; “it is going back from what you have so well begun,” v. 12. (2.) As a most perfidious breach of promise (v. 16): “It is a transgression of the covenant of the Lord your God, which he commanded you, and which you yourselves set your hand to.” Other sins were transgressions of the law God commanded them, but this was a transgression of the covenant he commanded them, and amounted to a breach of the relation between God and them and a forfeiture of all the benefits of the covenant.

      2. How he describes the destruction which he warns them of. He tells them, (1.) That these remainders of the Canaanites, if they should harbour them, and indulge them, and join in affinity with them, would be snares and traps to them, both to draw them to sin (not only to idolatry, but to all immoralities, which would be the ruin, not only of their virtue, but of their wisdom and sense, their spirit and honour), and also to draw them into foolish bargains, unprofitable projects, and all manner of inconveniences; and having thus by underhand practices decoyed them into one mischief or other, so as to gain advantages against them, they would then act more openly, and be scourges in their sides and thorns in their eyes, would perhaps kill or drive away their cattle, burn or steal their corn, alarm or plunder their houses, and would be all ways possible be vexatious to them; for, whatever pretences of friendship they might make, a Canaanite, unless proselyted to the faith and worship of the true God, would in every age hate the very name and sight of an Israelite. See how the punishment would be made to answer the sin, nay, how the sin itself would be the punishment. (2.) That the anger of the Lord would be kindled against them. Their making leagues with the Canaanites would not only give those idolaters the opportunity of doing them a mischief, and be the fostering of snakes in their bosoms, but it would likewise provoke God to become their enemy, and would kindle the fire of his displeasure against them. (3.) That all the threatenings of the word would be fulfilled, as the promise had been, for the God of eternal truth is faithful to both (v. 15): “As all good things have come upon you according to the promise, so long as you have kept close to God, so all evil things will come upon you according to the threatening, if you forsake him.” Moses had set before them good and evil; they had experienced the good, and were now in the enjoyment of it, and the evil would as certainly come if they were disobedient. As God’s promises are not a fool’s paradise, so his threatenings are not bugbears. (4.) That it would end in the utter ruin of their church and nation, as Moses had foretold. This is three times mentioned here. Your enemies will vex you until you perish from off this good land, v. 13. Again, “God will plague you until he have destroyed you from off this good land, v. 15. Heaven and earth will concur to root you out, so that (v. 16) you shall perish from off the good land.” It will aggravate their perdition that the land from which they shall perish is a good land, and a land which God himself had given them, and which therefore he would have secured to them if they by their wickedness had not thrown themselves out of it. Thus the goodness of the heavenly Canaan, and the free and sure grant God has made of it, will aggravate the misery of those that shall for ever be shut out and perish from it. Nothing will make them see how wretched they are so much as to see how happy they might have been. Joshua thus sets before them the fatal consequences of their apostasy, that, knowing the terror of the Lord, they might be persuaded with purpose of heart to cleave to him.

Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary

CRITICAL NOTES.

Jos. 23:11. Take good heed therefore unto yourselves] Marg., unto your souls. Take heed with all your soul; so Winer and Ges., quoted by Keil, who adds, The form is used for the sake of emphasis, to denote that inward vigilance which comes from the soul.

Jos. 23:12. Make marriages with them] The same sense is conveyed by the Heb. in Jos. 23:7.

Jos. 23:13. Snares traps scourges thorns] cf. passages in margin. The threatenings have a kind of cumulative force. The energy of the warnings here is the measure of the pathos in the entreaty of Jos. 23:8-11.

Jos. 23:14. Behold, this day] A similar use of hayyom, this day, occurs in Deu. 9:1, where the phrase is also employed to denote, not this day actually, but an early day or time.

MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.Jos. 23:11-16

FORCES OF PRESERVATION AND DESTRUCTION

Life, look upon it in what sphere we may, seems to have conflict for its inevitable condition. Sometimes life in one form preys upon life in another form. Everywhere, life has some foes that wait around it to work it harmsome influences by which it is ever being drawn unto death. There are also sustaining and restoring forces which are placed around life in every sphere. These verses present us with a picture of human life as it stands in contact with things that tend both to its preservation and destruction. Socially, nationally, and spiritually, human life is here shewn in possible contact with things which help it, and with things which destroy it.

I. The restraining power of love to God (Jos. 23:11). Love to God keeps men from going back to the influences which work death. The way of love to God is the way of life in God.

1. Love to God places a man higher in life than any other influence. He who lives in the love of God, lives far above all his fellows who want this love, let them dwell where they may. Love to God leads a man into a healthy region where life is ever strong, and where it takes on its noblest forms. The ideal of the ancient Romans was power. To them, to be mighty was to live. The ideal of the Greeks was beauty and wisdom. The Greek thought he lived most nobly when he dwelt amidst the most beautiful things which art could devise, and there talked philosophy. The modern English ideal seems to be riches. Give me wealth, says the Englishman; it has a vast purchasing power over almost everything: to be rich is to live indeed. The Bible ideal of life is love. Power may be pleasant, wisdom and beauty may be fascinating, and riches may help the soul, even within a few hours of death, to say, Take thine ease; thou hast much goods laid up for many years; yet life is not in these. A greater than these is love.

2. Love to God is life in a positive form, while mere obedience to God is hardly more than keeping from things which work death. Obedience submits to the voice which cries, Thou shalt have no other gods before me; Love responds, O Lord our Lord, how excellent is Thy name in all the earth! Before the proclamation, Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, Obedience just refrains from sculpture; but Love rejoins, Whom have I in heaven but Thee? and there is none upon earth that I desire beside Thee. Obedience declines to take the name of the Lord God in vain; Love exclaims, The desire of our soul is to Thy name; There is none other name under heaven, given among men, whereby we may be saved. Obedience refuses to break the Sabbath; Love says, I call the Sabbath a delight, the holy day of the Lord, honourable. Thus it is with the whole of the law. Love is the very soul of the commandments: it is the life thereof. Kept in the letter, they are mere tables of stonecold, frigid, and unseemly; kept in love, they are a living power, filled with the beauty of the love which animates them.

3. Love to God leads to God who is the source of life. Love of country, even in the traveller, presently turns his steps towards his native land. Love of father and mother quickens the steps of the schoolboy on his way towards home. The man who loves God will seek to come to God.

4. Love to God makes him who loves like God. The man who loves letters gets presently a literary look. The farmer gets an agricultural appearance. Family likeness may be sometimes partly owing to family love. So they who gaze admiringly on God are changed into His image. When inspired Jude would have his brethren be found separate from evil-doers, he said, Keep yourselves in the love of God. So when Joshua would restrain his people from fellowship with idolaters, he says, similarly, Take good heed therefore unto yourselves, that ye love the Lord your God.

II. The destroying power of corrupt society (Jos. 23:12-13). If the Israelites entered into close intercourse with the wicked, the wicked would vex them with many forms of pain, and ultimately cause them to perish from off the good land which the Lord their God had given them.

1. Corrupt society is insidious in its attractions. It has snares and traps. True, it has also scourges for the sides, and thorns for the eyes; but as the significant order of the text, so is the ingenious cruelty of the process: the snares and traps are placed first, and not till the victim is secure come the scourges and the thorns. Corrupt men lead the pure away stealthily; they instinctively conceal their worst things, reveal their best, and thus draw their prey onward. The very virtues of the pure sometimes help in the work of destruction. Charity thinketh no evil, and the innocent man is tempted to say of his seducers, These men have been unfairly spoken of; they are better than report stated. Time, too, is on the side of decay.

2. Corrupt society has, for many, a fascinating influence. It plies them in their weakest places. It consults their peculiar appetites. In its various and bountiful cruelty it holds the cup of water to the thirsty, gives bread to the hungry, has wine for the intemperate, and a feast of fat things for the glutton. With its thousand influences of seductive battery it plies hard every gate of the senses.

3. Corrupt society is hard to escape from. Its snares draw very closely into fast knots, and its traps lock upon their prey as the jaws spring together.

4. Corrupt society works corruption, and death through corruption. In some forms of disease, the body seems mercifully to die first, and afterwards to decay. In other diseases corruption is a part of the process of dying. The latter is ever the dreadful form in which the soul goes down to its grave. Woful indeed is the cry, O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death? Happy is he who can add, I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. Sometimes, even amid the wretchedness of this spiritual decay, a man flatters himself that he is still vigorous and healthy. The secret of the mistake may be found in the appropriately loathsome image of Burke, Corruption breeds new forms of life. There is in every realm of creation a life that worketh death, and such too is the life in which the corrupt mind finds enough to satisfy it that it is not dead yet.

III. The stimulating power of grateful recollections (Jos. 23:14).

1. The Israelites were to remember the good example of a faithful man. Joshua had led them in patience, and wisdom, and courage, and holiness. He was now going the way of all the earth; but he, being dead, might yet be found speaking helpfully.

2. They were to remember that God had fulfilled every good word of His promises. Not one promise had failed. They knew that in their own souls; they might know it also in their many possessions. God ever encourages His people by the faithfulness of some of their fellows, and always by His own faithfulness.

IV. The fatal power of Divine anger (Jos. 23:16). Before that, said Joshua, Ye shall perish quickly. As the beauty of Gods love, so is the terribleness of Gods anger.

1. The anger of God in no way reflects upon His holiness. All government supposes the punishment of evil-doers. Divine anger is not an impulsive passion, but the calm exercise of justice upon transgressors for the sake of all men.

2. The anger of God is not inconsistent with His mercy. There are instances in which righteousness demands anger. Thus it is said that one of the late Dr. Spencers parishioners in Brooklyn met him hurriedly urging his way down the street one day; his lip was set, and there was something strange in that gray eye. How are you to-day, doctor? asked the parishioner, pleasantly. He waked as from a dream, and replied soberly, I am mad! It was a new word for a mild, true-hearted Christian; but he waited, and with a deep earnest voice went on, I found a widow standing by her goods which were thrown into the street; she could not pay the months rent; the landlord turned her out; and one of her children is going to die; and that man is a member of the Church. I told her to take her things back again. I am on my way to see him. So mercy and anger dwelt together in the heart of Him who drove the traders out of the temple with a scourge of small cords, and wept over the city in its guilt and coming doom.

3. The anger of God is necessary to His mercy. If the anger could not be righteous, the mercy could not be real. If Gods anger towards the wicked were not right, He would be bound to pardon everybody. When pardon is compulsory, it is no longer mercy. If the idea of mercy is true, the possibility of anger must be true also. Mercy is a beautiful flower growing up from the very soil of righteous anger, and you cannot take away the ground in which the flower grows without removing the flower too. Mercy is a glorious picture, painted by the love of Christ upon the groundwork of justice in the punishment of sin, and he who destroys the canvas must not murmur when he finds that the picture has vanished.

4. The anger of God is real, and terrible in its results. When it is kindled against men, they quickly perish from off the good land where mercy loved to see them dwell. That is always the spirit of the Scripture representation.

OUTLINES AND COMMENTS ON THE VERSES

Jos. 23:11.A MANS COMMAND OF HIS OWN HEART.

Some persons regard love as entirely spontaneous. Admitting that a wrong affection may be held in check, they assume also that love cannot be created, and that it is free from the control of the will. If that were true, while it might be sinful to love wrong objects, it would no longer be sinful to fail to love right objects. This is not the teaching of the Bible: that not only says, Love not the world; it also bids us love God with all our hearts, love one another, and further says to us, Set your affections on things above. Any metaphysical difficulty in obeying these commands will ever disappear before practical and earnest piety. He who guards himself from all love that is wrong, will find little difficulty in obeying the Scripture admonition to love that which is right. This verse suggests the following considerations:

I. Men are commanded to watch their affections. Take good heed, etc.

II. Men are commanded to control their affections. They are to set them on right objects.

III. Men are commanded to set their affections upon God. Love the Lord your God. These commands are given in view of the fact that God ever helps the man who sincerely seeks the way of righteousness.

Jos. 23:12-13.THE POWER OF EVIL ASSOCIATIONS.

