Jericho 02

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The passage discusses ritual violence in the Hebrew Bible, focusing on the story of Jericho. It proposes that acts traditionally viewed as war could also be interpreted as acts of worship. Several scholars studying violence in the Bible are also mentioned.

The main topic being discussed is ritual violence at the city of Jericho as described in the Book of Joshua. The passage focuses on reinterpreting events there as ritual acts rather than purely violent acts of war.

Some of the key events described related to ritual violence include the total destruction of Jericho including all its inhabitants as described in the Book of Joshua. The passage also mentions acts like desecrating graves and decapitating statues of enemies' gods.

Don C.

Benjamin, Old Testament Story, an introduction (2004)

Ritual Violence at Jericho

Don C. Benjamin
(Arizona State University, Tempe)

Abstract: Susan Niditch did early and very detailed studies of violence in the
Bible and the challenges it poses for both scholars and people of faith. Today,
T.M. Lemos is leading a remarkable group of scholars pioneering cross-cultural
studies of total war in antiquity and the world today Here I am drawing together
my own work on violence in the world of the Bible, which proposes that herem,
like the lex talionis, may be a curb on, not an incentive to, violence. I also
suggest that Semitic words traditionally translated as acts of war should be
translated as acts of worship.

Key words: ritual violence, total war, herem, Jericho

Susan Niditch did early and very detailed studies of violence in the Bible
and the challenges it poses for both scholars and people of faith (Niditch,
1993). Today, T.M. Lemos is leading a remarkable group of scholars pioneering
cross-cultural studies of total war in antiquity and the world today (Lemos,
2016: 27-65). Here I am drawing together my own work on violence in the
world of the Bible, to propose that herem, like the lex talionis, may be a curb
on, not an incentive to, violence. I also suggest that Semitic words traditionally
translated as acts of war can also be translated as acts of worship.

During the Late Bronze period (1500-1200 B.C.E.) Hebrews were


displaced households (Akkadian: ’apiru) whose common bond was not ethnic,
but social. War and famine were common causes of their social dislocation.
These Hebrews often fought as mercenaries or supported their households by
raiding.

The Hebrews who founded the villages in the hills west of the Jordan
River Valley and north of Jerusalem at the beginning of the Iron Age (1200-
1100 B.C.E.) were from cities along the coast, not nomads from the desert.
What these villagers had in common was that they were social survivors who
fled the famine, plague, and war which brought the Bronze Age to an end. They
were not warriors, they were farmers and herders. They left centralized,
surplus states and created decentralized, subsistence village federation called
Israel. Politically these villagers were Israelites; culturally they were Hebrews.

Only Deuteronomy and Joshua (Josh 3:10) count the peoples of Syria-
Palestine as seven -- the mathematical base YHWH uses to order chaos into
cosmos (Gen 1:1—2:4). At least two observations inform the assumption. First,
the unaided eye sees seven celestial bodies: the sun, moon, Mercury, Venus,
 
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Don C. Benjamin, Old Testament Story, an introduction (2004)

Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. Second, the moon cycles in four seven-day weeks.
Instructions on Outsiders (Deut 7:1–26) teach the people of YHWH to re-enact
creation against these seven peoples of chaos.

The Hebrews are attracted to their neighbors because they wanted both
their land use rights and their knowledge of how to work the land. Marrying
outsider women to acquire land use rights, however, also implies that the
divine patrons of the indigenous peoples, and not YHWH, endow the Hebrews
with land and people.

Total or herem war was waged on four generations. First, warriors


confronted one another on the field of battle. A battlefield victory conquered the
present generation. Second, warriors conquered the future generation by
raping childbearing women, disemboweling pregnant women (2 Kgs 15:16), and
massacring newborn infants. Third, warriors conquered the past generation by
desecrating graves. Human remains were exhumed, burned and scattered to
prevent the ancestors of their enemies from coming to their defense from the
land of the dead. Fourth, warriors conquered the eternal generation by
decapitating statues of the divine patrons of their enemies, breaking their
noses, gouging out their eyes, or taking them into exile (Benjamin, 2015: 82-
84).

