Achan's sin and judgment
Israel's defeat at Ai was not a military failure but a covenant failure: Achan secretly violated the ban by taking what belonged to the Lord, and his sin brought guilt, judgment, and loss on the whole people. God therefore exposes the hidden offense, requires its removal, and restores the holiness n
Commentary
7:1 But the Israelites disobeyed the command about the city’s riches. Achan son of Carmi, son of Zabdi, son of Zerah, from the tribe of Judah, stole some of the riches. The Lord was furious with the Israelites.
7:2 Joshua sent men from Jericho to Ai (which is located near Beth Aven, east of Bethel) and instructed them, “Go up and spy on the land.” So the men went up and spied on Ai.
7:3 They returned and reported to Joshua, “Don’t send the whole army. About two or three thousand men are adequate to defeat Ai. Don’t tire out the whole army, for Ai is small.”
7:4 So about three thousand men went up, but they fled from the men of Ai.
7:5 The men of Ai killed about thirty-six of them and chased them from in front of the city gate all the way to the fissures and defeated them on the steep slope. The people’s courage melted away like water.
7:6 Joshua tore his clothes; he and the leaders of Israel lay face down on the ground before the ark of the Lord until evening and threw dirt on their heads.
7:7 Joshua prayed, “O, Master, Lord! Why did you bring these people across the Jordan to hand us over to the Amorites so they could destroy us?
7:8 If only we had been satisfied to live on the other side of the Jordan! O Lord, what can I say now that Israel has retreated before its enemies?
7:9 When the Canaanites and all who live in the land hear about this, they will turn against us and destroy the very memory of us from the earth. What will you do to protect your great reputation?”
7:10 The Lord responded to Joshua, “Get up! Why are you lying there face down?
7:11 Israel has sinned; they have violated my covenantal commandment! They have taken some of the riches; they have stolen them and deceitfully put them among their own possessions.
7:12 The Israelites are unable to stand before their enemies; they retreat because they have become subject to annihilation. I will no longer be with you, unless you destroy what has contaminated you.
7:13 Get up! Ritually consecrate the people and tell them this: ‘Ritually consecrate yourselves for tomorrow, because the Lord God of Israel says, “You are contaminated, O Israel! You will not be able to stand before your enemies until you remove what is contaminating you.”
7:14 In the morning you must approach in tribal order. The tribe the Lord selects must approach by clans. The clan the Lord selects must approach by families. The family the Lord selects must approach man by man.
7:15 The one caught with the riches must be burned up along with all who belong to him, because he violated the Lord’s covenant and did such a disgraceful thing in Israel.’”
7:16 Bright and early the next morning Joshua made Israel approach in tribal order and the tribe of Judah was selected.
7:17 He then made the clans of Judah approach and the clan of the Zerahites was selected. He made the clan of the Zerahites approach and Zabdi was selected.
7:18 He then made Zabdi’s family approach man by man and Achan son of Carmi, son of Zabdi, son of Zerah, from the tribe of Judah, was selected.
7:19 So Joshua said to Achan, “My son, honor the Lord God of Israel and give him praise! Tell me what you did; don’t hide anything from me!”
7:20 Achan told Joshua, “It is true. I have sinned against the Lord God of Israel in this way:
7:21 I saw among the goods we seized a nice robe from Babylon, two hundred silver pieces, and a bar of gold weighing fifty shekels. I wanted them, so I took them. They are hidden in the ground right in the middle of my tent with the silver underneath.”
7:22 Joshua sent messengers who ran to the tent. The things were hidden right in his tent, with the silver underneath.
7:23 They took it all from the middle of the tent, brought it to Joshua and all the Israelites, and placed it before the Lord.
7:24 Then Joshua and all Israel took Achan, son of Zerah, along with the silver, the robe, the bar of gold, his sons, daughters, ox, donkey, sheep, tent, and all that belonged to him and brought them up to the Valley of Disaster.
7:25 Joshua said, “Why have you brought disaster on us? The Lord will bring disaster on you today!” All Israel stoned him to death. (They also stoned and burned the others.)
7:26 Then they erected over him a large pile of stones (it remains to this very day) and the Lord’s anger subsided. So that place is called the Valley of Disaster to this very day.
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.
Context notes
This unit follows the fall of Jericho and explains Israel's unexpected defeat at Ai.
Historical setting and dynamics
The scene belongs to the early conquest period under Joshua, when Israel is entering the land under the terms of the Mosaic covenant. Jericho had been placed under the ḥerem, the ban, meaning its devoted goods belonged to the Lord and were not for private plunder. Ai is a smaller town near Bethel, and the defeat there is startling precisely because Israel has just experienced divine victory. The narrative also reflects ancient covenant and household solidarity: one man's covenant breach brings guilt and trouble on the whole community until the contamination is removed. The use of lots to identify the offender accords with a recognized biblical means of discerning divine choice and judgment. The one historical difficulty the chapter raises is the judgment on Achan's household: the text includes them in the proceedings, but it does not spell out each person's degree of knowledge or participation.
Central idea
Israel's defeat at Ai was not a military failure but a covenant failure: Achan secretly violated the ban by taking what belonged to the Lord, and his sin brought guilt, judgment, and loss on the whole people. God therefore exposes the hidden offense, requires its removal, and restores the holiness needed for Israel to stand before its enemies.
Context and flow
Joshua 7 stands between the victory at Jericho and the renewed campaign that will follow at Ai in chapter 8. The chapter first reports the transgression and the immediate defeat, then moves to Joshua's lament, the Lord's diagnosis, the lot-identification of the guilty party, Achan's confession, and the execution of judgment. The literary movement turns from inexplicable loss to revealed cause, from corporate humiliation to cleansing, and finally to the restoration of divine anger.
Exegetical analysis
The chapter opens with the narrator's blunt diagnosis: 'the Israelites disobeyed' the command regarding the devoted things, and Achan is named as the individual offender, yet the Lord's anger falls on 'the Israelites' corporately. That corporate framing is crucial; the covenant people are treated as a united body, so one man's hidden violation contaminates the whole camp. Joshua's reconnaissance of Ai is ordinary military prudence, but the spies' confidence shows a subtle human presumption after Jericho. The defeat is therefore both real and theological: the text does not attribute it to inferior tactics but to divine withdrawal. Joshua and the elders respond appropriately at first with mourning before the ark, yet Joshua's prayer misreads the situation by assuming that the problem is the Lord's purposes rather than Israel's sin. The Lord's answer is severe and clarifying: Israel has sinned, broken covenant, stolen, lied, and put the devoted thing among its own goods. The accumulation of verbs intensifies the offense and shows that private possession has become covenant contamination. The command to consecrate the people signals that the issue is not merely military but holy; Israel cannot stand before enemies while uncleanness remains in the camp. The lot procedure narrows the search in a public, God-directed way from tribe to clan to family to individual, demonstrating that the hidden offense will not remain hidden before the Lord. Achan's confession is honest but revealing: he 'saw,' 'wanted,' and 'took' what he saw, a sequence that echoes the pattern of disordered desire and grasping possession. The robe, silver, and gold are attractive spoil, but the sin is not desire alone; it is taking what was forbidden and hiding it 'in the middle of my tent,' a deliberate attempt to conceal covenant breach at the center of household life. The retrieval and public placement of the goods before the Lord make the offense visible again, now under judgment rather than concealment. The closing execution is among the most sobering moments in Joshua. The text presents it as covenant judgment on 'the one who has violated the Lord's covenant' and as the removal of what brought disaster on Israel. The involvement of Achan's household is the chief crux. The passage states that Joshua and all Israel brought Achan, along with his sons, daughters, ox, donkey, sheep, tent, and all that belonged to him, to the Valley of Disaster, and that they stoned him and the others; but it does not explicitly tell us the degree of each family member's knowledge or direct participation. The safest reading is that the household fell under covenant liability with Achan and shared in the judgment attached to the hidden offense, while the narrative still keeps Achan as the primary covenant violator. The closing memorial pile of stones functions as a permanent witness to the holiness of God and the cost of hidden sin.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage belongs squarely within the Mosaic covenant administration of Israel's life in the land. Jericho had been devoted to the Lord, and disobedience there threatened the very possibility of covenant blessing in Canaan. The chapter shows that possession of the land is not a blank check; the holy God must dwell among a holy people. It also intensifies the need for a faithful covenant head and for cleansing that can truly remove guilt, themes that continue to develop through Israel's history and find their fullest resolution beyond Joshua himself.
Theological significance
The passage reveals God's holiness, covenant jealousy, and willingness to discipline his people when his commands are violated. It also shows the seriousness of hidden sin, the corporate nature of covenant life, and the fact that private disobedience has public consequences. Human leadership, military strength, and outward success are insufficient if the camp is contaminated. Confession, exposure, and removal of sin are necessary before renewed blessing can come.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No major prophecy or direct messianic oracle appears in this unit. The most important symbols are the ban on Jericho's goods, the lots used to expose guilt, and the pile of stones that memorializes judgment. These elements should be read first in their own covenant setting. Later biblical reuse of the 'Valley of Trouble' language gives the location broader theological resonance, but that later development should not be forced back into the original narrative.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The passage depends on ancient covenant and household thinking. One man's act implicates the camp because the community is not an individualistic collection but a covenant body under one Lord. The lots reflect a worldview in which God governs hidden realities and can publicly identify the guilty. The tent is also significant as the center of household life; hiding the devoted things there symbolizes concealment in the most personal sphere of ownership and identity. The repeated public movement from tribe to clan to family to man emphasizes honor, shame, and communal accountability.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In the Old Testament setting, the chapter teaches that the holy God must purge sin before his people can advance in the land. Later Scripture develops that pattern by showing that Israel repeatedly needs cleansing, faithful leadership, and mercy beyond itself. The Valley of Trouble later becomes a meaningful biblical memory, and the larger canon increasingly points to the need for a truly obedient covenant head who can bear judgment without destroying the people he represents. That trajectory prepares readers for the greater Joshua and, ultimately, for Christ, though the passage itself remains a historical judgment narrative and should not be allegorized beyond its own covenant role.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God sees what people hide, and secret sin is never merely private. Leaders should not mistake success for spiritual health, nor should they presume on past victories. Corporate worship and service require moral seriousness and repentance where there has been covenant unfaithfulness. The passage also warns against possessiveness toward what belongs to God and against the temptation to justify disobedience by personal desire. For the covenant community, holiness is not optional; removal of sin is necessary for restored fellowship and effective witness.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The chief interpretive difficulty is the scope of judgment on Achan's household and how to relate corporate covenant solidarity to individual culpability. The text clearly presents the judgment, but it does not explicitly describe each family member's knowledge or participation. The strongest reading is that the household shared covenant liability because the banned goods were hidden in the tent and the entire unit was treated as implicated in the offense. That is textually safer than either denying the household judgment or claiming more personal guilt than the passage states.
Application boundary note
This passage should not be flattened into a simple proof text for modern civil penalties or used to erase the difference between Israel's theocratic judgment and the church's discipline. Its covenantal setting matters. The hidden-sin warning is directly applicable, but the specific judicial action belongs to Israel's unique historical situation under Mosaic administration. Likewise, the text does not license overconfident claims about the personal culpability of Achan's children beyond what it explicitly states.
Key Hebrew terms
ḥērem
Gloss: something devoted to destruction or reserved for God
The key concept in the chapter. Jericho's spoil was under the ban, so Achan's private taking of it was not ordinary theft but sacrilege against what belonged to the Lord.
māʿal
Gloss: to deal treacherously, be unfaithful
Describes covenant treachery rather than a mere mistake. The offense is relational and covenantal, not only legal.
qādash
Gloss: to sanctify, set apart
Joshua is told to consecrate the people because the camp must be prepared to confront and remove defilement before God can again be with them.
ʿākar
Gloss: to trouble, disturb, bring calamity
Forms the wordplay behind the Valley of Disaster/Trouble. Achan's sin has brought 'trouble' on Israel, and the memorial stone fixes that judgment in memory.
Interpretive cautions
Read the household judgment as a textually stated covenant liability issue; do not speculate beyond what the passage explicitly says about each family member's knowledge or participation.
Related Bible Maps
These external map and atlas resources may help locate the places mentioned in this page. External resources open in a separate browser context and are not copied, embedded, altered, hotlinked, or rehosted by AI Bible Commentary.
Related BibleHub Atlas Links
These links open BibleHub Atlas pages in a small external reference window. AI Bible Commentary does not copy, embed, alter, hotlink, or rehost BibleHub map images or atlas content.