Every healthy mind seeks other minds with which it can have fellowship. It is only the morbid disposition that cries often for a lodge in some vast wilderness. Companions are a necessity. Gods word recognises the necessity, but bids us choose our associates carefully.

I. Wicked companions make a man satisfied with a heart of unbelief. It would be very difficult for any Israelite to worship idols, if every one around him worshipped God. It would be very hard work for any wicked man to continue an unbeliever in Jesus Christ now, if he were the only unbeliever. A man should sometimes ask himself, How should I feel if I were the only unbeliever in my family?in my town or parish?in England?in the world? Robinson Crusoes lot provokes pity. This spiritual isolation would be far more pitiable, and far more unendurable. There are probably few, even of the boldest infidels, who could bear to be the only infidel in the world. Yet it is not difficult to think of a man as able to endure the thought of cleaving to Christ with a holy joy, even though every one else rejected Christ. Every unbelieving man is responsible for the countenance which his example is giving to others. The fellowship of holy men is a great power for good; the fellowship of the wicked is no less a power for evil.

II. Wicked companions make others partakers of their wickedness. Idolatrous Canaanites would make idolatrous Israelites.

1. There is the law of assimilation. Where life is the stronger force, it builds itself up into yet more strength by feeding on surrounding matter, and by making that a part of itself. But often disease and decay overcome life, and assimilate it to their condition. Infection and contagion are parts of the process of assimilation. So a man becomes like his companions, the weaker man succumbing to the stronger. He that walketh with wise men shall be wise, but the companion of fools shall be destroyed. A man may say, I do not believe that it will be so in my case. But his belief does not matter; the operation of the law is no more affected by the mans opinion of the law, than yeast is affected by a mans faith or unbelief in its power to leaven the whole lump into which it is put. This law works on silently and slowly, but surely; and, like other laws, it takes small heed of a mans opinion about its power. With fools, means like fools, whether a man believes it or not. With idolaters, means idolatry.

2. There is also to be taken into account the habit of imitation. Men everywhere practise it unconsciously. More than this; such imitators usually copy the worst features most strongly. Paint me as I am, blotches and all, said Oliver Cromwell to his artist. Thus, in unconscious imitation, men continually reproduce others, and, so far from omitting the blotches, they usually magnify them in the process.

3. The influence of food should not be forgotten in its bearing upon this subject. In a measure, a mans physical nature is made by what he eats and drinks. Companions are the food of a mans social nature, and, to some extent, here also, as the food so the man. In his book on The Origin of Civilisation and the Primitive Condition of Mankind, Sir John Lubbock gives several curious illustrations of the ludicrous beliefs which the natives of some countries have in respect to food. The Malays at Singapore give a large price for the flesh of a tiger, not because they like it, but because they believe that the man who eats tiger acquires the sagacity as well as the courage of that animal. Thus, too, the Dyaks of Borneo are said to shun the flesh of the deer, lest they should become timid; the Caribs reject the flesh of pigs and tortoises, that they may not have small eyes; and the Arabs ascribe the passionate and revengeful character of their countrymen to the use of camels flesh. It is further said that the New Zealanders, after baptizing an infant, used to make it swallow pebbles, so that its heart might be hard and incapable of pity. All this proceeds on the assumption that a mans physical food affects his moral qualities, which, while true in some aspects, is absurd in the manner stated. A mans moral food, however, will certainly affect his moral nature. He who socially feeds on idolatry will become an idolater. He who walks in the counsels of the ungodly will presently occupy the seat of the scorner, as one belonging to himself.

4. All history confirms the truth of these observations. Different nations are marked by distinct traits of character. The names of Greece and Rome represent literature. Turks are known as idle and cruel, Russians as ambitious and cruel, the Spanish as proud, the French as polite, and the Scotch as patriotic. One man in a nation has influenced another, some features have become predominant, and thus a distinctive character has been given to the worlds separated tribes and peoples. Thus, too, there have been distinctive ages: an age of painting, an age of letters, an age of religious persecution, and ages when these things were out of fashion, and something else was more popular. It is worth while, also, to note how many Calvinists have Calvinistic children, and how many Arminians find their offspring holding Arminian views. The children of Episcopalians attach themselves, for the most part, to the Church of their fathers; while in the families of Wesleyans, Baptists, Presbyterians, and the like, the sect also descends from the father to the child. Creeds are hereditary, not so much because of the character of the creed, but because a man becomes like those who are about him to form his character. With so much history to teach him, no man can afford to neglect the warning given in these verses. He who would not become an idolater must shun idolaters.