Massacring men, women and children seems to be both barbaric and


wasteful today, but the instructions in Deuteronomy reflect the harsh reality
that war is always total war. Wars always involve the killing of the innocent.
Even the signing of the first Geneva Convention in 1864, which sought to
convert war into a sport played by rules of conduct, did not eliminate the
cruelty of war.

Prisoners and plunder were an economic surplus shared by warriors.


Before going into battle, warriors in the world of the Bible vowed all or a portion
of their anticipated prisoners and plunder to YHWH Sabaoth – commander of
the divine warriors. Some chiefs channeled plunder and prisoners of war back
to the villages which had provided warriors and supplies to the tribe (Renfrew,
1973: 292, viii; Service, 1962: 211). The stories of David’s Rise to Power (1 Sam
22-23+27-30) demonstrate this redistribution (Adams, 1984: 79-129; Carneiro,
1981: 37-79; Preebles & Susan M. Kus:, 1977: 421-448).

Today the execution of prisoners of war and the destruction of all their
property – a social institution which Friedrich Schwally (1863-1913) labeled
holy war -- seems barbaric and wasteful (Schwally, 1901). In traditional
cultures like ancient Israel, however, this social institution may have served as
a deterrent to violence and waste

 
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Don C. Benjamin, Old Testament Story, an introduction (2004)

A significant portion of the budget of ancient states came from prisoners


and plunder taken in wars. Tribes, in contrast, set limits on the profits of war
by vowing before the battle to retain only a certain portion of the proceeds. The
rest were executed or burned, not as a sadistic act of revenge, but to transfer
them as sacrifices to the divine assembly. If villages could not profit
substantially by war, they would, hopefully, resort to it only as a last resort,
and not use it, as states did, as a regular source of public funding.

Likewise, life in any condition is considered preferable to death today. In


traditional cultures, however, life as a slave was not necessarily preferable to
death in battle or as a sacrifice following the battle (Beavis, 1992: 37-54).

Inauguration of Joshua at Jericho (Josh 5:13–6:27)

Jericho is an oasis in the Jordan River Valley some 840 feet below sea
level and 20 miles north of the Dead Sea. In contrast with the Hills of Galilee,
which average 40 inches of rainfall a year, and with the Hills of Samaria, which
average about 30 inches of rainfall a year, and with Jerusalem, which averages
24 inches, and with Beth-shan, which averages 13 inches, Jericho receives
only six inches of rainfall a year.

Jericho was founded on a site where two fault lines cut deep into the hill
country, creating two east–west highways running between the Mediterranean
Sea and the Jordan Valley. One route, called the Beth-horon Pass, ran through
the Valley of Aijalon near Jerusalem; the other ran near Gibeah and Michmash.

What draws the telling of the Inauguration of Joshua to Jericho is not


only its strategic location, but also its standing as a threshold separating chaos
from cosmos. Jericho was the place where the world began, where cosmos was
created. Therefore, Jericho was the site where Joshua is inaugurated to teach
the people of YHWH to live in the land of YHWH without cities like Jericho.
Cities were the legacy of the pharaohs and the work of slaves. A thousand
years after the days of Joshua, the people of Qumran still renewed their
covenant with YHWH by crossing the Jordan River and processing around
Jericho’s ruins.

Generation after generation left marks at Jericho. Mesolithic pioneers


occupied the site in 8000 B.C.E. during the Natufian era. Neolithic engineers
fortified Jericho with a massive retaining wall, observatory tower, and diversion
moat between 8500 and 4300 B.C.E. Early Bronze settlers occupied the site
from 2900 to 2300 B.C.E. Hyksos warriors established a battle camp at Jericho
fortified with a sloping glacis and mud-brick wall in 1750–1560 B.C.E.
Hezekiah (726–697 B.C.E.) and Simon (142–134 B.C.E.) were the last kings of
Judah to rebuild the site (Judg 3:13; 2 Sam 10:5; 1 Chr 19:5).

