After the death of Moses, God
said to Joshua, Moses' helper, "Moses my servant is dead: Now arise,
go over the Jordan with all this people to the land which I am about
to give to the Israelites. As long as you live no one will be able
to stand against you. As I was with Moses, so I shall be with you: I
will not fail you nor forsake you. Be brave and strong, for you
shall give this people the land which I solemnly promised their
fathers I would give them. Only be brave and strong to keep
faithfully all the law, as Moses my servant commanded you. Turn not
from it to the right nor to the left, and you shall have success
wherever you go. Have I not commanded you? Be brave and strong; fear
not nor be afraid, for God your God is with you wherever you go."
Then Joshua gave this order to the officers who were over the
people: "Go through all the camp and give this command: 'Prepare
food for yourselves, for within three days you are to cross this
Jordan, to go in and take the land which God your God has given you
as your own.'"
While Joshua was at Shittim, he secretly sent two men as spies, with
the command: "Go, explore the land and especially Jericho." So they
went and entered the house of a woman named Rahab, and stayed there.
It was reported to the king of Jericho, "Some men came here to-night
from the Israelites to explore the land." Therefore the king of
Jericho sent to Rahab and said, "Bring out the men who entered your
house, for they have come to explore all the land."
Now the woman had taken the two men and hidden them; so she said,
"It is true, some men came to me, but I did not know where they came
from. When the time came to shut the gate at night, the men went out
and I do not know where they have gone. Follow after them quickly,
for you may overtake them." She, however, had brought them up to the
roof and hidden them with the stalks of flax which she had spread
out there. So the men of Jericho followed after them in the
direction of the fords of the Jordan; and as soon as the men of
Jericho had gone out, the gate was closed.
The spies had hardly lain down when Rahab came up to them on the
roof and said, "I know that God has given you the land and that fear
of you has seized us and that because of you all who live in the
land are losing heart. Now therefore swear to me by God, since I
have treated you with kindness, that you will also treat my family
kindly, and promise me that you will save the lives of my father, my
mother, my brothers, and my sisters, together with all that they
have, and will not put us to death." The men said to her, "We are
ready to give our lives for you, if you do not tell what we are
doing; and when God gives us the land, we will treat you kindly and
faithfully."
Then she let them down by a rope through the window, for the house
in which she lived was built into the city wall. She said to them,
"Go into the hills, that the men who are looking for you may not
find you, and hide yourselves there three days until they have
returned. Then you may go on your way."
The men said to her, "We shall be free from our solemn promise to
you, unless, when we come into the land, you bind this cord of
scarlet thread in the window through which you let us down and
gather your father, your mother, your brothers, and all your family
into your house. If any one goes out of the doors of your house into
the street, he shall be responsible for his death and we shall be
innocent. If any one stays with you in the house, we will be
responsible for his death if any one lays hands on him. But if you
tell what we are doing, we shall be free from our solemn promise to
you." She replied, "It shall be as you say." So she sent them away.
And when they were gone, she bound the scarlet cord in the window.
So they left and went into the hills and stayed there three days
until those who were looking for them had returned. They sought for
them in every direction but did not find them. Then the two men came
down from the hills, crossed the river, and came to Joshua and told
him all that had happened to them.
Joshua rose up early in the morning and set out from Shittim. And he
and all the Israelites came to the Jordan and spent the night there
before crossing. And Joshua said to the people, "Consecrate
yourselves, for to-morrow God will do wonders among you. Come and
hear the words of God your God. By this you shall know that a living
God is with you: the ark of the Lord of all the earth is about to
pass over before you into the Jordan. When the priests who bear the
ark of the Lord of all the earth step into the waters of the Jordan,
its waters shall be cut off, so that the waters that come down from
above will stand still in a heap."
So when the people left their tents to pass over the Jordan, the
priests, who were carrying the ark were in front of them. And when
the bearers of the ark came to the Jordan, and the feet of the
priests who were carrying the ark dipped in the brink of the
water—for the Jordan overflows all its banks during the harvest
time—the waters that came down from above stood still and its waters
rose in a heap a long distance up the river at Adam, the city that
is near Zarethan. The waters that went down toward the Dead Sea were
wholly cut off, while the people crossed over opposite Jericho. The
priests who were carrying the ark of God stood firm on dry ground in
the middle of the Jordan, while all the Israelites passed over on
dry ground, until the whole nation had completed the crossing of the
Jordan.
When they had all crossed, God said to Joshua, "Command them to take
from the middle of the Jordan, out of the place where the priests'
feet stood, twelve stones and carry them over with you and lay them
down in the camping-place, where you pass the night, that this may
be a reminder to them. Then when your children ask from time to
time: 'What do these stones mean to you?' you shall say to them,
'They are reminders that the waters of the Jordan were cut off
before the ark of God, when it passed over the Jordan.' These stones
shall be a constant reminder to the Israelites."
So the Israelites did as Joshua commanded and took up out of the
middle of the Jordan twelve stones corresponding to the number of
the tribes of the Israelites. They carried them over with them to
the place where they camped and laid them down there.
Then the waters of the Jordan returned to their place and the river
overflowed all its banks as before.