Joshua 7:6

6 Joshua and the leaders of Israel tore their clothes in grief, threw themselves to the ground before the Lord's Covenant Box, and lay there till evening, with dust on their heads to show their sorrow.

Joshua 7:6 Meaning and Commentary

Joshua 7:6

And Joshua rent his clothes
As was usual in those ancient times, on hearing bad news, and as expressive of grief and trouble F18; see ( Genesis 37:29 Genesis 37:34 ) ( Job 1:20 ) ;

and fell to the earth upon his face before the ark of the Lord, until
the eventide;
in a posture of adoration and prayer, in which he continued till even; how long that was cannot be said, since the time is not mentioned when the army returned from Ai; very probably it was some time in the afternoon: this was done before the ark of the Lord, the symbol of the divine Presence, not in the most holy place, where that usually was, and into which Joshua might not enter, but in the tabernacle of the great court, over against where the ark was:

he and the elders of Israel;
either the elders of the people in the several tribes, or rather the seventy elders, which were the sanhedrim or council, and which attended Joshua, and assisted him as such;

and put dust upon their heads;
another rite or ceremony used in times of mourning and distress, and that very anciently, before Joshua's time and after, see ( Job 2:12 ) ( 1 Samuel 4:12 ) ( 2 Samuel 1:2 ) ; and among various nations; so when Achilles bewailed the death of Patroclus, he is represented by Homer F19 taking with both his hands the black earth, and pouring it on his head; so Aristippus among the Athenians is said F20 to sprinkle dust on his head in token of mourning on a certain account.


FOOTNOTES:

F18 "Tum pius", Aeneas Virgil. Aeneid. l. 5. prope finem.
F19 (amfoterhsi te cersin) Iliad. 18. ver. 23. Vid. Odyss. 24. "Sparsitque cinis" Seneca, Troad. Act. 1. Chorus.
F20 Heliodor. Aethiop. l. 1. c. 13.

Joshua 7:6 In-Context

4 So about three thousand Israelites made the attack, but they were forced to retreat.
5 The men of Ai chased them from the city gate as far as some quarries and killed about thirty-six of them on the way down the hill. Then the Israelites lost their courage and were afraid.
6 Joshua and the leaders of Israel tore their clothes in grief, threw themselves to the ground before the Lord's Covenant Box, and lay there till evening, with dust on their heads to show their sorrow.
7 And Joshua said, "Sovereign Lord! Why did you bring us across the Jordan at all? To turn us over to the Amorites? To destroy us? Why didn't we just stay on the other side of the Jordan?
8 What can I say, O Lord, now that Israel has retreated from the enemy?
Scripture taken from the Good News Translation - Second Edition, Copyright 1992 by American Bible Society. Used by Permission.