JOSHUAS LONG DAY"
1. METHOD OF STUDYING THE RECORD
There are three incidents recorded
in Holy Scripture which may fairly, if with no great
exactness, be termed astronomical miracles; the
“long day” on the occasion of Joshua’s
victory at Beth-horon; the turning back of the shadow
on the dial of Ahaz, as a sign of king Hezekiah’s
recovery from sickness; and the star which guided
the wise men from the east to the birthplace of the
Holy Child at Bethlehem.
As astronomy has some bearing on each
of these three remarkable events, it will be of some
interest to examine each of them from the point of
view of our present astronomical knowledge. It
does not follow that this will throw any new light
upon the narratives, for we must always bear in mind
that the Scriptures were not intended to teach us the
physical sciences; consequently we may find that the
very details have been omitted which an astronomer,
if he were writing an account of an astronomical observation,
would be careful to preserve. And we must further
remember that we have not the slightest reason to suppose
that the sacred historians received any supernatural
instruction in scientific matters. Their knowledge
of astronomy therefore was that which they had themselves
acquired from education and research, and nothing
more. In other words, the astronomy of the narrative
must be read strictly in the terms of the scientific
advancement of the writers.
But there is another thing that has
also to be remembered. The narrative which we
have before us, being the only one that we have, must
be accepted exactly as it stands. That is the
foundation of our inquiry; we have no right to first
cut it about at our will, to omit this, to alter that,
to find traces of two, three, or more original documents,
and so to split up the narrative as it stands into
a number of imperfect fragments, which by their very
imperfection may seem to be more or less in conflict.
The scientific attitude with regard
to the record of an observation cannot be too clearly
defined. If that record be the only one, then
we may accept it, we may reject it, we may be obliged
to say, “We do not understand it,” or
“It is imperfect, and we can make no use of it,”
but we must not alter it. A moment’s reflection
will show that a man who would permit himself to tamper
with the sole evidence upon which he purports to work,
no matter how profoundly convinced he may be that his
proposed corrections are sound, is one who does not
understand the spirit of science, and is not going
the way to arrive at scientific truth.
There is no need then to inquire as
to whether the tenth chapter of the Book of Joshua
comes from two or more sources; we take the narrative
as it stands. And it is one which has, for the
astronomer, an interest quite irrespective of any
interpretation which he may place upon the account
of the miracle which forms its central incident.
For Joshua’s exclamation:
“Sun, stand thou
still upon Gibeon;
And thou, Moon,
in the valley of Ajalon,”
implies that, at the moment of his
speaking, the two heavenly bodies appeared to him
to be, the one upon or over Gibeon, the other over
the valley of Ajalon. We have therefore, in effect,
a definite astronomical observation; interesting in
itself, as being one of the oldest that has been preserved
to us; doubly interesting in the conclusions that we
are able to deduce from it.
The idea which has been most generally
formed of the meaning of Joshua’s command, is,
that he saw Gibeon in the distance on the horizon in
one direction with the sun low down in the sky immediately
above it, and the valley of Ajalon in the distance,
on the horizon in another direction, with the moon
low down in the sky above it.
It would be quite natural to associate
the sun and moon with distant objects if they were
only some five or six degrees high; it would be rather
straining the point to do so if they were more than
ten degrees high; and if they were fifteen or more
degrees high, it would be quite impossible.
They could not be both in the same
quarter of the sky; both rising or both setting.
For this would mean that the moon was not only very
near the sun in the sky, but was very near to conjunction in
other words, to new moon. She could, therefore,
have only shown a slender thread of light, and it
is perfectly certain that Joshua, facing the sun in
such a country as southern Palestine could not possibly
have perceived the thin pale arch of light, which
would have been all that the moon could then have
presented to him. Therefore the one must have
been rising and the other setting, and Joshua must
have been standing between Gibeon and the valley of
Ajalon, so that the two places were nearly in opposite
directions from him. The moon must have been in
the west and the sun in the east, for the valley of
Ajalon is west of Gibeon. That is to say, it
cannot have been more than an hour after sunrise, and
it cannot have been more than an hour before moonset.
Adopting therefore the usual explanation of Joshua’s
words, we see at once that the common idea of the
reason for Joshua’s command to the sun, namely,
that the day was nearly over, and that he desired
the daylight to be prolonged, is quite mistaken.
If the sun was low down in the sky, he would have had
practically the whole of the day still before him.
2. BEFORE THE BATTLE
Before attempting to examine further
into the nature of the miracle, it will be well to
summarize once again the familiar history of the early
days of the Hebrew invasion of Canaan. We are
told that the passage of the Jordan took place on
the tenth day of the first month; and that the Feast
of the Passover was held on the fourteenth day of that
month. These are the only two positive dates
given us. The week of the Pascal celebrations
would have occupied the time until the moon’s
last quarter. Then preparations were made for
the siege of Jericho, and another week passed in the
daily processions round the city before the moment
came for its destruction, which must have been very
nearly at the beginning of the second month of the
year. Jericho having been destroyed, Joshua next
ordered a reconnaissance of Ai, a small fortified town,
some twenty miles distant, and some 3400 feet above
the Israelite camp at Gilgal, and commanding the upper
end of the valley of Achor, the chief ravine leading
up from the valley of the Jordan. The reconnaissance
was followed by an attack on the town, which resulted
in defeat. From the dejection into which this
reverse had thrown him Joshua was roused by the information
that the command to devote the spoil of Jericho to
utter destruction had been disobeyed. A searching
investigation was held; it was found that Achan, one
of the Israelite soldiers, had seized for himself
a royal robe and an ingot of gold; he was tried, condemned
and executed, and the army of Israel was absolved
from his guilt. A second attack was made upon
Ai; the town was taken; and the road was made clear
for Israel to march into the heart of the country,
in order to hold the great religious ceremony of the
reading of the law upon the mountains of Ebal and
Gerizim, which had been commanded them long before.