III. Wicked companions destroy all that remains of a mans better feelings and desires.

1. Good things are neglected, and neglect works death. A limb unused would soon become useless. An unexercised faculty dies out. So it is in a mans soul: From him that hath not, shall be taken away even that which he hath.

2. Men get used to evil things, and the evil things destroy the good. It is said that a prisoner who had been confined for many years in the Bastile, when liberated, cried like a child to be taken back again to the old solitude and darkness with which he had become familiar. Men may get used to strange things. The idolater presently finds his idolatry far more agreeable than the worship of God. A man may get used to no prayer, no Bible, no story of the cross, and no Saviour. It is terrible to think that it is possible to be without hope and without God in the world, and to be so reconciled to that dreadful condition as to wish for no alteration.

Jos. 23:14 aTHE WAY OF ALL THE EARTH.

I. Death in its certainty. This is a universal way. The exceptions of Enoch and Elijah do but lay emphasis on the rule.

II. Death in its variety. Death has many ministers and forms. It is met in various moods. It has vastly different issues.

III. Death in its conscious nearness. This day I am going, etc. That is to say, I am going soon: I feel it. The hour of departure is often known to be at hand.

Jos. 23:14 b.THE UNFAILING WORDS OF THE LORD.

I. The words of the Lord are good words. All the good things which the Lord your God spake.

II. The words of the Lord are wrought cut gradually. The war itself had taken several years. Many years had elapsed since the first promises were made to Abraham.

III. The words of the Lord are every one fulfilled. Not one thing hath failed of all the good things.

IV. The words of the Lord are fulfilled to the satisfying of the heart and soul. Ye know in all your hearts, etc. It is much to satisfy a mans mind, and to prevent all occasion of actual complaint. It is far more to satisfy the heart. The heart in its sanguine hopefulness ever puts large meanings to words of promise. God meets our highest hopes. He not only silences objections; He satisfieth the longing soul, and filleth the hungry soul with goodness.

Jos. 23:15.GODS FULFILMENT OF HIS PROMISES A GUARANTEE OF HIS FULFILMENT OF HIS THREATENINGS.

I. The certainty of Divine promises is to be taken as an assurance of the certainty of Divine threatenings. The argument is: As all good things, so all evil things.

1. Fidelity to words sometimes fails from want of power to fulfil words. Men promise to-day, and to-morrow their power to discharge their promise is taken from them by unforeseen circumstances. Men threaten, it may be quite righteously, but become unable to fulfil their threat. This cannot be so with God.

2. Fidelity to words sometimes fails because of short-sightedness in the use of words. Men use words of which they do not see all the meanings. This can never be so with God.

3. Fidelity to words sometimes fails from a conscientious change of mind. What Saul might have promised the high priest when he desired of him letters to Damascus, he might have felt it wicked to fulfil after that eventful journoy had been taken. God can never change His mind about the righteousness of either His threats or His promises.

4. Absolute fidelity to words is irrespective of the nature of the words. Mans weakness, or short-sightedness, or his changed views, might afford him some excuse for not keeping his words; but, for all that, an unkept word is a broken word. It is no part of the question of fidelity that words be about good things or evil thingsthat they be promises or threatenings. Hence this same argument is sometimes used in an inverted form (cf. Jer. 31:28; Jer. 32:42). God may choose to pardon, if He will, just as any father might withdraw his word and forgive an offending child; but, as a rule, it is here asserted that as God is true to His promises of good things, so He is true in His promises of evil things.

II. The bearing of this truth on our religious faith and life.

1. No present prosperity should be taken as an essential earnest of permanent prosperity. God tries men with His good things to see how they will use them. If they are abused, He will take them away. The riches of Dives here, can give no security against the poverty of Dives hereafter. Purple and fine linen may be only for a time. Sumptuous fare to-day is no pledge that there may not be agony for a drop of water presently.

