Inductive Bible Study on Joshua 6 – Discussion Questions and Applications
Outline:
I. The people obey God by walking around the wall (1-16)
II.God gives victory, but the things in the city are under the ban (17-27)
I. The people obey God by walking around the wall (1-16)
Discussion Questions
- Is this encounter with the “LORD” the same encounter from 5:13-15? Explain.
- What battle plan was given to Joshua?
- Why do you think God chose to have them use this way to achieve victory?
- Did the people have a role or a responsibility? What? What traits were needed to fulfill the role God had given to them?
- What may have been the purpose of the trumpets?
- What do you think the people of Jericho were likely doing while the Israelites were marching around the town?
- Do you think it was difficult for the people to keep Joshua’s command to keep silent in verse 10? Why or why not?
- What was the purpose of the armed men and the rear guard (13)?
- What can we learn from God’s command to the people in this chapter?
- What can we learn from the people’s response?
Verse by Verse Commentary
1.Verse 1 – The people in the city knew Israel was near and closed everything up. Jericho was known for its massive fortifications. It was an extremely strong and powerful city, with good defenses. Generally they would have been confident against invaders, but invaders didn’t normally have Yahweh on their side.
Conquest of Jericho and Ai by Israel – Created by Study and Obey With Accordance Bible Software
2. Verses 2-5 – If most armies had heard a commander give this strategy they would have laughed. How can walking and blowing trumpets knock down a strong wall? With man it is impossible, but with God it was not impossible. This was the first city they had attacked.
God wanted to teach them a lesson. It wasn’t by strength of arm that they could gain the victory. It was only through His strength. They couldn’t hope to do it by themselves, but had to wholly depend on divine aid. (Psalms 20:7.) Faith and obedience were essential. Here is the same lesson we have seen God teaching the Israelites in the first several chapters of this book. The lesson is that they must learn not to lean on their own understanding and not to trust in their own strength. God’s ways are higher than our ways.
How would you have planned to take this city? Some common strategies might be: sneaking in and opening the doors suddenly or building ladders to scale the wall or tricking the people to come out of the city. God did not need to rely on those strategies.
Notice that though the victory belonged to the Lord, the people also had a responsibility. If the people did not obey God and do it His way, He would not have knocked the walls down. The people’s role was very important. Disobedience would result in failure. It is interesting that God designed this plan (and many others like this). Success could only be attributed to God’s power. But a failure would be the people’s fault.
Application: This is also how we can have victory in our lives. It’s not by our intelligence or our planning or strategy or talent or skill. God not only wanted to teach this to the Israelites, but also to the people in the city and the surrounding nations. God is a jealous God. He doesn’t want a lot of boasters proud of their own power. If this plan was to succeed it would clearly be by God’s power. So when you are successful, praise God.
When you fail, examine yourselves and see if it might be because of your own sin or disobedience. Also, we should make a habit to always seek guidance from the Lord before making decisions and plans, or taking important steps in our lives. Are you trusting in your intelligence or money or strength instead of in the Lord? How would a person even know if he was trusting in these things rather than God?
3. Verses 6-10 – Joshua showed no hesitation whatsoever. He did not doubt God, question Him, argue, or laugh. Joshua was a good leader. He didn’t care that the people may laugh at him or ridicule or doubt. He wasn’t worried about his face. Neither did he take a vote or ask the people to consider various different plans. Instead his response was simple. Joshua obeyed God’s command and instructed the people under him to do the same. He didn’t show any hesitation or doubt. This is what a good leader does. He leads the way in what is right regardless of the response of the people under him.
Can you think of any examples of people in the Bible who gave up their own authority in order to follow the sinful desires of those under them? (Aaron and the golden calf, Adam in the garden, Saul when he didn’t destroy all of the Amalekites.) Can you think of any examples of leaders who stood up for what was right even in the face of pressure or rebellion from those under them?
4. Verses 10-16 – The people persevered in this even though they must have looked foolish to the people of Jericho. What do you think the people in Jericho may have been doing during this time? You can imagine what kind of insults were thrown their way. Perseverance is very important. They didn’t give up after one or two days, but they kept marching and marching and saw it through to the end.
What is more, in verse 10 Joshua commands them to be quiet and not let their voices be heard or even a word to come out of their mouths. This might have been the most difficult command to follow of any of them. Imagine how difficult it would be to keep your mouth shut in the face of incessant mocking/taunting.
Cross-References
On Silence:
Proverbs 17:28 – Even fools are thought wise if they keep silent, and discerning if they hold their tongues.
Proverbs 18:6-7 – The lips of fools bring them strife, and their mouths invite a beating. The mouths of fools are their undoing, and their lips are a snare to their very lives.
Psalm 141:3 – Set a guard over my mouth, Lord; keep watch over the door of my lips.
Isaiah 53:7 – He was oppressed and afflicted, yet he did not open his mouth; he was led like a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before its shearers is silent, so he did not open his mouth.
Application: Have you encountered opposition or mocking while serving the Lord? Can you share why and what your response was? Is there anyone in the Bible that faced mocking because of their decision to obey God? (Noah probably did while building the ark. Jesus did while hanging on the cross. ) If God gives you a tough task, don’t begin it and then give up. Be a finisher! Don’t worry about others or what they think. Don’t be timid if you hear insults. Do what is right in order to please God. Each of us is supposed to please God rather than man. We don’t need to worry what people think or say. We please God because He is the judge and He is sitting on the throne, no one else.
Seven is considered the perfect number in the Bible. It signifies completeness.
II. God gives victory, but the things in the city are under the ban (17-27)
Discussion Questions
- What was under the ban?
- What was supposed to happen to the things under the ban? Why?
- What happened when the people shouted and blew the trumpets?
