I
Background
According to the Book of Joshua, when the Israelites were encamped at Shittim opposite Jericho, ready to cross the river, Joshua, as a final preparation, sent out two spies to Jericho. The spies stayed in the house of Rahab, a local prostitute. The king of Jericho sent soldiers who asked Rahab to bring out the spies. Instead, she hid them under bundles of flax on the roof. After escaping, the spies promised to spare Rahab and her family after taking the city, if she would mark her house by hanging a red cord out the window.After the Israelites crossed the Jordan, the king of Jericho ordered that the gates of the walls be closed. God commanded Joshua to go around the walls of Jericho for six days, once every day, and seven times on the seventh day. God commanded the city to be attacked by seven priests blowing horns, with the Ark of the Covenant in front of them and all the people behind the Ark of the Covenant. They encircled the wall of Jericho once a day for the first six days, and then encircled the city seven times on the seventh day. After the shofar (horn) sounded a great blow, the Israelites shouted, and the city walls fell beneath them.Following God's law, the Israelites killed every man and woman, the young and the old, as well as the oxen, sheep, and donkeys. Only Rahab, her parents, brothers and all "those who belonged to her" were spared. They were incorporated into Israel. Joshua then cursed anybody who rebuilt the foundations and gates, with the deaths of their firstborn and youngest child respectively. This was eventually fulfilled by Hiel the Bethelite under King Ahab's reign.
Academic consensus
A minority of scholars maintain that the biblical account is historical and that an Israelite conquest of Jericho may have occurred around the 13th century BCE,[17][18] but the strong consensus among scholars is that the Book of Joshua holds little historical value.[19] Its origin lies in a time far removed from the times that it depicts,[20] and its intention is primarily theological in detailing how Israel and her leaders are judged by their obedience to the teachings and laws (the covenant) set down in the Book of Deuteronomy.[21] The story of Jericho and the rest of the conquest represents the nationalist propaganda of the Kingdom of Judah and their claims to the territory of the Kingdom of Israel after 722 BCE;[3] and that those chapters were later incorporated into an early form of Joshua likely written late in the reign of King Josiah (reigned 640–609 BCE), and the book was revised and completed after the fall of Jerusalem to the Babylonians in 586 BCE, and possibly after the return from the Babylonian exile in 538 BCE.[22] According to Ann E. Killebrew, "Most scholars today accept that the majority of the conquest narratives in the book of Joshua are devoid of historical reality".[23]
Are God's People Devoted to Destruction?
The Book of Joshua contains several passages where God is portrayed as commanding Israel to kill or “devote to destruction” (ḥerem, חֵרֶם) the inhabitants of Canaanite cities. These are among the most difficult and contested texts in the Hebrew Bible because of their violence.
Here’s a structured list of the main “killing” verses in Joshua (where the command is attributed to God or enacted under divine instruction):
Commands from God
These are passages where the narrator attributes commands directly to YHWH.
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Joshua 6:17–21 (Jericho)
The city and all that is in it shall be devoted to the LORD for destruction… They devoted all in the city to destruction, both men and women, young and old, oxen, sheep, and donkeys, with the edge of the sword.
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Joshua 8:1–2, 24–26 (Ai)
The LORD said to Joshua, “Do not fear… I have given into your hand the king of Ai, his people, his city, and his land.”
Later, the Israelites struck down all the inhabitants of Ai, leaving none alive, about twelve thousand men and women.
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Joshua 10:8–11, 28–40 (Southern Campaign)
The LORD said to Joshua, “Do not fear them, for I have given them into your hands.”
The Israelites defeated the Amorite coalition, and the text repeats: “He left none remaining, but devoted to destruction all that breathed, as the LORD God of Israel commanded” (10:40).
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Joshua 11:6, 10–15 (Northern Campaign)
The LORD said to Joshua, “Do not be afraid of them… you shall hamstring their horses and burn their chariots.”
Joshua captured Hazor, struck its king, and “struck with the sword all who were in it, devoting them to destruction; there was none left that breathed” (11:11).