2. The dark side of the Bible is as true as the bright side. The faith of many people has in it real promises and empty threatenings, a real heaven and a fabulous hell, real redeemed and scarecrow lost, real angels and more than spectral fiends, a real Christ and a mythical devil. God Himself is held to be real on the side of mercy and gentleness and love, and unreal on the side of every sterner quality. If all this be so indeed, the half of the Bible that is untrue renders the half that is true too poor for either respect or hope.

3. Every fulfilled promise of God should become to us a warning. The good things in which He has faithfully kept His word should preach to us of the evil things in which He will also be true. These are very gentle lips which thus solemnly proclaim wrath to come against the ungodly. The very tenderness of the tones ought to have, to every unbelieving man, the solemn emphasis of truth. When a mother threatens a child sotto voce, while tears of love stream down her face, it is time for the child to repent. So when God sets mercy to preach wrath, and bids His good things assure the wicked of His evil things, it is time to believe indeed.

4. The measure of mans hope should become, also, the measure of his fear. There are many who are not Christians who admire the faith and enthusiasm of the Church. The hymns of the Church are not seldom the admiration of many who make no claim whatever of belonging unto Christ. All the joy in which men legitimately hope for heaven as the home of the righteous is preaching the certainty of the sorrow which awaits the ungodly.

Jos. 23:14-16.CHILDHOOD THROUGH FATHERHOOD.

God was seeking to make the Israelites into a nation which should be separate from all the nations of the earth. He would fashion these children of Abraham into children of God. Mark the process. God assumes that His people will be faithful. He does not prove them before He blesses them. He treats them as a peculiar people already, in order to make them peculiar. He foresees their coming unfaithfulness, but He does not, even on that account, withhold His good gifts. He still gives the good land, with all its accompanying mercies, and does but warn His people that the gifts are conditional. In view of this spirit, the following thoughts may be expanded and illustrated:

I. God proposes to make men His children by treating them as His children.

II. God the Father gives to men abundantly in the present, that He may prepare them to enjoy the still more abundant mercy of the future.

III. To repudiate Gods fatherhood, and to ignore the purpose of His fatherly gifts, is to be cut off from the joys of childhood altogether.

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

11. Take good heed This is the condition of the foregoing promise. “Such is the slothfulness of the flesh that it always needs to be stimulated by threats.” Calvin. The depravity of men compels a resort to fear when an appeal to hope has been ineffectual.

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

Take good heed therefore to yourselves, that you love YHWH your God.’

The thought of loving God was central to the teaching of Moses (Deu 6:4-6), and revealed in the keeping of His commandments (Deu 5:10; Jos 22:5), in walking in His ways (Deu 10:12; Deu 11:22; Deu 19:9; Jos 22:5), in serving Him with heart and soul (Deu 10:12), and in cleaving only to Him (Deu 11:22; Deu 30:20; Jos 22:5). It would result in keeping His charge, His statutes, His judgments, and His commandments (Deu 11:1; Deu 30:16). It was to be a love that was total, with heart, and soul, and might (Deu 6:5; Deu 11:13; Deu 13:3; Deu 30:6; Jos 22:5). It was in the final analysis the result of God ‘circumcising the heart’ (Deu 30:6), which means working a transforming experience within. As Jesus said, ‘If you love me you will keep my commandments’ (Joh 14:15).

This was a robust love, a love resulting from gratitude and a sense of relationship with God through covenant, and an awareness of His love (Deu 7:7-8; Deu 7:13; Deu 10:15), a love which resulted in action. There was nothing sentimental about it, it affected every part of life.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

How closely connected sin is with its sure punishment. My backslidings shall correct thee! The very thing which we lean upon for confidence or comfort; that above every other evil, shall be sure to pierce us through. In the unhappy, and I had almost said unnatural, coalition sometimes made between believers and unbelievers, what sorrow hath sprung out of them? ‘There is death in the pot. Snares, and traps, and scourges, and thorns, we make for ourselves. The root is laid in unbelief, and it will be sure to bring forth and blossom with deadly fruit. Lord, keep thy people from themselves and the perversity of their ways, for they are well kept who are preserved by thee. Joh_17:11; Joh_17:15 .

