Slaughter at Jericho
[Could the loving God of the New Testament order the complete destruction of the
inhabitants of Jericho found in the Old Testament? by Steve Fazekas] "The
massacre of the inhabitants who occupied the fortified city-outpost known as
Jericho can raise many questions in the mind of the careful reader. The higher
critic has claimed for many years there was a conflict between the Bible and
current archaeological data and that the claimed historicity of the sacred text
was merely exaggerated colorful myth. Some liberal thinkers have viewed the
Jehovah of the Old Testament as a deity who required appeasement and blood
sacrifice to satisfy his capricious lust, while the New Testament god, in their
view, is all about love, acceptance, and toleration. Then, the atheist uses the
Bible to “prove” to the Christian that the god of his scripture is a warmonger
and the murderer of innocent women and children, and even if he did exist, he
would remain unworthy of the worship and adoration required to satisfy his huge
ego.
Even many an ardent Bible believer has felt some uneasiness at the unashamed
transparency of the sacred text. Along with this comes the struggle to reconcile
the relationship between a good and benevolent God and the obvious presence of
evil in the world, especially as it relates to the death of women and children.
Recall the youthful gusto with which many have sung the traditional American
spiritual.
“Joshua fit de battle of Jericho,
Jericho, Jericho,
Joshua fit de battle of Jericho,
An de walls come a tumbling down.”
Of course, in Sunday School, as we marched around the chairs and pretended to
blow the ram-horns, we were definitely on the side of the “good guys.” On the
other hand, Jericho and its inhabitants were the villains who deserved to lose
their city, though we didn’t know why. Only much later did we come to realize
there was a sober side to this deadly dance, which gave new face and fresh
meaning to our childish play.
Let us consider the text as it reads in the Authorized Version of the Bible.
And they utterly destroyed all that was in the city, both man and woman, young
and old, and ox, and sheep, and ass, with the edge of the sword. (Joshua 6:21)
Try as we might, there is no way we can dodge the dilemma by laying the event at
the feet of an overly zealous Joshua leading a nomadic army of marauding,
misguided Israelites. Nor can we sweep it under the rug by allowing for some
kind of modified divine permission or restraint, which might absolve God from
any direct culpability. The fact remains; it was a carefully calculated act with
a specific goal in mind. Jehovah ordered it (Deuteronomy 7:2), and Joshua did it
(Joshua 6:21).
The qualifier in this saga seems to be what is referred to in Genesis 15:16 as
the “iniquity of the Amorites.” The nations that occupied Canaan had become so
hideously debauched, so degenerate in custom and practice, that the judgment of
God became imminent. We are told in the Mosaic account that God is preparing to
act and His longsuffering is about to end.
For the land has become defiled, therefore I have brought its punishment upon
it, so the land has spewed out its inhabitants. (Leviticus 18:25)
In the larger context of the writings of Moses, the Amorites are viewed by
Jehovah as representative of the whole of Palestine. Further, it was as if they
had become so saturated with corruption that the very earth itself spit them
out.
Recent textual discoveries in Ugarit confirm the Scripture record of centuries
filled with idolatry, sodomy, bestiality, sorcery, and child sacrifice.
Consequently, each generation had polluted the next with idolatry, perversion,
and blood. We must not read Deuteronomy 18:9–12 with an emotionless indifference
in the way that some would read yesterday’s news. Parents offered up their
children to the god Molech by fire. Child sacrifice is more than an unfortunate,
ancient tribal custom. It is a hideous twisted ritual conducted by men who have
reprobated themselves into beasts. Then again, the customs of Canaan are not
really a quantum leap from ancient religious ritual to our current indulgence of
“a woman's right to choose,” are they?
The problem of Jericho is easily solved. God has revealed Himself to us in the
Bible just as He is. His self-revelation to Moses (see Exodus 34: 6–7) is very
revealing:
And Jehovah passed before him and proclaimed, Jehovah, Jehovah, a God merciful
and gracious, slow to anger and abundant in loving-kindness and truth; keeping
loving-kindness for thousands, forgiving iniquity, transgressions and sin; and I
will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the
children, and upon the children’s children. . . .
Can we not see that God’s disposition is showcased in His longsuffering, equity,
mercy, and patience? He never acts in a knee-jerk, capricious manner. Yet at the
same time God reserves the right to be God, doing as He chooses when He wills
and with universal authority over His creation. Even as he pleaded for God to
spare the inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrah, Abraham declared, “Shall not the
judge of the earth do right?” (Genesis 18:25). So, the answer to the problem
lies bound up in the character of God as revealed in Scripture. Is there ever a
time when divine genocide is justified? The answer must be “yes,” because the
judge of the whole earth always does what is right. Scripture makes it
abundantly clear that in time the longsuffering of God will transform itself
into judgment if the warnings are not heeded.
A.W. Tozer in The Knowledge Of The Holy says it well:
Before the Christian church goes into eclipse anywhere, there must first be the
corrupting of her simple basic theology. She simply gets a wrong answer to the
question, “What is God like?” Though she may continue to cling to a sound
nominal creed, her practical working creed has become false. The masses of her
adherents come to believe that God is different from what He actually is; and
that is heresy of the most insidious and deadly kind.
Here are words from the Apostle Paul challenging us to think Biblically about
the nature and character of God. “Behold then the goodness and severity of God.”
(Romans 11:22) Full text: Slaughter at Jericho
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2008/10/27/contradictions-slaughter-at-jericho
Response to comment [from an atheist]: "And?"
You atheists here at TOL are so genteel. You're giving God a pass on this one? Isa 1:18. Great. Moving on...
Response to comment [from a Christian]: "I am sorry you don't like what you read."
I like what I read.
Response to comment [from a Catholic]: [Quote: I think her avatar is fitting. It looks like a conceited nerd with his eyes wide shut...] "[I]t will take more than that to get on her signature."
A few housekeeping items:
I generally do not include "other" (unless they persist with the same question for your convenience) or "Catholic" (because it is generally understood that they don't read their Bible anyway). If someone is claiming to be something or someone they are not, then I add them to Satan Inc (TOL Heretics List) http://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showthread.php?t=55479 and/or signature. Helpful?