No note is given of the date when this ceremony took
place, but bearing in mind that the second month of
the year must have begun at the time of the first
reconnaissance of Ai, and that the original giving
of the Law upon Mount Sinai had taken place upon the
third day of the third month, it seems most likely
that that anniversary would be chosen for a solemnity
which was intended to recall the original promulgation
in the most effective manner. If this were so,
it would account for the circumstance, which would
otherwise have seemed so strange, that Joshua should
have attacked two cities only, Jericho and Ai, and
then for a time have held his hand. It was the
necessity of keeping the great national anniversary
on the proper day which compelled him to desist from
his military operations after Ai was taken.
We are not told how long the religious
celebrations at Shechem lasted, but in any case the
Israelites can hardly have been back in their camp
at Gilgal before the third moon of the year was at
the full. But after their return, events must
have succeeded each other with great rapidity.
The Amorites must have regarded the pilgrimage of Israel
to Shechem as an unhoped-for respite, and they took
advantage of it to organize a great confederacy.
Whilst this confederacy was being formed, the rulers
of a small state of “Hivites” by
which we must understand a community differing either
in race or habits from the generality of their Amorite
neighbours had been much exercised by the
course of events. They had indeed reason to be.
Ai, the last conquest of Israel, was less than four
miles, as the crow flies, from Bireh, which is usually
identified with Beeroth, one of the four cities of
the Hivite State; and the Beerothites had, without
doubt, watched the cloud of smoke go up from the burning
town when it was sacked; and the mound which now covered
what had been so recently their neighbour city, was
visible almost from their gates. That was an
object-lesson which required no enforcement. The
Hivites, sure that otherwise their turn would come
next, resolved to make peace with Israel before they
were attacked.
To do this they had to deceive the
Israelites into believing that they were inhabitants
of some land far from Canaan, and this they must do,
not only before Joshua actually attacked them, but
before he sent out another scouting party. For
Beeroth would inevitably have been the very first
town which it would have approached, and once Joshua’s
spies had surveyed it, all chance of the Hivites successfully
imposing upon him would have vanished.
But they were exposed to another danger,
if possible more urgent still. The headquarters
of the newly formed Amorite league was at Jerusalem,
on the same plateau as Gibeon, the Hivite capital,
and distant from it less than six miles. A single
spy, a single traitor, during the anxious time that
their defection was being planned, and Adoni-zedec,
the king of Jerusalem, would have heard of it in less
than a couple of hours; and the Gibeonites would have
been overwhelmed before Joshua had any inkling that
they were anxious to treat with him. Whoever was
dilatory, whoever was slow, the Gibeonites dared not
be. It can, therefore, have been, at most, only
a matter of hours after Joshua’s return to Gilgal,
before their wily embassy set forth.
But their defection had an instant
result. Adoni-zedec recognized in a moment the
urgency of the situation. With Joshua in possession
of Gibeon and its dependencies, the Israelites would
be firmly established on the plateau at his very gates,
and the states of southern Palestine would be cut
off from their brethren in the north.
Adoni-zedec lost no time; he sought
and obtained the aid of four neighbouring kings and
marched upon Gibeon. The Gibeonites sent at once
the most urgent message to acquaint Joshua with their
danger, and Joshua as promptly replied. He made
a forced march with picked troops all that night up
from Gilgal, and next day he was at their gates.
Counterblow had followed blow, swift
as the clash of rapiers in a duel of fencers.
All three of the parties concerned Hivite,
Amorite and Israelite had moved with the
utmost rapidity. And no wonder; the stake for
which they were playing was very existence, and the
forfeit, which would be exacted on failure, was extinction.
3. DAY, HOUR, AND PLACE OF THE MIRACLE
The foregoing considerations enable
us somewhat to narrow down the time of the year at
which Joshua’s miracle can have taken place,
and from an astronomical point of view this is very
important. The Israelites had entered the land
of Canaan on the 10th day of the first month, that
is to say, very shortly after the spring equinox March
21 of our present calendar. Seven weeks after
that equinox May 11 the sun attains
a declination of 18 deg. north. From this
time its declination increases day by day until the
summer solstice, when, in Joshua’s time, it was
nearly 24 deg. north. After that it slowly
diminishes, and on August 4 it is 18 deg. again.
For twelve weeks, therefore very nearly
a quarter of the entire year the sun’s
northern declination is never less than 18 deg..
The date of the battle must have fallen somewhere
within this period. It cannot have fallen earlier;
the events recorded could not possibly have all been
included in the seven weeks following the equinox.
Nor, in view of the promptitude with which all the
contending parties acted, and were bound to act, can
we postpone the battle to a later date than the end
of this midsummer period.
We thus know, roughly speaking, what
was the declination of the sun that is
to say, its distance from the equator of the heavens at
the time of the battle; it was not less than 18 deg.
north of the equator, it could not have been more
than 24 deg..
