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Part III - Rahab: An Archetypal Outsider

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 July 2020

Jacob L. Wright
Affiliation:
Emory University, Atlanta
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020
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When Jericho’s walls come tumbling down, the Israelite troops storm the city and annihilate every living thing, “both men and women, young and old as well as oxen, sheep, and donkeys.” Yet there is one family whose lives they spare, that of a harlot named Rahab, and the reason they make an exception for her is that she had previously placed her life on the line for them.

In the days before, a pair of Israelite spies had embarked on a reconnaissance mission in Canaan and ended up in her house. When the king of Jericho found out, he demanded that Rahab deliver the men into his custody. Yet instead of complying with his demands, she concealed the spies on her roof and blatantly lied to the king. Her bold decision to ally herself with Israel imperiled her future and that of her family, but she was certain that doing otherwise posed a greater risk. When she sent the spies away in safety, she revealed to them her confidence in the power of their god. Convinced of the imminent demise of Canaan’s kingdoms, she made them swear that they would rescue her and her entire family during the impending invasion.

Rahab is more than “a hooker with a heart of gold.”Footnote 1 Indeed, her story is a poignant parable of wartime contributions and belonging: by assisting Israel’s war effort, she secures protection and a prominent place in a new society. As a prostitute, she moves from the margins of a Canaanite city-state to the center of the Israelite nation. The narrator marks the social transition in spatial terms: Her house is located “on the outer side of the city wall, and in the wall she resided.” She occupies a space between the inhabitants of Jericho and those on the city’s horizon. At the moment the wall falls, she abandons the fringes of this Canaanite city and moves to “the midst of Israel,” where “she lives until the present day.”

This is a story of hope and survival. After hearing about the power of Israel’s god, Rahab sees the writing on the wall. Yet instead of consigning herself to the fate of those around her, she finds a way to preserve her life and the lives of her family. The plan she adopts involves considerable risk, but also the promise of a new future. Recognizing the imminent demise of the status quo in Canaan, she casts her lot with the people of Israel and ends up playing a pivotal role in the history of this novel nation. Her actions presage the hope that inspires the prophets, who respond to the devastation of their societies by discerning a new dawn on the horizon.Footnote 2

Recounted in the first chapters of Joshua, the Rahab story provides the yardstick for evaluating the actions of others in the book. Thus, whereas Rahab bravely risks her life, the Gibeonites (identified as an indigenous population from Canaan) procure a place “in the midst of Israel” by performing a contemptible act of subterfuge. As outsiders in relation to the covenant, both enter the national fold by means of a pact guaranteeing special protection. But in the case of the Gibeonites, the pact is later broken when the nation’s first king pursues a program of genocide against this population.

The Rahab story appears on the seams between the Torah and the Former Prophets, which it introduces. In this strategic position, it treats issues of national identity and belonging in an indirect and safe manner insofar as its protagonist doesn’t represent a particular population (in the way that, for example, Esau represents the Edomites). We will see that Rahab’s purpose is broader: she is the archetype of the outsider who becomes an insider, and the authors of her story wanted their readers to pay close attention to both her words and her deeds as she negotiated the terms of her survival.

In what follows, we begin, in Chapter 7, by comparing Christian and Jewish interpretation of the Rahab story. Then, in Chapter 8, we investigate the story’s origins and its purpose in the wider biblical narrative. Finally, in Chapter 9, we turn our attention to the Gibeonites and witness how the biblical memories and the archeological data related to this group shed light on both the figure of Rahab and the account of the conquest that her story inaugurates.

7 Between Faith and Works

Rahab has a long and complex afterlife in the history of biblical interpretation. For the rabbis, she represents the prototypical “righteous proselyte” who, despite her Canaanite descent and fame as a fille de joie, becomes a full member of Israel. For the first Christian interpreters, her story illustrates foundational theological principles, such as the relationship between faith and works.

These differing approaches reflect an abiding tension between Christian and Jewish approaches to the Bible, both ancient and modern. Because that tension bears directly on our central concern with “war and national identity,” we will compare a number of early readings of the biblical account. In doing so, we will deepen our appreciation of the ideals, ethos, and concerns that shaped biblical war commemoration as a politico-theological discourse, as well as the competing understandings of “belonging” in early Jewish and Christian communities.

Three Early Christian Interpreters

Next to Joshua, who was seen as a prefiguration of Jesus, Rahab stands out as one of the leading biblical personalities in the imagination of early Christian interpreters.Footnote 3 The Gospel of Matthew even identifies her as an ancestress of Jesus. A gentile saved from the divine judgment poured out on a pagan city, she embodies central themes in the theology of the early church.

Recently, a number of biblical scholars have ended this long-standing veneration of Rahab. Viewing her now as a collaboratrice who joins forces with colonizers, these scholars consciously adopt the perspective of indigenous peoples – in Palestine, New Zealand, South Africa, North America, and other places. For example, Lori Rowlett compares the biblical account to Disney’s Pocahontas and subjects it to a penetrating postcolonial critique.Footnote 4

Rahab’s recent ill repute represents, to be sure, a drastic departure from the high honor that she has enjoyed since the emergence of Christianity. To begin this chapter, we examine several of the earliest Christian texts, showing how they interpret Jewish scriptures in line with a new theological program. I have confined the discussion to these works because they are the earliest ones to refer to this biblical figure, they feature numerous points of contact, and they illustrate the potential of biblical war commemoration for Christian theological construction.Footnote 5

First Epistle of Clement

Written to the church at Corinth in the wake of a communal crisis, the First Epistle of Clement is one of the earliest Christian writings and is likely older than a number the New Testament books. The lengthy work refers extensively to the Jewish scriptures as it seeks to demonstrate “how from generation to generation the Master hath given a place of repentance unto them that desire to turn to Him” (7:5).Footnote 6 The twelfth chapter rehearses the biblical account of Rahab, quoted here in the elegant translation from 1869 by J. B. Lightfoot:

For her faith and hospitality Rahab the harlot was saved. For when the spies were sent forth unto Jericho by Joshua the son of Nun, the king of the land perceived that they were come to spy out his country, and sent forth men to seize them, that being seized they might be put to death. So the hospitable Rahab received them and hid them in the upper chamber under the flax stalks. And when the messengers of the king came near and said, The spies of our land entered in unto thee: bring them forth, for the king so ordereth: then she answered, The men truly, whom ye seek, entered in unto me, but they departed forthwith and are sojourning on the way; and she pointed out to them the opposite road. And she said unto the men, Of a surety I perceive that the Lord your God delivereth this city unto you; for the fear and the dread of you is fallen upon the inhabitants thereof. When therefore it shall come to pass that ye take it, save me and the house of my father. And they said unto her, It shall be even so as thou hast spoken unto us. Whensoever therefore thou perceivest that we are coming, thou shalt gather all thy folk beneath thy roof and they shall be saved; for as many as shall be found without the house shall perish. And moreover they gave her a sign, that she should hang out from her house a scarlet thread, thereby showing beforehand that through the blood of the Lord there shall be redemption unto all them that believe and hope on God. Ye see, dearly beloved, not only faith, but prophecy, is found in the woman.Footnote 7

While Clement’s rendering hews closely to the original story, it departs from it in several telling ways. His larger purpose is to explain why “Rahab the harlot was saved.” The salvation he envisions, however, is far removed from – and a theologically rarefied form of – the survival of Rahab’s clan among the people of Israel in the territory that they conquer. While Clement begins with the biblical story, he interprets the deliverance in the framework of a distinctively Christian soteriology, which we can observe in statu nascendi in the writings of the early church.

Clement begins by declaring that Rahab was saved first by “faith/belief” (pistis). While central to Christian writings, a doctrine of salvific faith, as we will see, is foreign to the account in Joshua – both in its older Hebrew form and in the Greek translations undertaken by Jewish scholars in the Greco-Roman period.Footnote 8

But Rahab wasn’t saved by faith alone according to Clement; she had also demonstrated exceptional “love of strangers” (philoxenia). The church father is referring here not to Rahab’s profession but to a set of social expectations relating to the treatment of strangers and guests that sociologists study under the rubric of “hospitality.” Practiced widely throughout ancient Mediterranean societies, hospitality is central to the moral vision of both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament, and an important theme of Clement’s Epistle.Footnote 9 When the king of Jericho learns about the spies at Rahab’s home, he sends soldiers to seize and execute them. It’s at this point that “the hospitable Rahab” receives the men and hides them.

The scarlet cord that Rahab displays in her window, in keeping with the spies’ instructions, carries special significance as a prophetic “sign” in Clement’s interpretation. The color signifies “that through the blood of the Lord there shall be redemption unto all them that believe and hope on God.” The reference to “hope” here is noteworthy, as it’s closely related semantically to the Hebrew word for cord (tiqwāh). This clue and others suggest that Clement may have been influenced by early Jewish interpretation, and a number of leading nineteenth-century scholars even thought that he was born Jewish.

Letter to the Hebrews

Alongside Clement, two writings from the New Testament construct memories of Rahab to illustrate the efficacy of faith.Footnote 10 The eleventh chapter of the Letter to the Hebrews includes Rahab in a monumental tribute to prominent figures from the Jewish scriptures who, “by faith” (pistei), demonstrated that “God had provided something better for us” (11:40). The intended audience consists of those who “look to Jesus” as “the founder and perfecter of our faith” (12:2). The author declares that “by faith, Rahab the harlot did not perish with those who were disobedient, because she had received the spies in peace” (11:31). As in Clement’s letter, faith is tethered to hospitality, even if the term philoxenia doesn’t appear here.

In the preceding verse, we are told that “by faith, the walls of Jericho fell after the people marched around them for seven days.” In keeping with the same line of reasoning, Rahab’s reception of the spies testifies to her faith inasmuch as the destruction of Jericho was still a future event. For faith, according to the proem of the pericope, is “the confidence of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen” (11:1).Footnote 11

The author of this account commemorates Rahab’s deeds, along with others from Israel’s past, in an effort to show that, despite appearances, all were actually seeking “a heavenly country” or “city that God has prepared for them.” In this way, the author denationalizes Israel’s heroes and transforms them into prototypes of a new transnational “people of God” (11:25). Like so many others, this early Christian writing reorients the thoroughly political complexion of the Jewish scriptures in the direction of a de-territorialized, de-nationalized, eschatological future. Whereas the book of Joshua depicts a war fought by the people of Israel, whom Rahab joins in solidarity, the book of Hebrews sees in Rahab’s story an anticipation of the impending divine judgment upon the unrighteous. Because of her faith, we are told, she did not perish with “those who were disobedient.” What was once national and political is now universal and ethical.

The Epistle of James

The Epistle of James is a sapiential treatise, written in exquisite Greek, that may have been composed for, and circulated among, “Jewish-Christian” communities in Palestine. One section treats the subject of faith, and it uses the example of Rahab to establish the importance of “works” against those who were apparently claiming that faith is all one needs: “You see that a person is justified by works and not by faith alone. Was not Rahab the harlot justified by works when she welcomed the messengers and sent them out by another road?” (2:24–25). As with 1 Clement and Hebrews, this early Christian writing emphasizes Rahab’s hospitality (“she welcomed the messengers”).

That the author appeals to the story of Rahab may be because it had already served as an important prooftext in theological debates. Rahab’s profession of Yhwh’s power is one of the lengthiest and most forceful in the Hebrew Bible, as we will see later in this chapter. By drawing on the account, writers in the early church could buttress a soteriology that prioritized belief and confessions of faith. Perhaps responding to the antinomianism inherent in Paul’s theology of faith, the Epistle of James seizes on the account in order to argue, a fortiori, that even it attributes Rahab’s rescue to her “works” rather than her bold and elaborate asseveration.

The author of James proceeds to translate these facts into Christian theological categories: “a person is justified by works rather than faith alone.” Belief or creeds are not enough: “You believe that God is one? Good for you! Even the demons believe in fear and trembling” (2:19). This argument comes remarkably close to Rahab’s declaration that “dread of you has fallen on us, and all the inhabitants of the land melt in fear before you, for we have heard how Yhwh dried up the waters of the Sea of Reeds … ” (Josh. 2:9). As I will show, this declaration is not “a confession of faith,” but rather an acknowledgment of indisputable facts, without any redemptive value in and of itself.

Christians as Readers of the Jewish Scriptures

The Jewish scriptures assumed very different meanings, as they were read and interpreted in communities whose social constitution and collective concerns differed in many ways from the communities that produced them. In the case of Rahab, writers in the early church pressed her story into the service of sophisticated debates on soteriology. What gets obfuscated in these debates is the extent to which the account in Joshua relates to membership of the political community of Israel.Footnote 12

The Christian writings take for granted that a Canaanite could join the “people of God.” Given the church’s multiethnic constellation, Rahab’s Gentile identity undoubtedly predestined her to a long afterlife in Christian literature.Footnote 13 Yet the three interpreters we looked at are not interested in how this figure, as an archetypal alien, secured membership among the people of Israel by demonstrating allegiance to the nation during a momentous war effort. Instead, they use her story to teach ideals of community (such as hospitality) and to address theological matters (such as sin, divine judgment on the disobedient, justification, and eternal salvation) that transcend national boundaries. Something is thus not only lost but also gained in their adaptation: as these thinkers engaged in their own project of peoplehood, a paradigmatic case of war commemoration from the Jewish scriptures proved to be a powerful theological framework for articulating fundamental doctrines and addressing concerns that faced the church as an emerging transnational community of faith.

What I wish to get at in the present study is nothing less than the raison d’être of the Jewish scriptures. According to a leading trajectory of critical scholarship, the Hebrew Bible reflects the emergence of a religious or cultic community of “Yahwists” from the ashes of national defeat. Following Wellhausen, many scholars distinguish between a national existence during the time of the monarchy, on one side, and nonnational religious community living under foreign imperial hegemony, on the other (see the Introduction to the present volume). But this division is severely undermined by the evidence that the battlefield persists in the final strata of the Hebrew Bible (in stark contrast to the New Testament) as a preferred narrative space. Memories of war and martial conflict course through the veins of these writings because they are crafted for a community with a political and territorial orientation.

Although widely viewed, especially by its Christian interpreters, as scripture for an emerging religious sect, the Hebrew Bible has, I maintain, a much more ambitious agenda, serving as the blueprint for a new kind of nationhood. The New Testament authors adopted and adapted this blueprint in keeping with their own interest in creating a spiritual community of faith. To state the difference simply: The Hebrew Bible is a project of creating one nation, while the New Testament is a project of creating a community whose members hail from all nations. Likewise, the Hebrew Bible is about creating an identity that is capable of withstanding national defeat, while the New Testament is about creating an identity capable of withstanding Jesus’s death and delayed return.

The literary corpus we know today as the Hebrew Bible is ultimately a rabbinic project. The Jewish sages from the first centuries of the Common Era were the ones who defined the contours of this corpus by excluding such works as 1 and 2 Maccabees.Footnote 14 But even if the rabbis had not played a crucial role in the shaping of the Hebrew scriptures, they stand in more direct continuity than the New Testament writers with the scribes who created this corpus. Admittedly, the destruction of the temple marks a traumatic cultural rupture with which rabbinic Judaism had to come to terms in various ways. Yet this rupture pales in comparison with the radical departure from the Hebrew Bible represented by the worship of Christ. For the early church, the life and death of Jesus of Nazareth constitutes the turning point in history, and the New Testament writings owe their existence in large part to the hermeneutical struggle with the problems, and prospects, presented by this discontinuity with the Jewish scriptures.

Josephus

A good candidate for comparison with early Christian readers is the Antiquities of the Jewish priest, military commander, and historian, Flavius Josephus. His pleonastic retelling of the account, which overlaps on many points with rabbinic interpretations, underscores the political nature of the negotiations between Rahab and the spies.Footnote 15

Following the lead of the biblical account, Josephus explicitly links Rahab’s honored place in Israel to the memory of her wartime contributions. In a particularly prolix passage (even by Josephus’s standards), Rahab pleads that as soon as the nation conquers the land, the spies remember the danger she had undergone for their sakes. If the king had caught her, he would have executed both her and her family. As a reward for her bravery, she demands that they swear to preserve her and her family’s lives as soon as they have finished conquering Canaan. The spies agree to reward her “not only in words, but in deeds [ergoi].”

But when the tumult was over, Rahab brought the men down, and desired them as soon as they should have obtained possession of the land of Canaan, when it would be in their power to make her amends for her preservation of them, to remember what danger she had undergone for their sakes; for that if she had been caught concealing them, she could not have escaped a terrible destruction, she and all her family with her, and so bid them go home; and desired them to swear to her to preserve her and her family when they should take the city, and destroy all its inhabitants, as they had decreed to do; for so far she said she had been assured by those Divine miracles of which she had been informed. So these spies acknowledged that they owed her thanks for what she had done already, and withal swore to requite her kindness, not only in words, but in deeds.Footnote 16

The spies instruct Rahab to keep her family and possessions in her house during the battle, and to mark her residence with scarlet threads so that the soldiers could more easily identify it; if she failed to do so, they would be relieved of their obligations. Later, Joshua communicates to the high priest and senate (gerousia) what the spies had sworn to Rahab, and these organs of government in turn officially approve the oath.

Instead of stripping the narrative of its martial materiality and reducing it to an illustration of a timeless theological principle, Josephus preserves its national character. While he shadows the biblical Vorlage, he also accentuates its political features. For example, he highlights the formal-legal qualities of the pact and its quid pro quo rationale.Footnote 17 In recounting the battle of Jericho, he claims that Joshua formally avowed his gratitude to Rahab, granted her landholdings, “and held her in high esteem ever afterwards.” These details embellish the biblical depiction and anticipate later rabbinic legends discussed in the following section. The conferral of property rights is, nevertheless, consonant with the biblical authors’ concern to show how, after the conquest, Joshua equitably distributed the land among all members of the nation, and what warrants the embellishment is the statement in the biblical account that Rahab “has continued to dwell in the midst of Israel until this day” (Josh. 6:25).

Josephus’s rendering of Rahab’s eloquent utterance about Israel’s god is especially telling. The historian has reduced a speech, which encompasses three long verses in the biblical account, to a brief line that explains Rahab’s confidence in Israel’s victory: “ … for she knew all [what would happen] because she had been instructed by signs [sēmeiois] of God.” Reminiscent of the claims in later Christian and Jewish literature that Rahab possessed the gift of prophecy, this little statement in Josephus’s retelling has fully replaced Rahab’s eloquent declaration in the biblical text, with its climatic peroration: “For Yhwh your god, he is god in the heavens above and on the earth below!” (Josh. 2:11).

The fact that Josephus downplays the significance of Rahab’s pronouncements about Israel’s god, and empties them of any independent merit, is undoubtedly related to the great space he devotes to depicting how this woman risked her life, and that of her entire family, by hiding the spies. What justifies the honored place she and her family enjoy in Israel’s national territory and its collective history are not her words but rather her works.Footnote 18

Rahab and the Rabbis

Rabbinic interpretation elicits sympathy for Rahab by maintaining that she had been forced into a life of sex trafficking as a child. The proof for this surprising claim is that she had heard the news about the Egyptians’ demise, which happened forty years earlier. At that time, they surmise, she must have been at least ten years of age, and now at fifty, she was still working as a prostitute. She owed her enduring career to her extraordinary beauty. (The rabbis counted her among the four most beautiful women who ever lived, the others being the matriarch Sarah, David’s wife Abigail, and Queen Esther.) Rahab’s beauty was so legendary that simply repeating her name twice would immediately bring sexual release.Footnote 19 The spies seek her out because her fame had spread far and wide. Since every minister and prince visited her, she was better informed than anyone else. Yet Yhwh’s fame had also spread throughout the land and, despite her extraordinary beauty, the men of the land had lost their virility along with their courage upon hearing of his extraordinary might.Footnote 20

The rabbis regarded Rahab’s utterance as the consummate affirmation of the power of Israel’s god by a Gentile, outdoing any other across the entire span of sacred scripture. Because she acknowledges the presence of their deity both in heaven and on the earth, they deemed Rahab’s statement to be even more radical than the profession by the Aramean general Naaman in the book of Kings: “Now I know that there is no god in all the earth except in Israel” (2 Kings 5:15).

Few contemporary biblical scholars would agree with the ancient sages on this point, and rightly so: the words of Naaman constitute one of the most sweeping monotheistic statements in the entire Bible, going far beyond Rahab’s monolatrous avowal. Yet the rabbis gave pride of place to Rahab instead of Naaman, and their reason for doing so was that this foreign general, while revering their god, was not interested in becoming a member of their people. The biblical account portrays him importing soil from Eretz Israel and placing it under the altar he builds to Yhwh. This religious reverence, even if it is exclusive to Israel’s god, sufficed neither for the biblical writers nor the rabbis. One needed to make a resolute and unswerving commitment to throw his or her lot in with the people of Israel.Footnote 21 Such is what Rahab does. By hiding the spies, she risks her life and physically demonstrated her allegiance to this nation. Moreover, she performs this action at an uncertain time, when the Israelites had yet to win a battle against Canaan’s superior forces and superbly fortified cities.

The rabbis interpreted the concluding statement – “she has continued to dwell in the midst of Israel until this day” (Josh. 6:25) – to mean that she converted and became a “righteous proselyte” (gēr ṣedeq), with most, if not all, the rights and obligations of Jews by birth.Footnote 22 Rahab is not mentioned elsewhere in scripture, yet the Jewish sages used midrash to mine the biblical genealogies for traces of her descendants. In the process, they “discovered” that she is the ancestress of Israelite priests and prophets (including Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Huldah), and that she even became Joshua’s wife.Footnote 23 In this way, they eliminated any doubt that the people of Israel fully embraced her in their fold.

Conversion and Naturalization

Whereas Rahab’s identity as a Gentile gave her an advantage in Christian sources, it was naturally a problem for Jewish interpreters. Membership of Israel was decided primarily by descent. Although this criterion may seem chauvinistic, what gave rise to it was not racial prejudice but rather the perception that intermarriage severely undermined the effort to create a form of peoplehood that could survive the loss of statehood. As long as one could take for granted the persistence of a powerful territorial state, intermarriage would not pose much of a problem and actually might benefit political alliances. But after imperial armies erased the nation’s territorial borders, one had to do something to be a Jew. Enculturation of the nation’s members in Israel’s collective memories – which fostered the formation of the biblical corpus – now assumed an unprecedented role in identity formation. And given the role of parents in enculturation and education, matters surrounding marriage took on a new importance.

Tackling the problem of intermarriage, the postexilic Judean leader Nehemiah observed that the children of these mixed unions no longer “knew how to speak Judean/Jewish” (Neh. 13:24). As an antidote to this problem of “cultural literacy,” Jewish communities enacted strict measures against intermarriage.Footnote 24 In Greco-Roman times, Jewish identity came to be defined legally by birth, and later specifically birth from a Jewish woman (i.e., matrilineal descent). All these developments were ultimately elicited and sustained by a realization that procreation and education were the most reliable means of fostering the growth of the Jewish people.

But what about non-Jews who desire to enter the national fold? The rabbis responded to this question by creating a ritual for conversion, and when they did, they studied the lives of such biblical figures as Jethro, Ruth, and Rahab.Footnote 25 Of course, the biblical accounts do not depict these figures converting to a religion such as “Yahwism.”Footnote 26 When the ancient sages spoke of conversion, they did not mean an assent of faith or confession of belief followed by baptism, as in Christianity. True, they stipulated that the convert has to testify with a verbal declaration and be immersed in water, but the procedure as a whole is more reminiscent of what we today call naturalization” – the process by which one becomes a member of a political community.Footnote 27

The declaration that the Jewish convert makes is much more akin to the oaths of loyalty pronounced by citizens of nation-states than to the creeds cited by members of transnational communities of faith, whether it be the Christian church or the Muslim ummah. The convert, like the naturalized citizen, takes upon him- or herself the obligation to abide fully by a code of laws. It also became customary by the first century CE to require male converts to undergo circumcision. This fleshly ritual expresses the principle that one becomes a member of the people in a physical sense, in keeping with Israel’s character as primarily a political, not cultic, community.

The discontinuity between the biblical accounts of outsiders joining Israel, on the one hand, and the rabbis’ approach to conversion, on the other, pivots on the issue of land and location. Rahab, Jethro, and Ruth not only utter unambiguous statements about Israel’s god but also, and more decisively, join themselves to the people of Israel in their national territory. Remember that Naaman, in contrast to these respectable figures, stays in his country and builds there an altar to Yhwh on soil imported from the land of Israel.

Rabbinic Judaism charts a new course. Living in an age when the Jewish people no longer enjoyed political sovereignty, and when many of its members had been exiled from their homeland, the rabbis sought a means to establish belonging in their communities without requiring residence in the territories that the nation had long inhabited. By omitting the criterion of territorial residence, the sages did not mean to dismiss the importance of place in the construction of Jewish identity. Indeed, their prayers and hopes remained resolutely fixed on a return to Zion. But in the meantime, they adopted and expanded a core tenet of biblical nationhood: the possibility of being a people even when many of the communities constituting this people did not inhabit, let alone exercise sovereignty over, its national homeland.

For these reasons, Ruth’s statement, not Rahab’s, came to be recognized as the quintessential expression of the Jewish convert. Naomi repeatedly exhorts Ruth and her sister to go back to their people and gods in Moab. But whereas her sister takes leave of Naomi, Ruth “cleaves” to her and utters the declaration of allegiance that we already considered in Chapter 6:

Do not urge me to leave you, to turn back and not follow you. For where you go, I will go. Where you stay, I will stay. Your people shall be my people, and your god my god. Where you die, I will die, and there I will be buried. Thus and more may Yhwh do to me if anything but death parts me from you.

Ruth 1:16–17

Ruth’s declaration expresses her determination to make Naomi’s people and god her own, and to follow her wherever she goes. Naomi’s wanderings lead the two back to the land of Judah, but because the declaration leaves the destination open, it lent itself easily to the project of peoplehood that the rabbis inherited from their biblical predecessors and modified for the Jewish diaspora.

The Repentant Rahab

In contrast to Ruth, Rahab served as an illustration of the power of repentance for the rabbis. According to their expositions, she belonged to a people about whom it was written, “You shall not save even one soul alive” (Deut. 20:16), but because she “brought herself near,” the deity also “brought her near.” If an exception was made in the case of this Canaanite, “how much more will the Holy One be receptive to Israel, his beloved people, when they act in accordance with his will?”Footnote 28

Although Rahab’s occupation as a harlot likely wouldn’t have been a cause for consternation among the earliest biblical readers, it began to elicit opprobrium in a culture that had been shaped by the spread of Hellenism. The rabbis were confident that Rahab relinquished her life of harlotry once she became a member of Israel, even if this life was what had brought her to Israel in the first place. She knew that the tidings of Israel’s victories had zapped the Canaanites’ strength because she had personally witnessed the shriveling effect of Israel’s triumphs on their manhood.Footnote 29 After forty years of prostitution, she not only repented but also demonstrated her solidarity with Israel by hiding the spies. As a reward for her deeds, she was welcomed among the people of Israel and went on to become, as noted, the ancestress of many of the most important figures in the nation’s history.

Whereas prostitution is never proscribed in biblical law, later generations, from the Greco-Roman period and thereafter, condemned this profession, suggesting that she was nothing other than an innkeeper or the proprietress of a tavern.Footnote 30 However, in the ancient Near East, as in the American Old West, taverns and inns were establishments in which men not only could find a meal and bed but also form political alliances and engage in sexual activity.Footnote 31 In reporting that the men went to the house/inn of a prostitute and “slept there,” the narrator leaves it open whether the men had intercourse with Rahab. The authors of the account, who were neither prude nor prurient, may simply not have been interested in the question: the spies enter the house of a prostitute because it promises to be a place where news circulates, and they are interested in learning about the psychological condition of the land’s inhabitants, not the physical condition of its fortifications.Footnote 32

Alternatively, the authors of the account may have intended to cast Israelite men in an unfavorable light. According to this option, the story lampoons the spies by presenting them as less honorable than Rahab: upon arriving in Jericho, the men head immediately to a house of pleasure, yet its proprietress turns out to have only one thing on her mind – the power of Israel’s god and the impending invasion of Canaan.Footnote 33

Josephus notably avoids the use of “harlot” when describing Rahab. (He has the spies less interested in the enemy’s psychological condition than in inspecting the ramparts and fortifications; when the sun goes down, they repair to “a certain inn” to find refuge for the night.) While prostitution was widely accepted in the Greco-Roman world, prostitutes themselves were forbidden to marry and were banned from public ceremonies.Footnote 34 However, there’s likely another reason why Josephus omits her title: if Rahab is not a harlot, she cannot serve as an illustration of a repentant convert, and this serves Josephus’s interest in filtrating out many of theological elements in the account. Writing for non-Jewish audiences, the historian eliminated Rahab’s declaration about Yhwh’s superior power and, in so doing, made it more palatable for his Roman readers.

The rabbis, however, refused to pick and choose from a text whose sacred meanings, they were convinced, could only be discovered by taking seriously all the facts of scripture. Instead of tossing aside details that bothered them, they found a way to connect Rahab’s occupation as a prostitute to the unequivocal words she speaks and the commendable deeds she performs.Footnote 35

From Rahab to Paul

The prototypical convert in Christianity is the Apostle Paul – an individual who had made a name for himself by violently persecuting Christian communities before he was “blinded by the light” on the road to Damascus. After turning his life around, he quickly ascends to a position of authority in the early church (see Gal. 1:13–14). Later Christian tradition, beginning with the book of Acts, embellished accounts of this persecution; the aim was, not least, to demonstrate that even an archenemy of the church, with blood on his hands, could not only be forgiven but also rise to the highest ranks of leadership.

It’s inconceivable that the United States or any other national community would grant citizenship – let alone a public office – to one who had a history of terrorizing them. In the same way, it makes sense that the scribes who produced the Jewish scriptures, and their rabbinic successors, cast aspersions on Naaman (a foreign general with a record of assaulting Israel) when articulating norms for integrating outsiders into their national fold.Footnote 36

Paul the persecutor is the polar opposite of Rahab the prostitute. Their stories are archetypal, each for a new kind of community: the former for the transnational community of the church, and the latter for the national community of Israel. Faith is the means by which one enters the former, while acts of solidarity and allegiance are the test of membership for the latter. This difference explains why Rahab, in contrast to Paul and Naaman, doesn’t rue a record of violence against the people she later joins. She demonstrates exceptional hospitality from the very beginning. And when she’s granted an honored place in the nation’s midst, the reason is not because she recognizes the power of Israel’s god; after all, the inhabitants of Canaan do the same, as she divulges to the spies. A special place of honor is awarded to her rather because she risks her life and the lives of her family for the nation, and then follows through with legal actions to secure special protection.

I do not want to deny the central place that faith occupies both in this story and in the wider national narrative. When Abraham and Sarah – and later the nation after the exodus – embark on a journey to the land of promise, they act in confidence that Yhwh will meet his end of the bargain. What’s determinative is action, yet this action is not mere obedience; it’s impelled by confidence (Gen. 15:6) that the other party 1) will be “faithful” in keeping the promise or pact (Deut. 7:9) and 2) has the capacity to do what’s required. Since Rahab is an outsider to the covenant, these two sides are bifurcated: when she hangs the scarlet cord in her window, she trusts that Israel will keep the pact that she has made with the spies, just as she is confident that Yhwh has what it takes to conquer Canaan.

This chapter has demonstrated the ways in which war commemoration, as a political activity, evolved for theological purposes in formative Judaism and Christianity. In Chapter 8, we turn our attention to the biblical account interpreted by these early readers. Our aim will be to understand the evolution of the Rahab story and the various functions it serves in the biblical narrative.

8 The Composition of the Rahab Story

From the fourth century CE, and increasingly in the sixth and seventh centuries, Christian pilgrims began visiting the Holy Land with the express aim of finding Rahab’s house in Jericho.Footnote 1 While the search has long since been abandoned, a number of influential scholars over the past century – including Ernst Sellin, Albrecht Alt, Martin Noth, Volkmar Fritz, Klaus Bieberstein, Ed Noort, and Michael Coogan – have argued, or assumed, that the author(s) of the account knew of a population group that traced itself to Rahab and resided near Jericho. These “Rahabites” are said to have fabricated a legend about their eponymous ancestor’s bravery and her contribution to Israel’s conquest of Canaan. Likewise, the Rahab story in Joshua is said to have originated as an explanation of why this particular clan of Canaanites became members of Israel in blatant contradiction to Deuteronomy’s command to annihilate all the land’s inhabitants.

There’s a problem with this thesis: the figure of Rahab is not associated with any particular group or clan in the biblical corpus. Admittedly, a number of cities bear a similar name, yet we lack a good reason to connect them to Rahab.Footnote 2 In Gentile Impurities and Jewish Identities, Christine Hayes links Rahab to the Rechabites whom the prophet Jeremiah praises (Jer. 35), but the identification is improbable: In Hebrew, “Rahab” is not spelled the same way as “Rechab,” and it has a different meaning and etymology.Footnote 3

Scholars who read the story as an apologia for the “Rahabites” usually rely on the statement in Joshua 6:25 that “she/it still dwells in the midst of Israel until the present day.” Although “her family” may be an implicit subject of the verb “dwell” in the Hebrew, and although many translators make this explicit, it is clear from the next line that the subject must be Rahab. The statement is not meant to be taken literally; nothing is being said here about a particular population group.Footnote 4

Instead of understanding Rahab as the eponymous ancestor of an ancient clan (similar to Caleb and the Calebites), we would be better served by interpreting her as a paradigmatic Other. Just as she came to be the prototypical proselyte for the rabbis, she figures in the biblical account as an archetypal outsider who successfully achieves membership among the people of Israel. Inasmuch as she is not associated with any one clan or community, this liminal figure from Canaanite society could serve as a safe proxy for outsiders from various times and places.

The use of legends as arguments for tolerance is an abiding feature of historical fiction through the ages. (For example, Jean Racine’s lesser-known play featuring the biblical queen Esther from 1689 was read as an apology for religious tolerance and a polemic against the revocation of the Edict of Nantes.Footnote 5) Of central importance to our study of war commemoration and national identity, the biblical legend links Rahab’s continued presence “in the midst of Israel” to her contributions at a defining moment in the wars of conquest: “for she hid the messengers whom Joshua sent to spy out Jericho” (Josh. 6:17, 25). The account sets forth a principle of inclusion, one that Rahab illustrates through both words and deeds.

The Rahab Story as a Narrative Frame

The Rahab story is delivered in two installments. The first episode is found in chapter 2 and portrays her saving the spies; the second episode appears at the end of chapter 6, where the spies save Rahab and her family. In the narrative of Joshua, these two episodes bracket a foundational period of miraculous triumph, which commences with the crossing of the Jordan and concludes with the conquest of Jericho.Footnote 6 At a time of the year when the Jordan was most dangerous to ford, the Israelites cross on dry ground. They mark the crossing with a number of ritual-commemorative activities: construction of a monument with stones from the Jordan; circumcision of the males; celebration of the Passover; and cessation of manna and consumption of crops in Canaan. Portrayed as a divine triumph over the inimical forces of chaos, the desiccation of the Jordan mirrors the crossing of the Red Sea, on the one hand, and anticipates the miraculous collapse of Jericho’s walls, on the other.Footnote 7 In contrast to these events, the subsequent subjugation of Ai is achieved through natural means (a clever stratagem), and the nation must first suffer devastating defeats:

The Rahab Story in Joshua 1–8

  • Chapter 1: Yhwh’s marching orders to Joshua

  • Chapter 2: Rahab saves the spies

  • Chapters 34:   Crossing of the Jordan

  • Chapter 5: Rituals celebrating transition to the promised land

  • Chapter 6: Conquest of Jericho, with the spies saving Rahab

  • Chapters 78: Battle of Ai, which begins with Israel’s defeat

The section of the narrative framed by the Rahab story devotes disproportionate attention to the cult. The river recedes when the priests bearing the ark enter it, and the walls of Jericho fall when seven priests marching with the ark blow their seven shofars. This material likely represents the work of priestly scribes at the Jerusalem temple who revised an older, much shorter report of the crossing of the Jordan and conquest of Jericho. In this new and improved edition of the account, cultic personnel and paraphernalia play an indispensable role. In stark contrast to the narrative it frames, the Rahab story commemorates the contributions of a Canaanite prostitute and declares that she later enjoyed a place of honor in Israel’s midst (6:25). Undoubtedly, the account of this pivotal moment in the nation’s past would have scandalized priestly sensibilities. We know from numerous Pentateuchal texts that priests were highly anxious about the camp’s purity, and it was presumably a scribe of priestly pedigree who made sure to point out that when the spies rescued Rahab and her family, they placed them outside “the camp of Israel” (6:23).Footnote 8

The Place of the Rahab Story in the Narrative

The book of Joshua begins with the nation’s new leader commanding the officers to prepare the nation for the crossing of the river, which will take place “in three days”:

Joshua commanded the officers of the people, “Pass through the camp and command the people: ‘Prepare your provisions; for in three days you are to cross over the Jordan, to go in and take possession of the land that Yhwh your god is giving you to possess.’”

(1:10–11)

We encounter this same group of officers at the Jordan crossing, which is said explicitly to have occurred precisely after this time period:

After three days the officers went through the camp and commanded the people, “When you see the ark of the covenant of Yhwh your god being carried by the levitical priests, then you shall set out from your places and follow after it … .”

(3:2–3)

The similar formulations in these two passages have misled some scholars to assume that they form an older running narrative into which the Rahab story was inserted at a later point.Footnote 9 The interpretation does not hold up to scrutiny: In the first passage the officers are to pass through the camp immediately and command the people to prepare for the Jordan crossing three days from then, while in the second passage the officers wait three days before marching through the camp and issuing orders to the people. Instead of forming a coherent, older narrative thread, the two texts actually contradict each other, and the opposite compositional scenario suggests itself: what we have here is a later scribal attempt to synthesize the Rahab story with the later narrative of the Jordan crossing, with the formulation “in/after three days” implying the exact duration of the reconnaissance mission (see 2:16, 22).Footnote 10

The Rahab story appears both to be older than the narrative of the Jordan crossing, and to have grown in stages to its present proportions. According to my analysis, its earliest iteration told the backstory to the battle of Jericho and was prefaced directly to it. Both the Rahab story and the battle account represent older portions of chapters 17, and they gradually drifted apart as later scribes composed the disparate materias related to the crossing of the Jordan in chapters 35.Footnote 11

The Rahab story was composed for, and added directly to, the battle account in chapter 6. As we shall see, it was originally much shorter and did not necessitate the follow-up episode in chapter 6. Recently, Joachim Krause has taken a different approach, arguing that the Rahab story is relatively unified and represents a late development in an older narrative of the Jordan crossing in chapters 15.Footnote 12 However, we can more easily explain the literary evidence if we accept 1) that the Rahab story originated as an early preface to the account of the Jericho battle, and 2) that the narrative of the Jordan crossing in chapters 15 represents a later compositional stage.

With regard to the second episode of the Rahab story in chapter 6, the battle account reads more smoothly without the lines related to Rahab; not surprisingly, scholars have long declared them to be supplementary. Below, I have arranged the text to show how the Rahab story presupposes redactions of the battle account. As in the narrative of the Jordan crossing, one redaction assigns an indispensable role to the priests and their trumpets, while, in keeping with the Deuteronomistic program of destruction (ḥerem), another redaction develops the description of the city’s demolition. The oldest substratum of this section is in boldface, while the later lines related to Rahab are indented. Even though the latter are not differentiated below, they likely do not all stem from the same hand.

Compositional Strata in Joshua 6:14–26

14 … on the second day they marched around the city once and then returned to the camp. They did this for six days. 15 On the seventh day they rose early, at dawn, and marched around the city in the same manner seven times. It was only on that day that they marched around the city seven times. 16 And the seventh time, when the priests had blown the trumpets, Joshua said to the people, “Shout! For Yhwh has given you the city.

17 The city and all that is in it shall be devoted to Yhwh for destruction.

Only Rahab the prostitute and all who are with her in her house shall live, because she hid the messengers we sent.

18 As for you, keep away from the things devoted to destruction, so as not to covet and take any of the devoted things and make the camp of Israel an object for destruction, bringing trouble upon it.

19 But all silver and gold, and vessels of bronze and iron, are sacred to Yhwh; they shall go into the treasury of Yhwh.

20 So they raised – the trumpets were blown; when the people heard the sound of the trumpets, they raised – a great shout, and the wall fell down flat. Thereafter the people charged straight ahead into the city and captured it.

21 They devoted to destruction by the edge of the sword all in the city, both men and women, young and old, oxen, sheep, and donkeys.

22 Joshua said to the two men who had spied out the land, “Go into the prostitute’s house, and bring the woman out of it and all who belong to her, as you swore to her.”

23 And the young men who had been spies went in and brought Rahab out, along with her father, her mother, her brothers, and all who belonged to her. They brought out all her clans, and they set them outside the camp of Israel.

24 They burned down the city and everything in it.

Only the silver and gold, and the vessels of bronze and iron, they put into the treasury of Yhwh’s house.

25 But Rahab the prostitute, with her family and all who belonged to her, Joshua spared. She has lived in the midst of Israel ever since. For she hid the messengers whom Joshua sent to spy out Jericho.

26 At that time Joshua made an oath: “Cursed before Yhwh be anyone who tries to rebuild this city, Jericho. At the cost of his firstborn he shall lay its foundation, and at the cost of his youngest he shall set up its gates!” So Yhwh was with Joshua, and his fame spread throughout the country.

We will touch upon several notable features of this second episode, yet before doing so, we need take a closer look at the first episode – the account of Rahab hiding two Israelite spies, lying to the king, and then negotiating protection for herself and her family.

A City Besieged

Strangely, the Rahab story has nothing to say about the spies’ activities of scouting or espionage. The first episode begins with Joshua secretly dispatching the men with orders to “go view the land and Jericho.” However, when the men go, the only thing they manage to do is “enter the house of a prostitute named Rahab and spend the night there” (2:1).Footnote 13 The king learns that Israelites had infiltrated the city with the intention of “searching out the whole land.” He quickly establishes that they are residing in Rahab’s place and sends soldiers to seize them there.

The succinct narration in 2:1–7 shows, rather than reports (as in vv. 8–14), the heightened state of alarm that Israel’s arrival had provoked among the inhabitants of Jericho. Despite the precautions that Joshua and the spies take to conduct a clandestine mission, their arrival doesn’t go unnoticed. The narrator implies that all the inhabitants of the country are well aware of Israel’s presence on Canaan’s eastern border and nervous about an imminent invasion.

This is precisely what Rahab spells out to the spies in an extended scene that stands at the center of the account:

But before [the two spies] lay down, she came up to them on the roof. Then she said to the men: “I know that Yhwh has given you the land, and that dread of you has fallen on us, and that all the inhabitants of the land are faint because of you. For we have heard how Yhwh dried up the water of the Red Sea before you when you came out of Egypt, and what you did to the two kings of the Amorites that were beyond the Jordan, to Sihon and Og, whom you utterly destroyed. When we heard it, our hearts melted. No longer does a spirit rise in any man because of you! Yhwh your god is indeed god in heaven above and on earth below. “Now then swear to me by Yhwh – for I have dealt kindly with you; you in turn must deal kindly with my father’s house and give me a sure sign – that you will spare my father and mother, my brothers and sisters, and all who belong to them, and deliver our lives from death.” The men said to her, “Our life for yours! If you do not tell this business of ours, then we will deal kindly and faithfully with you when Yhwh gives us the land.”Footnote 14

Josh. 2:8–14

This scene is likely secondary. As scholars have long observed, the first part of story (vv. 1–7), which ends with Rahab sending the pursuers on a wild-goose chase, continues naturally in the description of Rahab letting the spies down on a rope from her window (vv. 15–16, 21–23):

1 Then Joshua son of Nun sent two men secretly from Shittim as spies, saying, “Go, view the land, and Jericho.” So they went and came to the house of a prostitute whose name was Rahab, and they spent the night there. 2 It was told to the king of Jericho: “Some men have come here tonight from the children of Israel to search out the land.” 3 Then the king of Jericho sent orders to Rahab, “Bring out the men who have come to you, who entered your house, for it is only to search out the whole land that they have come.” 4 But the woman took the two men and hid them. Then she said, “True, the men came to me, but I did not know where they are from. 5 When it was time to close the gate at dark, the men left. I do not know where the men went. Pursue them quickly, for you can overtake them.” [6 She had, however, brought them up to the roof and hidden them with the stalks of flax that she had spread out on the roof.] 7 So the men pursued them on the way to the Jordan as far as the fords. As soon as the pursuers had gone out, the gate was shut.

[vv. 8–14]

15 Then she let them down by a rope through the window, for her house was in the city wall, and in the city wall she resided. 16 She said to them, “Make for the hills so that the pursuers do not chance upon you. Hide there for three days until the pursuers return, and then go your way.” … 21 Thereafter she let them go, and they left. [She tied the crimson cord in the window.] 22 They left and they went into the hill country and stayed there three days, until the pursuers returned. The pursuers had searched all along the way and found nothing. 23 Then the two men returned and came down again from the hill country crossed over, and came to Joshua son of Nun, and told him everything that had happened to them. [24 They said to Joshua, “Yhwh has delivered the whole land into our hands, and indeed all the inhabitants are faint because of us.]

Not only does the scene in verses 8–14 sever the narrative at this juncture; its language and ideas stand out as an anomaly in the context of the chapter. Acclaiming Yhwh’s hand in Israel’s history, Rahab uses formulations and concepts that presuppose an advanced stage in the formation of the wider biblical narrative, as we saw in our discussions of Sihon and Og (“two Amorite kings,” vv. 8–14) in Parts I and II. The only other place in the account where we find this language is the final line (v. 24), which appears to have been composed as a new conclusion that integrates Rahab’s exact words into the spies’ debriefing.Footnote 15

The second part of verse 21, which presents Rahab hanging a crimson cord from her window, interrupts the flow of the narrative and is easy to identify as an editorial gloss. It presupposes the supplementary material related to the logistics of Rahab’s rescue (vv. 8–14 + 17–21).Footnote 16

The announcement in verse 6 that Rahab had concealed the spies on the roof provides an additional clue that the scene in verses 8–14 is secondary. The narrator has already reported in verse 4 that “the woman took the two men and hid them.” (Where she hides them is not said.) While verse 4 flows effortlessly in the narrative and must be part of the earliest version, the announcement in verse 6 is poorly placed. It was likely added by the same hand that composed verses 8–14, which begin with Rahab going up to the men on the roof.

The Masoretic text at 2:4 is literally “she hid him,” and the unexpected singular may be an echo of Exodus 2:2, where Moses’s mother “hid him” (using the same verb). Just as the story of the exodus begins with the courageous defiance of the Egyptian king by Moses’s mother as well as by his sister and the Hebrew midwives, the story of the conquest begins with the courageous defiance of a Canaanite king by a woman. In each case, the women not only act without the help of males but also protect them as passive objects. These parallels may help us understand why later scribes seized on the originally brief account and embellished it: without husband and children, Rahab works maternally to protect the spies, covering them under her stalks of flax and then lying to the king’s men as to their whereabouts. Moreover, the description of her letting the spies down by a rope brings to mind the scene in 1 Sam. 19 in which Michal lets David down by a rope from her window when he, like the spies, is fleeing for his life from a king. In keeping with an assault on hegemonic masculinities that can be identified in many biblical texts, these narratives undermine pretensions of male self-sufficiency by depicting valiant women acting surreptitiously. In their crucial contributions to the nation’s history, they orchestrate directly, and physically, the lives of male figures.Footnote 17

While the scene in verses 8–14 is most likely supplementary, Rahab’s statements in it about the fear that had consumed Canaan are consistent with the rhetorical purpose of the older account. We are told in verse 7 that as soon as the men took off in pursuit of the spies, the city gate was closed after them. Israel’s arrival obviously had struck fear into the heart of Jericho’s inhabitants and king. Likewise, chapter 6 begins by reporting that Jericho was on lockdown, which Yhwh interprets as a portent of the city’s imminent downfall:

Jericho was shut up tightly because of the Israelites; no one went out and no one came in. Yhwh said to Joshua, “See, I have handed Jericho over to you, along with its king [and soldiers]. You shall march around the city, all the warriors surrounding the city … .”

Josh. 6:1–3

Before the composition of all the disparate material related to the crossing of the Jordan in chapters 35, the Rahab story would have segued directly into the battle account. The latter tells how Jericho was “shut up tightly because of the Israelites,” and the Rahab story provides a glimpse from the inside on why this was so.

The battle account focuses on the city’s wall. The remains of an impressive system of fortifications at Jericho could be seen be passers-by in antiquity, and they can still be witnessed today. Although the city was conquered in the sixteenth century BCE during an Egyptian campaign in the region, the authors of the biblical account point to the ruins as physical evidence for – and a monument to – Israel’s inaugural triumph after invading Canaan. This historiographical purpose explains why the authors do not present Joshua engaging the enemy in the field, as he does at Ai in the immediately following episode.Footnote 18

If the first and most basic purpose of the Rahab story is to explain why Jericho was “shut up tightly,” and therefore why the nation attacks the city in an unconventional manner, we can explain why the spies, instead of continuing their espionage activities, immediately make their way back to Joshua and “tell him everything that had happened to them” (2:21).Footnote 19 They terminate their reconnaissance mission because it had already provided them with all the intelligence they needed: panic had seized Jericho, and as Yhwh spells out for Joshua, this panic is handwriting on the wall that the city would soon fall.

Edification of a Defeated Nation

The aim of the espionage mission, as I pointed out in Chapter 7, was not to inspect the military establishments in Canaan but to assess the psychological state of the local population. This aim explains why the spies visit the house of Rahab. Due to her private intercourse with diverse clientele, the proprietresses of bordellos and taverns were privy to news and rumors from abroad and intimately aware of the locals’ disposition. For example, according to Hammurabi’s laws, “if criminals [or conspirators] plot in the house of a tavern keeper [sabitum], and she does not capture those criminals and deliver them to the palace, the tavern keeper shall be put to death.”Footnote 20

Presupposing these associations, the supplements to the story portray Rahab approaching the Israelite men before they go to sleep. She divulges to them that the land’s inhabitants were shaking in their sandals in fear of Israel and its god. Her statement divulges the deflation of Canaan’s male inhabitants: “When we heard it, our hearts melted. No longer does a spirit rise in any man because of you! Yhwh your god is indeed god in heaven above and on earth below.”Footnote 21

Signs, oracles, prophetic performances, speeches, and rituals that motivate the army or its leaders for an impending engagement are all important features of biblical war commemoration. In addition to serving an immediate narrative function, this discourse on fear and courage has a larger didactic purpose. Thus, Rahab’s reference to the memories of Sihon’s and Og’s defeat resembles the use Moses makes of these same memories throughout Deuteronomy, as he rouses the nation on the eve of war.Footnote 22 Like Moses’s orations in Deuteronomy, a new ending to the Rahab story plays a rhetorical role by having the spies draw a conclusion for Joshua: “Yhwh has given the entire land into our hands; indeed, all the inhabitants of the land melt in fear before us!”

Two chapters from the book of Numbers tell of the initial scouting mission conducted by the preceding generation soon after leaving Egypt. The spies’ objective was to find, and to bring back to the national assembly, a sign confirming that Israel would claim certain victory. Likely composed much later than the first iteration of the Rahab story, the account in Numbers differs from this story above all in the failure of the mission. The scouts bring back an “evil report” that demoralizes the nation, and, as punishment, Yhwh sentences the entire generation to death in the wilderness. Paralyzed by fear, the nation stands no chance of victory. The same goes conversely for their enemies, and such is the case as a new generation prepares to invade angst-filled Canaan in the time of Rahab. If even this non-Israelite knew that Canaan was about to be wiped out, all the more reason for Israel to eschew disbelief, which had brought forty years of wandering in the wilderness.

More than any other biblical account, the story of Gideon from the book of Judges is characterized by a profusion of prebattle signs and oracles. Its distinctive quality is due to the work of later scribal hands that transformed a “mighty hero” into an exceedingly trepidatious farmer.Footnote 23 At every step of the way, Gideon needs signs and demonstrations that he and his men could overpower the enemy. On the eve of battle, the fretful warrior goes down with his servant on a reconnaissance mission into the enemy camp. There, they overhear a soldier describing his dream about the collapse of a tent, which his fellow interprets as a portent of their own defeat: “This is nothing other than the sword of Gideon ben Joash, a man of Israel. Into his hand God has given Midian and all the army!” Gideon had already witnessed many signs that he would triumph over the Midianites and this last sign is what finally emboldens him to begin the battle (Judg. 7:10–15).

As we observe in the Gideon account, the news brought by the spies in the Rahab story galvanizes Joshua’s resolve on the eve of invasion. The nation’s leader has already received an oracle of divine encouragement (1:1–9) and will witness yet another divine sign right before the battle (5:13–15).Footnote 24 The character of Joshua does not suffer from Gideon’s lack of courage; to the contrary, he, like Rahab, is a paragon of valor.

The intended audience of our texts would have been faced with the prospect, and then the fact, of forfeiting to foreign armies the land Joshua had conquered. These texts were written and rewritten for the edification of a defeated nation, and as such, they participate in an elaborate biblical discourse on faith and fear.Footnote 25

Belief and Action

According to Klaus Bieberstein, a Roman Catholic biblical scholar from Germany, the authors of the Rahab story highlighted the harlot’s “confession of faith” and placed it at the center of the account as an illustration of Isaiah’s verdict “If you do not believe, you will not stand” (Isa. 7:9).Footnote 26 Because Rahab believes, she survives, becoming thereby a living “monument” (Denkmal) that witnesses to the nexus between faith and salvation. Bieberstein agrees that the Rahab story participates in a struggle to define Israel’s collective identity, yet it does so, according to his interpretation, by pointing to verbal confessions and “faith/belief” (Glaube) in Yhwh as the basis for belonging.

While this reading may be consistent with influential iterations of Christian theology, it’s difficult to reconcile with the logic of the text itself. Belief isn’t the condition for Rahab’s rescue, let alone her inclusion among the people of Israel. To be sure, the biblical scribes portray Rahab as being confident that Israel will conquer the land, and this confidence stands out against the account of the first espionage mission during the days of Moses. At that time, Yhwh condemned an entire generation to die in the wilderness for its lack of faith:

And Yhwh said to Moses, “How long will this people spurn me, and how long will they not believe (in) me [and] all the signs I performed in their midst.”

Num. 14:11

Here, as elsewhere, Israel’s refusal to believe in Yhwh’s power elicits divine punishment. It would be a flagrant non sequitur, however, to conclude that these texts identify faith as the criterion for membership, as if Israel were a “community of believers.”

Twice in the second episode of the Rahab story, the authors name the heroine’s actions in hiding the spies as the reason for the special treatment she – together with all her family and clans – receives from the conquerors (6:17b, 25b). Even if these lines are late additions to the account, one must explain why their authors did not mention the words she spoke as a testimony to her belief in Israel’s god. It might be argued, in line with the early Christian writings discussed in Chapter 7, that Rahab’s underlying faith prompted her to hide the Israelite men. Even so, the account in Joshua identifies solely her deeds as the grounds for her and her family’s salvation; in stark contrast to many later interpreters, it says nothing about these works as tangible testaments to her “faith.”

Rahab’s report about the fear that had engulfed the local population culminates in a declaration: “Yhwh your god is indeed god in heaven above and on earth below.” (2:11b; cf. Deut. 4:37–39). As we noted in Chapter 7, these words resemble the avowals of Jethro and Naaman. All three figures do not simply state the facts; they also express solidarity. Even if Jethro returns to his own country instead of joining the people of Israel, his declaration reinforces the special quality of his relationship to the nation, which is celebrated in the rituals of commensality with its leaders (Exod. 18:12).Footnote 27 Rahab’s statement about Israel’s god, in the same way, does not in and of itself qualify her for inclusion among the people of Israel. But if she is to be included, she must both demonstrate her loyalty through her actions and interpret them with her words. (Her statement likely belongs to the same compositional level as the lines added to Joshua 6 that describe the honored place she assumes in the nation.)

Consider again the example of Ruth. When Boaz grants special privileges to this Moabite, she is taken aback and wonders why. Boaz responds by pointing to her record of solidarity with Naomi and, by extension, with the people of Israel as a whole:

All that you have done for your mother-in-law since the death of your husband has been fully told to me, and how you left your father and mother and your native land and came to a people that you did not know before. May Yhwh reward you for your deeds. And may you have a full reward from Yhwh, the god of Israel, under whose wings you have come for refuge!”

Ruth 2:11–12

As in Rahab’s case, Ruth’s reward, both from Boaz and from Yhwh, is merited by her deeds, whereas the words she speaks to Naomi at the beginning of the narrative are the means by which she proclaims her intent and motivation. Even if they are indispensable, they are not the grounds for her inclusion.

In Chapter 7, we compared Rahab’s statement to the testimonies and oaths of loyalty required for naturalization in modern nation-states. The difference is that Rahab’s testimony revolves around Israel’s deity; today, one swears allegiance to a flag. This difference turns out to be not so stark if we remember that the national flags of modernity evolved as secularized incarnations of the deities and religious symbols under whose aegis ancient states operated. The project of peoplehood that the biblical writers conceived has a thoroughgoing theological dimension. The fact that the biblical writers ascribed a central role to their deity does not mean, however, that the form of peoplehood they envisioned is more akin to an assembly of believers than a national body. Even so, a deity that transcends political divisions offered an ideal common point for competing communities to consolidate as one people and form a more perfect union (see the discussion in Part IV).

A New Covenant

The complexity of Rahab’s identity may be embedded already in the earliest formulations of the account, but as the story evolved, the intertextuality with other biblical texts assumed a sharper profile. We notice this not only in Rahab’s testimony but also in her extended negotiations with the spies.Footnote 28 It’s obvious to Rahab that no one stands a chance of surviving the impending devastation and that Canaan’s future clearly lies with Israel. Hence, she not only hides the men but is also eager to persuade them to make a pact with her. She fears that Israel would annihilate her entire family, and we, as readers, know this is what they are about to do, in keeping with the command in Deuteronomy to annihilate all the Canaanites (see Deut. 7 and 20).

Many passages in Joshua do not reflect knowledge of Deuteronomy, and the earliest portrait of Rahab did not present her Canaanite identity as grounds for execution. The present shape of the book, however, is explicitly and repeatedly linked to its predecessor. For example, the Gibeonite account (chaps. 9–10), which we explore in Chapter 9, presupposes the command to annihilate the Canaanites. In this narrative framework, the final form of the Rahab story demonstrates the possibility of suspending the Mosaic decree in the case of someone who stands in undivided solidarity with Israel and proves his/her loyalty when push comes to shove.

The scribes who reworked the account devoted a lot of space to the oath that Rahab demands from the spies (2:8–14, 17–21; see also 6:22), and the reason seems to be that they wanted to address the way in which Rahab becomes part of Israel. Their account reveals paradigmatically how a non-Israelite secures protection and privileges via a proven record of loyalty (notice the length and shrewdness of her lines to the king’s men), which merits a contractual guarantee in the form of an unbreakable oath. Prompting their editorial work was the insight that eloquent affirmations about the power of Israel’s god, and even courageous displays of loyalty, are of limited value if they do not culminate in legally binding guarantees of protection. Such pledges define and formalize the mutual obligations that constitute the bedrock of a political community.Footnote 29

When creating this complex account, the scribes couldn’t help but echo Sinai. Throughout Exodus and Deuteronomy, Yhwh appeals to a record of protecting and saving the nation as the basis for the covenant he makes with the nation. Similarly, Rahab begins by recalling these same salvific deeds of Yhwh (2:9–11), and then makes a case for her own covenant with the nation (beginning with the appropriate formula “and now,” 2:12). In making her case, Rahab invokes her act of “loyalty/hospitality” (ḥesed). Since she risked her life and the lives of her family to save the spies, they now should reciprocate with a quid pro quo, swearing to show her “loyalty” and to “save” her and her family (2:12–13).

In making this new covenant, Rahab demonstrates superb negotiation skills, and perhaps we are to understand that she owes these skills to her profession. The pact with the Israelite men is just as much about her (and her family’s) survival as transactions with clients. The difference is that the former is more enduring and transformative, as she now moves from the margins of one society to the center of another.

Inclusion Versus Integration

We established that Rahab’s belonging presupposes both her deeds and her words. But what more can we say about the nature of the belonging that she procured? In Chapter 7, we saw how Josephus and the rabbis claimed that she was fully integrated into Israelite society, eventually marrying Joshua and becoming the ancestress of important figures in the nation’s history, and the Gospel of Matthew does something similar by grafting her into the family tree of Jesus. Thus, both Jewish and Christian readers imagine Rahab being fully integrated into the life of the nation, but does the account in Joshua suggest that she became a full-fledged member of Israel?

We are told that the spies, after following through with the pact and rescuing Rahab’s family, “left them outside the camp of Israel” (6:23). Although they are no longer a part of the city destined for destruction, they are kept separate from the rest of the nation and not allowed to dwell alongside its members. This line, as I suggested earlier, is likely a gloss added by a priestly scribe who was disturbed by the notion that a Canaanite harlot and her family could have so easily entered the (sacred) space of the camp and thereby jeopardized Israel’s welfare. In contrast to this gloss, the final statement about Rahab proclaims resoundingly:

As for Rahab the prostitute, and the house of her father, and all that belonged to her, Joshua saved them alive; she lives in Israel’s midst to the present day, because she hid the messengers Joshua had sent to spy out Jericho.

Josh. 6:25

If Rahab came to live in Israel’s midst, are we to understand that she became a full-fledged member of the nation?

The term “midst” is used often in the book, recurring at key moments in the narrative: Yhwh performs wonders in the Israelites’ midst at the crossing of the Jordan (3:5) and proves that he dwells in their midst by driving out the seven nations that dwell in the Promised Land (3:10). Israel sets up a monument in the nation’s midst for future generations (4:6). In the episode that immediately follows the statement about Rahab, a figure named Achan wrongly keeps some of the war spoils for himself; because these banned items were found in Israel’s midst, they cause a devastating defeat for the nation (7:12–13). That many indigenous outsiders, like Rahab, dwell in their midst is affirmed in the account of Joshua reading the words of Moses to the assembly (8:35). The account of the Gibeonites in chapters 910 plays heavily on this theme. It presents a population that lives in Israel’s midst tricking the people into thinking that they were actually from far away (9:7, 16, 22). By means of such subterfuge, they make peace with the Israelites and secure rights to continue dwelling in their midst (10:1). In addition to Rahab and the Gibeonites, others continue to live in Israel’s midst because various tribes failed to drive them out (13:10, 16:10). Finally, in his valediction, Joshua implores Israel to put away the foreign gods that are in their midst (24:23).

The term “midst” is thus used in Joshua in reference to things that are separate from Israel while having an intimate relationship with it – whether deities or proscribed war spoils. When applied to peoples and populations, the term does not suggest that the group has become one with Israel. The statement about Rahab may suggest, then, that she was embraced into Israelite society and given an honored place in Israel’s national memory, even while not becoming a full Israelite. But given that, ideally, the deity dwells in the midst of Israel, the use of the term is likely used here to draw attention to the place of honor Rahab occupies in the nation. This brings to mind Moses’s father-in-law, whose story we treat in Part IV. An outsider too, he should join the nation as a fellow-traveler, serving as its “eyes” and seeking out places where it should camp; the place he is offered is at the head of the camp, with the deity leading the nation through the wilderness (see Num. 10:29–32, 33–36). What makes Rahab special, however, is that she still occupies her privileged place “until the present day.”

The sociological distinction between inclusion and integration proves useful here. If Rahab and her family were included within Israel without being fully integrated, they could be recognized as a group with a protected and privileged status. Such seems to have been the case with the Gibeonites. By means of a formal pact, the Israelites pledge that they will not annihilate this population, and they guarantee its members sanctuary within their society. The book of Samuel presents King Saul violating this oath when he “attempts to wipe out [the Gibeonites] in his zeal for Israel and Judah,” and the bloodguilt incurred by this king eventually results in a famine that Yhwh inflicts upon Israel. Given several points of overlap with the Rahab account, these Gibeonite texts merit a closer examination, which we undertake in Chapter 9.

9 Rahab’s Courage and the Gibeonites’ Cowardice

According to the analysis presented in Chapter 8, the two sides of Rahab’s character – her words and her deeds – evolved together. Instead of representing a particular clan (the “Rahabites”), as some scholars claim, this Canaanite woman serves as an archetype of the outsider who secures a place in the national fold through an act of courage and loyalty.Footnote 1

While we cannot say much, if anything, about Rahab’s origins and the prebiblical legends that may have grown up around her name, we can establish what purposes her story serves in the wider narrative: Originally, it had little to do with her identity as an outsider, serving instead to explain why Jericho was “shut up tightly because of the Israelites, with no one going out or coming in” (Josh. 6:1). The story grew to its present proportions as later writers expanded it, both to teach the nation lessons of fearlessness and to address issues posed by contested populations.

The Gibeonites, who are the subject of two chapters in Joshua, were one such contested population. The commonalities between this group and Rahab make their differences all the more telling: Both call attention to Israel’s impressive triumphs over two kings in the Transjordan, and both manage to secure a place in the nation’s “midst.” Yet while Rahab does so through surreptitious actions that are both courageous and commendable (at least, from the perspective of the intended readership), the Gibeonites secure their protected place through an act of pusillanimous duplicity.

The account of the Gibeonites’ treachery illustrates the dynamics of war remembrance that we are exploring in our study. Instead of defending this population by commemorating the loyalty and bravery of its members in wartime, the biblical scribes challenged their belonging and privileges by creating a memory of unheroic conduct.Footnote 2 Yet what was it about the Gibeonites that rankled the authors of Joshua? To answer this question, we need to consider a number of clues from both the material-cultural record and the biblical corpus.Footnote 3

Archeological and Biblical Evidence

At the site of Gibeon (Tell el-Jib), archeologists have unearthed more than ninety jar handles bearing the Hebrew impression LMLK (meaning for the king) and dating to the late eighth to mid-seventh centuries; most are identified as “late types.” Another twenty-four were found at Beeroth (Khirbet el-Burj). Several of the handles from Gibeon were originally part of massive wine pithoi. Recently, a tax bulla that reads “For the king, from Gibeon,” dating perhaps to the reign of Manasseh (697–643 BCE), was uncovered in Jerusalem. In addition to these finds, forty-one jar handles with concentric stamps (mid-seventh century; 14.5 percent of all those excavated) were found at Gibeon, with fifty-six jar handles bearing the name Gibeon.Footnote 4

More than a century before native potters impressed Judean royal seals on these jar handles, an Egyptian scribe had inscribed the name Gibeon in a memorial account of the cities encountered by the Egyptian pharaoh Sheshonq during his campaign in the southern Levantine (ca. 926/5 BCE). The site of Tell el-Jib was occupied from the Early Bronze Age, but attained unprecedented levels of prosperity during Iron Age IIB and IIC (corresponding roughly to the eighth and seventh centuries, respectively). A thick wall enclosed the crest of the High Place, and a large pool with water conduits witnesses to impressive architectural expertise. In addition, the city boasted a thriving wine industry during the eighth and seventh centuries BCE, with cellars that could house 95,000 liters of wine.Footnote 5

On the biblical landscape, the Gibeonites inhabited a tetrapolis consisting of the towns of Gibeon, Chephirah, Beeroth, and Kiriath-Jearim (see Josh. 9:17). The towns of Chephirah and Beeroth are mentioned very rarely in biblical literature. A list from the Persian-Hellenistic period mentions them together with Kiriath-Jearim as several of the places to which Judean exiles returned (Ezra 2:25; Neh. 7:29). Beeroth gets bad press in a passage from the book of Samuel that describes how two men from this town entered the house of Saul’s son, Ish-bosheth, and brutally murdered him in the night; when David hears about it, he condemns their deed and commands his servants to execute them (2 Sam. 4).Footnote 6

Kiriath-Jearim is remembered as the place where the ark of Yhwh was domiciled for some twenty years, and recent excavations conducted by Israel Finkelstein and Thomas Römer have revealed a massive cultic platform at this site. When David centralizes his kingdom, he transfers the palladium to Jerusalem from “the house of Abinadab on the hill” (2 Sam. 6:1–5, 14–15, 16–19). Whereas the text locates this hill in a town called Baale-Judah, another account (1 Sam. 4–7) goes to great lengths to identify Abinadab’s house in Kiriath-Jearim and to explain how the ark ended up there: After the Philistines capture it in battle, it wreaks havoc among them, so they send it back to Judah. When it arrives in the town of Beth-Shemesh, it continues to inflict many deaths. Wondering who could “stand/serve before Yhwh, this holy god,” the people of the town petition their neighbors in Kiriath-Jearim to take it off their hands. When the citizens of Kiriath-Jearim do so, they station it in “the house of Abinadab on the hill” and consecrate his son to guard it.Footnote 7 It remains in the town happily for twenty years (1 Sam. 7:1–2).Footnote 8 The claims made in this account of the ark – perhaps representing an older source – would, of course, have pleased the (Gibeonite) inhabitants of Kiriath-Jearim.Footnote 9

With respect to Gibeon, “a massive city, like one of the royal cities” (Josh. 10:2), the biblical texts reflect a range of attitudes. A document in the Nehemiah Memoir commemorates a Gibeonite contribution to the construction of Jerusalem’s wall (Neh. 3:7). The book of Chronicles identifies Gibeon as the place where the tabernacle had been erected (1 Chron. 16:39, 21:29, and passim). The book also describes a warrior from Gibeon leaving Saul and becoming one of David’s elite warriors (1 Chron. 12:4). Two passages link “the father/founder of Gibeon” to the line of Saul (1 Chron. 8:29–40, 9:35–44); the Gibeonites accordingly belong to Saul’s extended clan. This is not a good thing, since, in the version of history told in Chronicles, Saul serves as a contemptible foil to the heroic David.Footnote 10

Older texts present a similarly ambivalent image of Gibeon. A chapter in the book of Samuel depicts a bloody battle fought “at the pool of Gibeon” between the warriors of David and Saul after the death of the latter (2 Sam. 2; see also 2 Sam. 20:8). The book of Jeremiah alludes to this battle by locating another deplorable instance of internecine conflict “at the waters of Gibeon” (Jer. 41:12; cf. v. 9). The same book (chap. 28) depicts a Gibeonite prophet named Hananiah, who, as a prominent figure in Jerusalemite society, enjoys the respect of elite (priestly) circles. However, he denies the veracity of Jeremiah’s message; consequently, Yhwh sends Jeremiah to curse him, and he dies soon thereafter. The rabbis interpreted this prophet’s Gibeonite origins in line with Joshua’s curse (see Josh. 9:23).

Relationship to Jerusalem’s Temple

A number of biblical texts bespeak Gibeon’s importance as a cultic place, with a long history of royal patronage. We’ve already considered the ark narrative, which commemorates the respected role played by Kiriath-Jearim. The book of Kings honors Solomon as the one who built the temple in Jerusalem, but it also claims that long before he undertook the building project, he went regularly to Gibeon to sacrifice: “For that was the principal shrine; Solomon had offered a thousand burnt offerings on that altar” (1 Kings 3:4).Footnote 11

Another prominent text reflecting Gibeon’s cultic significance is 2 Samuel 21, which we examine in greater detail later in this chapter. The story describes a famine and David’s attempts to placate Yhwh. When the drought had not relented for three years, the king learns, in an oracle from Yhwh, that the cause was “Saul and his house, because he had incurred bloodguilt by killing Gibeonites.” We are not told when Saul committed the atrocities, but one is reminded of the time when he slaughtered the priests at Nob (1 Sam. 21–22).Footnote 12 David asks the Gibeonites what he could do for them so that they would “bless the possession of Yhwh.” Although this expression may be just a way of describing reconciliation between the Gibeonites and (the rest of) Israel, it may refer to a special priestly prerogative to pronounce a benediction on the people. (The collective blessing of Israel is to be pronounced by the sons of Aaron, according to Numbers 6.) In response to David’s inquiry, the Gibeonites ask that they be given seven of Saul’s sons, whom they intended to impale “on the mountain before Yhwh,” and, with David’s assistance, this is exactly what they do. The cultic-ritual character of the slaughter is underscored by the statement that it occurred for the entire span of the barley harvest.

The Gibeonites’ cultic connection is reflected elsewhere in the biblical corpus. Thus, the book of Isaiah (28:21) compares Yhwh’s might to the hill of Perazim (see 2 Sam. 6:8) and to the valley of Gibeon. Likewise, material from Joshua, also treated later in this chapter, assigns to the Gibeonites tasks at “the house of my god” and “the altar of Yhwh, in the sacred place that he would choose” (Josh. 9:24, 27). Although menial tasks, the responsibility is nevertheless cultic, and as we shall see, there’s a very good reason why the authors would have wanted to diminish the nature of their priestly roles. Moreover, the following account of the battle at Gibeon, which is generally agreed to be older, presents Yhwh engaging directly in combat by both hurling stones from heaven and stopping the sun in the sky; the latter aspect reflects the “solarization” of Yhwh, whose wars are commemorated in “the Scroll of Yashar” (Josh. 10:11–14).Footnote 13

All these texts assert a special relationship between Yhwh and the Gibeonites. They claim that Yhwh’s ark resided in Kiriath-Jearim for many years; that Solomon sacrificed frequently to Yhwh at Gibeon and had one of his most important divine encounters there; that the Gibeonites appeased the divine wrath at harvest time by slaughtering Saul’s son on the “mountain of Yhwh”; and that Yhwh manifested his power at Gibeon in special ways.

On the basis of the material just discussed, one would assume that the Gibeonites were members of Israel. However, two texts in our survey emphatically deny that such is the case. The first appears in the account of David and the ritual slaughter Saul’s descendants; the second is the tale of the Gibeonites’ first encounter with Israel during the days of Joshua. In what follows, we treat these two closely related texts in tandem.

From Joshua to Saul

The account of David permitting the Gibeonites to perform a ritual slaughter of Saul’s male progeny (2 Sam. 21) begins with a statement about the origins of this population. As most scholars agree, the statement must have originated as a marginal gloss before being incorporated into the introduction. Notice how it’s interjected into the narrative; in most modern translations, it is placed in parentheses:

2 So the king [David] called the Gibeonites and said to them:

(Now the Gibeonites are not Israelites; they are instead part of the Amorites. Although the Israelites had sworn to them [protection], Saul attempted to wipe them out in his zeal for the Israelites and Judah.)

3 David said to the Gibeonites, “What shall I do for you … .”

The supplement declares, in the most straightforward terms, that the Gibeonites are Amorites, not Israelites. They lived among the Israelites because the latter had entered a pact with them. However, Saul had violated the pact and sought to wipe out this indigenous population. What motivated his genocidal campaign, the supplement explains, was his xenophobic zeal for his own people. It’s noteworthy that Saul, as a Benjaminite from the town of Gibeah, hails from a region that was home to the important Gibeonite sites mentioned earlier in this chapter.Footnote 14

The account of Saul’s reign in the book of Samuel pivots on an episode in which Yhwh’s prophet commands him to annihilate the vicious Amalekites, both the people and their animals, because they treated Israel most inhospitably at the time of the exodus.Footnote 15 Saul, however, defies these battle orders by granting immunity to the Amalekites’ king and destroying only the worthless livestock (1 Sam. 15). Consequently, he forfeits his throne to David, who is busy fighting Amalekites when Saul and Jonathan fall dishonorably in a battle with the Philistines on Mount Gilboa (2 Sam. 1:1).

While Saul fails in his campaigns against these and other enemies of Israel, he easily executes eighty-five priests of Yhwh from the town of Nob/Gob, together with all the inhabitants and animals that live there (1 Sam. 21–22); the connections between this town and the Gibeonites have long been noted.Footnote 16 With respect to that pact mentioned in 2 Samuel 22:2, the book of Joshua tells how Israel swore to the Gibeonites that they would permit them to live in their midst (chap. 9). In the context of the wider narrative of Genesis-Kings, the reader should understand the statement “the Israelites had sworn to them [protection]” as a reference to this episode in the book of Joshua.Footnote 17

The Gibeonites are depicted in chapter 9 as a population that joins the nation later. Since neither they nor their ancestors were present at Sinai, they are not members of the covenant and, as in the case of Rahab, have to be grafted in by a secondary pact of protection made directly, and deceitfully, with the nation (rather than with Yhwh). In the case of the Gibeonites, however, the pact fails to provide protection after the nation’s first king seizes power. When Saul embarks on his nationalistic program of genocide, the people fail to stand in his way and enforce the pact of protection made directly with them. Even if that pact was made under false pretenses, it was sworn in the name of Yhwh, and Yhwh is not reluctant to enforce it. He chooses to do so by punishing the land with a famine.

An Early Memory of Joshua

It seems quite likely that this episode in Joshua 9 was composed secondarily as a prologue to the battle story in the following chapter.Footnote 18 In fact, the battle story may be one of the oldest texts within the book, and the event itself appears to have been commemorated in an earlier work featuring the wars of Yhwh (see “the Scroll of Yashar” in 10:11). Most of the material in Joshua appears to have been created ad hoc for the exodus-conquest narrative, yet the battle story, when isolated and read independently from its present context, identifies Joshua neither as Moses’s successor nor as the commanding officer who leads Israel across the Jordan. Like Gideon, Jephthah, Saul, and David, the hero is a local warlord who commands his own private army. He saves a beleaguered population thanks to the miraculous intervention of Yhwh; the name Joshua, after all, means “Yhwh saved/saves.”

The story’s substratum depicts a scenario that is strikingly similar to Saul’s rescue of Jabesh-Gilead as portrayed in 1 Samuel 11. In both cases, an enemy first besieges a town; in response, its residents send a message for help; and finally, the hero answers the call and marches up promptly with an army to “save” them. The difference between the accounts is that Saul musters a militia force from Israel’s farmers, while Joshua fights with what seem to be his private corps of professional warriors. In keeping with a typical scenario of martial “saviors” in the ancient world, Joshua just happens to conquer a region as he lends a hand to those in dire straits.Footnote 19 By executing five kings who had formed a military coalition against Gibeon, he then extends his territorial claims from their original borders in the central hill country.

The older battle story in chapter 10 does not present a sharp distinction between Israelites and all others (“Canaanites”); in fact, the name “Israel” is found solely in what appears to be a secondary stratum. In contrast, the account of the pact in chapter 9 clearly identifies the Gibeonites as non-Israelites. Specifically, it calls them “Hivites,” linking them to the “seven nations” that Yhwh commands Israel to exterminate in Deuteronomy. If they survived the conquest, it was only through a contemptible act of deceit.Footnote 20

The battle story also presents the Gibeonites in a positive (or at least neutral) light. The city of Gibeon is described as “a massive city, like one of the royal cities, … and all its men were heroes/warriors” (v. 2).Footnote 21 Its extraordinary might is suggested further by the large coalition of Canaanite kings that besieges it. In contradistinction to chapter 10, the new account in chapter 9 portrays the Gibeonites as cowardly and duplicitous. When they hear what Joshua did to Jericho and Ai, they devise a scheme to save themselves: Disguised as travelers from a distant country, they send delegates to make a treaty with Israel. They know that Joshua is intent on taking possession of a clearly circumscribed territory and would not target them as enemies if he thinks they come from abroad. Reflecting this rationale, the laws of Deuteronomy demand the annihilation of all who dwell in Canaan, yet permit peace treaties with those who reside afar off (Deut. 20:10–18).Footnote 22

After Joshua makes a pact with the Gibeonites, their true identity comes to light: Instead of voyaging from a foreign land, they turn out to be a Canaanite population residing in Israel’s “midst.” When summoned to give account for their actions, the Gibeonites explain that they feared for their lives since they knew Yhwh had commanded Israel to destroy all the inhabitants of the land. Rather than violating their treaty and assaulting the Gibeonites, as Saul does, Joshua allows them to live in the nation’s midst. But to ensure that they will not occupy a place of honor, he pronounces a curse on them: “Never shall one of you be ‘cut off’ from being a slave – hewers of wood and drawers of water for the house of my god!” (v. 23).

The Composition of Joshua 9

The account of the pact in Joshua 9 denigrates the Gibeonites and denies them a primordial connection to the people of Israel. Whereas the true Israelites came out of Egypt during the exodus under Moses, these are indigenous inhabitants of Canaan who managed to weasel their way into the national fold when Israel was already in the land. The account also explains how the Gibeonites came to serve in a cultic capacity: instead of assigning them to an illustrious position at one of the largest shrines in the region (1 Kings 3:4) or to a special role as guardians of the ark of Yhwh (1 Sam. 7 and 2 Sam. 6), Joshua formally condemned them, during their first encounter with Israel, to the most menial of cultic tasks (see Deut. 29:10).

If the Gibeonites were allowed to perform respected priestly roles at an important shrine, the recognition they would enjoy would incite fierce competition with priests in Jerusalem. The latter have left their unmistakable imprimatur on Joshua 9. As we observed in relation to Joshua 22 in Part II, they take the opportunity here to reaffirm to their readers that there was only one place that Yhwh chose for his altar.

Below I present the results of my diachronic analysis of the text. The indented portions belong to the secondary strata, while the earliest edition is in boldface.Footnote 23

Reconstruction of Joshua 9

1 Now when all the kings who were beyond the Jordan in the hill country and in the lowland all along the coast of the Great Sea toward Lebanon – the Hittites, the Amorites, the Canaanites, the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites – heard of this, 2 they gathered together with one accord to fight Joshua and Israel.

3 When the inhabitants of Gibeon heard what Joshua had done to Jericho and to Ai,

4 they on their part acted with cunning:

they went and prepared provisions,

and took worn-out sacks for their donkeys, and wineskins, worn-out and torn and mended, 5 with worn-out, patched sandals on their feet, and worn-out clothes; and all their provisions were dry and moldy.

