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<p>This book, which began with triumphs, here ends with funerals, by which all the glory of man is stained. We have here 1. The burial of Joseph, <a class="bibleref" title="Josh.24.32" href="/passage/?search=Josh.24.32">Josh. 24:32</a>. He died about 200 years before in Egypt, but <i>gave commandment concerning his bones</i>, that they should not rest in their grave until Israel had rest in the land of promise; now therefore the children of Israel, who had brought this coffin full of bones with them out of Egypt, carried it along with them in all their marches through the wilderness (the two tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh, it is probable, taking particular care of it), and kept it in their camp till Canaan was perfectly reduced, now at last they deposited it in that piece of ground which his father gave him near Shechem, <a class="bibleref" title="Gen.48.22" href="/passage/?search=Gen.48.22">Gen. 48:22</a>. Probably it was upon this occasion that Joshua called for all Israel to meet him at Shechem (<a class="bibleref" title="Josh.24.1" href="/passage/?search=Josh.24.1">Josh. 24:1</a>), to attend Joseph’s coffin to the grave there, so that the sermon in this chapter served both for Joseph’s funeral sermon and his own farewell sermon; and if it was, as is supposed, in the last year of his life, the occasion might very well remind him of his own death being at hand, for he was not just at the same age that his illustrious ancestor Joseph had arrived at when he died, 110 <i>years old</i>; compare <a class="bibleref" title="Josh.24.29" href="/passage/?search=Josh.24.29">Josh. 24:29</a> with <a class="bibleref" title="Gen.50.26" href="/passage/?search=Gen.50.26">Gen. 50:26</a>. 2. The death and burial of Joshua, <a class="bibleref" title="Josh.24.29,Josh.24.30" href="/passage/?search=Josh.24.29,Josh.24.30"><span class="bibleref" title="Josh.24.29">Josh. 24:29</span>, <span class="bibleref" title="Josh.24.30">30</span></a>. We are not told how long he lived after the coming of Israel into Canaan. Dr. Lightfoot thinks it was about seventeen years; but the Jewish chronologers generally say it was about twenty-seven or twenty-eight years. He is here called the <i>servant of the Lord</i>, the same title that was given to Moses (<a class="bibleref" title="Josh.1.1" href="/passage/?search=Josh.1.1">Josh. 1:1</a>) when mention was made of his death; for, though Joshua was in many respects inferior to Moses, yet in this he was equal to him, that, according as his work was, he approved himself a diligent and faithful servant of God. And he that traded with his two talents had the same approbation that he had who traded with his five. <i>Well done, good and faithful servant</i>. Joshua’s burying-place is here said to be <i>on the north side of the hill Gaash</i>, or <i>the quaking hill</i>; the Jews say it was so called because it trembled at the burial of Joshua, to upbraid the people of Israel with their stupidity in that they did not lament the death of that great and good man as they ought to have done. Thus at the death of Christ, our Joshua, the earth quaked. The learned bishop Patrick observes that there is no mention of any days of mourning being observed for Joshua, as there were for Moses and Aaron, in which, he says, St. Hierom and others of the fathers think there is a mystery, namely, that under the law, when life and immortality were not brought to so clear a light as they are now, they had reason to mourn and weep for the death of their friends; but now that Jesus, our Joshua, has opened the kingdom of heaven, we may rather rejoice. 3. The death and burial of Eleazar the chief priest, who, it is probable, died about the same time that Joshua did, as Aaron in the same year with Moses, <a class="bibleref" title="Josh.24.33" href="/passage/?search=Josh.24.33">Josh. 24:33</a>. The Jews say that Eleazar, a little before he died, called the elders together, and gave them a charge as Joshua had done. He was buried in a hill that pertained to Phinehas his son, which came to him, not by descent, for then it would have pertai
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