 
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Don C. Benjamin, Old Testament Story, an introduction (2004)

Despite Jericho’s long history, however, the site was uninhabited as often
as inhabited. Jericho was a ghost town from 4000 to 2900 B.C.E., from 2300 to
1750 B.C.E., from 1560 to 716 B.C.E., and from 587 to 142 B.C.E. The existing
ruins at Jericho and Ai, Jericho’s sister city, date from the Early Bronze period
(3300–2000 B.C.E.) or the Middle Bronze period (2000–1550 B.C.E.). As yet,
there is no archaeological evidence for a city or a destruction layer at either site
during the period when Hebrew villages appear in the region (1200—1100
B.C.E.

Kathleen Kenyon (1906–78) of the British School of Archaeology in


Jerusalem was the most accomplished archaeologist to excavate Jericho (1952–
58). For her, Jericho was a strongly fortified Hyksos city during the Middle
Bronze period. Like the Hebrews, the Hyksos were a Semitic people. They ruled
an empire that stretched from Avaris near Cairo (Egypt) today to the Carmel
Mountains near Haifa (Israel). Their city at Jericho was destroyed more than
250 years before Joshua, and remained abandoned until 716 B.C.E., when
Hezekiah rebuilt it. More than one explanation has been offered to reconcile the
destruction of Jericho described in the book of Joshua with the lack of solid
archaeological evidence that a city existed at the site in the days of Joshua.

Perhaps the traditions describing the conquest of Jericho and Ai (Josh 1–


9) are not battle reports, but explanations of the ruins that the Hebrews found
at Jericho and at Ai. Since this proposal was first suggested, anthropologists
have shown that storytellers do use striking natural phenomena and human
ruins familiar to their audiences to punctuate stories, but they do not tell
stories just to explain natural phenomena and human ruins.

Perhaps Jericho’s Late Bronze–period city may still lie beneath a section
of the tell that has not yet been excavated. No excavations have been
conducted at Jericho since those directed by Kathleen Kenyon, who excavated
only a small portion of the site.

Perhaps the city that Joshua conquered may have been completely
eroded by Syria-Palestine’s winter rains. There was a real city at the site when
the Hebrew villages appeared in the area, but all trace of that city has
vanished.

Perhaps the people whom Joshua conquered in the Late Bronze period
were living behind Middle Bronze–period walls. They did not build their own
walls in the Late Bronze period, but simply recycled those from an earlier
period.

Charles Warren (1867–1868) dug three 30-foot shafts into the tell and determined that the 70-
foot high, 10-acre mound (1200 N-S x 600 E-W feet) was artificial, not natural.

 
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Don C. Benjamin, Old Testament Story, an introduction (2004)

Ernst Sellin and Carl Watzinger (1907–1909, 1911) mapped the Middle Bronze period (1600
B.C.E.) retaining wall, 15 feet high, at the base of the tell.

Using a pottery chronology now considered faulty, John Gartstang (1930–1936) dated mud-
brick wall and city at stratum iv to the Late Bronze period and their destruction to Joshua
(1400–1380 B.C.E.).

Kathleen Kenyon (1952–1958), whose reports were finally published in 1981–1983, dug three
trenches on N, W, and S sides of the tell, dated the tower (25 feet in diameter, 25 feet high) to
Neolithic period (7000 B.C.E.), mud-brick wall (6.5 feet wide, 12 feet high) and 40 degree glacis
to the Early Bronze period, but mud-brick wall and city at stratum iv to the Middle Bronze
period (1350 B.C.E.) because there was no Mycenaean pottery associated with either.

Bryant G. Wood (“Did the Israelites Conquer Jericho? A New Look at the Archaeological
Evidence,” BARev 16 [March/Apr: 1990]: 44–57) did not excavate Jericho, but restudied
Kenyon’s records, and argues that:

