Chapter 46
The Blessings and the Curses
[This chapter is based on Joshua 8.]
AFTER the execution of the sentence upon Achan, Joshua was commanded to marshal all the
men of war and again advance against Ai. The power of God was with His people, and they
were soon in possession of the city.
Military operations were now suspended, that all Israel might engage in a solemn religious
service. The people were eager to obtain a settlement in Canaan; as yet they had not homes
or lands for their families, and in order to gain these they must drive out the
Canaanites; but this important work must be deferred, for a higher duty demanded their
first attention.
Before taking possession of their inheritance, they must renew their covenant of loyalty
to God. In the last instructions of Moses, direction had been twice given for a
convocation of the tribes upon Mounts Ebal and Gerizim, at Shechem, for the solemn
recognition of the law of God. In obedience to these injunctions the whole people, not
only men, but "the women, and the little ones, and the strangers that were conversant
among them" left their camp at Gilgal, and marched through the country of their
enemies, to the vale of Shechem, near the center of the land. Though surrounded by
unconquered foes, they were safe under the protection of God as long as they were faithful
to Him. Now, as in the days of Jacob, "the terror of God was upon the cities that
were round about them" (Genesis 35:5), and the Hebrews were unmolested.
The place appointed for this solemn service was one already sacred from its association
with the history of their fathers. It was here that Abraham raised his first altar to
Jehovah in the land of Canaan. Here both Abraham and Jacob had pitched their tents. Here
the latter bought the field in which the tribes were to bury the body of Joseph. Here also
was the well that Jacob had dug, and the oak under which he had buried the idolatrous
images of his household.
The spot chosen was one of the most beautiful in all Palestine, and worthy to be the
theater where this grand and impressive scene was to be enacted. The lovely valley, its
green fields dotted with olive groves, watered with brooks from living fountains, and
gemmed with wild flowers, spread out invitingly between the barren hills. Ebal and
Gerizim, upon opposite sides of the valley, nearly approach each other, their lower spurs
seeming to form a natural pulpit, every word spoken on one being distinctly audible on the
other, while the mountainsides, receding, afford space for a vast assemblage.
According to the directions given by Moses, a monument of great stones was erected upon
Mount Ebal. Upon these stones, previously prepared by a covering of plaster, the law was
inscribed--not only the ten precepts spoken from Sinai and engraved on the tables of
stone, but the laws communicated to Moses, and by him written in a book. Beside this
monument was built an altar of unhewn stone, upon which sacrifices were offered unto the
Lord. The fact that the altar was set up on Mount Ebal, the mountain upon which the curse
was put, was significant, denoting that because of their transgressions of God's law,
Israel had justly incurred His wrath, and that it would be at once visited, but for the
atonement of Christ, represented by the altar of sacrifice.
Six of the tribes--all descended from Leah and Rachel--were stationed upon Mount Gerizim;
while those that descended from the handmaids, together with Reuben and Zebulun, took
their position on Ebal, the priests with the ark occupying the valley between them.
Silence was proclaimed by the sound of the signal trumpet; and then in the deep stillness,
and in the presence of this vast assembly, Joshua, standing beside the sacred ark, read
the blessings that were to follow obedience to God's law. All the tribes on Gerizim
responded by an Amen. He then read the curses, and the tribes on Ebal in like manner gave
their assent, thousands upon thousands of voices uniting as the voice of one man in the
solemn response. Following this came the reading of the law of God, together with the
statutes and judgments that had been delivered to them by Moses.
Israel had received the law directly from the mouth of God at Sinai; and its sacred
precepts, written by His own hand, were still preserved in the ark. Now it had been again
written where all could read it. All had the privilege of seeing for themselves the
conditions of the covenant under which they were to hold possession of Canaan. All were to
signify their acceptance of the terms of the covenant and give their assent to the
blessings or curses for its observance or neglect. The law was not only written upon the
memorial stones, but was read by Joshua himself in the hearing of all Israel. It had not
been many weeks since Moses gave the whole book of Deuteronomy in discourses to the
people, yet now Joshua read the law again.
Not alone the men of Israel, but "all the women and the little ones" listened to
the reading of the law; for it was important that they also should know and do their duty.
God had commanded Israel concerning His statutes: "Therefore shall ye lay up these My
words in your heart and in your soul, and bind them for a sign upon your hand, that they
may be as frontlets between your eyes. And ye shall teach them your children, . . . that
your days may be multiplied, and the days of your children, in the land which the Lord
sware unto your fathers to give them, as the days of heaven upon the earth."
Deuteronomy 11:18-21.
Every seventh year the whole law was to be read in the assembly of all Israel, as Moses
commanded: "At the end of every seven years, in the solemnity of the year of release,
in the feast of tabernacles, when all Israel is come to appear before the Lord thy God in
the place which He shall choose, thou shalt read this law before all Israel in their
hearing. Gather the people together, men, and women, and children, and thy stranger that
is within thy gates, that they may hear, and that they may learn, and fear the Lord your
God, and observe to do all the words of this law: and that their children, which have not
known anything, may hear, and learn to fear the Lord your God, as long as ye live in the
land whither ye go over Jordan to possess it." Deuteronomy 31:10-13.
Satan is ever at work endeavoring to pervert what God has spoken, to blind the mind and
darken the understanding, and thus lead men into sin. This is why the Lord is so explicit,
making His requirements so very plain that none need err. God is constantly seeking to
draw men close under His protection, that Satan may not practice his cruel, deceptive
power upon them. He has condescended to speak to them with His own voice, to write with
His own hand the living oracles. And these blessed words, all instinct with life and
luminous with truth, are committed to men as a perfect guide. Because Satan is so ready to
catch away the mind and divert the affections from the Lord's promises and requirements,
the greater diligence is needed to fix them in the mind and impress them upon the heart.
Greater attention should be given by religious teachers to instructing the people in the
facts and lessons of Bible history and the warnings and requirements of the Lord. These
should be presented in simple language, adapted to the comprehension of children. It
should be a part of the work both of ministers and parents to see that the young are
instructed in the Scriptures.
Parents can and should interest their children in the varied knowledge found in the sacred
pages. But if they would interest their sons and daughters in the word of God, they must
be interested in it themselves. They must be familiar with its teachings, and, as God
commanded Israel, speak of it, "when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou
walkest by the way, when thou liest down, and when thou risest up." Deuteronomy
11:19. Those who desire their children to love and reverence God must talk of His
goodness, His majesty, and His power, as revealed in His word and in the works of
creation.
Every chapter and every verse of the Bible is a communication from God to men. We should
bind its precepts as signs upon our hands and as frontlets between our eyes. If studied
and obeyed, it would lead God's people, as the Israelites were led, by the pillar of cloud
by day and the pillar of fire by night.
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