The northern campaign
The Lord gives Israel decisive victory over the northern coalition and brings the conquest phase in the land to completion in fulfillment of his promise and command. Joshua’s success rests on divine initiative, not numerical strength, and his obedience is highlighted throughout the unit. The passage
Commentary
11:1 When King Jabin of Hazor heard the news, he organized a coalition, including King Jobab of Madon, the king of Shimron, the king of Acshaph,
11:2 and the northern kings who ruled in the hill country, the Arabah south of Kinnereth, the lowlands, and the heights of Dor to the west.
11:3 Canaanites came from the east and west; Amorites, Hittites, Perizzites, and Jebusites from the hill country; and Hivites from below Hermon in the area of Mizpah.
11:4 These kings came out with their armies; they were as numerous as the sand on the seashore and had a large number of horses and chariots.
11:5 All these kings gathered and joined forces at the Waters of Merom to fight Israel.
11:6 The Lord told Joshua, “Don’t be afraid of them, for about this time tomorrow I will cause all of them to lie dead before Israel. You must hamstring their horses and burn their chariots.”
11:7 Joshua and his whole army caught them by surprise at the Waters of Merom and attacked them.
11:8 The Lord handed them over to Israel and they struck them down and chased them all the way to Greater Sidon, Misrephoth Maim, and the Mizpah Valley to the east. They struck them down until no survivors remained.
11:9 Joshua did to them as the Lord had commanded him; he hamstrung their horses and burned their chariots.
11:10 At that time Joshua turned, captured Hazor, and struck down its king with the sword, for Hazor was at that time the leader of all these kingdoms.
11:11 They annihilated everyone who lived there with the sword – no one who breathed remained – and burned Hazor.
11:12 Joshua captured all these royal cities and all their kings and annihilated them with the sword, as Moses the Lord’s servant had commanded.
11:13 But Israel did not burn any of the cities located on mounds, except for Hazor; it was the only one Joshua burned.
11:14 The Israelites plundered all the goods of these cities and the cattle, but they totally destroyed all the people and allowed no one who breathed to live.
11:15 Moses the Lord’s servant passed on the Lord’s commands to Joshua, and Joshua did as he was told. He did not ignore any of the commands the Lord had given Moses. A Summary of Israel’s Victories
11:16 Joshua conquered the whole land, including the hill country, all the Negev, all the land of Goshen, the lowlands, the Arabah, the hill country of Israel and its lowlands,
11:17 from Mount Halak on up to Seir, as far as Baal Gad in the Lebanon Valley below Mount Hermon. He captured all their kings and executed them.
11:18 Joshua campaigned against these kings for quite some time.
11:19 No city made peace with the Israelites (except the Hivites living in Gibeon); they had to conquer all of them,
11:20 for the Lord determined to make them obstinate so they would attack Israel. He wanted Israel to annihilate them without mercy, as he had instructed Moses.
11:21 At that time Joshua attacked and eliminated the Anakites from the hill country – from Hebron, Debir, Anab, and all the hill country of Judah and Israel. Joshua annihilated them and their cities.
11:22 No Anakites were left in Israelite territory, though some remained in Gaza, Gath, and Ashdod.
11:23 Joshua conquered the whole land, just as the Lord had promised Moses, and he assigned Israel their tribal portions. Then the land was free of war.
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 unit depicts the final stage of Joshua’s southern and northern campaigns in the land of Canaan. Hazor appears as the dominant northern center, and the coalition of city-kings reflects the typical fractured city-state politics of the region. Their horses and chariots indicate superior military technology and mobility, which makes the Lord’s command to disable them especially significant: Israel is not to trust in Canaanite military power or preserve it as a future threat. The narrative assumes a covenantal conquest context in which Israel is executing divine judgment under God’s direct command, not conducting ordinary interstate warfare.
Central idea
The Lord gives Israel decisive victory over the northern coalition and brings the conquest phase in the land to completion in fulfillment of his promise and command. Joshua’s success rests on divine initiative, not numerical strength, and his obedience is highlighted throughout the unit. The passage ends by emphasizing that the land was secured and apportioned to Israel, bringing a measure of rest from war.
Context and flow
This chapter follows the southern campaign of Joshua 10 and serves as the complementary northern campaign. The opening coalition scene and battle at the Waters of Merom lead into the destruction of Hazor, the most important northern center, and then into a summary of the wider conquest. The unit concludes the conquest sequence by recapping the extent of Joshua’s victories, the removal of remaining major resistance, and the allotment of the land.
Exegetical analysis
The chapter opens with the northern kings reacting to Israel’s advance by forming a broad coalition under Jabin of Hazor. The catalog of peoples and regions underscores both the scale of opposition and the geographic breadth of the threat. Their armies are described hyperbolically as innumerable ‘like the sand on the seashore,’ and their horses and chariots point to conventional military superiority.
Verse 6 is the theological center of the scene: the Lord directly encourages Joshua not to fear and promises a swift, total defeat. The command to hamstring the horses and burn the chariots is practical and theological at once. Practically, it disables future military resistance; theologically, it prevents Israel from preserving trust in Canaanite war power. Joshua’s surprise attack at Merom, followed by pursuit and rout, shows that the Lord’s promise governs the outcome. The narrator repeatedly attributes the victory to the Lord: Israel strikes, but the Lord hands the enemy over.
The destruction of Hazor is singled out because Hazor was the leading city of the coalition. The burning of Hazor contrasts with the general practice of not burning the mound cities, suggesting Hazor’s special status and perhaps its representative role as the coalition’s center. The repeated language of total destruction and the extermination of ‘everyone who breathed’ reflects the seriousness of the ban in this covenant setting. Verse 15 explicitly evaluates Joshua’s conduct: he did not neglect any command given through Moses. This is one of the unit’s major interpretive emphases; Joshua is portrayed as the faithful executor of the Mosaic charge.
The summary section broadens the scope from a single battle to the whole land. The text uses compressed victory language to describe the decisive defeat of the principal Canaanite resistance and the securing of territorial control; it does not require a flat reading that every remaining Canaanite presence in the broader region disappeared immediately. Verse 19 clarifies that peace was not obtained through diplomacy except in the case of Gibeon; the conquest occurred because the Lord himself determined to harden the opposition into judgment. This is judicial, not arbitrary: the text presents God as bringing to completion the judgment already merited by the nations. The final verses about the Anakites remove a major source of fear associated with the earlier spies’ report in Numbers, and the closing statement that the land had rest from war marks the completion of this stage of the conquest.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands squarely within the fulfillment of the Mosaic stage of the Abrahamic promise: God is giving Israel the land he swore to their fathers and commanded through Moses. Joshua functions as Moses’ faithful successor, executing the covenantal task of conquest and allotment. At the same time, the final phrase about the land being free of war anticipates rest but does not exhaust the Bible’s rest theme; later Scripture will show that the land promise and the deeper rest it signifies still point forward to fuller realization in God’s redemptive purposes.
Theological significance
The passage displays the Lord’s faithfulness to his word, his sovereignty over nations and battles, and his right to judge sin on his own timetable. It also commends obedient leadership: Joshua is repeatedly praised not for creativity but for exact compliance with what the Lord commanded through Moses. The text highlights both divine judgment and divine gift: the enemy is destroyed, and the land is assigned to Israel. The closing rest-from-war theme shows that peace in the land comes only through God’s victorious action and covenant faithfulness.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No direct prophecy is present in this unit. The conquest and the granting of rest are historically specific events within Israel’s covenant story, though they contribute to later biblical themes of inherited rest, divine kingship, and the subduing of enemies. Those later themes should be traced carefully and not used to turn every conquest detail into a symbol.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The coalition reflects ancient Near Eastern city-state politics, where local kings formed alliances when threatened by a stronger force. The description of kings gathering with horses and chariots presents military prestige in concrete terms familiar to the original audience. The repeated ‘no one who breathed remained’ language is a standard idiom of complete defeat in war narratives and should be read as summary language within the conquest account, not as a license for later readers to apply the same category outside this covenant setting.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
Within the Old Testament, Joshua’s conquest contributes to the larger theme of God giving rest and establishing his people in the land according to promise. Later Scripture reflects on this rest theme and shows that Joshua’s achievement was real but not ultimate. Canonically, the passage contributes to the expectation that God himself must defeat the enemies that threaten his people and bring them into settled inheritance. In the New Testament, the rest theme reaches its fuller theological horizon in Christ, but that development must not erase the passage’s original role as historical covenant fulfillment in Israel.
Practical and doctrinal implications
Believers should see that God’s promises are trustworthy and that obedience matters even when the task seems overwhelming. The passage warns against trusting in visible power, military strength, or human strategy apart from the Lord. It also reminds readers that divine judgment is real and that God is free to harden persistent rebellion in judgment. At the same time, the text must be handled carefully: it is not a general template for religious violence, but a unique covenantal episode in redemptive history.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main crux is verse 20’s statement that the Lord determined to make the Canaanite kings obstinate. The text presents this as judicial hardening within the context of prior rebellion and covenant judgment, not as arbitrary cruelty detached from moral purpose. A second issue is the sweeping language of total conquest; the chapter uses summary formulas to describe decisive victory and territorial control rather than requiring a flat reading that every remaining Canaanite was instantly removed from the broader region.
Application boundary note
This passage must not be used to justify crusades, nationalism, coercive religion, or any modern claim to wage ‘holy war.’ It also should not be collapsed into the church’s mission, since Israel’s conquest under Moses and Joshua belongs to a unique covenantal and historical setting. The proper application is theological and ethical: trust God’s word, obey his commands, and recognize that judgment and rest come from him.
Key Hebrew terms
charam
Gloss: put under the ban, destroy completely
This term underlies the repeated descriptions of total destruction. It signals covenant judgment, not random violence, and is central to the passage’s theology of holy war under divine command.
natan
Gloss: to give, deliver
The Lord’s ‘handing over’ of the enemy frames Israel’s victory as divine grant rather than military achievement. Joshua conquers because God gives the victory.
sus
Gloss: horse
The horses symbolize Canaanite military strength and mobility. Hamstringing them shows intentional disarmament and dependence on the Lord rather than on cavalry.
rekhev
Gloss: chariot
The chariots represent advanced military power and regional prestige. Burning them prevents Israel from adopting or relying on the very war machine that had supported the coalition.
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