
Text -- Joshua 2:22-24 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Jos 2:22 - -- Supporting themselves there with the provisions, which Rahab had furnished them with.
Supporting themselves there with the provisions, which Rahab had furnished them with.

Wesley: Jos 2:22 - -- That is, in the road to Jordan, and the places near it, but not in the mountains.
That is, in the road to Jordan, and the places near it, but not in the mountains.
Clarke: Jos 2:23 - -- So the two men returned - Having concealed themselves in the mountains that night, all the next day, and the night ensuing, on the third day they re...
So the two men returned - Having concealed themselves in the mountains that night, all the next day, and the night ensuing, on the third day they returned to Joshua.

Clarke: Jos 2:24 - -- Truly the Lord hath delivered into our hands all the land - How different was this report from that brought by the spies on a former occasion! They ...
Truly the Lord hath delivered into our hands all the land - How different was this report from that brought by the spies on a former occasion! They found that all the inhabitants of the land were panic-struck. The people had heard of the great exploits of the Israelites on the other side of Jordan; and as they had destroyed the potent kings of the Amorites, they took it for granted that nothing could stand before them. This information was necessary to Joshua to guide him in forming the plan of his campaign
1. It may be asked, Did not Rahab lie in the account she gave to the officers of the king of Jericho, (Jos 2:4, Jos 2:5), There came men unto me, etc.? I answer, She certainly did; and the inspired writer sets down the fact merely as it stood, without making the Spirit of God responsible for the dissimulation of the woman. But was she not rewarded, etc.? Yes; for her hospitality and faith, not for her lie. But could she have saved the spies without telling a lie? Yes, she certainly might; but what notion could a woman of her occupation, though nothing worse than an inn-keeper, have of the nicer distinctions between truth and falsehood, living among a most profligate and depraved people, where truth could scarcely be known
2. There is a lax morality in the world that recommends a lie rather than the truth, when the purposes of religion and humanity can be served by it. But when can this be? The religion of Christ is one eternal system of truth, and can neither be served by a lie nor admit one. On this vile subject fine words have been spoken. Tasso, in his elegant episode of Sophronia and Olindo, in the Gerusalemme Liberata, b. ii., v. 22, represents the former as telling a lie to Saladdin, relative to the stealing of an image, for which, as he could not discover the culprit, he doomed all the Christians in his power to death. Sophronia, a pious Christian virgin, getting into the presence of the tyrant, in order to save her people, accuses herself, though perfectly innocent, of the theft. Her conduct on this occasion the poet embellishes in the following manner, for which the religion of that time, which dealt in holy frauds, would no doubt applaud him
‘ Ed ella: il reo si trova al tuo cospetto
Opra e il furto, Signor, di questa man
Io l’ immagine tolsi; Io son cole
Che tu ricerchi, e me punir tu dei
Cosi al pubblico fato il capo alter
Offerse, e ‘ l volle in se sol racorre
Magnanima Menzogna! or quando e il Ver
Si Bello, che si possa a te preporre?
Then she: "Before thy sight the guilty stands
The theft, O King, committed by these hands
In me the thief who stole the image view
To me the punishment decreed is due.
Thus, filled with public zeal, the generous dam
A victim for her people’ s ransom came
O great deceit! O lie divinely fair
What truth with such a falsehood can compare
Hoole
Thus a lie is ornamented with splendid decorations both by the Italian and English poet, and the whole formed into an anti-apostolic maxim, Let us do Evil, that Good may come of it. A purer morality was taught by one of the most ancient heathen writers than is here preached by these demi-christians: -
Iliad. l. ix., v. 312
My soul detests him as the gates of hell
Who knows the truth and dares a falsehood tell
The following is the advice of a genuine Christian poet, and one of the holiest men of his time: -
Lie not; but let thy heart be true to God
Thy tongue to it, thy actions to them bot
Cowards tell lies, and those who fear the rod
The stormy working soul spits lies and froth
Dare To Be True! nothing can Need a lie
The fault that needs it most grows Two thereby
Herbert
For other observations on this subject see the notes on Gen 12:20, at the end, and Gen 20:12
3. Though the hand of God was evidently in every thing that concerned the Israelites, and they were taught to consider that by his might alone they were to be put in possession of the promised land; yet they were as fully convinced that if they did not use the counsel, prudence, and strength which they had received from him, they should not succeed. Hence, while they depended on the Divine direction and power, they exercised their own prudence, and put forth their own strength; and thus they were workers together with him, and did not receive the grace of God in vain. The application of this maxim is easy; and we cannot expect any success, either in things spiritual or temporal, unless we walk by the same rule and mind the same thing.
Calvin -> Jos 2:24
Calvin: Jos 2:24 - -- 24.And they said unto Joshua, etc. This passage shows that Joshua was not mistaken in selecting his spies; for their language proves them to have bee...
24.And they said unto Joshua, etc. This passage shows that Joshua was not mistaken in selecting his spies; for their language proves them to have been right-hearted men possessed of rare integrity. Others, perhaps, not recovered from the terror into which they had once been thrown, would have disturbed the whole camp, but these, while they reflect on the wonderful kindness of God, displayed in their escape from danger, and the happy issue of their expedition, exhort Joshua and the people to go boldly forward. And although the mere promise of possessing the land ought to have been sufficient, yet the Lord is so very indulgent to their weakness, that, for the sake of removing all doubt, he confirms what he had promised by experience. That the Lord had not spoken in vain, was proved by the consternation of the nations, when it began already to put them to flight., and to drive them out, as if hornets had been sent in upon them. For they argue in the same way as Rahab had done, that the land was given to them, as the inhabitants had almost fainted away from fear. I have therefore used the illative particle for, though the literal meaning is, and also. But it is sufficiently plain, that in the other way there is a confirmation of what they had said. And, indeed, the courage of all melted away, as if they felt themselves routed by the hand of God.
found them not : 1Sa 19:10-12; 2Sa 17:20; Psa 32:6, Psa 32:7