- Who was not to be destroyed? Why? Who was saved along with her?
- What does this tell us about those who were to be destroyed?
- What can we learn about the consequences of sin? Who does sin effect?
- How do you understand God’s instructions to destroy everything in verse 21?
- Why did Joshua speak a curse to the person who would rebuild this city?
- What can we learn from this passage which is applicable to our lives today?
- Is there anything which God has banned for us which may tempt us?
Verse by Verse Commentary
1. Verse 17 – The people were not to take anything from the city. The gold and silver was to go into the temple. Everything else was to be destroyed. It was a way for God to remind the people that this victory was His. It was not by their own intelligence or strength that they won. God gave Jericho into their hands. All of the victories which they would achieve in the future (whether through supernatural miracles or not) were no less a result of God’s divine plan. God generally doesn’t ask people to give everything to Him, but in the Old Testament He does ask for the first of what they receive, just as in the case of the first fruits being completely devoted to God. Giving of the first which someone receives is an act of faith. It also shows that God is the priority.
Everything belongs to the Lord. God did not always prohibit the people from taking for themselves spoils of victory, but He always had the right to do so. Everything was His. The people in the city were His (He created them.) All of their material possessions were His (He gave them to them.) Their animals were also His. In this case He decided that what He wanted to do with His own possessions was to destroy them. They were like the vessels of dishonor seen in 2 Timothy 2:20, “But in a great house there are not only vessels of gold and of silver, but also of wood and of earth; and some to honour, and some to dishonour.”
Cross-References
Psalms 24:1 – The earth is the Lord’s, and everything in it, the world, and all who live in it.
Deuteronomy 10:14 – To the Lord your God belong the heavens, even the highest heavens, the earth and everything in it.
Psalms 89:11 – The heavens are yours, and yours also the earth; you founded the world and all that is in it.
Leviticus 25:23 – The land must not be sold permanently, because the land is mine and you reside in my land as foreigners and strangers.
Application: Everything we have belongs to God. This should effect how we use it. How should you use your possessions, knowing that they belong to God?
- We should give to God the first of what we have, not the leftovers.
- We should give to God as much as we can, not as little as possible.
- We should seek God’s guidance when saving, giving, spending, or investing money.
- We should use what we have to build God’s kingdom (since it is God’s already.)
- We should not waste what He has graciously provided. Can you give examples of how we might sometimes waste? (Wasting includes being careless and breaking things, wasting electricity or water or food, buying new when the old is still acceptable, buying more than we need, etc.)
Keep yourselves from the things under the ban so that you do not covet:
When we want something that God has not given us it is coveting. It is often easy to see coveting in children who often want the toy the other child is holding rather than the toy they have. But adults often covet as well. Can you think of any biblical examples of people who coveted? (Ahab, Herod Antipas)
Coveting falls under the category of the “lust of the flesh.” Like Ahab, we sometimes look at what other people have and wish we had it. Even if we don’t take action on those desires, it is still sin. It still shows a lack of gratitude to God for what we have. Modern day advertisements are meant to feed people’s coveting nature. These ads show us the wonderful, carefree lives of people who own a certain type of car, phone computer, appliance, etc. Many people also buy products not for their own usefulness, but because of wanting to project a certain image to those around them. The world of materialism we live in is meant to feed our coveting appetites. Social media also is a world which is often used both to covet and to elicit coveting in others. People post pictures of all the exotic places they have been and all the wonderful foods they are eating.
It is not inherently wrong to post nice pictures on social media, but there is a danger to begin focusing on the wrong things. There is a danger to brag to others about what we have or have experienced. And there is a danger to wish that we could have those same experiences or things that others have. It is a danger of focusing on surface things that don’t have a lot of meaning, the physical world of what we can touch and see rather than the intangible spiritual world. Here are a few things that we may covet (including believers):
- Possessions (car, phone, house, electronics, etc.)
- Job. We may tend to complain about our jobs and wish we had a job like so and so.
- Travel. We may tend to complain about how busy we are and wish we could travel like so and so.
- Relationship. We may complain about being single and wish we could have a happily married life like so and so. Or we may complain about the difficulties or burdens of marriage and wish we could have a carefree single life like so and so.
We know it is wrong to covet. (Psalms 10:3, Exodus 20:17, 1 Timothy 6:9-10). How do we guard ourselves from coveting? What is the opposite of coveting? How can we be more proactive to show gratitude for what we have so that we won’t fall into the temptation of coveting?
2. Verses 20-21- God’s plan succeeded. The walls fell and Israel achieved a great victory. God’s plans will never fail. If we obey His words we will surely achieve victory.
The command to destroy all the people of the city –
This was not a new command. It had been given concerning all of the Canaanites in Deuteronomy 7:2-6 and it was applied specifically to the Amelikites in Deuteronomy 25:17-19. There are several reasons given in the Bible why God told Israel to utterly destroy them.
Firstly, they were evil. Their practices were abominable to God. We know both from the Bible and from other historic documents that the Canaanite civilization was perhaps the most wicked and vile ever known in the world (see above). Their sin was a stench in God? nostrils and the very land spewed or vomited them out (Leviticus 18:25). They were descended from Esau and also were exposed to the Israelites and the true teaching from God. Yet they rejected it in favor of a vile, sensuous, and brutal religion. God’s just character requires Him to punish evildoers. Generally He is patient (and He did wait hundreds of years to use Israel to wipe out the Canaanites), but His patience doesn’t last forever and He decided to judge the Amalekites sooner rather than later.
Secondly, according to Deuteronomy 7 and other Scriptures, if any portion of these wicked nations were allowed to remain they would ensnare Israel and lead them away from the true God to worship their false gods and also practice abominat