by jimwalton » Tue Jun 17, 2014 2:33 pm
Thanks for the question. It's a general rule of proper textual interpretation that a text should be read for what its author meant to say and what its first readers or hearers would have heard it say, so let's look into that.
Warfare bravado ("Kill 'em all!") was conventional warfare rhetoric in the ancient near East, and is common in military accounts. What we find out from those accounts is that genocide or total slaughter were not the intent of the language, but victory.
- Egypt's Tuthmoses III (15th c BC) boasted that "the numerous army of Mitanni was overthrown within the hour, annihilated totally, like those (now) not existent." But the fact was that Mitanni's forces were merely conquered, and lived on to fight again and again in the 15th and 14th centuries.
- Hittite king Mursilli II (1322-1295 BC) recorded making "Mt. Asharpaya empty (of humanity)" and the "mountains of Tarikarimu empty (of humanity)." It was rhetoric, not reality.
- The "Bulletin" of Ramses II tells of Egypt's less-than-spectacular victories in Syria (1274 BC). Nevertheless, he announces that he slew "the entire force" of the Hittites, indeed, "all the chiefs of all the countries," disregarding the "millions of foreigners," which he considered chaff. All bravado, little fact.
- In the Merneptah Stele (c. 1230 BC), Rameses II's son Merneptah announced, "Israel is wasted, his seed is not." Quite a premature declaration, given what we know of history.
- Moab's king Mesha (840/830 BC) bragged that the northern kingdom of "Israel has utterly perished for always." Well, not in 840 BC they didn't. the Assyrians devastated Israel in 722.
- The Assyrian ruler Sennacherib (701-681 BC) used similar hyperbole and pomposity: "the soldiers of Hirimme, dangerous enemies, I cut down with the sword, and not one escaped." Again, not so.
So you see, it was common warfare grandiloquence to say, "Kill them all!" before a war, and "we killed 'em all" after a war, as a way of saying, "Let's win this," and "we won!" Nobody killed all of anybody. THEY would have understood this stuff. WE don't. We read the text and think, "Bloody jerks!" but it means we don't understand the ancient cultures.
If we go to the biblical accounts, we find out the exact same thing as the surrounding cultures: it wasn't genocide at all, or even the killing of infants. Their battle cry pertained to the armed soldiers, and that's who they killed. They didn't slaughter everyone and everything, and they knew that wasn't the command. It was part of their idiom that we don't understand, being 3000 years removed from it, but these archaeological discoveries help us understand.
- Duet. 7.2 commands the armies to "kill them all," and then in v. 3 warns them not to intermarry with them. Well, they can't intermarry if they're all dead. There was no inference to kill them all, but only to achieve victory.
- Numbers 31: "Kill all the Midianites!" Didn't happen. The Midianites were a large, scattered confederation of Bedouin and nomadic tribes. They hardly had cities, though there were a few. The Israelites are not riding through the entire Middle East slaughtering innocents. Here is it those particular Midianites associated with Moab that are targeted. This particular collection of villages and been hostile to Israel, and they had been a moral detriment to the people. They had instigated hostility against them, and it was time for military action. The Israelites did execute the 5 kings of Midian (Num. 31.8), but this is by no means a genocide. The Midianites show up later in the times of the Judges (Judges 6.1), to confirm for us that the ethnic group was not wiped from the face of the earth. Gideon defeated them in Judges 7, but they're still around as a people group. The prophet Habakkuk (Hab. 3.7) mentions them in about 600 BC, so they're still around then.
- Joshua 6: From what we know of Canaanite life in that era, Jericho and Ai were military strongholds with little or no civilian populations. Israel's war was directed towards military personnel and governmental installations, not the women, children, and elderly. The use of women, children, and elderly, in their battle commands and war cries were merely stock cultural language for victory.
- Joshua 10 & 11: The text says all the kings were defeated, all the Canaanites were destroy, and Joshua took the whole land. Josh. 10.40. but Joshua himself acknowledged that wasn't literally so (Josh. 13.1, 13; 15.63; 16.10; 17.12-13, 18. So does the Bible: Judges 1.21, 27-28.
- Joshua 11.22: Joshua says there were no Anakim left in the land. but in Josh. 14.12-15, Caleb asked Joshua for permission to go to war against the Anakim.
- 1 Sam. 15.3. Yeah, not so. "Kill them all" in v. 3, but the Amalekites remain in 1 Sam. 27.8; 30.17-18, and even hundreds of years later (1 Chr. 4.43).
The Bible isn't lying, and Joshua & Moses weren't being deceptive. It's the way they talked.
The point was not to kill the people, but to drive them out (Dt. 7.1).
God was far more concerned about the destruction of the Canaanite religion and idols than Canaanite people. (Josh. 23.7, 12-13; 15.63; 16.17-10; Jer. 18.18; Jonah 4.11 and many more).
Also, God repeatedly expressed his love for the foreign peoples (Gn. 12.3; Lev. 19.34; 24.22; Num. 35.15; Dt. 10.18-19 and many more), if they would just turn to him and worship in truth rather than be misled by lies.
So it wasn't genocide, as it seems to read. We just need to know more of the context, culture, and language.