1) 20 strata, 3 major destructions, 12 minor destructions cannot be assigned to only 100 years
(1650–1550 B.C.E.);
2) There is Late Bronze–period local pottery in Garstang’s and Kenyon’s finds;
3) Jericho is not on a trade route, hence would not import Late Bronze–period Mycenaean
pottery like Megiddo and Gezer;
4) Kenyon excavated an ordinary neighborhood where imported Mycenaean pottery would not
occur;
5) Kenyon excavated only two 26x26-foot squares, which provides too little data to be
conclusive;
6) Hyksos retreating from Egypt would not have destroyed Jericho, which was their own city;
7) Egyptians did not pursue Hyksos north of Sharuhen in the Negeb (Egypt);
8) Egyptians always attacked before harvest, and six bushels of wheat recovered indicate city
fell after harvest;
9) The continuous scarab record in tombs from the Middle Bronze period through the Late
Bronze period (1800–1400 B.C.E.) indicates a Late Bronze–period city did exist

and concludes that:

1) A landslide caused by a Late Bronze–period (1400 B.C.E.!) earthquake blocked the Jordan
River;
2) An earthquake collapsed the Late Bronze–period mud-brick wall, which tumbled across
retaining wall;
3) The Hebrews used rubble as a ladder to enter the city;
4) Spontaneous fires caused by collapsing buildings destroyed the city.

Jericho’s Archaeological Record

Perhaps the Jericho in these traditions may originally have been Bethel,
which, like Ai, was also a sister city of Jericho. There is clear evidence for
Bethel’s destruction in the Late Bronze period, and storytellers may have
transferred stories about the destruction of Bethel to the more famous Jericho.

Perhaps Kenyon simply overlooked evidence for a city at Jericho during the
Late Bronze period. There may be locally made Late Bronze pottery among
 
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Don C. Benjamin, Old Testament Story, an introduction (2004)

Kenyon’s finds, even though there is no Late Bronze–period pottery imported


from Mycenae. There may also be scarab seals from the Late Bronze period
among the grave goods that Kenyon recovered. Burned grain recovered from
the excavation may show that Jericho fell quickly and not after a prolonged
siege. An earthquake may have created a landslide that held back the waters of
the Jordan River and tumbled the city’s main mud-brick wall, providing a ramp
down from the top of the tell across its glacis and retaining wall. The Hebrews
may have climbed up this ramp into the city set ablaze when roofs collapsed
into cooking fires.

My interpretation, however, assumes that it was the ruins of Jericho, and


not a living city, that inspired the Inauguration of Joshua at Jericho. The ruins
of its lofty observation tower and massive retaining walls were monuments to
the affluence and organization of the peoples who once lived at Jericho. Like
others who came on these ruins, the Hebrews were awestruck. The ruins made
the Hebrews wonder why YHWH allowed this great city to be destroyed, and
whether they should rebuild it.

The Hebrews had good reasons to rebuild Jericho. Rebuilding the city would
be an act of stewardship. Heirs were expected to take immediate possession of
their testator’s estates in order to begin payment of the agreed annuity or
sacrifices. They would be repairing the land that YHWH had delegated to them.

Rebuilding Jericho would also allow the Hebrews to enjoy its affluence.
Jericho was an economic gold mine. Obviously, the founders of Jericho knew
how to make a good living in this land, and the Hebrews wanted to imitate
them. The Hebrews hoped Jericho could make them as rich as their
predecessors on the site.

The Inauguration of Joshua at Jericho reflects the idealism of early Israel.


The Hebrews who built their villages in the hills above Jericho were survivors of
the great slave empires of Egypt, Hatti, and Mycenae. Cities were the hallmark
of these empires. While most cultures in the world of the Bible looked on cities
as great accomplishments, the clan of Joshua considered cities to be
monuments to slavery. Hence, the Hebrews created a village culture, not a city
culture. To prevent slavery, early Israel prohibited not only cities, but
monarchs, taxes, and soldiers as well. Life in early Israel would be simple, but
it would be free.

To rebuild Jericho would return the Hebrews to the slavery from which
YHWH had delivered them. Cities and slavery were the antithesis of being
Hebrew. The inauguration warns the Hebrews not to rebuild Jericho, but to
leave the city in ruins, and off-limits, as a reminder that only in a land without
cities can they remain free.