TSK: Jos 2:24 - -- Truly the Lord : Jos 1:8, Jos 21:44, Jos 21:45; Exo 23:31; Num 13:32, Num 13:33; Pro 25:13
all the inhabitants : Jos 2:9-11; Psa 48:5, Psa 48:6; Rev 6...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jos 2:22
Barnes: Jos 2:22 - -- Unto the mountain - Probably the mountains to the west and north of Jericho, called afterward, from the belief that the 40 days of our LordR...
Unto the mountain - Probably the mountains to the west and north of Jericho, called afterward, from the belief that the 40 days of our Lord’ s temptation were passed among them, the Quarantania. The spies avoided at the first the neighhourhood of the Jordan, where the pursuers sought them: and amidst the grottoes of the limestone rocks, which in later ages were the abode of numerous hermits, they could readily shelter themselves for three days.
Poole: Jos 2:22 - -- Abode there three days supporting themselves there with the provisions, which after the manner of those times and places they carried with them, whic...
Abode there three days supporting themselves there with the provisions, which after the manner of those times and places they carried with them, which Rahab furnished them with.
Throughout all the way i.e. in the road to Jordan, and the places near it, but not in the mountains.
Haydock -> Jos 2:24
Haydock: Jos 2:24 - -- Fear, as Rahab had testified. They might also have been witnesses of the people's consternation, which gave them the most assured hopes of victory, ...
Fear, as Rahab had testified. They might also have been witnesses of the people's consternation, which gave them the most assured hopes of victory, as the Lord had given this sign, among others, that he would be with them, Deuteronomy xxviii. 10. (Haydock)
Gill: Jos 2:22 - -- And they went, and came unto the mountain,.... Rahab had directed them to, the mountain Quarantania; see Gill on Jos 2:16,
and abode there three da...
And they went, and came unto the mountain,.... Rahab had directed them to, the mountain Quarantania; see Gill on Jos 2:16,
and abode there three days; being, no doubt, supplied with food by Rahab; and it might not be three wholly, but one whole day and part of the other two:
until the pursuers were returned; to the city of Jericho, as might reasonably be supposed:
and the pursuers sought them throughout all the way; from Jericho to the fords of Jordan, searching every hedge, field, and village as they went and returned:
but found them not; Rahab having hid them in her house, and then sent them to the mountain, there to remain till the return of the pursuers.

Gill: Jos 2:23 - -- So the two men returned, and descended from the mountain,.... Or came down from it again, by which, it seems, they went to the top of it, and hid them...
So the two men returned, and descended from the mountain,.... Or came down from it again, by which, it seems, they went to the top of it, and hid themselves in some cave there: this descent, Kimchi says, was,"on the third day of their being sent, which was the second day of the three days Joshua made mention of when he said, "within three days";''See Gill on Jos 1:11,
and passed over; that is, the river Jordan, at the fords of it:
and came to Joshua the son of Nun; at Shittim, where he still continued, and from whence he sent them, Jos 2:1,
and told him all things that befell them; what house they went into when come to Jericho, what reception they met with, the report of them to the king of Jericho, how messengers were sent by him to demand them, and by what means they were preserved and made their escape.

Gill: Jos 2:24 - -- And they said unto Joshua,.... Made a report of what they had got knowledge of, which answered the end of their mission:
truly the Lord hath delive...
And they said unto Joshua,.... Made a report of what they had got knowledge of, which answered the end of their mission:
truly the Lord hath delivered into our hands all the land: which they concluded by the terror the inhabitants of it were in, and so in no condition to make resistance and defend themselves; and they not only judged of the whole land by the case of the inhabitants of Jericho, but were assured by Rahab that all the inhabitants of the land were in the same plight and condition, Jos 2:9,
for even the inhabitants of the country do faint because of us; this was the temper and disposition they appeared in, and seems to be what Joshua was chiefly desirous of knowing; since nothing else is told by the spies nor inquired of by him, but immediately upon this report began his march towards Canaan, as in the next chapter is related.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jos 2:1-24
TSK Synopsis: Jos 2:1-24 - --1 Rahab receives and conceals the two spies sent from Shittim.8 The covenant between her and them.23 Their return and relation.
MHCC -> Jos 2:22-24
MHCC: Jos 2:22-24 - --The report the spies brought was encouraging. All the people of the country faint because of Israel; they have neither wisdom to yield, nor courage to...
Matthew Henry -> Jos 2:22-24
Matthew Henry: Jos 2:22-24 - -- We have here the safe return of the spies Joshua had sent, and the great encouragement they brought with them to Israel to proceed in their descent ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jos 2:22; Jos 2:23-24
Keil-Delitzsch: Jos 2:22 - --
The spies remained three days in the mountains, till the officers returned to the town, after searching for them the whole way in vain. The mountain...