Summary verse: “As the LORD had commanded Moses his servant, so Moses commanded Joshua, and so Joshua did; he left nothing undone of all that the LORD had commanded Moses.” (11:15).
Narrative Summaries
These passages condense multiple campaigns, presenting them as divinely sanctioned or completed.
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Joshua 10:40–42
“So Joshua struck the whole land… He left none remaining, but devoted to destruction all that breathed, just as the LORD God of Israel commanded.”
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Joshua 11:16–23
“So Joshua took all that land… And Joshua made war a long time with all those kings… For it was the LORD’s doing to harden their hearts that they should come against Israel in battle, in order that they should be devoted to destruction.”
Key Hebrew Concept: ḥerem
The repeated term is ḥerem (חֵרֶם), usually translated “devoted to destruction.” It implies a ritualized extermination — total removal from human use and consecration to God, often by killing. This is not mere warfare; it is portrayed as sacred violence.
Summary
The main “killing verses” in Joshua are:
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Jericho (Joshua 6:17–21)
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Ai (Joshua 8:24–26)
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Southern Campaign (Joshua 10:28–40)
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Northern Campaign (Joshua 11:6–15)
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Summary Statements (Joshua 10:40–42; 11:16–23)
These are the core texts where the LORD is explicitly said to order or approve total destruction.
| At what point should we question our idea of God? |
How Should God be Understood?
⚖️ From a theological, literary, and historical perspective, these verses have been deeply debated — whether as historical memory, ideological justification, mythic narrative, or theological metaphor. Many modern interpreters (especially in Jewish and Christian theology today) see them as problematic and in need of reframing.
⚖️ The line in Joshua 11:20 is one of the most striking and troubling:
“For it was the LORD’s doing to harden their hearts that they should come against Israel in battle, in order that they should be devoted to destruction and should receive no mercy, but be exterminated, just as the LORD commanded Moses.”
Why It’s Troubling:
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Parallels with Pharaoh (Exodus)
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The same language is used in Exodus about Pharaoh: “the LORD hardened Pharaoh’s heart” (Exod. 9:12; 10:20, etc.).
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In both cases, it seems to remove human agency: God ensures the opponent resists, thereby justifying their destruction.
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Theological Problem
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It portrays God as not only permitting violence but orchestrating it.
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This raises questions of divine justice: why would God cause resistance just to destroy those people?
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Literary Function
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In the narrative, it functions to absolve Israel of moral responsibility: they are not wiping out innocent people, but fulfilling God’s decree.
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It reinforces the idea of ḥerem (total devotion to destruction) as divinely mandated, not a political choice.
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Historical/Anthropological Lens
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Scholars often see this as ideological war language. Ancient Near Eastern inscriptions (Moabite, Assyrian, Egyptian) use the same rhetoric: “the gods hardened their hearts” or “the gods devoted them to destruction.”
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It elevates military victory into a sacred act, turning conquest into cosmic destiny.
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Process / Modern Readings
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Process Theology: A process view would resist the idea of God coercively hardening hearts. Instead, it might interpret these verses as Israel’s projection of divine will onto their history, an ancient attempt to explain the chaos of war.
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Literary-Theological Reframing: Many theologians read these texts as mythic war rhetoric, not literal history. The texts express Israel’s desire to see their survival as God’s doing, but those same texts also expose the danger of using God-language to justify violence.
✨ Summary Observation: The “hardening of hearts” in Joshua is not unique but part of a biblical motif that raises questions of freedom, divine justice, and violence. In Exodus, it’s Pharaoh; in Joshua, it’s the Canaanites. In both, the effect is to heighten God’s power but at the cost of human mercy.
| How we have manufactured God into our own justifying Image |
IV
Is God a God of War and Destruction or a God of Love?
The question sits at the very heart of the Bible’s tensions — and it is as old as Israel’s wrestling with its own story. Let me lay it out carefully, in several perspectives:
| Does Christianity serve a God of bloodshed and warfare? |
Why Does the Christian Bible End with a Violent God of Warfare?
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