Hebrew Life and Times eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 170 pages of information about Hebrew Life and Times.

Hebrew Life and Times eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 170 pages of information about Hebrew Life and Times.

During the twelfth and eleventh centuries before Christ there was an unusually good opportunity for nomads to settle in Palestine.  Before and after that time there were strong empires in control of the land protecting it from invasion.  The Greeks and Romans long afterward built a line of fortified towns east of the Jordan on the border of the desert, whose ruins may be seen to-day.  In similar ways the Babylonians and the Egyptians had occupied and defended the country.  But just about the time when the Hebrews escaped from Egypt, and for a century and more afterward, both the Egyptian and Babylonian governments were weak.  And as the various petty kings of Canaan itself were usually at war with each other, there was no strong government anywhere whose soldiers newcomers would have to face.

=The first invasion from the south.=—­Very soon after leaving the mountain of Sinai the Hebrew tribes found themselves on the southern edge of Canaan, in what was afterward known as the South Country, south of Judah.  Scouts were sent up as far as the town of Hebron, which was afterward for a time the capital of Judah, to investigate and report on conditions there.  They returned with a glowing account of the fertility of the soil.  It is even stated in the Hebrew traditions that they brought back as a sample of the crops, one bunch of grapes so large that it had to be carried on a pole between two men.

But with the exception of one of their leaders, a certain Caleb, all the men reported that the cities were strongly fortified and the inhabitants so warlike that an invasion was out of the question.  The people adopted this “majority report” in spite of the protests of Moses.  It is probable that the life in Egypt, with something of ease and luxury for a time, and then so many years of slavery, had sapped their courage and will power.  At any rate, after a brief encounter with some of the tribesmen nearby, they fled in panic into the desert again.

THE WILDERNESS WANDERINGS

There followed, for a generation and more, a period of training somewhat like that which Boy Scouts receive, or should receive, on their “hikes” and camping trips.  They learned to be independent and resourceful.  It was at times very difficult to find food for themselves, or pasture for their sheep, and there was nothing to eat but the “manna,” which they believed their God provided for them, and which was perhaps in the nature of an edible moss or lichen.  At times there was a terrible scarcity of water.  Always there was the danger of losing their way on those trackless wastes, and in this matter also they learned to look to their God as their pillar of cloud by day and their pillar of fire by night, guiding them from oasis to oasis in their search for food and pasturage.  Then there were wild beasts and poisonous serpents and, worst of all, hostile tribes with whom more than once they had to fight for their lives.

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Hebrew Life and Times from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.