6 and went to Joshua in the camp at Gilgal, and said to him

and to the Israelites, “We have come from a far country; so now make a treaty with us.” 7 But the Israelites said to the Hivites, “Perhaps you live among us; then how can we make a treaty with you?” 8 They said to Joshua,

“We are your servants.” And Joshua said to them, “Who are you? And where do you come from?” 9 They said to him, “Your servants have come from a very far country, because of the name of Yhwh your god; for we have heard a report of him, of all that he did in Egypt, 10 and of all that he did to the two kings of the Amorites who were beyond the Jordan, King Sihon of Heshbon, and King Og of Bashan who lived in Ashtaroth. 11 So our elders and all the inhabitants of our country said to us, ‘Take provisions in your hand for the journey; go to meet them, and say to them, “We are your servants; come now, make a treaty with us.” ’

12 Here is our bread; it was still warm when we took it from our houses as our food for the journey, on the day we set out to come to you, but now, see, it is dry and moldy; 13 these wineskins were new when we filled them, and see, they are burst; and these garments and sandals of ours are worn out from the very long journey.” 14 So the leaders partook of their provisions, and did not ask direction from the LORD.

15 And Joshua made peace with them, guaranteeing their lives by a treaty.

And the leaders of the congregation swore an oath to them.

16 But when three days had passed after they had made a treaty with them, they heard that they were their neighbors and were living among them.

17 So the Israelites set out and reached their cities on the third day. Now their cities were Gibeon, Chephirah, Beeroth, and Kiriath-Jearim. 18 But the Israelites did not attack them, because the leaders of the congregation had sworn to them by Yhwh, the god of Israel. Then all the congregation murmured against the leaders. 19 But all the leaders said to all the congregation, “We have sworn to them by Yhwh, the god of Israel, and now we must not touch them. 20 This is what we will do to them: We will let them live, so that wrath may not come upon us, because of the oath that we swore to them.” 21 The leaders said to them, “Let them live.” So they became hewers of wood and drawers of water for all the congregation, as the leaders had decided concerning them.

22 Joshua summoned them, and said to them, “Why did you deceive us, saying, ‘We are very far from you,’ while in fact you are living among us?

23 Now therefore you are cursed, and some of you shall always be slaves, hewers of wood and drawers of water for the House of my god.”

24 They answered Joshua, “Because it was told to your servants for a certainty that Yhwh your god had commanded his servant Moses to give you all the land, and to destroy all the inhabitants of the land before you; so we were in great fear for our lives because of you, and did this thing. 25 And now we are in your hand: do as it seems good and right in your sight to do to us.”

26 This is what he did for them: he saved them from the Israelites; and they did not kill them.

27 On that day Joshua made them hewers of wood and drawers of water for the congregation and for the altar of Yhwh, to continue to this day, in the place that he should choose.

As a late text placed at an early point in the biblical narrative, Joshua 9 provides a lens through which to read all the subsequent depictions of the Gibeonites. Moreover, it invites the reader to infer that if the Gibeonites had no cultic role before they were assigned to lowly tasks at the altar of Yhwh, then they must have built their renowned shrine and achieved their prominent priestly status after they abandoned their assignments at Yhwh’s one true altar.Footnote 24 When read in sequence, this late text contradicts many others related to the Gibeonites. (For example, it would not make sense for Yhwh to appear to Solomon at Gibeon if its shrine were illicit.) But such is the nature of biblical literature: Instead of deleting problematic texts, redactors more frequently added new texts in an effort to tip the weight of evidence in their favor. And what better place to attack the Gibeonites than right before Israel’s first encounter with them during the conquest?

From Saul to David

Having now explored the compositional history of the Joshua 9–10, we can return to our discussion of 2 Samuel 21. We’ve seen that Joshua does not break his oath after learning that the Gibeonites deceived him. In contrast, Saul goes out of his way to harass the Gibeonites. By doing so, he flouts the protection Joshua originally promised them. It is up to David, as Saul’s successor, to make reparations.Footnote 25

An ancient oath provides little protection unless it is guaranteed by effective divine curses. Fortunately, the Gibeonites have a special relationship to Yhwh, and the oath eventually makes itself felt in the form of an enduring famine. After three years of dismal harvests, David finally turns to an oracle to learn what caused it. When he discovers, conveniently, that not he but his predecessor Saul was at fault, he summons the Gibeonite leaders to determine how he could make atonement so that they would “bless the heritage of Yhwh.” The Gibeonites are initially reluctant to request anything, but, with David’s prodding, they eventually ask that seven of Saul’s male descendants be impaled on a hill at his hometown in Gibeah. David accedes to their request, and the ritual execution is performed “on the mountain before Yhwh” during the first days of the harvest. The act appeases the deity, and the famine ceases thereafter.

Reconstruction of Older Account in 2 Samuel 21

There was a famine during the reign of David, year after year for three years. David inquired of Yhwh, and Yhwh said, “It is because of Saul and the bloodguilt of his house that he incurred by killing the Gibeonites.” 2 The king summoned the Gibeonites and said to them:

(Now the Gibeonites are not Israelites; they are instead part of the Amorites. Although the Israelites had sworn to them [protection], Saul attempted to wipe them out in his zeal for the Israelites and Judah.)— 3 David said to the Gibeonites,

3 David said to the Gibeonites, “What shall I do for you? How shall I make atonement, so that you will bless the heritage of Yhwh?” 4 The Gibeonites said to him, “We have no claim for silver or gold against Saul and his household, and we have no claim on the life of any other man in Israel.” And he said, “Whatever you say I will do for you.” 5 And they said to the king, “The man who massacred us and planned to exterminate us, so that we should not survive in all the territory of Israel, 6 let seven men from his descendants be handed over to us, and we will impale them before Yhwh in Gibeah of Saul, ‘Yhwh’s chosen one.’” And the king replied, “I will do so.”

7 The king had pity on Mephibosheth son of Jonathan son of Saul, because of the oath before Yhwh between the two, between David and Jonathan son of Saul.Footnote 26

8 The king took Armoni and Mephibosheth, the two sons that Rizpah daughter of Aiah bore to Saul, and the five sons that Merab daughter of Saul bore to Adriel son of Barzillai the Meholathite, 9 and he delivered them to the Gibeonites, who proceeded to impale them on the mountain before Yhwh. All seven of them perished at the same time; they were put to death in the first days of the harvest, at the beginning of the barley harvest.Footnote 27

14b The deity heeded the land after this.

This is a highly disturbing episode, and it is placed next to others that are unfavorable to David’s memory. Directly preceding it are the accounts of the bloody war that the king wages against Israel, his calamitous return from exile, and an insurrection against his reign. In the immediately following account, David grows weary while fighting the Philistines and is almost killed; his men thereafter swear that he will no longer accompany them in battle. Another passage tells of a census David undertakes that provokes divine judgment on the nation; it ceases only after David builds an altar and sacrifices to Yhwh, who is said to have “heeded the land” (2 Sam. 24:25) – the same expression with which the episode in chapter 21 concludes.

In the context of these critical accounts, our story is to be interpreted not ad maiorem David gloriam but as a conscious attempt to cast the nation’s iconic ruler in an unfavorable light. As such, it’s part of the larger parable of power and statehood unfurled in the book of Samuel.Footnote 28 David originally mounts the throne because he’s skilled in fending off the nation’s enemies, but at this late stage he has become a menace to his own people.

Rizpah’s Heroism

The critique of David continues in the expansions to the account, which appear to have been undertaken in two stages. The first is one of the most poignant scenes in the Hebrew Bible, portraying a heroic act of protest. The protagonist is Rizpah, the mother of two of the seven victims. For many weeks, she camps in sackcloth on a nearby boulder, shielding the impaled bodies from birds during the day and from animals at night:

Then Rizpah daughter of Aiah took sackcloth and spread it on the boulder for herself. She stayed there from the beginning of the harvest until water was pouring on the bodies from the sky. She did not let the birds of the sky settle on them by day or the wild beasts [approach] by night.

2 Sam. 21:10

This description of Rizpah’s vigil may have been added to the story first. If so, it would have dramatically shifted the interpretation of the final line: “The deity heeded the land after this.” Originally “after this” referred to the ritual slaughter on the mountain of Yhwh, yet with the new scene we are to understand that what appeased the divine ire was a very different move – namely, an act of honoring the victims performed by a bereaved mother who seemingly could not do otherwise.

The second part of the continuation originally had nothing to do with this story, yet it makes for a suggestive and powerful resolution to the bloody drama. The text consists of a short account of how David honors the memories of Saul and Jonathan by reinterring their bones in their ancestral tomb (vv. 12–14). To connect it to the story, a scribe added two lines: one that presents David learning of Rizpah’s actions (v. 11) and another (v. 13) that presents David gathering the bones of those who had been “impaled” – the same verb as used in the description of the Gibeonites “impaling” the bodies of Saul’s descendants.Footnote 29

11 And it was told to David what Saul’s concubine Rizpah daughter of Aiah had done.

12 David went and took the bones of Saul and his son Jonathan from the citizens of Jabesh-Gilead, who had stolen them from the public square of Beth-Shan, where the Philistines had hung them up on the day the Philistines killed Saul at Gilboa. 13 He brought up the bones of Saul and of his son Jonathan from there, and he gathered the bones of those who had been impaled. 14 They buried the bones of Saul and his son Jonathan in Zela, in the territory of Benjamin, in the tomb of his father Kish, and they did all that the king commanded … .

2 Sam. 21:11–14

The episode works as a continuation of the older account in two ways. First, its description of David reinterring Saul’s and Jonathan’s bones on their patrimony makes for a fitting response to Rizpah’s protest over the exposed corpses of these men’s descendants. Second, it presents the Philistines “hanging” the bodies of Saul and Jonathan at the public square in Beth-Shan, which parallels the Gibeonites “impaling” their descendants.Footnote 30

The new continuations thus turn the originally pro-Gibeonite account on its head. Together with the interpolation in verse 2b, which we discussed at length earlier in this chapter, these supplements make it clear that the Gibeonites do not belong to the people of Israel. They are outsiders and behave like the Philistines, Israel’s most loathsome neighbors. The necessary step David takes to bring an end to the famine is not what he does to placate the Gibeonites but rather the benefaction he performs for the house of Saul. From the perspective of the account’s three compositional stages, the deity heeds the land not in response to the Gibeonites’ ritual slaughter or even the courageous act of Rizpah to honor the dead; what ultimately induces divine favor is rather the honor David pays to the memory of Saul and his son Jonathan. In keeping with the critique of monarchic power being formulated in the wider context, these new expanded versions of the story leave no room for doubt that had it not been for Rizpah’s courageous and unrelenting protest, David wouldn’t have thought to perform this praiseworthy deed.Footnote 31

The Gibeonites, Rahab, and Biblical War Commemoration

Let us now consider how our findings relate to the Rahab story. Both the Gibeonites and Rahab are depicted in the book of Joshua as indigenous outsiders who secure a place “in the midst of Israel.” The accounts of both also revolve around the formal declarations they make as they enter the national fold. The Gibeonite delegates begin their address in a manner that bears striking resemblances to Rahab’s speech:

Your servants have come from a very far country due to the name of Yhwh your god. We have heard a report of him, of all that he did in Egypt, and of all that he did to the two kings of the Amorites who were beyond the Jordan, King Sihon of Heshbon, and King Og of Bashan, who lived in Ashtaroth … .

Josh. 9:9–10

Rahab also tells the spies how she heard about the feats of Yhwh against these two formidable foes that inhabited the Transjordan. Yet she not only speaks; she also acts, and does so fearlessly. By risking her life, she merits the special treatment and protection she and her family receive during the Israelite invasion. Conversely, when all the kings of Canaan assemble to fight Israel (9:1–2), the lily-livered Gibeonites do not rally to Israel’s side; their only move is an elaborate act of deception, through which they manage to save themselves.

Such tricksterism is admittedly in keeping with the Israelite ethos of survival depicted in many biblical texts.Footnote 32 Yet in the case of outsiders (such as Rahab and the Gibeonites), the objective is not simply to secure a place in the national community, but to do so honorably. Only then can a group expect to be embraced fully, rather than merely tolerated. In this respect, the Gibeonites fall far short of the high standard Rahab set through both her words and actions.

The authors of Joshua radically recontextualized one of the oldest accounts in the book – the story of how an indigenous military leader saved Gibeon and thereby established Israel’s hegemony in the region (chap. 10). By prefacing this account with the story of the Gibeonites’ subterfuge (chap. 9), they transformed the group to indigenous aliens with no primordial connection to the people of Israel. From other biblical texts and archeological evidence, we know that the Gibeonites boasted an honored position as guardians of a prominent shrine. Vilifying their cultic competitors, the Jerusalem-temple circles that composed Joshua 9 tell how Israel’s leader, during the foundational wars of conquest, punished the denizens of Gibeon for their shameless chicanery and consigned them to the lowest orders of service in the congregation of Israel and at Yhwh’s altar. Thus, in this case, we see how rivalries between clans and cultic professionals provided the impetus for the war commemoration that produced these central texts in the book of Joshua.

The Rahab story is directly related to this literary activity. The biblical scribes used biography and the stories of particular individuals when engaging in war commemoration on behalf of corporate groups and institutions. Yet whereas a figure like Jael, whom we study in Part IV, represents a particular ethnic group (the Kenites), Rahab serves as a foil to the Gibeonites. The authors castigate a prominent group in their society by producing a powerful tale of an outsider; in the process, the outsider becomes an insider while the Gibeonites, who had long been honored members of Israel, are declared to be aliens.

But the Rahab story is not just about Gibeonites. As the archetypal Other, this woman looms across the horizon of the entire biblical corpus, illustrating the most fundamental strategy by which disputed groups could affirm their affiliation to the people of Israel.

In addition to depicting this strategy, the biblical scribes themselves model a means of negotiating belonging. Instead of actual wartime contributions and solidarity, this method is historiographical in nature. It consists of memory-making through the activity of writing and rewriting texts. For these scribes, the account of the greatest moment in Israel’s history – when the nation took possession of its Promised Land – offered itself as an ideal framework in which to commemorate the solidarity and sacrifice of some, and the duplicity and deceptions of others.

Footnotes

7 Between Faith and Works

1 Sometimes called “a tart with a heart,” this stock character of irony is widely represented in literature, drama, and music. See the entry on the Art & Popular Culture website: www.artandpopularculture.com/Hooker_with_a_heart_of_gold. In God’s Leading Lady (New York: Berkley Books, 2002), T. D. Jakes suggests that Rahab “may be the original hooker with the heart of gold” (p. 127).

2 We will see that Rahab’s story has often been read in terms of faith, yet perhaps a better lens is hope, which is also an alternative meaning for the “thread/cord” (tiqwāh) that Rahab hangs in her window. Hope is in many ways a biblical invention and a Jewish gift to human civilization (“somewhere over the rainbow … ”), and it stands in stark contrast to the tragic vision that has long dominated cultural productions from East to West; see Alan Mittelman, Hope in a Democratic Age: Philosophy, Religion, and Political Theory (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009).

3 On Joshua in the early Christian imagination, see Zev Farber, Images of Joshua in the Bible and Their Reception (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2016).

4 Lori L. Rowlett, Joshua and the Rhetoric of Violence: A New Historicist Analysis (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1996); Rowlett, “Disney’s Pocahontas and Joshua’s Rahab in Postcolonial Perspective” in George Aichele (ed.), Culture, Entertainment and the Bible (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 2000), 6675. See also Mitri Raheb,Jericho zuerst” in Dorothee Sölle (ed.), Für Gerechtigkeit streiten: Theologie im Alltag einer bedrohten Welt (Gütersloh: Chr. Kaiser, 1994), 174179Viola Raheb, Ringen mit und um Rahab: Bibelarbeit zu Rahab (Jos 2,1–24; 6,17.22–25)” in Sonja Angelika Strube (ed.), Fremde Frauen (Stuttgart: Katholisches Bibelwerk, 2010), 6067Musa W. Dube, Postcolonial Feminist Interpretation of the Bible (St. Louis: Chalice, 2000); Dube, “Rahab Says Hello to Judith: A Decolonizing Feminist Reading” in Fernando Segovia (ed.), Toward a New Heaven and a New Earth: Essays in Honor of Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza (Maryknoll: Orbis Books, 2003), 142158; Dube, “Rahab is Hanging Out a Red Ribbon: One African Woman’s Perspective on the Future of Feminist New Testament Scholarship” in Kathleen Wicker (ed.), Feminist New Testament Studies: Global and Future Perspectives (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005), 177202Judith E. McKinlay, Reframing Her: Biblical Women in Postcolonial Focus (Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2004), 3756; Katherine Doob Sakenfeld,Postcolonial Perspectives on Premonarchic Women” in Robert B. Coote and Norman K. Gottwald (eds.), To Break Every Yoke: Essays in Honor of Marvin L. Chaney (Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix, 2007), 188199; Marcella M. Althaus-Reid,Searching for a Queer Sophia-Wisdom: The Post-Colonial Rahab” in Lisa Isherwood (ed.), Patriarchs, Prophets and Other Villians (London: Equinox, 2007), 128140; Suzanne Scholz,Convert, Prostitute, or Traitor? Rahab as the Anti-Matriarch in Biblical Interpretations” in Mishael Caspi and John Greene (eds.), In the Arms of Biblical Women (Piscataway: Gorgias Press, 2013), 153186.

