around them, as all were idolaters; but God
commanded them, in certain cases, to spare the inhabitants.
Contact with any of them would be perilous—with
the inhabitants of the cities peculiarly, and
of the Canaanitish cities pre-eminently so.
The 10th and 11th verses contain the general rule
prescribing the method in which cities were to be
summoned to surrender. They were first to receive
the offer of peace—if it was accepted,
the inhabitants became tributaries—but
if they came out against Israel in battle, the men
were to be killed, and the woman and little ones saved
alive. The 15th verse restricts this lenient
treatment to the inhabitants of the cities afar
off. The 16th directs as to the disposal
of the inhabitants of the Canaanitish cities.
They were to save alive “nothing that breathed.”
The common mistake has been, in supposing that the
command in the 15th verse refers to the whole system
of directions preceding, commencing with the 10th,
whereas it manifestly refers only to the inflictions
specified in the 12th, 13th, and, 14th, making a distinction
between those Canaanitish cities that fought,
and the cities afar off that fought—in
one case destroying the males and females, and in
the other, the males only. The offer of
peace, and the conditional preservation, were
as really guarantied to Canaanitish cities
as to others. Their inhabitants were not to be
exterminated unless they came out against Israel in
battle. Whatever be the import of the commands
respecting the disposition to be made of the Canaanites,
all admit the fact that the Israelites did not
utterly exterminate them. Now, if entire and
unconditional extermination was the command of God,
it was never obeyed by the Israelites, consequently
the truth of God stood pledged to consign them
to the same doom which he had pronounced upon the
Canaanites, but which they had refused to visit upon
them. “If ye will not drive out all the
inhabitants of the land from before you, then it shall
come to pass that * * I shall do unto you as I
thought to do unto them.” Num. xxxiii.
55, 56. As the Israelites were not exterminated,
we infer that God did not pronounce that doom
upon them; and as he did pronounce upon them
the same doom, whatever it was, which they
should refuse to visit upon the Canaanites,
it follows that the doom of unconditional extermination
was not pronounced against the Canaanites.
But let us settle this question by the “law
and the testimony.” “There was not
a city that made peace with the children of Israel
save the Hivites, the inhabitants of Gibeon; all others
they took in battle. For it was of the Lord to
harden their hearts, that they should COME OUT AGAINST
ISRAEL IN BATTLE, that he might destroy them utterly,
and that they might have no favor, but that he might
destroy them, as the Lord commanded Moses.”