 
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Don C. Benjamin, Old Testament Story, an introduction (2004)

Crisis Episode (Josh 5:13)

The Inauguration of Joshua at Jericho follows the same pattern as an


Inauguration of Marduk in the Enuma Elish Stories from Mesopotamia. Just as
the divine assembly of Babylon inaugurates Marduk to confront Tiamat, YHWH
inaugurates Joshua to confront Jericho. Inauguration stories identify
candidates to the community and authorize their use of power. These stories
defend leaders against charges of ambition by portraying them as simply
following the commission of their divine patrons. Inaugurations regularly open
with candidates pursuing ordinary tasks.

When the book of Joshua opens, the Hebrews are east of the Jordan River.
Some are content, even proud, to remain there. They have no desire to cross
the frontier into the unexplored land to the west. YHWH interrupts this
peaceful existence and inaugurates Joshua to lead the Hebrews into a new
world. When the inauguration opens, Joshua is on guard duty at the perimeter
of the Hebrew camp. YHWH approaches the camp as a warrior responding to a
call to arms (1 Sam 13:2; 22:7; 24:3; 2 Sam 6:1). The intention of the
theophany is to attract the attention of a candidate and to lure the candidate
into the presence of YHWH. The armed warrior attracts the attention of
Joshua, just as the burning bush attracts the attention of Moses at Mt. Horeb
(Exod 3:3).

Joshua challenges the warrior to identify himself: Are you for us, or for our
enemies (Josh 5:13)?

Only YHWH asks questions. The warrior answers: Neither (Josh 5:14),
although At ease! would be a better translation of YHWH’s the characteristic
refusal of YHWH to identify himself on demand.

The prohibition of images of YHWH (Deut 5:8–10) in an iconoclastic culture


like ancient Israel imposes restraints on any theophany in the Bible, which
technically can never be an image of YHWH. Therefore, inaugurations regularly
introduce YHWH vaguely as a messenger (Exod 3:2) or a …man from the divine
household (Judg 13:6). In an Inauguration of Abraham at Mt. Moriah (Gen
21:33–22:19), a messenger speaks to Abraham twice (Gen 22:10+15), before
YHWH speaks to him (Gen 22:16). In an Inauguration of Moses at Mt. Horeb
(Exod 2:23–4:23), a messenger appears (Exod 3:2), before YHWH speaks (Exod
3:6). Although an Annunciation to the Wife of Manoah (Judg 13:1–25) never
formally introduces Manoah and his wife to the …divine messenger only YHWH
hears prayers (Judg 13:9), eats sacrifices (Judg 13:15–16), and refuses to give
the candidate a name (Judg 13:17–18).

 
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Don C. Benjamin, Old Testament Story, an introduction (2004)

inauguration story crisis (Josh 5:13)

When Joshua appeared at Jericho, a warrior suddenly approached him with his sword
drawn. Joshua challenged the stranger: Friend or foe?

inauguration story climax (Josh 5:14)

The warrior answered: At ease! I am YHWH, commander of the divine warriors. I am with
you.

Joshua fell to his knees, touching his forehead to the ground: Your word is my
command!

YHWH Sabaoth ordered Joshua: Take off your sandals. You are standing on holy
ground.

So Joshua removed his sandals.

inauguration story denouement: a creation story (Josh 6:1–27)

Jericho was unable to muster soldiers or assemble elders before the Israelites. Then
YHWH said to Joshua: I have delivered Jericho with its ruler and all its warriors to you. Your
warriors should circle the city in procession once a day for six consecutive days. Seven priests
should walk in procession with their trumpets in front of the ark of YHWH. On the seventh day,
walk in processions around the city seven times. Order the priests to blow their trumpets and the
warriors to shout their battle cry: YHWH is Our Divine Patron! In response, the walls of the city
will prostrate before the procession of warriors walking one behind the other.

So, Joshua, the son of Nun, ordered the priests to shoulder the ark, and assigned seven
priests with trumpets to lead it out of the camp. He ordered the warriors to circle the city in
procession in front of the ark, and they carried out Joshua’s orders. Seven priests blowing their
trumpets led the ark of YHWH out of the camp with warriors walking both in front of the ark
and behind it. Although the priests blew their trumpets continuously, Joshua had ordered the
warriors not to shout their battle cry until he gave the word.