5 See A. T. Hanson,Rahab the Harlot in Early Christian Tradition,” Journal for the Study of the New Testament, 1 (1978), 5360. Evidence of the possible genetic influences includes the emphasis on hospitality or (in 1 Clement and James) the point that Rahab sent the spies in the opposite direction from that of the king’s men.

6 See Donald Alfred Hager, The Use of the Old and New Testaments in Clement of Rome (Leiden: Brill, 1973).

7 J. B. Lightfoot, St. Clement of Rome (London: Macmillan, 1869), 60.

8 On the concept of faith in the early church, and the shift from trust and faithfulness to belief in doctrines, see Teresa Morgan, Roman Faith and Christian Faith: Pistis and Fides in the Early Roman Empire and Early Churches (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015). On a similar move to fides qua in medieval Judaism (from “believe in” to “believe that”), see Menachem Kellner, Dogma in Medieval Jewish Thought: From Maimonides to Abravanel (New York: Oxford, 1986); Kellner, Must a Jew Believe Anything?, 2nd ed. (London: Littman, 2006).

9 Thus, Abraham receives a son in his old age as a reward for “his faith and hospitality” (10:7), and Lot is saved from Sodom because he displays “hospitality and godliness” (11:1). Our study of “passages to peace” in Chapter 1 demonstrated how the biblical scribes used hospitality as the basis for negotiating relations with neighboring peoples. The contemporary study of hospitality takes its point of departure from the research of the anthropologist and hispanicist Julian Pitt-Rivers in the mid-twentieth century. On hospitality in the social world of the ancient Mediterranean, see Andrew E. Arterbury, Entertaining Angels: Early Christian Hospitality in Its Mediterranean Setting (Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2005).

10 The two New Testament writings discussed here, along with Clement, espouse ideas on faith that have been controversial in Christian theology (and later esp. in Protestantism) due to their putative proximity to “Jewish works-righteousness.” This fact imparts to them an added value for our study, since even they, as we shall see, are far removed from the political dimensions of the biblical account and Jewish interpretations thereof. For a classic comparison of these three works, see Benjamin W. Bacon,The Doctrine of Faith in Hebrews, James, and Clement of Rome,” Journal of Biblical Literature, 19 (1900), 1221.

11 Compare the final lines (regarding hope and Rahab’s prophetic gift) in the text of 1 Clement cited in the preceding section.

12 In chapter 11 of David, King of Israel, I treat a similar move in the reception history of the figure of Caleb among Christians and Muslims.

13 Her identity as a Gentile may have been one of the reasons for her inclusion in Matthew’s genealogy of Jesus (Matt. 1:5). The authors seem to have identified these women (Tamar, Ruth, the wife of Uriah, and Rahab) as Gentiles.

14 The fundamental way in which 1 Maccabees departs from the ethos articulated in this corpus is treated in Jacob L. Wright, “Making a Name for Oneself: Martial Valor, Heroic Death, and Procreation in the Hebrew Bible,” Journal for the Study of the Old Testament, 36 (2011), 131162.

15 See Christopher Begg, “The Rahab Story in Josephus,” Liber Annuus, 55 (2005), 113130, and the response to Begg’s essay by G. J. Swart,Rahab and Esther in Josephus: An Intertextual Approach,” Acta Patristica and Byzantina, 17 (2006), 5065.

16 Josephus, Ant. 5.1.5–15, in the translation by William Whiston (1737).

17 Here, Josephus seems to have in view a legal question found in later rabbinic interpretation – namely, that Rahab saved only two men but demands that her entire family be rescued, which makes the deal lopsided. In response, Josephus shows that it was a quid pro quo arrangement inasmuch as Rahab jeopardized the lives of her entire family, whom the king would have executed along with Rahab.

18 With respect to the relationship between war commemoration and the theological discourse on faith and works, it’s worth noting that the Iliad and a host of other Greek texts use the term “works” (ergoi) to describe valorous deeds on the battlefield.

19 See the exchange between Rav Nachman and Rav Isaac in b. Meg. 15a. On the nonprudish character of Jewish and Muslim sacred writings, in contrast to their Christian counterparts, see Zeʼev Maghen,Dancing in Chains: The Baffling Coexistence of Legalism and Exuberance in Judaic and Islamic Tradition” in Jonathan Jacobs (ed.), Judaic Sources and Western Thought: Jerusalem’s Enduring Presence (New York: Oxford University Press, 2010), 217237.

20 See Footnote n. 29 below for the scriptural formulation that informs this reading. On Rahab in early Jewish literature, see Judith Baskin,The Rabbinic Transformations of Rahab the Harlot,” Notre Dame English Journal, 11 (1979), 141157; Amy H. C. Robertson,Rahab and Her Interpreters” in Carol A. Newsom, Sharon H. Rindge, and Jacqueline Lapsley (eds.), The Women’s Bible Commentary (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2012), 109112; and Tamar Kadari, “Rahab: Midrash and Aggadah,” Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia, February 27, 2009, Jewish Women’s Archive, https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/rahab-midrash-and-aggadah.

21 The biblical authors satirize Naaman. An altar must be built on Israel’s soil, if not also in Jerusalem, yet Naaman tries to have the best of both worlds by bringing soil from the land of Israel to his own country. For the issue of unclean land and altar, see the discussion of Josh. 22 in Chapter 5. With respect to rabbinic interpretation, the Mekilta identifies Naaman as a gēr ṣedeq who outranks Jethro (Mek. Rab. Ish., Amalek 1), but the Talmud (b. Git. 57a) denies this status and designates him as a gēr tôshāv (“resident alien”).

22 p. Ber. 4.4; b. Zeb. 116a–b; b. Meg. 14b; Num. Rab. 8.9; Sipre Num. 78; Sipre Zuta on Num. 10:28; Ruth Rab. 2.1; Eccl. Rab. 5.6, 8.10.

23 Her marriage to Joshua is likely a later tradition based on the earlier connection to Huldah (see b. Meg. 14b). Similarly, the genealogy of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew presents her and a figure named Salmon as the parents of Boaz (who produces the next descendant with Ruth); the divergent spelling of her name has been used historically, yet unjustifiably, to dispute this reading.

24 The expression was coined by E. D. Hirsch, Jr., in Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1987). Matrilineal descent is not biblical (but see Ezra 10); it appears to have emerged among the Tannaim, through the influence of Roman law, and at a time of social upheaval. Matrilineal descent is, after all, a more practicable criterion, since one cannot always be sure who the father is, especially in times of turmoil. On the subject, see Shaye J. D. Cohen, The Beginnings of Jewishness: Boundaries, Varieties, Uncertainties (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999).

25 On the origins of conversion in the Hellenistic period, see Cohen, Beginnings of Jewishness. Some Hellenistic Jewish writings (e.g., Jubilees) deny the option of conversion; see Christine E. Hayes, Gentile Impurities and Jewish Identities: Intermarriage and Conversion from the Bible to the Talmud (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002); Matthew Thiessen, Contesting Conversion: Genealogy, Circumcision, and Identity in Ancient Judaism and Christianity (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011). On conversion in rabbinic sources, see Moshe Lavee, The Rabbinic Conversion of Judaism (Leiden: Brill, 2018).

26 It doubtful that “Yahwism” has ever existed outside the minds of modern academics and corresponds to a self-conscious community from antiquity.

27 In Transforming Identity: The Ritual Transition from Jew to Gentile; Structure and Meaning (New York: Continuum, 2007), Avi Sagi and Zvi Zohar treat the question of whether and how an individual can become a member of the Jewish people without religious conversion.

28 Sipre Num. 78, Sipre Zuta on Num 10:28. On repentance in biblical and rabbinic Judaism, see David A. Lambert, How Repentance Became Biblical (New York: Oxford University Press, 2016).

29 See b. Zeb. 116a-b; Pesiq. R. 40.3–4; Pesiq. Rab. Kah. 13.4. As the rabbis point out, Rahab’s statement in Joshua 2:11 is literally “no longer did a spirit rise in a man because of you” (emphasis added), which is more specific than the similar statement in 5:1 (“there was no spirit in them”).

30 Some may have appealed to a different root for “prostitute” that was used to describe the preparation of food (zûn, rather than zānah). The latter is in keeping with the “innkeeper” (pûndeqîtā) in Targum Jonathan; however, this Aramaic term is used repeatedly in the Targum to translate “prostitute.” On the Hebrew term in biblical texts, see Hannelis Schultz,Beoabachtungen zum Begriff der zônâ im alten Testament,” Zeitschrift für alttestamentliche Wissenschaft, 102 (1992), 255262.

31 On the social world of the ancient Near Eastern tavern, see Kelly J. Dixon,Saloons in the Wild West and Taverns in Mesopotamia: Explorations Along the Timeline of Public Drinking” in Steven N. Archer and Kevin M. Barton (eds.), Between Dirt and Discussion (New York: Springer, 2006), 6179.

32 In Chapter 8, I flesh out this approach, which is also widely adopted in rabbinic interpretation.

33 See Yair Zakovitch,Humour and Theology or the Successful Failure of Israelite Intelligence: A Literary-Folkloric Approach to Joshua 2” in Susan Niditch (ed.), Text and Tradition: The Hebrew Bible and Folklore (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 1990), 7598; Frank M. Cross, “A Response to Zakovitch’s ‘Successful Failure of Israelite Intelligence,’” in Niditch, Text and Tradition, 99–104. A more extended study of the comedic elements in Rahab is provided by Melissa A. Jackson in Comedy and Feminist Interpretation of the Hebrew Bible: A Subversive Collaboration (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011).

34 See Allison Glazebrook and Madeleine M. Henry (eds.), Greek Prostitutes in the Ancient Mediterranean, 800 BCE–200 CE (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2011).

35 Amy H. C. Robertson offers a stunning reading of the Rahab story against the backdrop of its rabbinic interpreters: “Are we to imagine that she could have acted on this faith earlier, but chose not to? Could a 50-year-old woman, a harlot of 40 years, have found a different role in Canaanite society if the social order had not been overturned with the destruction of Jericho? On the contrary, it is more realistic to imagine that, at her core, Rahab herself has changed very little. Instead, the world around her changed – thanks in part to her savvy and bravery – and these changes meant she was no longer stuck in her social role” (“Rahab the Faithful Harlot,” TheTorah.com website, https://thetorah.com/rahab-the-faithful-harlot/ [2019]).

36 The enemy general Naaman has a past similar to Paul’s, but Naaman does not even become a member of Israel, let alone assume a leadership role comparable to the one Paul occupied in the church.

8 The Composition of the Rahab Story

1 H. Donner, Pilgerfahrt ins Heilige Land: Die ältesten Berichte christlicher Palästinapilger (4.–7. Jahrhundert), 2nd ed. (Stuttgart: Katholisches Bibelwerk, 2003).

2 For example, Rehov, Rehavat Ir, or modern Rehavia; see also Neh. 7:4, which provides an important clue to the origins of Rahab’s name (lit. wide/open; similarly, reḥob means open space, plaza, street).

3 Hayes, Gentile Impurities, 21.

4 As we saw in Chapter 7, the rabbis discovered clues in scripture indicating that Rahab was rewarded with an honorable status in Israelite society and became the ancestress of many national leaders; unlike modern scholars, however, they didn’t understand Rahab to be the eponymous ancestor of a group that called themselves “Rahabites.”

5 See René Jasinski, Autour de l’Esther racinienne (Paris: Nizet, 1985).

6 Similarly, the Song of Deborah, together with the Song of the Sea from the book of Exodus, demarcates “bookends” around a special epoch of Yhwh’s activity within the national narrative; see the discussion in Chapter 10.

7 The link is made explicit in the formulation of Rahab’s words about Egypt in 2:9–11 and the narrator’s statement about the Jordan in 5:1. Notice how Psalms 114 synthesizes the two events.

8 On many of the passages from Joshua discussed in this chapter and Chapter 9, see Farber, Images of Joshua, as well as the commentary by Dozeman, Joshua 1–12.

9 This interpretation assumes that the description of the Jordan-crossing is an older part of the narrative; see Carl Steuernagel, Übersetzung und Erklärung der Bücher Deuteronomium und Josua und allgemeine Einleitung in den Hexateuch (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1900); and, more recently, Erhard Blum, “Überlegungen zur Kompositionsgeschichte des Josuabuches” in Ed Noort (ed.), The Book of Joshua (Leuven: Peeters, 2012), 137157; as well as Joachim J. Krause, Exodus und Eisodus: Komposition und Theologie von Josua 1–5 (Leiden: Brill, 2014), 197274.

10 How these older parts of the book of Joshua came to be connected to the exodus account is an important issue that deserves separate treatment. One possibility presents itself in Joshua 3:1: “They set out from Shittim and came to the Jordan. … They stayed the night there before crossing over.” While all of chapter 1 appears to be later, the paragraph in verses 10–11 is likely its oldest section.

That the conquest begins with the crossing of the Jordan rather than from the south (as we would expect for the account of Israel coming up from Egypt) is a major problem, one that is explained variously in the Pentateuch; see Wright, David, King of Israel, 194–197.

11 A portion of the account of the battle of Ai (8:3–29) seems to be older, and, when appending it to the narrative, scribes expanded it with themes from the preceding chapters.

12 See Krause, Exodus und Eisodus, as well as Blum, “Überlegungen.”

13 On the comedic qualities of the story, see Footnote Chapter 7, n. 33.

14 It’s possible that the first line (v. 8) was added at a later point to make the scene a flashback, taking place “before they lay down.” (The verb is the same as that used at the end of verse 1.) Notice that the spies agree to spare Rahab’s life on condition that she does not tell anyone about what they were up to. Had the conversation taken place after she speaks to the king, this condition would not make sense: Wasn’t Rahab’s act of hiding the men and deceiving the king already enough to merit the protection she solicits here?

15 The older conclusion in verse 23 focuses on what had happened to the spies at Jericho. The addition of verse 24 shifts the attention to the contents of Rahab’s declaration, which describes the angst that had pervaded the entire land.

16 Notice the Wiederaufnahme of “they left” in verses 21a and 22a. On the secondary nature of the logistics and reference to the crimson cord, which has inspired Christian allegorical readings, see Kratz, Composition, 201.

17 We revisit this point in relation to the book of Judges in Part IV. On Rahab as a queer figure who lives on the margins and sees and acts differently from those in her society, see Erin Runions, “From Disgust to Horror: Rahab’s Queer Affect,” Postscripts, 4 (2008), 4169; Billy Klutz, “Queers in the Borderlands: Rahab, Queer Imagination, and Survival,” The Other Journal, September 21, 2015, https://theotherjournal.com/2015/09/21/queers-in-the-borderlands-rahab-queer-imagination-and-survival/. On Rahab and Michal, see Adriane Leveen, Biblical Narratives of Israelites and Their Neighbors: Strangers at the Gate (New York: Routledge, 2017).

18 The account of the battle at Ai has its own commemorative-historiographical function – namely, to explain “the great heap of stones that until this day still stands there,” with the location being described as “the entrance of the city gate.” This is likely the original reference in the name “Ai,” and 8:29b, which describes the city as an “eternal tell of desolation,” is likely a product of a later reworking that brings the account in line with the demolition of Jericho in chapter 6. (Notice also the supplementary character of 8:2a and 8:8.) The Achan story in chapter 7 is, as most agree, a late preface to the older battle account in chapter 8. On the premeditated and deliberate destruction of these and other cities, including their iconic architecture and memories, see Jacob L. Wright, “Urbicide: The Ritualized Killing of Cities in the Ancient Near East” in Saul Olyan (ed.), Ritual Violence in the Hebrew Bible (New York: Oxford University Press, 2015), 147166.

19 The Hebrew literally means all that had found them, which is a play on the pursuers searching for them (see vv. 5, 16 and 22).

20 Law 109. See Dixon, “Saloons.”

22 Moses refers to them throughout chapters 24 and then resumes this theme in 29:6 and 31:4. The eve-of-battle addresses provided the framework in which later scribes inserted the Deuteronomic law code (parts of which are much older than the speeches).

23 I treat this scribal transformation in The Evolution of the Gideon Narrative” in Saul M. Olyan and Jacob L. Wright (eds.), Supplementation and the Study of the Hebrew Bible (Providence: Brown Judaic Studies, 2018), 105124.

24 The oracle in 1:1–9 has been secondarily prefaced to the older introduction in 1:10–11 (pace Germany, Exodus-Conquest Narrative, 314–318). It has grown in stages, serving as a preamble to not only the conquest story but also (various editions of) the Former Prophets (Joshua to Kings). Joshua 5:13–15 was likely inserted between the Rahab story and the battle account as yet another sign to Joshua that Jericho would certainly fall, since the captain of Yhwh’s army was present. Due to several obvious parallels between this story and that of Moses’s commission in Exodus 3, it seems reasonable to interpret the two texts as a scribal attempt to connect Joshua and the conquest of Canaan to Yhwh’s first apparition to Moses and his promise to bring Israel to a new land.

25 I treat the subject of fear with Sara Kipfer in “Fear (not)! Emotion and Ethics in Deuteronomy,” Journal of Ethics in Antiquity and Christianity (forthcoming).

26 Klaus Bieberstein, Josua – Jordan – Jericho: Archäologie, Geschichte und Theologie der Landnahmeerzählungen Josua 1–6 (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1995). When it’s not isolated from its context, this oft-quoted line from Isaiah can hardly bear the theological weight it is frequently forced to carry.

27 In Part IV, we examine the Jethro story in relation to the Kenites as “fellow travelers” with Israel. On the commonalities between Rahab and Jethro in rabbinic imagination, which imagines them as equally promiscuous in their respective roles as prostitute and priest, see David J. Zucker and Moshe Reiss, “Judaism’s First Converts: A Pagan and a Prostitute,” TheTorah.com website, https://thetorah.com/judaisms-first-converts-a-pagan-priest-and-a-prostitute/ [2017].

28 Notice how the spies’ statement about the oath (Josh. 2:14, 20) is cut asunder by a lengthy section (vv. 15–19) that fleshes out the dramatic meat on the skeletal narrative. Interrupting them mid-sentence, Rahab sends the two men away with directions on how to elude the king’s soldiers. But after she lets them down from her window, they continue their instructions, speaking now at much greater length (vv. 17–20). Later, we read that she “let them go” (v. 21, 23*), without reference to either the window of her house or the wall (cf. v. 15).

When later readers, such as Josephus, retell the story, they fill in its gaps by reporting that the men first came to Jericho, surveyed its fortifications, and then only later entered the house of Rahab. Of course, they simplify the lengthy departure scene and harmonize its many contradictions. Aside from being fascinating subjects for study in their own right, these retellings help us in reconstructing the prehistory of biblical accounts, for it is often the case that we fail to notice important diachronic clues in these accounts until we compare them with their retellings.

29 See the important study of the subject by Michael Walzer, Obligations: Essays on Disobedience, War, and Citizenship (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1970); as well as the critical review by Robert Horowitz, “Obligations: Essays on Disobedience, War, and Citizenship,” Cornell Law Review, 171 (1970), 171175.

9 Rahab’s Courage and the Gibeonites’ Cowardice

1 Rahab is notably never called a “Canaanite,” perhaps because in the context of the book this term has an ethnophaulistic sense deemed unfitting for such an exemplary character.

2 For this type of negative war memorializing, see my study of the Ziphites and Keilah in David, King of Israel, chap. 4.

3 An older, yet still useful, discussion of the range of historical and exegetical issues posed by the Gibeonites is the work of Joseph Blenkinsopp, Gibeon and Israel: The Role of Gibeon and the Gibeonites in the Political and Religious History of Early Israel (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1972). For a discussion of the role played by the Gibeonite region in the kingdoms of the North (Israel), see Israel Finkelstein, The Forgotten Kingdom: The Archeology and History of Northern Israel (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2013).

For the historical importance of Gibeon in the late monarchic period and thereafter, see Frédéric Gangloff, “La zone rurale centrale de Benjamin après l’invasion babylonienne de 587 av. J.-C.: Un marché régional et international prospère en plein effondrement de Juda,” Res antiquae, 10 (2013), 257272; Oded Lipschits, The Fall and Rise of Jerusalem (Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns, 2005); Diana Edelman, “Gibeon and the Gibeonites Revisited” in Oded Lipschits and Joseph Blenkinsopp (eds.), Judah and the Judeans Revisited (Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns, 2003), 153168. For the biblical texts, see John Day, “Gibeon and the Gibeonites in the Old Testament” in Robert Rezetko, Timothy Henry Lim, and W. Brian Aucker (eds.), Reflection and Refraction: Studies in Biblical Historiography in Honour of A. Graeme Auld (Leiden: Brill, 2007), 113137.

4 The figures I present here are from Oded Lipschits, Omer Sergi, and Ido Koch, “Royal Judahite Jar Handles: Reconsidering the Chronology of the lmlk Stamp Impressions,” Tel Aviv, 37 (2010), 332. On the classification and dating of LMLK impressions, see the treatments by Oded Lipschits (“Judah Under Assyrian Rule and the Early Phase of Stamping Handles”) and Andrew Vaughn (“Should All of the LMLK Jars Still Be Attributed to Hezekiah? Yes!”) in Zev I. Farber and Jacob L. Wright (eds.), Archeology and History of Eighth Century Judah (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2018), available in open access format at www.sbl-site.org/assets/pdfs/pubs/9780884143482_OA.pdf.

5 James B. Pritchard, “Gibeon” in Ephraim Stern (ed.), The New Encyclopedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land, 4 vols. (Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society & Carta, 1993), 2: 511–14; Hanan Eshel, The Late Iron Age Cemetery of Gibeon,” Israel Exploration Journal, 37 (1987), 117. On the Gibeon-Bethel plateau, see Finkelstein, Forgotten Kingdom, 37–62.

6 The passage may have originally consisted of only verses 5–12; see the discussion in Wright, David, King of Israel, 130–131.

7 Cf. “hill of Kiriath[-Jearim]” in Josh. 18:28; and see Nadav Naʼaman, “A Hidden Anti-David Polemic in 2 Samuel 6:2” in David S. Vanderhooft and Abraham Winitzer (eds.), Literature as Politics, Politics as Literature: Essays on the Ancient Near East in Honor of Peter Machinist (Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns, 2013), 321328.

8 Chronicles harmonizes the two texts in Samuel (see 1 Chron. 13:5, as well as Josh. 18:28). The difference of opinion as to whether Kiriath-Jearim is located in the tribal territory of Benjamin or Judah may be related to this account of the ark residing there.

9 On the ark narrative in Samuel, see now Peter Porzig, Die Lade Jahwes im Alten Testament und in den Texten vom Toten Meer (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2009).

10 On these texts, and on Saul as a foil to David in Chronicles more generally, see Wright, David, King of Israel, chap. 10.

11 This account vexed later readers, who expected Solomon to have worshiped solely in Jerusalem: “He loved Yhwh and followed the practices of his father David, yet he sacrificed and offered at the various shrines [on the high places]” (v. 3). The authors of Chronicles corrected this censure. In their account, Solomon visits the shrine in Gibeon because the sacred tabernacle stands there until Jerusalem becomes the final and sole place of sacrifice; Gibeon is thus the direct precursor to Jerusalem (1 Chron. 16:39–43, 21:29; 2 Chron. 1:3, 13).

12 If Nob is a misspelling of Gob, as widely assumed, then 1 Samuel 21–22 would be yet another illustration of biblical polemics surrounding the Gibeonites. David’s priest Abiathar (if not also Ahitub) would have hailed from a Gibeonite guild, according to this narrative thread.

13 On the solarization of Yhwh (attested also in the final line of the Song of Deborah, the subject of Part IV), see Joel M. Lemon, Yhwh’s Winged Forms in the Psalms: Exploring Congruent Iconography and Texts (Fribourg: Academic Press, 2011). Regarding “the Scroll of Yashar” as a work of war commemoration, I am preparing a short piece on the topic to be published with a work of poetry purporting to be the contents of this venerable work. In the meantime, see Kristin De Troyer, “‘Is This Not Written in the Book of Jashar?’ (Joshua 10:13c): References to Extra-Biblical Books in the Bible” in Jacques van Ruiten and J. Cornelis de Vos (eds.), The Land of Israel in Bible, History, and Theology: Studies in Honour of Ed Noort (Leiden: Brill, 2009), 4550; Farber, Images of Joshua, 116–118.

14 See the discussion of the region in William M. Schniedewind, “The Search for Gibeah: Notes on the Historical Geography of Central Benjamin” in Aren Maeir and Pierre de Miroschedji (eds.), I Will Speak the Riddles of Ancient Times: Archeological and Historical Studies in Honor of Amihai Mazar on the Occasion of His Sixtieth Birthday, vol. 2 (Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns, 2006), 711721.

15 In Part I, I treat this text and others that relate to the moral expectation of granting hospitality to refugees on the road, and in Part IV, I discuss this text in relation to the Kenites, whom Saul spares from his genocidal program.

16 The rabbis already connected the two stories (see b. Yebam. 78b). Whatever the case may be, the supplement in 2 Samuel 21:2 makes Saul’s crime not the vicious persecution of the Gibeonite priests but the violation of a pact that accorded the Gibeonites a protected (albeit inferior) status in Israelite society.

17 The Joshua passage may have been composed to tell the prehistory of the pact mentioned in 2 Samuel 21:2. However, the concise formulation leaves the reader wondering what exactly “the Israelites had sworn to them.” (Modern translations resolve this discrepancy by adding “to spare them.”) It is also improbable that a scribe responsible for this gloss would have made such a bold assertion, implying, for example, that non-Israelites served as priests at Yhwh’s altar where Solomon worshiped (1 Kings 3:4).

18 In chapter 9, Joshua and the Israelites consider wiping them out but cannot do so because of their pact. In chapter 10, they come to their aid against a coalition of enemy forces. Not only is the transition unusually abrupt; Israel could have circumvented their pact and still fulfilled the command to destroy the inhabitants of the land by allowing others to do it for them and not coming to their rescue. See Farber, Images of Joshua, 86–122; Zev I. Farber and Jacob L. Wright, “The Savior of Gibeon: Reconstructing the Prehistory of the Joshua Account” in Christoph Berner and Harald Samuel (eds.), Book Seams in the Hexateuch I (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2018), 295310.

19 See Wright, David, King of Israel, 52–53 and 66–74; Farber, Images of Joshua, 109–115.

20 See also Josh. 11:19. Note however the contradiction to 9:1 (the Hivites attack the Hivites!). The identification of the Gibeonites is likely secondary, for the purpose of identifying them as an accursed nation. In The Sanctuary of the Gibeonites Revisited,” Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions, 9 (2009), 101–24, Nadav Na’aman attempts to explain how the Gibeonites were actually Hivites, missing the polemic purpose of the identification. I differ with Naʼaman on a number of points, most importantly that this text originated in the direct wake of Josiah’s reforms. The text likely originated at a later time, and the polemics against the Gibeonites are only indirectly related to Josiah, if at all.

21 The earliest iteration of the account in chapter 10 likely began in verse 5, yet portions of verses 1–4 (such as part of v. 2) may have been added at an early stage. These first four verses appear to have been amplified first with Ai, then with Jericho, and finally with the pact between Gibeon and Israel. On compositional issues in Josh. 9–10, see Dozeman, Joshua 1–12; Volkmar Fritz, Das Buch Josua (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 1994); J. Alberto Soggin, Joshua: A Commentary (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1972).

22 I am not sure if Joshua 10 presupposes specifically Deuteronomy 20:10–18.

23 For the sake of presentation, I have distinguished solely two layers here. Yet, given the number of duplications, it is possible that, in addition to many supplements, we have two independent recensions that have been spliced together. Notice the way that much of the secondary portion of the text deflects attention away from Joshua and is more priestly in orientation. The problem with this solution is that some things are repeated more than twice. On past proposals and their problems, see Dozeman, Joshua 1–12, 407–411.

24 This text is by no means an isolated instance of insults hurled from priestly circles in Jerusalem. Indeed, these circles were responsible for a wide array of biblical texts that defend their own status and assail their competitors. See Wright, David, King of Israel, chap. 8.

25 It’s tempting to approach the text with a “hermeneutic of suspicion,” as if it were a pro-Davidic apology that exonerates him from his execution of Saul’s descendants. But such a reading is actually naive inasmuch as it must assume that the text was written by spin doctors in David’s or Solomon’s court.

26 This line in verse 7 about David sparing Mephibosheth is closely related to the interpolation in verse 2b: in contrast to Saul, David was concerned to keep an oath made “before Yhwh.” The line may be intended to cast aspersions on the Gibeonites inasmuch as David has pity on a (disabled) member of Saul’s family (see the Talmudic text cited in Footnote n. 31 below). The appearance of another descendant named Mephibosheth in the immediately following verse reinforces the impression that verse 7 has been interpolated. On this figure, see Jeremy Schipper, Disability Studies and the Hebrew Bible: Figuring Mephibosheth in the David Story (New York: T&T Clark, 2006).

27 The explicit reference to “beginning” here in verse 9 anticipates the new scene in which Rizpah guards the corpses during the entire period of the harvest: “from the beginning of the harvest until water was pouring on them from the sky” (v. 10).

28 According to a dominant approach, this account is an apologia for the house of David, which actually had these men killed. While the account is suggestive in this regard, the approach obfuscates the fact that this account appears in a context of the book that explicitly casts David in an unfavorable light. For more on the critique of statism in the book of Samuel, see Wright, David, King of Israel, chaps. 6–7.

29 My understanding of the text has much in common with the sensitive analysis of Simeon Chavel, “Compositry and Creativity in 2 Samuel 21:1–14,” Journal of Biblical Literature, 122 (2003), 2352. Chavel reads all of verses 1–11, together with verse 13b and the second half of verse14a, as a separate running account. Although this is possible, the reader would be left wondering what “the king had commanded” (v. 14). It seems more likely that the second half of verse 14a is part of the originally separate account in verses 12–14a, and that verse 13b was added to it by the scribe who secondarily integrated it into the Gibeonite account.

30 In contrast to 1 Samuel 31:11–13, which commemorates the heroism of the Transjordanian town of Jabesh-Gilead, this account maligns the city’s memory by claiming that its citizens purloined the bodies of Saul and Jonathan and perhaps didn’t even bury them. I treat these conflicting accounts at length in David, King of Israel, chap. 5.

31 On burying or reinterring the bones of the dead as an act of piety, see Saul Olyan, “Some Neglected Aspects of Israelite Interment Ideology,” Journal of Biblical Literature, 124 (2005), 601616; Olyan, “Jehoiakim’s Dehumanizing Interment as a Ritual Act of Reclassification,” Journal of Biblical Literature, 133 (2014), 271279.

In the Babylonian Talmud (b. Yebam. 79a), what seems to be an earlier maxim pertaining to Israel’s defining characteristics is placed in the mouth of David: The Gibeonites voice their desire to impale seven of Saul’s descendants, and David attempts to conciliate them – to no avail. Their unabashed and merciless brutality proves that they are not fit to belong to Israel: “[David] attempted to placate them, but they refused to be placated. Then he said to them: ‘This nation [i.e., Israel] is distinguished by three traits: It is merciful, modest and benevolent. […] Only one who cultivates these three traits qualifies to become a member of this nation.’” The point is that David recognized that the Gibeonites did not have what it takes to belong to the nation. Even so, the king follows through with his agreement and punishes Saul’s descendants in order to do justice for this alien population in Israel’s midst. The retribution on behalf of marginal groups causes neighboring peoples to admire Israel and want to enter the fold: “Passers-by asked, ‘What kind of men are these?’ – ‘These are royal princes.’ ‘What wrong did they do?’ – ‘They laid their hands upon resident aliens.’ Then the passers-by declared: ‘There is no nation worth joining more than this one. If royal princes are punished so harshly, how much more so common people? And if they did this for resident aliens, how much more so for Israelites?’ 150,000 men immediately joined Israel – as it is said, ‘Solomon had 70,000 who bore burdens, and 80,000 who were hewers in the hills.’”

32 Susan Niditch, A Prelude to Biblical Folklore: Underdogs and Tricksters (New York: Harper & Row, 1987). On the trickster elements in the stories of Rahab and the Gibeonites, see Dozeman, Joshua 1–12.

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