Rahab shelters the spies
God is already handing the land over to Israel, and Rahab’s confession makes clear that Jericho knows it. Her faith leads her to shelter the spies and seek mercy for her household, and the spies bind themselves by oath to spare those gathered under the sign of the red cord. The chapter therefore joi
Commentary
2:1 Joshua son of Nun sent two spies out from Shittim secretly and instructed them: “Find out what you can about the land, especially Jericho.” They stopped at the house of a prostitute named Rahab and spent the night there.
2:2 The king of Jericho received this report: “Note well! Israelite men have come here tonight to spy on the land.”
2:3 So the king of Jericho sent this order to Rahab: “Turn over the men who came to you – the ones who came to your house – for they have come to spy on the whole land!”
2:4 But the woman hid the two men and replied, “Yes, these men were clients of mine, but I didn’t know where they came from.
2:5 When it was time to shut the city gate for the night, the men left. I don’t know where they were heading. Chase after them quickly, for you have time to catch them!”
2:6 (Now she had taken them up to the roof and had hidden them in the stalks of flax she had spread out on the roof.)
2:7 Meanwhile the king’s men tried to find them on the road to the Jordan River near the fords. The city gate was shut as soon as they set out in pursuit of them.
2:8 Now before the spies went to sleep, Rahab went up to the roof.
2:9 She said to the men, “I know the Lord is handing this land over to you. We are absolutely terrified of you, and all who live in the land are cringing before you.
2:10 For we heard how the Lord dried up the water of the Red Sea before you when you left Egypt and how you annihilated the two Amorite kings, Sihon and Og, on the other side of the Jordan.
2:11 When we heard the news we lost our courage and no one could even breathe for fear of you. For the Lord your God is God in heaven above and on earth below!
2:12 So now, promise me this with an oath sworn in the Lord’s name. Because I have shown allegiance to you, show allegiance to my family. Give me a solemn pledge
2:13 that you will spare the lives of my father, mother, brothers, sisters, and all who belong to them, and rescue us from death.”
2:14 The men said to her, “If you die, may we die too! If you do not report what we’ve been up to, then, when the Lord hands the land over to us, we will show unswerving allegiance to you.”
2:15 Then Rahab let them down by a rope through the window. (Her house was built as part of the city wall; she lived in the wall.)
2:16 She told them, “Head to the hill country, so the ones chasing you don’t find you. Hide from them there for three days, long enough for those chasing you to return. Then you can be on your way.”
2:17 The men said to her, “We are not bound by this oath you made us swear unless the following conditions are met:
2:18 When we invade the land, tie this red rope in the window through which you let us down, and gather together in your house your father, mother, brothers, and all who live in your father’s house.
2:19 Anyone who leaves your house will be responsible for his own death – we are innocent in that case! But if anyone with you in the house is harmed, we will be responsible.
2:20 If you should report what we’ve been up to, we are not bound by this oath you made us swear.”
2:21 She said, “I agree to these conditions.” She sent them on their way and then tied the red rope in the window.
2:22 They went to the hill country and stayed there for three days, long enough for those chasing them to return. Their pursuers looked all along the way but did not find them.
2:23 Then the two men returned – they came down from the hills, crossed the river, came to Joshua son of Nun, and reported to him all they had discovered.
2:24 They told Joshua, “Surely the Lord is handing over all the land to us! All who live in the land are cringing before us!”
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Historical setting and dynamics
The scene is set on the threshold of the conquest, with Israel still east of the Jordan and Jericho functioning as a strategic frontier city guarding access into the land. Joshua’s secret reconnaissance is a prudent military step, not a challenge to Yahweh’s promise. Rahab’s house is located on the city wall, which explains both the spies’ concealment and their escape route. The city’s king responds with ordinary ancient Near Eastern counterintelligence and gate security, but the narrative emphasizes that fear has already spread inside Jericho because of what Yahweh has done in Israel’s recent history.
Central idea
God is already handing the land over to Israel, and Rahab’s confession makes clear that Jericho knows it. Her faith leads her to shelter the spies and seek mercy for her household, and the spies bind themselves by oath to spare those gathered under the sign of the red cord. The chapter therefore joins judgment on Canaan with mercy for the outsider who aligns herself with Yahweh and his people.
Context and flow
This unit opens the conquest section of Joshua by moving from commission (Joshua 1) to reconnaissance and testimony before the Jordan crossing and the fall of Jericho. The chapter is structured in two main movements: the secret mission and concealment of the spies (vv. 1–7), then Rahab’s confession and the sworn agreement (vv. 8–21), followed by the spies’ safe return and report to Joshua (vv. 22–24). Rahab’s speech in the middle is the theological center, and the final report echoes her confession almost verbatim, confirming that what she said is now the spies’ conclusion.
Exegetical analysis
The narrative begins with Joshua’s secret sending of two spies from Shittim toward Jericho. The secrecy is practical and tactical; the text does not criticize the mission. The irony is immediate: the Israelite spies are sheltered not by an Israelite but by Rahab, a Canaanite woman identified as a prostitute, whose house appears to have been a natural place for travelers and thus a plausible cover for clandestine activity.
Verses 2–7 contrast the king of Jericho’s alarm with Rahab’s hidden loyalty. The king’s report and pursuit show that Jericho is alert, but the city’s security is already compromised because Yahweh is at work. Rahab’s concealment of the spies is narrated plainly; the text reports her deception without pausing to commend the lie itself. The emphasis falls instead on her decisive alignment with Israel’s God and people.
Rahab’s speech in verses 9–11 is the theological center of the unit. She does not merely express fear; she interprets Israel’s history correctly. The drying up of the Red Sea, the defeat of Sihon and Og, and the collapse of Canaanite courage all testify that Yahweh has acted in power. Her confession, 'the Lord your God is God in heaven above and on earth below,' is a remarkable statement of Yahweh’s universal sovereignty coming from a Canaanite mouth. In the story’s logic, she believes what Jericho fears.
Her request in verses 12–13 is built on the language of chesed and oath. She has shown kindness or loyalty to the spies, and she seeks the same kind of pledged loyalty for her father’s house. The spies answer in verse 14 with a reciprocal oath, but they also condition their promise: Rahab must not betray them. The agreement is legal and covenantal in form, sworn in Yahweh’s name, which makes it more than a private favor.
The red cord in the window functions as the agreed sign of protection. The text does not present it as a magical object; it is a visible marker tied to the oath and to the confinement of Rahab’s household within the house. The household solidarity is crucial: those gathered inside are protected, while those who leave the house bear responsibility for their own death. In a siege context, this is concrete and intelligible, not symbolic abstraction.
The final movements confirm the narrative outcome. Rahab sends the men away, they hide in the hill country for three days, and then they return safely to Joshua. The report in verse 24 mirrors Rahab’s confession in verses 9–11: the Lord is handing over the land, and the inhabitants are cringing. That repetition closes the circle. What Rahab knew by faith and what the spies now report by observation converge on the same conclusion: Yahweh has already given the land.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands at the threshold of the land promise’s historical fulfillment. Israel is entering Canaan under the Mosaic covenant, but the land itself still belongs to the stage of the Abrahamic promise being realized in history. Rahab’s preservation shows that judgment on Canaan is real, yet mercy is available to one who acknowledges Yahweh and identifies herself with his people. The passage therefore preserves Israel’s distinct covenant role while also hinting that Yahweh’s saving purpose is not limited by ethnicity, even though that wider development remains to be unfolded later in Scripture.
Theological significance
The passage reveals Yahweh’s sovereignty over nations, lands, and histories. It shows that hearing and rightly interpreting God’s mighty acts is the foundation of faith, and that faith may appear first in an unexpected outsider. It also displays the seriousness of oath-taking in the Lord’s name, the moral weight of covenant loyalty, and the reality that judgment and mercy meet in the same historical moment. The text also reminds readers that Scripture can report morally complex human actions without making every action normative or exemplary.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No direct prophecy appears here, but the unit does contain a restrained redemptive pattern: a believing outsider is spared under judgment and brought into the sphere of Israel’s blessing. Rahab later becomes an important example of faith in the New Testament and appears in the messianic genealogy, but those later developments should not erase the passage’s own focus on conquest, oath, and mercy. The red cord is a narrative sign of protection, not a free-standing symbol to be over-allegorized.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The passage assumes strong household solidarity: Rahab seeks safety for her father’s house, and the oath extends to the whole family unit. Honor-shame logic also matters, since Rahab’s allegiance publicly transfers from Jericho to Yahweh’s people. The sealed city gate, pursuit to the fords, and the use of the roof for concealment all fit the practical realities of an ancient fortified city. The house on the wall is not incidental; it is the means of escape and the place of protection.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In Joshua itself, the passage is about the Lord’s conquest and the incorporation of a believing Canaanite into the sphere of mercy. Canonically, Rahab becomes a pattern of faith later praised in Hebrews and James and is included in the genealogy of Jesus in Matthew. That later use is legitimate because it grows out of the text’s own witness to faith under judgment, but the original meaning must remain intact: this is first a conquest narrative in which Yahweh saves an outsider who confesses him and shelters his servants.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God’s promises can be trusted before they are visible, and his prior acts in history are meant to be remembered and believed. Faith is not bare acknowledgment but a decisive turning to Yahweh that expresses itself in allegiance, courage, and mercy. The passage also teaches that covenants and oaths are serious before God and must not be treated lightly. At the same time, readers should not turn Rahab’s deception into a general ethical model; the text commends her faith and her protection of the spies, not deception as such.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive crux is Rahab’s deception: the narrator clearly presents it, but the text does not explicitly commend it. The stronger emphasis is on her faith, her confession of Yahweh’s sovereignty, and her protection of the spies. A second issue is the red cord: it is a covenantal sign within the story, not a detached symbol to be over-read.
Application boundary note
Do not use this passage to justify lying in general, to erase Israel’s historical role in the conquest, or to flatten the distinction between Israel and later Gentile inclusion in the canon. The red cord should not be treated as a magical object or an independent sacrament. Application should remain tied to the passage’s own emphasis on Yahweh’s sovereignty, oath-keeping, and merciful rescue of the one who believes.
Key Hebrew terms
zonah
Gloss: prostitute; woman of illicit sexual activity
The term is morally and socially weighty. It identifies Rahab as an outsider with a compromised social status, which heightens the force of her later confession of faith and the mercy extended to her.
natan
Gloss: to give, place, hand over
Repeated language of Yahweh 'handing over' the land frames the conquest as divine gift and judgment, not merely Israelite military success.
mug
Gloss: to melt, dissolve, lose heart
The Canaanites are described as emotionally and spiritually collapsing before Yahweh’s acts, underscoring the totality of their fear and the certainty of conquest.
chesed
Gloss: loyal love, covenant loyalty, kindness
Rahab asks for chesed and the spies promise chesed in return. In this passage it is not mere sentiment but faithful, pledged loyalty expressed through oath and action.
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