On the first day, the ark circled the city only once before returning to camp for the
night. At dawn, Joshua ordered the priests to shoulder the ark, and assigned seven priests
blowing their trumpets continuously to lead it out of the camp with warriors walking both in
front of the ark and behind it.

On the second day, they circled the city only once before returning to camp for the
night.

On six consecutive days, they repeated the ritual.

At dawn on the seventh day, they walked in procession around the city, in the same
order, a total of seven times. It was only on the seventh day that they circled the city seven
times. On the seventh time, when the priests had blown their trumpets, Joshua gave the word
to the warriors: Shout: YHWH has delivered the city into our hands! Sacrifice the city and
everything in it to YHWH. Spare only the household of Rahab the so-called prostitute because she
spared our warriors. Bring nothing from the sacrifice back to the camp. Plunder taken from a
sacrifice contaminates everything it touches. Deposit the silver, gold, and bronze and iron from
the sacrifice directly into the House of YHWH.

The warriors shouted their battle cry as soon as the priests blew their trumpets. In
response, the walls of the city prostrated before the procession of warriors walking one behind

 
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Don C. Benjamin, Old Testament Story, an introduction (2004)

the other. They sacrificed the entire city to YHWH, men and women, young and old, oxen,
sheep, and asses.

Joshua ordered the warriors who had scouted the land: Deliver the household of Rahab
the so-called prostitute as you swore to her you would do!

The warriors who had scouted the land delivered Rahab, her father, mother, brothers,
and their slaves, and brought them to the perimeter of the camp. They offered the city as a
sacrifice and deposited all the silver, gold, bronze, and iron directly into the House of YHWH.
Nonetheless, they spared the household of Rahab the so-called prostitute, who are still
members of Israel to this day, because she spared the warriors Joshua sent to scout Jericho.

Joshua placed the city under interdict: Cursed be the ruler who rebuilds this city,
Jericho. At the cost of his firstborn shall he lay its foundation, and at the cost of his youngest son
shall he set up its gates.

YHWH was with Joshua, who was honored throughout the land.

Inauguration of Joshua at Jericho (Josh 5:13–6:27 DCB)

The motif of YHWH as a warrior with a flaming sword at the boundary


between the old world and the new world also appears in a Story of Adam and
Eve as Farmers and Child-bearers, where YHWH stations …the cherubim, and a
sword flaming and turning to guard the way to the Tree of Life (Gen 3:24).
YHWH also appears as a warrior in the books of Samuel-Kings (2 Sam 24:16–
17; 2 Kgs 19:35; 1 Chr 21:16) and in a Trial of David (2 Sam 24:16–17). The
warrior who confronts David is armed only with a raised hand, but as in the
Inauguration of Joshua at Jericho, the target of this warrior’s commission is a
city. YHWH talks with David about the city of Jerusalem, and with Joshua
about the city of Jericho.

What takes place at this threshold will determine the future of Israel.
Jericho is a sacred center and YHWH guards its threshold with a flaming
sword. Joshua must use competence and courage to deal with this guardian.
Once across the threshold, the candidate is endowed with the wisdom of the
sacred center by this guardian. To seize this wisdom, the candidate must
challenge the guardian. Only by crossing the established boundaries, only by
provoking the guardian’s destructive power, can the candidate obtain the
guardian’s constructive power, which will allow the Hebrews to pass over into a
new world. To cross the threshold, candidates must develop the discipline to
deny the senses that limit them to the known world and acquire a sense of the
unknown new world. Armed with the confidence of this new sense, candidates
confront the guardian without fear and lead their households forward. A Labor
of Moses and Zipporah against YHWH (Exod 4:24–26) and a Labor of Jacob
against YHWH (Gen 32:23–33) are parallel stories told about ancestors crossing
a frontier to undertake a divine mission.

Climax Episode (Josh 5:14)


 
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Don C. Benjamin, Old Testament Story, an introduction (2004)

In the standard inauguration stories, YHWH greets candidates formally by


calling their name twice: Moses! Moses (Exod 3:4)! Once addressed, candidates
realize they are in the presence of YHWH. Instead of calling Joshua by name,
however, YHWH addresses him Joshua as his commander in chief: At ease, I
am YHWH, commander of the divine warriors (Josh 5:14)!

