Joshua 5 – When God Shows Up at Your Crossroads
What’s Joshua 5 about?
After forty years of wandering, Israel finally crosses into the Promised Land – but before any battles begin, God calls for a complete spiritual reset. It’s about getting right with God before moving forward, and discovering that the Commander of heaven’s army has been there all along.
The Full Context
Joshua 5 takes place at one of the most pivotal moments in Israel’s history. After four decades of desert wandering – a generation of punishment for their parents’ lack of faith – the Israelites have finally crossed the Jordan River into Canaan. Joshua, Moses’ successor, is leading a people who’ve never known anything but nomadic life into their first taste of conquest and settlement. The miraculous river crossing has just happened, and the Canaanite kings are terrified. You’d think it’s time to strike while the iron is hot, right?
But God has other plans. Before any military campaigns begin, He commands a complete spiritual renewal. This chapter serves as a bridge between the wilderness wanderings (recounted in the previous books) and the conquest narratives that follow. The literary structure is deliberate: first comes spiritual preparation (circumcision and Passover), then divine encounter (the mysterious Commander), and finally the transition from supernatural provision to natural sustenance. Joshua is learning that spiritual readiness must precede military action, and that God’s presence – not just His promises – will determine their success.
What the Ancient Words Tell Us
The Hebrew in this chapter is loaded with military and covenant language that would have made ancient hearts race. When the text says the Canaanite kings’ hearts “melted” (namasû), it’s using the same word for wax melting in fire – complete liquefaction from terror. But here’s what’s fascinating: the same root appears when describing how God’s people should respond to Him in worship.
Grammar Geeks
The phrase “reproach of Egypt” (ḥerpat miṣrayim) in verse 9 is a loaded expression. Ḥerpat isn’t just shame – it’s the kind of disgrace that makes people whisper behind your back for generations. Egypt had branded Israel as failures, wanderers, people who couldn’t even conquer a land their God supposedly gave them.
The word for circumcision (mûl) appears seven times in this chapter – and seven is never accidental in Hebrew literature. It’s the number of completion, suggesting this isn’t just a physical ritual but a complete spiritual restoration. When God says He’s “rolled away” the reproach of Egypt, the Hebrew verb (galal) is the same one used for rolling away stones – it takes serious effort, but once it’s done, there’s no going back.
What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?
Picture this: you’re a young Israelite warrior who’s spent your entire life hearing stories about the “good old days” in Egypt and the promised land you’ve never seen. Your parents died in the desert because they wouldn’t trust God’s promises. Now you’re finally here, but instead of charging into battle, you’re being asked to undergo a painful procedure that will leave you vulnerable for days.
The original audience would have understood something we often miss: circumcision wasn’t just about covenant identity – it was about vulnerability and trust. In an ancient military context, asking your entire army to become temporarily incapacitated before a major campaign was either insane or an incredible act of faith.
Did You Know?
Archaeological evidence from Jericho shows the city was heavily fortified during this period, with double walls and sophisticated defensive systems. The Israelites choosing to circumcise their entire army within sight of such fortifications would have seemed like military suicide to any ancient observer.
The Passover celebration in verses 10-12 would have hit differently too. This was the first Passover celebrated in the Promised Land – not in Egypt, not in the wilderness, but finally home. For a people whose identity was shaped by being strangers and sojourners, eating the produce of the land they now possessed would have been emotionally overwhelming.
But Wait… Why Did They Stop the Manna?
Here’s something that should make us pause: Joshua 5:12 casually mentions that the manna stopped appearing after they ate the produce of Canaan. After forty years of supernatural breakfast delivery, God just… stopped?
This isn’t abandonment – it’s graduation. The manna was never meant to be permanent; it was training wheels for faith. In the wilderness, Israel learned to depend on God for daily provision. Now they needed to learn that God provides through natural means too – through the work of their hands in the land He’d given them.
Wait, That’s Strange…
The manna stopped “on that very day” – not gradually, not with warning, but immediately. After 14,600+ days of supernatural provision, God switched to ordinary provision in 24 hours. It’s like He was saying, “You’re not wilderness people anymore. Time to live like Promised Land people.”
The Hebrew word for “produce” (tᵉbûʾat) literally means “what the land brings forth.” God was teaching them that His provision looks different in different seasons, but His faithfulness remains constant.
Wrestling with the Text
The most mysterious part of this chapter is the encounter between Joshua and the “Commander of the army of the LORD” in verses 13-15. Who is this figure? The text is deliberately ambiguous, but the clues are fascinating.
This Commander accepts worship (something angels typically refuse), commands Joshua to remove his sandals because the ground is holy (echoing Moses’ burning bush experience), and speaks with divine authority. Many scholars see this as a christophany – a pre-incarnate appearance of Christ. Others argue it’s simply a high-ranking angel speaking on God’s behalf.
But here’s what strikes me: Joshua asks, “Are you for us or for our enemies?” and gets the most unexpected answer: “Neither.” The Commander isn’t choosing sides in Joshua’s war – Joshua needs to choose sides in God’s war.
“The question isn’t whether God is on our side, but whether we’re on His side.”
This completely reframes the conquest narratives that follow. This isn’t about Israel being God’s favorites getting special treatment. It’s about God’s people aligning themselves with God’s purposes, even when those purposes are bigger and more complex than they initially understood.
How This Changes Everything
Joshua 5 teaches us that spiritual preparation must precede significant action. Notice the sequence: first circumcision (covenant renewal), then Passover (remembering God’s faithfulness), then the divine encounter (understanding God’s perspective), and finally transition to new provision (learning to see God’s faithfulness in new forms).
This pattern shows up throughout Scripture and throughout life. Before David faced Goliath, he spent years facing lions and bears. Before Jesus began His ministry, He spent forty days in the wilderness. Before Paul’s missionary journeys, he spent time in Arabia being taught by revelation.
The reproach of Egypt being “rolled away” is particularly powerful. Egypt represented more than just slavery – it represented shame, failure, and the weight of unfulfilled promises. God doesn’t just forgive our past; He removes its power to define our future. When God rolls something away, it’s gone.
Key Takeaway
Spiritual readiness isn’t optional preparation for life’s battles – it’s the foundation that determines whether we’re fighting our own war or joining God’s greater purpose.
Further Reading
Internal Links:
- Joshua 5:9 – Rolling away reproach
- Joshua 5:12 – When provision changes
- Joshua 5:14 – The Commander’s question
External Scholarly Resources: