In the Old Testament, God commands the Israelites to possess the fertile crescent and wipe out its inhabitants. This has been called “genocide” and smells rancid to the modern conscience. It is a bit of an embarrassment in a society that champions tolerance, peace, and religious coexistence. Prominent atheists call the God of the Old Testament ruthless, and point to the invasion of the Promised Land as nothing but barbarism: “indiscriminate massacre and ethnic cleansing”. The war passages are not the favorites of most Christians either. How many Bible study application questions have you heard like, “What does the total annihilation of the Canaanites mean for your relationship with your neighbors?” Many Christian traditions object to war outright (like my wife’s family’s denomination, the Brethren in Christ). What then do we do with a God who orders the mass destruction of an entire ethnic group? What do we do with verses like this?:
However, in the cities of the nations the Lord your God is giving you as an inheritance, do not leave alive anything that breathes. Completely destroy them—the Hittites, Amorites, Canaanites, Perizzites, Hivites and Jebusites—as the Lord your God has commanded you. (Deuteronomy 20:16-17)
We believe in an unchanging, loving God. He is Love, so much that he incarnated himself in Immanuel to offer the free gift of salvation to all peoples. So what do we make of the killing of the Canaanites? Some considerations, leaning very heavily on (and inspired by) Paul Copan’s book Is God a Moral Monster?, might help to justify the destruction of the Canaanites.
Semitic Exaggeration Rhetoric: How Brutal Was the Invasion?
Some cultural and linguistic evidence shows that the invasions of Canaan were probably not as brutal as we think at first glance. The account of the conquest of Canaan is filled with the language of “total destruction”, for example, from Joshua 10:
So Joshua subdued the whole region, including the hill country, the Negev, the western foothills and the mountain slopes, together with all their kings. He left no survivors. He totally destroyed all [haram] who breathed, just as the Lord, the God of Israel, had commanded.
But Copan points out the problem: later in Joshua and Judges, the very same people that were totally destroyed appear again! The Jebusites appear again (Judges 1:21), and the Anakim appear again in the hill country (to be driven out by Caleb) even though “there were no Anakim left in the land…they were utterly destroyed in the hill country” (Joshua 11:21-22). In Judges 1-2, God says that he will “stop driving out” the people before Israel because of their sin: so the destruction was a gradual process of smothering the Canaanite culture and religion, not a once-and-done massacre. How? The “total destruction” language isn’t literal. Rather, it is using exaggeration as a rhetorical style. It was common ancient Near Eastern culture to exaggerate conquests using obliteration language, similar to how one boy today would say to another, “Dude, you totally destroyed him.” For example, Copan says:
Egypt’s Tuthmosis III (later fifteenth century) boasted that ‘the numerous army of Mitanni was overthrown within the hour, annihilated totally, like those now not existent.’ In fact, Mitanni’s forces lived on to fight in the fifteenth and fourteenth centuries BC. (p. 172)
This kind of hyperbole can also be found in the records of the Hittite Mursilli II, the Egyptians Rameses II and Merneptah, the Moabite Mesha, and the Assyrian Sennacherib.
The fact that haram might not necessarily mean killing everyone is evident in Deuteronomy 7. In verse 2, God tells them to utterly destroy (haram) the seven Canaanite nations, but then, as Copan points out, he tells them not to intermarry with them. How can you intermarry with dead people? The whole context of Chapter 7 shows that God is primarily creating a ban on Canaanite thinking and culture – they are to be shunned and debased as unclean. The focus is on destroying their religion: verse 5 continues with, “Break down their altars, smash their sacred stones, cut down their Asherah poles and burn their idols in the fire. For you are a people holy to the Lord your God.” Copan cites scholars that haram is thus focusing on obliterating political/military strongholds, desecrating religious symbols (high places, temples, etc.), and “driving out” or dispossessing the people of the land. In other words, the focus of the ban was on wiping out the corrupted Canaanite identity and culture, and above all their idolatry, not so much on taking the lives of the Canaanites themselves.
A last note is that the Old Testament commonly refers to “driving out” and “dispossessing” the Canaanites, as opposed to killing them. Presumably this meant that all those who would flee were allowed to. Only those who resisted and fought would be killed.
If Some Women and Children Did Die
Despite this significant down-tone of the brutality of the occupation of Canaan, suppose we still have to admit that some women and children were killed. The text isn’t clear, so we should be ready to deal with a worse-case scenario. For example, Deuteronomy 20 commands the “destruction of everything that breathes” among the Caananites in contrast (“however,” v. 16) to nations outside the promised land, from which the Israelites could keep the women, children and livestock as plunder (v. 14). So, presumably, Canaanite women and children couldn’t be kept as plunder. What then was their fate? More subjectively, scriptures such as Joshua 1 seem to express God’s displeasure when devotion to destruction (harem) is not complete, and we see that when the Israelite Achan is cut off from Israel and stoned after he took objects under the ban during the battle of Jericho, his wives and children are stoned with him (Joshua 7:24-25). The point is that God’s command was intended to be very severe and that noncombatants and families weren’t necessarily exempt from punishment in the ancient Semitic conscience. So we are still faced with the possibility that God commanded, and the Israelites executed, the death penalty for both combatants and noncombatants in those Canaanite lands. Is this the Bible committing moral suicide? Not so fast: let’s think it through. The Israelites would have committed a moral atrocity by killing the Canaanites if and only if any of the following scenarios were true:
(1) It was wrong for God to desire the death of the Canaanites. That is, the Canaanite women, children, etc. were innocent and not worthy of death.
(2) Human hands were not a legitimate means for God to accomplish the death of the Canaanites. That is, although Providence might have desired their death, it is always wrong for men to kill other men, so it is impossible for them to be the agents of God’s judgement (at least when it comes to the death penalty).
(3) Even though it would have been possible for God to have ordered Israel to execute his justice, Israel did not receive the command. Perhaps the God who ordered the death of the Canaanites was only an invention of religious leaders to accomplish their political conquest – not the True God.
(4) Even if Israel had indeed received a divine command, they were motivated not by this command, but by selfish motives for invading Canaan (greed for the land, xenophobic hatred, etc.), and thus did the right thing for the wrong reason. Similarly God acted with unloving, wantonly wrathful motives, not demonstrating love for the Canaanites.
I think that all four of these conditions are false, and therefore, by indirect reasoning, the Israelites did NOT commit a moral atrocity. If none of the above conditions is true, then God rightly desired the death of the Canaanites and lawfully delegated the task to Israel, who, accordingly, received a true revelation from God and acted in faith and holy fear. There is nothing ignoble anywhere in the equation. My next four blog posts will aim at these four points, and will, I hope, show us how we can gladly accept God’s war on the Canaanites as a triumph of his justice, love, and strength, not as something to be ashamed about.