But, if we adopt the idea most generally
formed of the meaning of Joshua’s command, namely,
that he saw the sun low down over Gibeon in one direction,
and the moon low down over the valley of Ajalon in
another, we can judge of the apparent bearing of those
two heavenly bodies from an examination of the map.
And since, if we may judge from the map of the Palestine
Exploration Fund, the valley of Ajalon lies about
17 deg. north of west from Gibeon, and runs nearly
in that direction from it, the moon must, to Joshua,
have seemed about 17 deg. north of west, and
the sun 17 deg. south of east.
But for any date within the three
summer months, the sun in the latitude of Gibeon,
when it bears 17 deg. south of east, must be at
least 56 deg. high. At this height it would
seem overhead, and would not give the slightest idea
of association with any distant terrestrial object.
Not until some weeks after the autumnal equinox could
the sun be seen low down on the horizon in the direction
17 deg. south of east, and at the same time the
moon be as much as 17 deg. north of the west point.
And, as this would mean that the different combatants
had remained so close to each other, some four or
five months without moving, it is clearly inadmissible.
We are forced therefore to the unexpected conclusion
that it is practically impossible that Joshua could
have been in any place from whence he could have seen,
at one and the name moment; the sun low down in the
sky over Gibeon, and the moon over the valley of Ajalon.
Is the narrative in error, then?
Or have we been reading into it our own erroneous
impression? Is there any other sense in which
a man would naturally speak of a celestial body as
being “over” some locality on the earth,
except when both were together on his horizon?
Most certainly. There is another
position which the sun can hold in which it may naturally
be said to be “over,” or “upon”
a given place; far more naturally and accurately than
when it chances to lie in the same direction as some
object on the horizon. We have no experience of
that position in these northern latitudes, and hence
perhaps our commentators have, as a rule, not taken
it into account. But those who, in tropical or
sub-tropical countries, have been in the open at high
noon, when a man’s foot can almost cover his
shadow, will recognize how definite, how significant
such a position is. In southern Palestine, during
the three summer months, the sun is always so near
the zenith at noon that it could never occur to any
one to speak of it as anything but “overhead.”
And the prose narrative expressly
tells us that this was the case. It is intimated
that when Joshua spoke it was noon, by the expression
that the sun “hasted not to go down about a
whole day,” implying that the change in the
rate in its apparent motion occurred only in the afternoon,
and that it had reached its culmination. Further,
as not a few commentators have pointed out, the expression, “the
sun stood still in the midst of heaven,” is
literally “in the bisection of heaven”;
a phrase applicable indeed to any position on the
meridian, but especially appropriate to the meridian
close to the zenith.
This, then, is what Joshua meant by
his command to the sun. Its glowing orb blazed
almost in the centre of the whole celestial vault “in
the midst of heaven” and poured down
its vertical rays straight on his head. It stood
over him it stood over the place where he
was Gibeon.
We have, therefore, been able to find
that the narrative gives us, by implication, two very
important particulars, the place where Joshua was,
and the time of the day. He was at Gibeon, and
it was high noon.
The expression, “Thou, Moon,
in the valley of Ajalon,” has now a very definite
signification. As we have already seen, the valley
of Ajalon bears 17 deg. north of west from Gibeon,
according to the map of the Palestine Exploration
Fund, so that this is the azimuth which the moon had
at the given moment. In other words, it was almost
exactly midway between the two “points of the
compass,” W.b.N. and W.N.W. It was also
in its “last quarter” or nearly so; that
is, it was half-full, and waning. With the sun
on the meridian it could not have been much more than
half-full, for in that case it would have already set;
nor much less than half-full, or it would have been
too faint to be seen in full daylight. It was
therefore almost exactly half-full, and the day was
probably the 21st day of the month in the Jewish reckoning.
But the moon cannot be as far as 17
deg. north of west in latitude 31 deg 51’ N. on the 21st day of the month earlier
than the fourth month of the Jewish year, or later
than the eighth month. Now the 21st day of the
fourth month is about seven weeks after the 3rd day
of the third month; the 21st day of the fifth month
is eleven weeks. Remembering how close Gilgal,
Gibeon and Jerusalem were to each other, and how important
was the need for promptitude to Israelite and Amorite
alike, it can scarcely be disputed that eleven weeks
is an inadmissible length of time to interpose between
the reading of the Law and the battle; and that seven
weeks is the utmost that can be allowed.
The battle took place, then, on or
about the 21st day of the fourth month. But it
could only have done so if that particular year began
late. If the year had begun earlier than April
1st of our present calendar, the moon could not have
been so far north on the day named. For the Jewish
calendar is a natural one and regulated both by the
sun and the moon. It begins with the new moon,
and it also begins as nearly as possible with the
spring equinox. But as twelve natural months fall
short of a solar year by eleven days, a thirteenth
month has to be intercalated from time to time; in
every nineteen years, seven are years having an extra
month. Now the 21st day of the fourth month must
have fallen on or about July 22 according to our present
reckoning, in order that the moon might have sufficient
northing, and that involves a year beginning after
April 1; so that the year of the battle of Beth-horon
must have been an ordinary year, one of twelve months,
but must have followed a year of thirteen months.
Summarizing all the conclusions at
which we have now arrived, Joshua’s observation
was made at Gibeon itself, almost precisely at the
moment of noon, on or about the 21st day of the fourth
month, which day fell late in July according to our
present reckoning; probably on or about the 22nd.
The sun’s declination must have been about 20
deg. north; probably, if anything, a little more.
The sun rose therefore almost exactly at five in the
morning, and set almost exactly at seven in the evening,
the day being just fourteen hours long. The moon
had not yet passed her third quarter, but was very
near it; that is to say, she was about half full.
Her declination did not differ greatly from 16 deg.
north; she was probably about 5 deg. above the
horizon, and was due to set in about half an hour.
She had risen soon after eleven o’clock the previous
evening, and had lighted the Israelites during more
than half of their night march up from Gilgal.
4. JOSHUA’S STRATEGY
These conclusions, as to the place
and time of day, entirely sweep away the impression,
so often formed, that Joshua’s victory was practically
in the nature of a night surprise. Had it been
so, and had the Amorites been put to flight at daybreak,
there would have seemed no conceivable reason why,
with fourteen hours of daylight before him, Joshua
should have been filled with anxiety for the day to
have been prolonged. Nor is it possible to conceive
that he would still have been at Gibeon at noon, seven
hours after he had made his victorious attack upon
his enemy.
The fact is that, in all probability,
Joshua had no wish to make a night surprise.
His attitude was like that of Nelson before the battle
of Trafalgar; he had not the slightest doubt but that
he would gain the victory, but he was most anxious
that it should be a complete one. The great difficulty
in the campaign which lay before him was the number
of fortified places in the hands of the enemy, and
the costliness, both in time and lives, of all siege
operations at that epoch. His enemies having
taken the field gave him the prospect of overcoming
this difficulty, if, now that they were in the open,
he could succeed in annihilating them there; to have
simply scattered them would have brought him but little
advantage. That this was the point to which he
gave chief attention is apparent from one most significant
circumstance in the history; the Amorites fled by
the road to Beth-horon.
There have been several battles of
Beth-horon since the days of Joshua, and the defeated
army has, on more than one occasion, fled by the route
now taken by the Amorites. Two of these are recorded
by Josephus; the one in which Judas Maccabaeus defeated
and slew Nicanor, and the other when Cestius Gallus
retreated from Jerusalem. It is probable that
Beth-horon was also the scene of one, if not two, battles
with the Philistines, at the commencement of David’s
reign. In all these cases the defeated foe fled
by this road because it had been their line of advance,
and was their shortest way back to safety.
But the conditions were entirely reversed
in the case of Joshua’s battle. The Amorites
fled away from their cities. Jerusalem,
the capital of Adoni-zedec and the chief city of the
confederation, lay in precisely the opposite direction.
The other cities of their league lay beyond Jerusalem,
further still to the south.
A reference to the map shows that
Gilgal, the headquarters of the army of Israel, was
on the plain of Jericho, close to the banks of the
Jordan, at the bottom of that extraordinary ravine
through which the river runs. Due west, at a
distance of about sixteen or seventeen miles as the
crow flies, but three thousand four hundred feet above
the level of the Jordan, rises the Ridge of the Watershed,
the backbone of the structure of Palestine. On
this ridge are the cities of Jerusalem and Gibeon,
and on it, leading down to the Maritime Plain, runs
in a north-westerly direction, the road through the
two Beth-horons.
The two Beth-horons are one and a
half miles apart, with a descent of 700 feet from
the Upper to the Lower.
The flight of the Amorites towards
Beth-horon proves, beyond a doubt, that Joshua had
possessed himself of the road from Gibeon to Jerusalem.
It is equally clear that this could not have been done
by accident, but that it must have been the deliberate
purpose of his generalship. Jerusalem was a city
so strong that it was not until the reign of David
that the Israelites obtained possession of the whole
of it, and to take it was evidently a matter beyond
Joshua’s ability. But to have defeated
the Amorites at Gibeon, and to have left open to them
the way to Jerusalem less than six miles
distant would have been a perfectly futile
proceeding. We may be sure, therefore, that from
the moment when he learned that Adoni-zedek was besieging
Gibeon, Joshua’s first aim was to cut off the
Amorite king from his capital.
The fact that the Amorites fled, not
towards their cities but away from them, shows clearly
that Joshua had specially manoeuvred so as to cut
them off from Jerusalem. How he did it, we are
not told, and any explanation offered must necessarily
be merely of the nature of surmise. Yet a considerable
amount of probability may attach to it. The geographical
conditions are perfectly well known, and we can, to
some degree, infer the course which the battle must
have taken from these, just as we could infer the
main lines of the strategy employed by the Germans
in their war with the French in 1870, simply by noting
the places where the successive battles occurred.
The positions of the battlefields of Mars-la-Tour,
Gravelotte, and Sedan would show clearly that the
object of the Germans had been, first, to shut Bazaine
up in Metz, and then to hinder MacMahon from coming
to his relief. So in the present case, the fact
that the Amorites fled by the way of the two Beth-horons,
shows, first, that Joshua had completely cut them off
from the road to Jerusalem, and next, that somehow
or other when they took flight they were a long way
to the north of him. Had they not been so, they
could not have had any long start in their flight,
and the hailstorm which occasioned them such heavy
loss would have injured the Israelites almost as much.
How can these two circumstances be
accounted for? I think we can make a very plausible
guess at the details of Joshua’s strategy from
noting what he is recorded to have done in the case
of Ai. On that occasion, as on this, he had felt
his inability to deal with an enemy behind fortifications.
His tactics therefore had consisted in making a feigned
attack, followed by a feigned retreat, by which he
drew his enemies completely away from their base,
which he then seized by means of a detachment which
he had previously placed in ambush near. Then,
when the men of Ai were hopelessly cut off from their
city, he brought all his forces together, surrounded
his enemies in the open, and destroyed them.
It was a far more difficult task which
lay before him at Gibeon, but we may suppose that
he still acted on the same general principles.
There were two points on the ridge of the watershed
which, for very different reasons, it was important
that he should seize. The one was Beeroth, one
of the cities of the Hivites, his allies, close to
his latest victory of Ai, and commanding the highest
point on the ridge of the watershed. It is distant
from Jerusalem some ten miles a day’s
journey. Tradition therefore gives it as the
place where the Virgin Mary and St. Joseph turned
back sorrowing, seeking Jesus. For “they,
supposing Him to have been in the company, went a
day’s journey,” and Beeroth still forms
the first halting-place for pilgrims from the north
on their return journey.
Beeroth also was the city of the two
sons of Rimmon who murdered Ishbosheth, the son of
Saul. When it is remembered how Saul had attempted
to extirpate the Gibeonites, and how bitter a blood
feud the latter entertained against his house in consequence,
it becomes very significant that the murderers of
his son were men of this Gibeonite town.
Beeroth also commanded the exit from
the principal ravine by which Joshua could march upwards
to the ridge the valley of Achor. The
Israelites marching by this route would have the great
advantage that Beeroth, in the possession of their
allies, the Gibeonites, would act as a cover to them
whilst in the ravines, and give them security whilst
taking up a position on the plateau.
But Beeroth had one fatal disadvantage
as a sole line of advance. From Beeroth Joshua
would come down to Gibeon from the north, and the
Amorites, if defeated, would have a line of retreat,
clear and easy, to Jerusalem. It was absolutely
essential that somewhere or other he should cut the
Jerusalem road.
This would be a matter of great difficulty
and danger, as, if his advance were detected whilst
he was still in the ravines, he would have been taken
at almost hopeless disadvantage. The fearful losses
which the Israelites sustained in the intertribal
war with Benjamin near this very place, show what
Joshua might reasonably have expected had he tried
to make his sole advance on the ridge near Jerusalem.
Is it not probable that he would have
endeavoured, under these circumstances, to entice
the Amorites as far away to the north as possible
before he ventured to bring his main force out on the
ridge? If so, we may imagine that he first sent
a strong force by the valley of Achor to Beeroth;
that they were instructed there to take up a strong
position, and when firmly established, to challenge
the Amorites to attack them. Then, when the Israelite
general in command at Beeroth perceived that he had
before him practically the whole Amorite force for
it would seem clear that the five kings themselves,
together with the greater part of their army, were
thus drawn away he would signal to Joshua
that the time had come for his advance. Just as
Joshua himself had signalled with his spear at the
taking of Ai, so the firing of a beacon placed on
the summit of the ridge would suffice for the purpose.
Joshua would then lead up the main body, seize the
Jerusalem road, and press on to Gibeon at the utmost
speed. If this were so, the small detachment
of Amorites left to continue the blockade was speedily
crushed, but perhaps was aware of Joshua’s approach
soon enough to send swift runners urging the five
kings to return. The news would brook no delay;
the kings would turn south immediately; but for all
their haste they never reached Gibeon. They probably
had but advanced as far as the ridge leading to Beth-horon,
when they perceived that not only had Joshua relieved
Gibeon and destroyed the force which they had left
before it, but that his line, stretched out far to
the right and left, already cut them off, not merely
from the road to Jerusalem and Hebron, but also from
the valley of Ajalon, a shorter road to the Maritime
Plain than the one they actually took. East there
was no escape; north was the Israelite army from Beeroth;
south and west was the army of Joshua. Out-manoeuvred
and out-generalled, they were in the most imminent
danger of being caught between the two Israelite armies,
and of being ground, like wheat, between the upper
and nether millstones. They had no heart for
further fight; the promise made to Joshua, “there
shall not a man of them stand before thee,” was
fulfilled; they broke and fled by the one way open
to them, the way of the two Beth-horons.
Whilst this conjectural strategy attributes
to Joshua a ready grasp of the essential features
of the military position and skill in dealing with
them, it certainly does not attribute to him any greater
skill than it is reasonable to suppose he possessed.
The Hebrews have repeatedly proved, not merely their
valour in battle, but their mastery of the art of
war, and, as Marcel Dieulafoy has recently shown,[372:1]
the earliest general of whom we have record as introducing
turning tactics in the field, is David in the battle
of the valley of Rephaim, recorded in 2 Sam. v 22-25
and 1 Chron. xiv 13-17.
“The several evolutions of a
complicated and hazardous nature which decided
the fate of the battle would betoken, even at the
present day, when successfully conducted, a consummate
general, experienced lieutenants, troops well
accustomed to manoeuvres, mobile, and, above
all, disciplined almost into unconsciousness,
so contrary is it to our instincts not to meet
peril face to face. . . . In point of fact, the
Israelites had just effected in the face of the
Philistines a turning and enveloping movement that
is to say, an operation of war considered to
be one of the boldest, most skilful, and difficult
attempted by forces similar in number to those of
the Hebrews, but, at the same time, very efficacious
and brilliant when successful. It was the
favourite manoeuvre of Frederick II, and the
one on which his military reputation rests.”