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

Jos 23:11 Take good heed therefore unto yourselves, that ye love the LORD your God.

Ver. 11. Take heed therefore unto yourselves. ] Heb., To your souls, that chief part of yourselves, the welfare whereof lieth upon it.

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

selves-souls. Hebrew. nephesh, App-2.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Take good: Jos 22:5, Deu 4:9, Deu 6:5-12, Pro 4:23, Luk 21:34, Eph 5:15, Heb 12:15

yourselves: Heb. your souls

love: Exo 20:6, Rom 8:28, 1Co 8:3, 1Co 16:22, Jud 1:20, Jud 1:21

Reciprocal: Exo 23:13 – be circumspect Deu 4:15 – Take ye Deu 4:23 – heed 2Ki 21:8 – only if they Jer 17:21 – Take Heb 2:1 – the more

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

TAKE GOOD HEED!

Take good heed therefore unto yourselves, that ye love the Lord your God, etc.

Jos 23:11-15

I. In this speech Joshua once more pressed upon the people their true character as the chosen people of the Lord God.He is able now to appeal to facts in evidence of the truth which had once been matters of faith; he is able now to point to what God has done, to call the people themselves to witness that all the promises of God have come to pass, and that not one good thing hath failed of all those which the Lord their God had promised them.

II. Joshua found in his old age nothing to retract of what he had said in former times concerning God and the people, and the relation of the one to the other.He next implores the people to guard against backsliding. He says: Go on as you have begun, and God will bless you; your shame, and misery, and damnation will be if you turn back from following the Lord.

III. Once more, looking forward to the future, Joshua declares that, in case of the Israelites going back from their high position as Gods people, God would punish them as severely as hitherto He had blessed them bounteously.The possession of the land had been the reward of obedience; the loss of the same would be the punishment of disobedience.

All the points in Joshuas speech might be applied by a Christian minister to a Christian congregation. Consider: (1) whether you are sufficiently alive to your high calling, and profession, and privileges; (2) whether you are guarding against backsliding in your religious course; (3) whether you think sufficiently of the danger of offending God, and of the awfulness of that judgment-seat before which the living and the dead must alike one day stand.

Bishop Harvey Goodwin.

Illustrations

(1) Once having chosen, we cannot escape the results of our choice. Here, even for us, an inevitable must comes in. We are kings in the realm of choice; we are slaves in the realm of the results of our choice. We cannot escape the consequences of our decisions, any more than the Israelites could serve other gods, and yet receive the rewards of serving Jehovah.

(2)Though the mills of God grind slowly,

Yet they grind exceeding small;

Though with patience He stands waiting,

With exactness grinds He all.

So glorious and yet so solemn is the responsibility of choice. Joshuas appeal rings across the centuries, and the urgency of its appeal to us is all the greater because our light is so much clearer than his. Life is a service; who shall be our master?

(3) Rev. David Sandeman, the devoted missionary to China, delighting, as he did, in vigorous exercise, one day in a walk with two companions, joined for a few minutes in the amusement of leaping over a stile. While his companions failed he cleared the stile so easily and gracefully as to draw forth the admiration of a dragoon who stood by. When about to walk on Mr. Sandeman turned to the soldier, got him into conversation, and spoke of the perils and honours of a life like his. Then, suddenly drawing himself up to his full height, he exclaimed, with deep feeling, There is something far better yet. It is to be a soldier of Jesus Christ. Are you that? The dragoon looked with wonder on the man of muscle and sinew, who could thus speak to his soul, and shook hands at parting deeply impressed and interested.

Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary

Jos 23:11. Take good heed Now it requires more watchfulness and diligence than it did in the wilderness, because your temptations are now stronger, from the examples and insinuations of your bad neighbours, the remainders of this wicked people; and from your own peace and prosperity; and the pride, security, forgetfulness of God, and luxury, which usually attend that condition.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments