Joshua 11

The Northern Coalition Defeated and the Land Brought Under Joshua’s Control

The northern kings gather against Israel, the LORD commands Joshua not to fear, Israel defeats the coalition, Hazor is burned, and the chapter summarizes Joshua’s broad conquest and the land’s rest from war.

Berean Standard Bible (BSB) , Public Domain · Translation notes · Reference sources

  1. The Northern Kings Gather 11:1-5

    Jabin of Hazor gathers a coalition as numerous as the sand on the seashore, with many horses and chariots.

  2. The LORD Commands Joshua Not to Fear 11:6

    God promises victory and commands Joshua to destroy the enemy’s military assets.

  3. The Coalition Is Defeated 11:7-9

    Joshua attacks suddenly, pursues the enemy, and obeys the LORD’s instruction concerning horses and chariots.

  4. Hazor Falls 11:10-15

    Joshua captures Hazor, kills its king, burns the city, and fulfills the LORD’s command through Moses.

  5. The Conquest Is Summarized 11:16-20

    The narrator surveys Joshua’s victories across the land and explains the hardened resistance of the kings.

  6. The Anakim Are Cut Off 11:21-22

    Joshua removes the Anakim from much of the land, addressing one of Israel’s old fears.

  7. The Land Rests from War 11:23

    Joshua takes the land, distributes it as inheritance, and the land has rest from war.

Biblical Theology

How This Chapter Fits

Theological Argument

The chapter argues that the LORD’s promise is stronger than the greatest gathered opposition. Israel must not fear horses, chariots, kings, or giants, because the LORD gives victory and fulfills what He spoke through Moses. The land is received not by trusting captured power but by obeying the LORD.

From overwhelming northern threat to divine assurance, from obedient battle to conquest summary, from ancient fear to inheritance and rest.

  • The northern kings gather immense military strength against Israel
  • The LORD commands Joshua not to fear and promises victory before the battle
  • The LORD forbids Israel from relying on captured horses and chariots
  • Joshua obeys the LORD’s command fully
  • Hazor, the head of the northern kingdoms, falls under judgment
  • The conquest is summarized as fulfillment of the LORD’s word through Moses

Christological Focus

Joshua 11 contributes to the biblical movement toward rest, inheritance, and victory under the LORD’s appointed leader. Joshua brings Israel into a real but incomplete land-rest; Christ, the greater Joshua, brings His people into final rest, defeats every hostile power, and secures an inheritance that cannot perish.

The chapter argues that the LORD’s promise is stronger than the greatest gathered opposition. Israel must not fear horses, chariots, kings, or giants, because the LORD gives victory and fulfills what He spoke through Moses. The land is received not by trusting captured power but by obeying the LORD.

Covenant Significance

Joshua 11 presents the major conquest as covenant fulfillment. The LORD gives Israel the land He promised through Moses and the patriarchal promises behind Moses. Joshua’s obedience to Moses’ commands demonstrates continuity between Torah and conquest, while the distribution of land moves Israel toward settled inheritance.

  • The land promise continues moving into historical possession
  • Joshua is repeatedly measured by obedience to what the LORD commanded Moses
  • The destruction of Canaanite coalitions is framed as covenant judgment
  • The command to destroy horses and chariots guards Israel from trusting military strength
  • The defeat of the Anakim reverses the unbelief associated with the spy report in Numbers

Formation

Theological Burden The LORD fulfills His promises over every visible power, and His people must trust and obey Him rather than adopt the strength-systems of the world.

Pastoral Burden Move believers from intimidation and resource-dependence into Word-governed courage, obedience, and hope in final rest.

Character Aim A courageous, obedient, promise-rooted people who refuse false security and rest in the LORD’s faithfulness.

  • Name the visible powers that provoke fear
  • Renounce forms of strength that compete with trust in God
  • Obey God’s Word even when obedience seems to reduce worldly advantage
  • Remember how God has overcome old fears before
  • Evaluate success by faithfulness to God’s command

Canonical Connections

Anakim and the Wilderness Fear

The defeat of the Anakim reverses the old fear that contributed to Israel’s unbelief in the wilderness generation.

Horses, Chariots, and Trust

The command to destroy horses and chariots fits the broader biblical warning against trusting military power instead of the LORD.

Joshua Obeys Moses

Joshua is presented as carrying out the LORD’s commands given through Moses, showing continuity between Torah and conquest.

Hardening and Judgment

The hardening of the kings’ hearts connects the conquest with broader biblical themes of judgment on hardened rebellion.

Inheritance by Allotment

Joshua 11 prepares for the tribal allotments that dominate the later chapters of Joshua.

Jabin of Hazor gathers a coalition as numerous as the sand on the seashore, with many horses and chariots.

1 Now when Jabin king of Hazor heard about these things, he sent word to Jobab king of Madon; to the kings of Shimron and Achshaph;

2 to the kings of the north in the mountains, in the Arabah south of Chinnereth, in the foothills, and in Naphoth-dor to the west;

3 to the Canaanites in the east and west; to the Amorites, Hittites, Perizzites, and Jebusites in the hill country; and to the Hivites at the foot of Hermon in the land of Mizpah.

4 So these kings came out with all their armies, a multitude as numerous as the sand on the seashore, along with a great number of horses and chariots.

5 All these kings joined forces and encamped at the waters of Merom to fight against Israel.

God promises victory and commands Joshua to destroy the enemy’s military assets.

6 Then the LORD said to Joshua, “Do not be afraid of them, for by this time tomorrow I will deliver all of them slain before Israel. You are to hamstring their horses and burn up their chariots.”

Joshua attacks suddenly, pursues the enemy, and obeys the LORD’s instruction concerning horses and chariots.

7 So by the waters of Merom, Joshua and his whole army came upon them suddenly and attacked them,

8 and the LORD delivered them into the hand of Israel, who struck them down and pursued them all the way to Greater Sidon and Misrephoth-maim, and eastward as far as the Valley of Mizpeh. They struck them down, leaving no survivors.

9 Joshua treated them as the LORD had told him; he hamstrung their horses and burned up their chariots.

Joshua captures Hazor, kills its king, burns the city, and fulfills the LORD’s command through Moses.

10 At that time Joshua turned back and captured Hazor and put its king to the sword, because Hazor was formerly the head of all these kingdoms.

11 The Israelites put everyone in Hazor to the sword, devoting them to destruction. Nothing that breathed remained, and Joshua burned down Hazor itself.

12 Joshua captured all these kings and their cities and put them to the sword. He devoted them to destruction, as Moses the LORD’s servant had commanded.

13 Yet Israel did not burn any of the cities built on their mounds, except Hazor, which Joshua burned.

14 The Israelites took for themselves all the plunder and livestock of these cities, but they put all the people to the sword until they had completely destroyed them, not sparing anyone who breathed.

15 As the LORD had commanded His servant Moses, so Moses commanded Joshua. That is what Joshua did, leaving nothing undone of all that the LORD had commanded Moses.

The narrator surveys Joshua’s victories across the land and explains the hardened resistance of the kings.

16 So Joshua took this entire region: the hill country, all the Negev, all the land of Goshen, the western foothills, the Arabah, and the mountains of Israel and their foothills,

17 from Mount Halak, which rises toward Seir, as far as Baal-gad in the Valley of Lebanon at the foot of Mount Hermon. He captured all their kings and struck them down, putting them to death.

18 Joshua waged war against all these kings for a long period of time.

19 No city made peace with the Israelites except the Hivites living in Gibeon; all others were taken in battle.

20 For it was of the LORD to harden their hearts to engage Israel in battle, so that they would be set apart for destruction and would receive no mercy, being annihilated as the LORD had commanded Moses.

Joshua removes the Anakim from much of the land, addressing one of Israel’s old fears.

21 At that time Joshua proceeded to eliminate the Anakim from the hill country of Hebron, Debir, and Anab, and from all the hill country of Judah and of Israel. Joshua devoted them to destruction, along with their cities.

22 No Anakim were left in the land of the Israelites; only in Gaza, Gath, and Ashdod did any survive.

Joshua takes the land, distributes it as inheritance, and the land has rest from war.

23 So Joshua took the entire land, in keeping with all that the LORD had spoken to Moses. And Joshua gave it as an inheritance to Israel according to the allotments to their tribes. Then the land had rest from war.

Key Terms

חָצוֹר Chatsor H2674
נָתַן natan H5414
סוּס sus H5483
מֶרְכָּבָה merkavah H4818
עָקַר aqar H6131
חָזַק chazaq H2388
עֲנָקִים Anaqim H6062
נַחֲלָה nachalah H5159
שָׁקַט shaqat H8252