But though the Amorites had been discomfited
by Joshua, they had not been completely surrounded;
one way of escape was left open. More than this,
it appears that they obtained a very ample start in
the race along the north-western road. We infer
this from the incident of the hailstorm which fell
upon them whilst rushing down the precipitous road
between the Beth-horons; a storm so sudden and so violent
that more of the Amorites died by the hailstones than
had fallen in the contest at Gibeon. It does
not appear that the Israelites suffered from the storm;
they must consequently have, at the time, been much
in the rear of their foes. Probably they were
still “in the way that goeth up to Beth-horon”;
that is to say, in the ascent some two miles long from
Gibeon till the summit of the road is reached.
There would be a special appropriateness in this case
in the phrasing of the record that “the Lord
discomfited the Amorites before Israel, and slew them
with a great slaughter at Gibeon, and chased
them along the way that goeth up to Beth-horon, and
smote them to Azekah and unto Makkedah.”
There was no slaughter on the road between Gibeon
and Beth-horon. It was a simple chase;
a pursuit with the enemy far in advance.
The Israelites, general and soldiers
alike, had done their best. The forced march
all night up the steep ravines, the plan of the battle,
and the way in which it had been carried out were
alike admirable. Yet when the Israelites had
done their best, and the heat and their long exertions
had nearly overpowered them, Joshua was compelled to
recognize that he had been but partly successful.
He had relieved Gibeon; the Amorites were in headlong
flight; he had cut them off from the direct road to
safety, but he had failed in one most important point.
He had not succeeded in surrounding them, and the
greater portion of their force was escaping.
5. THE MIRACLE.
It was at this moment, when his scouts
announced to him the frustration of his hopes, that
Joshua in the anxiety lest the full fruits of his
victory should be denied him, and in the supremest
faith that the Lord God, in Whose hand are all the
powers of the universe, was with him, exclaimed:
“Sun, stand thou
still upon Gibeon,
And thou, Moon,
in the valley of Ajalon!”
So his exclamation stands in our Authorized
Version, but, as the marginal reading shows, the word
translated “stand still” is more literally
“be silent.” There can be no doubt
that this expression, so unusual in this connection,
must have been employed with intention. What
was it that Joshua is likely to have had in his mind
when he thus spoke?
The common idea is that he simply
wished for more time; for the day to be prolonged.
But as we have seen, it was midday when he spoke, and
he had full seven hours of daylight before him.
There was a need which he must have felt more pressing.
His men had now been seventeen hours on the march,
for they had started at sunset 7 p.m. on
the previous evening, and it was now noon, the noon
of a sub-tropical midsummer. They had marched
at least twenty miles in the time, possibly considerably
more according to the route which they had followed,
and the march had been along the roughest of roads,
and had included an ascent of 3400 feet about
the height of the summit of Snowdon above the sea-level.
They must have been weary, and have felt sorely the
heat of the sun, now blazing right overhead.
Surely it requires no words to labour this point.
Joshua’s one pressing need at that moment was
something to temper the fierce oppression of the sun,
and to refresh his men. This was what he prayed
for; this was what was granted him. For the moment
the sun seemed fighting on the side of his enemies,
and he bade it “Be silent.” Instantly,
in answer to his command, a mighty rush of dark storm-clouds
came sweeping up from the sea.
Refreshed by the sudden coolness,
the Israelites set out at once in the pursuit of their
enemies. It is probable that for the first six
miles they saw no trace of them, but when they reached
Beth-horon the Upper, and stood at the top of its
steep descent, they saw the Amorites again. As
it had been with their fathers at the Red Sea, when
the pillar of cloud had been a defence to them but
the means of discomfiture to the Egyptians, so now
the storm-clouds which had so revived them and restored
their their strength, had brought death and destruction
to their enemies. All down the rocky descent
lay the wounded, the dying, the dead. For “the
Lord cast down great stones from heaven upon them,
unto Azekah, and they died: they were more which
died with hailstones than they whom the children of
Israel slew with the sword.”
“The might of
the Gentile, unsmote by the sword,
Had melted like
snow in the glance of the Lord.”
Far below them the panic-stricken
remnants of the Amorite host were fleeing for safety
to the cities of the Maritime Plain. The battle
proper was over; the one duty left to the army of Israel
was to overtake and destroy those remnants before
they could gain shelter.
But the narrative continues.
“The sun stayed in the midst of heaven, and
hasted not to go down about a whole day.”
This statement evidently implies much more than the
mere darkening of the sun by storm-clouds. For
its interpretation we must return to the remaining
incidents of the day.
These are soon told. Joshua pursued
the Amorites to Makkedah, twenty-seven miles from
Gibeon by the route taken. There the five kings
had hidden themselves in a cave. A guard was placed
to watch the cave; the Israelites continued the pursuit
for an undefined distance farther; returned to Makkedah
and took it by assault; brought the kings out of their
cave, and hanged them.
“And it came to pass at the time
of the going down of the sun, that Joshua commanded,
and they took them down off the trees, and cast
them into the cave wherein they had hidden themselves,
and laid great stones on the mouth of the cave, unto
this very day.”
All these events the pursuit
for twenty-seven miles and more, the taking of Makkedah
and the hanging of the kings took place
between noon and the going down of the sun, an interval
whose normal length, for that latitude and at that
time of the year, was about seven hours.
This is an abnormal feat. It
is true that a single trained pedestrian might traverse
the twenty-seven and odd miles, and still have time
to take part in an assault on a town and to watch
an execution. But it is an altogether different
thing when we come to a large army. It is well
known that the speed with which a body of men can move
diminishes with the number. A company can march
faster than a regiment; a regiment than a brigade;
a brigade than an army corps. But for a large
force thirty miles in the entire day is heavy work.
“Thus Sir Archibald Hunter’s division,
in its march through Bechuanaland to the relief of
Mafeking, starting at four in the morning, went on
till seven or eight at night, covering as many as
thirty miles a day at times.” Joshua’s
achievement was a march fully as long as any of General
Hunter’s, but it was accomplished in less than
seven hours instead of from fifteen to sixteen, and
it followed straight on from a march seventeen hours
in length which had ended in a battle. In all,
between one sunset and the next he had marched between
fifty and sixty miles besides fighting a battle and
taking a town.
If we turn to the records of other
battles fought in this neighbourhood, we find that
they agree as closely as we could expect, not with
Joshua’s achievement, but with General Hunter’s.
In the case of the great victory secured by Jonathan,
the gallant son of Saul, the Israelites smote the
Philistines from Michmash to Ajalon; not
quite twenty miles. In the defeat of Cestius
Gallus, the Jews followed him from Beth-horon to Antipatris,
a little over twenty miles, the pursuit beginning at
daybreak, and being evidently continued nearly till
sundown. The pursuit of the Syrians under Nicanor
by Judas Maccabaeus seems also to have covered about
the same distance, for Nicanor was killed at the first
onslaught and his troops took to flight.
It is not at all unusual to read in
comments on the Book of Joshua that the “miracle”
is simply the result of the dulness of the prose chronicler
in accepting as literal fact an expression that originated
in the poetic exuberance of an old bard. The
latter, so it is urged, simply meaning to add a figure
of dignity and importance to his song commemorating
a great national victory, had written:
“And the sun stood
still, and the moon stayed,
Until the nation
had avenged themselves of their enemies,”
but with no more expectation that
the stay of the moon would be accepted literally,
than the singers, who welcomed David after the slaying
of Goliath, imagined that any one would seriously
suppose that Saul had actually with his own hand killed
two thousand Philistines, and David twenty thousand.
But, say they, the later prose chronicler, quoting
from the ballad, and accepting a piece of poetic hyperbole
as actual fact, reproduced the statement in his own
words, and added, “the sun stayed in the midst
of heaven, and hasted not to go down about a whole
day.”
Not so. The poem and the prose
chronicle make one coherent whole. Working from
the poem alone, treating the expressions in the first
two lines merely as astronomical indications of time
and place, and without the slightest reference to
any miraculous interpretation, they lead to the inevitable
conclusion that the time was noonday. This result
certainly does not lie on the surface of the poem,
and it was wholly beyond the power of the prose chronicler
to have computed it, yet it is just in the supposed
stupid gloss of the prose chronicler, and nowhere
else, that we find this fact definitely stated:
whilst the “miracle” recorded both by
poem and prose narrative completely accords with the
extraordinary distance traversed between noon and sunset.
Any man, however ignorant of science,
if he be but careful and conscientious, can truthfully
record an observation without any difficulty.
But to successfully invent even the simplest astronomical
observation requires very full knowledge, and is difficult
even then. Every astronomer knows that there
is hardly a single novelist, no matter how learned
or painstaking, who can at this present day introduce
a simple astronomical relation into his story, without
falling into egregious error.
We are therefore quite sure that Joshua
did use the words attributed to him; that the “moon”
and “the valley of Ajalon” were not merely
inserted in order to complete the parallelism by a
bard putting a legend into poetic form. Nor was
the prose narrative the result of an editor combining
two or three narratives all written much after the
date. The original records must have been made
at the time.
All astronomers know well how absolutely
essential it is to commit an observation to writing
on the spot. Illustrations of this necessity
could be made to any extent. One may suffice.
In vol. ii. of the Life of Sir Richard Burton,
by his wife, Lady Burton says:
“On the 6th December, 1882 .
. . we were walking on the Karso (Opcona) alone;
the sky was clear, and all of a sudden my niece
said to me, ’Oh, look up, there is a star walking
into the moon!’ ‘Glorious!’
I answered. ’We are looking at the Transit
of Venus, which crowds of scientists have gone to the
end of the world to see.’”
The Transit of Venus did take place
on December 6, 1882; and though Venus could have been
seen without telescopic aid as a black spot on the
sun’s disc, nothing can be more unlike Venus
in transit than “a star walking into the moon.”
The moon was not visible on that evening, and Venus
was only visible when on the sun’s disc, and
appeared then, not as a star, but as a black dot.
No doubt Lady Burton’s niece
did make the exclamation attributed to her, but it
must have been, not on December 6, 1882, but on some
other occasion. Lady Burton may indeed have told
her niece that this was the Transit of Venus, but
that was simply because she did not know what a transit
was, nor that it occurred in the daytime, not at night.
Lady Burton’s narrative was therefore not written
at the time. So if the facts of the tenth chapter
of Joshua, as we have it, had not been written at
the time of the battle, some gross astronomical discordance
would inevitably have crept in.