Joshua, like candidates in other inauguration stories, prostrates himself.


His posture is a demurral that demonstrates his lack of ambition and argues
that he will take possession of Jericho only in obedience and not in a selfish
quest for power. With both physical and verbal demurrals candidates promise
to serve the community, not dominate it. Candidates in inauguration traditions
are reluctant messengers.

YHWH often responds to the demurrals of candidates with the promise: I am


with you. This promise appears at both the beginning of the inauguration when
the warrior says: …as commander of the divine warriors I have come (Josh
5:14), and at the end when the story confirms that YHWH was with Joshua
(Josh 6:27).

YHWH often stays the transfer of a candidate from the human plane to the
divine plane with the words: Fear not! The delay allows candidates to carry out
a divine mission. Here YHWH delays Joshua’s transfer by teaching him the
protocol for an audience with his divine patron. He tells Joshua to remove his
sandals, which will prevent the holiness of YHWH from transfiguring him into a
risk for the Hebrews when he returns to the camp.

Denouement Episode (Josh 6:1–27)

Joshua is now prepared to receive his divine commission. Standard


commissions use a command (Exod 3:8–10), a decalogue (Deut 5:6–21), or a
covenant. This commission, however, is a creation story like the Enuma Elish
Stories that developed in Mesopotamia, and the Stories of the Heavens and the
Earth in the book of Genesis (Gen 1:1–2:4).
When on high…. are the opening words of the Enuma Elish Stories (Enuma
I:1), and a good example of the standard opening words for creation stories.
Likewise, When Joshua appeared before Jericho… better translates the opening
words of this inauguration. When the messenger of YHWH appears, a radical
change is imminent (Gen 39:5; Exod 12:13; 1 Sam 5:9; 7:13; 12:15).

Sterility affidavits are the standard crisis episodes in creation stories. They
certify that when the creator begins to create, there is nothing but chaos. The
sterility affidavit here: …all who went out of the gate of his city (see: Gen 34:24)
and …all who went in at the gate of his city (see: Gen 23:8–10) identify the two

 
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Don C. Benjamin, Old Testament Story, an introduction (2004)

most important groups of men. As early as the culture of Sumer, cities were
governed by warriors and elders. In the Stories of Gilgamesh, both the elders
and the warriors commission him to declare war on Kish. Here there are no
elders to negotiate with the Hebrews, and no warriors to protect Jericho against
them. Jericho is in chaos. The city is as lifeless as the chaos before which
YHWH stands in the Stories of the Heavens and the Earth.

The climax episode in the creation story is a cosmogony. YHWH directs


Joshua to celebrate the end of the old world of Jericho and the beginning of the
new world of Israel. This liturgy contains a series of rubrics describing what is
to be done and what is to be said. For six days, the Hebrews are to walk in
procession around Jericho once a day. On the seventh day, they are to process
around the city seven times. These seven days of processions parallel the seven
days of creation in the Stories of the Heavens and the Earth. This liturgy,
however, does not draw cosmos from chaos, but returns cosmos to chaos. It is
a reversed ritual that inverts the creative process.

Although some words do carry military connotations, they also carry


liturgical connotations. For example, the same Hebrew word can mean …the
army or …the people of YHWH (Josh 6:8). Likewise, to carry the ark of the
covenant was as much an act of war as an act of worship. In battle, the ark
was a rallying point for warriors separated from their detachments. In worship,
the ark was the pedestal for YHWH toward which the congregation directed its
attention.

The walls of Jericho represent the divine patrons of the city who prostrate
themselves, which signals that the old world of Jericho has come to an end,
and acknowledges that YHWH is the new divine patron of this land (Josh 6:20).
The walls are to remain prostrate and the city is placed under interdict to
remind the Hebrews that the old world of monarchs and taxes and soldiers and
cities and slaves has ended. The Hebrews draw a circle as they dance with the
ark around the ruin, creating a forbidden zone where only YHWH may enter.

 
Sunday, December 30, 2018 /Page 11
 
Don C. Benjamin, Old Testament Story, an introduction (2004)

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