Joshua 5:9
Context5:9 The Lord said to Joshua, “Today I have taken away 1 the disgrace 2 of Egypt from you.” So that place is called Gilgal 3 even to this day.
Joshua 5:1
Context5:1 When all the Amorite kings on the west side of the Jordan and all the Canaanite kings along the seacoast heard how the Lord had dried up the water of the Jordan before the Israelites while they 4 crossed, they lost their courage and could not even breathe for fear of the Israelites. 5
Joshua 11:14-15
Context11:14 The Israelites plundered all the goods of these cities and the cattle, but they totally destroyed all the people 6 and allowed no one who breathed to live. 11:15 Moses the Lord’s servant passed on the Lord’s commands to Joshua, and Joshua did as he was told. He did not ignore any of the commands the Lord had given Moses. 7
[5:9] 2 sn One might take the disgrace of Egypt as a reference to their uncircumcised condition (see Gen 34:14), but the generation that left Egypt was circumcised (see v. 5). It more likely refers to the disgrace they experienced in Egyptian slavery. When this new generation reached the promised land and renewed their covenantal commitment to the Lord by submitting to the rite of circumcision, the
[5:9] 3 sn The name Gilgal sounds like the Hebrew verb “roll away” (גַּלַל, galal).
[5:1] 4 tc Another textual tradition has, “while we crossed.”
[5:1] 5 tn Heb “their heart[s] melted and there was no longer in them breathe because of the sons of Israel.”
[11:14] 6 tn Heb “but all the people they struck down with the edge of the sword until they destroyed them.”
[11:15] 7 tn Heb “As the