Let us suppose that the sun and moon
did actually stand still in the sky for so long a
time that between noon and sunset was equal to the
full length of an ordinary day. What effect would
have resulted that the Israelites could have perceived?
This, and this only, that they would have marched
twice as far between noon and sunset as they could
have done in any ordinary afternoon. And this
as we have seen, is exactly what they are recorded
to have done.
The only measure of time, available
to the Israelites, independent of the apparent motion
of the sun, was the number of miles marched. Indeed,
with the Babylonians, the same word (kasbu)
was used to indicate three distinct, but related measures.
It was a measure of time the double hour;
of celestial arc the twelfth part of a great
circle, thirty degrees, that is to say the space traversed
by the sun in two hours; and it was a measure of distance
on the surface of the earth six or seven
miles, or a two hours’ march.
If, for the sake of illustration,
we may suppose that the sun were to stand still for
us, we should recognize it neither by sundial nor by
shadow, but we should see that whereas our clocks had
indicated that the sun had risen (we will say) at
six in the morning, and had southed at twelve of noon;
it had not set until twelve of the night. The
register of work done, shown by all our clocks and
watches, would be double for the afternoon what it
had been for the morning. And if all our clocks
and watches did thus register upon some occasion twice
the interval between noon and sunset that they had
registered between sunrise and noon, we should be
justified in recording, as the writer of the book of
Joshua has recorded, “The sun stood still in
the midst of heaven, and hasted not to go down about
a whole day.”
The real difficulty to the understanding
of this narrative has lain in the failure of commentators
to put themselves back into the conditions of the
Israelites. The Israelites had no time-measurers,
could have had no time-measurers. A sundial,
if any such were in existence, would only indicate
the position of the sun, and therefore could give no
evidence in the matter. Beside, a sundial is
not a portable instrument, and Joshua and his men
had something more pressing to do than to loiter round
it. Clepsydrae or clocks are of later date,
and no more than a sundial are they portable.
Many comments, one might almost say most comments
on the narrative, read as if the writers supposed that
Joshua and his men carried stop-watches, and that
their chief interest in the whole campaign was to
see how fast the sun was moving. Since they had
no such methods of measuring time, since it is not
possible to suppose that over and above any material
miracle that was wrought, the mental miracle was added
of acquainting the Israelites for this occasion only
with the Copernican system of astronomy, all that
the words of the narrative can possibly mean is, that
“the sun stood
still in the midst of heaven, and hasted not to
go down about a whole
day,”
according to the only means which
the Israelites had for testing the matter. In
short, it simply states in other words, what, it is
clear from other parts of the narrative, was actually
the case, that the length of the march made between
noon and sunset was equal to an ordinary march taking
the whole of a day.
If we suppose as has been
generally done, and as it is quite legitimate to do,
for all things are possible to God that
the miracle consisted in the slackening of the rotation
of the earth, what effect would have been perceived
by the Hebrews? This, and only this, that they
would have accomplished a full day’s march in
the course of the afternoon. And what would have
been the effects produced on all the neighbouring nations?
Simply that they had managed to do more work than usual
in the course of that afternoon, and that they felt
more than usually tired and hungry in the evening.
But would it have helped the Israelites
for the day to have been thus actually lengthened?
Scarcely so, unless they had been, at the same time,
endowed with supernatural, or at all events, with unusual
strength. The Israelites had already been 31 hours
without sleep or rest, they had made a remarkable
march, their enemies had several miles start of them;
would not a longer day have simply given the latter
a better chance to make good their flight, unless
the Israelites were enabled to pursue them with unusual
speed? And if the Israelites were so enabled,
then no further miracle is required; for them the sun
would have “hasted not to go down about a whole
day.”
Leaving the question as to whether
the sun appeared to stand still through the temporary
arrest of the earth’s rotation, or through some
exaltation of the physical powers of the Israelites,
it seems clear, from the foregoing analysis of the
narrative, that both the prose account and the poem
were written by eye-witnesses, who recorded what they
had themselves seen and heard whilst every detail was
fresh in their memory. Simple as the astronomical
references are, they are very stringent, and can only
have been supplied by those who were actually present.
Nothing can be more unlike poetic
hyperbole than the sum of actual miles marched to
the men who trod them; and these very concrete miles
were the gauge of the lapse of time. For just
as “nail,” and “span,” and
“foot,” and “cubit,” and “pace”
were the early measures of small distance, so the
average day’s march was the early measure of
long distance. The human frame, in its proportions
and in its abilities, is sufficiently uniform to have
furnished the primitive standards of length.
But the relation established between time and distance
as in the case of a day’s march, works either
way, and is employed in either direction, even at
the present day. When the Israelites at the end
of their campaign returned from Makkedah to Gibeon,
and found the march, though wholly unobstructed, was
still a heavy performance for the whole of a long
day, what could they think, how could they express
themselves, concerning that same march made between
noon and sundown? Whatever construction we put
upon the incident, whatever explanation we may offer
for it, to all the men of Israel, judging the events
of the afternoon by the only standard within their
reach, the eminently practical standard of the miles
they had marched, the only conclusion at which they
could arrive was the one they so justly drew
“The sun stayed in the midst
of heaven and hasted not to go down about a whole
day. And there was no day like that before it
or after it, that the Lord hearkened unto the voice
of a man: for the Lord fought for Israel.”