6/9/17

Jews Invaded Canaan, Conquered/Overcame the Walls of Jericho

Jewish Conquest of Jericho

Those critics of the veracity of the Biblical account of the fall of Jericho to the Jews usually are not well read in the Bible. Since the account is of such importance to those godless atheists determined to defend sin by throwing mud onto the Bible-especially the old testament, I will reply here a bit.

First there are three primary threads useful for getting to a true opinion of the Jericho incident.
1) History
2) Linguistics
3) Archaeological record.

One might ask, did the Jews ever really invade and conquer Canaan? Did they have a reason to falsify the Joshua account? Is the alternative more true. That is, the Jews did not invade Palestine before 1000 a.d., never built the Temple, and the Dome of the Rock built by the Arabs doesn’t exist and is instead a holograph perpatrated by thieves that float the actually Dome on an anti-gravity platform with a need to fool the public?

http://dailysignal.com/2017/06/09/bernie-sanders-shows-lefts-refusal-coexist-traditional-believers/

I will use the King James version for Biblical citations and quotes. It was Shakespeare’s era of English, was translated from the Greek Septuagint translation by 70 Jewish scholars in the 3nd century to 132 B.C. from Hebrew.

This is an article by a Dr. Woods who did his PhD dissertation on bronze age pottery. He finds Kenyon’s recently released final findings off the mark. It has rigorous scholastic standards.


https://youtu.be/AnUnp2qMBCs Jericho archeology

I rather like considering some of the history of what is know about the way the books of the Bible were put together with tools of linguistic philosophy and history.

Ludwig Wittgenstein wrote in the Blue and Brown books of the problem of the indeterminacy of translation, and that certainly is an issue with some parts of the Old Testament.

As I understand it, the Hebrew alphabet wasn’t made to exist as the first phonetic written language before 1500. In my opinion Moses as a Prince of Egypt who would have been about as knowledgeable at hieroglyphic as anyone could be, was the inventor of the Hebrew alphabet as a written language. A literate fellow with time on his hands after exile to live with the Jews. Having learned the Hebrew language too while in Egypt, making his own written language to write in Hebrew rather than Egyptian is a reasonable probable development. Even so the language would have had huge gaps and an inadequate vocabulary for hundreds of years. It would have been slow to develop enough scribes to learn, teach and expand the project.


The Old Testament books of the Pentateuch were assembled in the court of Solomon and Jeroboam circa 1000 B.C. hundreds of years after the events recorded in Joshua. It has been speculated that four different authors put together the Pentateuch and /or revised it. Some of the Old Testament may have been worked on as late a s the 5th century B.C. I believe that much material existed from ancient times but the idea of adding it to a formal group of books was a project that evolved under divine guidance rather than with a master secular plan. The value of the archaeological records is contingent upon an interpretation of the book Joshua account. Or at least the contentiousness is built on finding differences between archaeological, historical and written accounts.

It is safe to say that the Jews conquered Canaan some time, including Joshua, before the time of King David. Jericho was the most important city in early Canaan, and was probably known far and wide for its city walls. To conquer Jericho would entail overcoming its walls. The Greeks overcame the walls of Troy with deceit.

In contrast, pre-Columbian cities in north America had no city walls except for one small walled city found in North Dakota I believe, where a slaughter was discovered to have occurred in battle. That aside, the lack of walled cities exemplifies that the development of defense walls requires particular social circumstances including frequent invaders and location. Wall Mart has locations on frequently traveled route yet uses its wall for sales of consumer goods.

The account of Jericho had to enter the written record some time. Moses is thought to be the progenitor of the first five books (Pentateuch) that made it down through centuries to David, who may actually have been the guy that started the project to get the old testament assembled. Solomon his son was perhaps the sponsor of scholars that worked on correlating the Moses data.

https://www.britannica.com/topic/Yahwist-source

Who wrote the book of Joshua? Joshua himself seems to have composed part of the work. A Bible scholar looked into the issue somewhat and publish an article here.


Keep in mind that the Hebrew alphabet might not yet have been fully developed, and in Wittgenstein’s paradigm of the indeterminacy of translation the meaning of the Joshua account may be amiss. For example;

If there wasn’t an adequate word symbol for beat, victory or trashed, the writer (whoever it was) who may or may not have been an eyewitness summarized the event for ordinary understanding of people of the day- hence- Joshua broadcast psyop music at Jericho for seven days and the walls came down-that is, they surrendered. To defeat Jericho meant to overcome the walls. It could have been a synonym for victory completely disambiguated for all near and far.

Of course one might wonder how many stones for city walls to fall would need to fall. Would it have been adequate for a section of the wall to collapse? If five stones were all that were left standing would that falsify the account.

The entire episode appears to be one of advanced psychological operations against the Canaanite holding the interior lines inside the walled city. For seven days an armed party circled the city with a loud horn making a fearsome or strange sound. Given all that time the insiders may have become terrified and undermined sections of their own walls (at least a dissenting element may have). When the great shout rose on the seventh day fear and terror was at a max and someone pulled the keystones out letting the breach in the walls occur and the Jews pour through.

Joshua 6:20 “20 So the people shouted when the priests blew with the trumpets: and it came to pass, when the people heard the sound of the trumpet, and the people shouted with a great shout, that the wall fell down flat, so that the people went up into the city, every man straight before him, and they took the city.”

It seems to be excellent history for the day. The uncertainty of the exact meaning together with uncertainty about the line of communication from the historical event to inclusion in the Talmud via ancient and no longer extent sources (scrolls) make it fairly high quality in my thought.

Critics of course prefer a naive realist interpretation of the Bible taking it all literally as atheist Biblical literalistic. They don’t go far into consideration of the circumstances of Bible construction at all.


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