Canaanite Conquest Commands
“The Torah explicitly commands Israel to show no mercy and leave nothing alive in Canaanite cities. How do we read this today?”
Deuteronomy 20:16-17 , "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 distinguishes between treatment of distant cities (negotiate first, then enslave survivors) and the cities of Canaan (complete destruction of every living thing). This command, applied throughout Joshua, has been called one of the most morally troubling passages in Scripture. How have theologians, historians, and ethicists engaged this text across the centuries?
Hard verses are where our biases and assumptions do the most damage. Before diving into scholarly perspectives, consider which thinking patterns might be shaping how you read this passage.
The traditional defense, developed by apologists including Paul Copan and John Wenham, argues that the command was a unique, historically bounded act of divine judgment on a culture whose moral and religious corruption was extreme and long-endured. Leviticus 18 catalogs the Canaanite practices God found abominable, including child sacrifice (verse 21). " The command was not ethnic cleansing but judicial execution of a culture condemned by its own actions.
Rahab's preservation shows that individual repentance was possible even within the condemned group.
K. Lawson Younger's comparative study of ancient Near Eastern conquest accounts demonstrates that "utterly destroying everything that breathes" was conventional rhetorical hyperbole in military texts, not a precise operational order. Crucially, the book of Judges presupposes extensive Canaanite survival: Judges 1:27-35 lists city after city that Israel failed to conquer, and Canaanites appear as a significant presence throughout the period.
This narrative evidence from the same canon strongly suggests that "total destruction" in Deuteronomy and Joshua is hyperbolic rhetoric expressing the ideal of total obedience, not a literal outcome that was achieved or necessarily intended.
The New Testament dramatically reframes the "holy war" tradition. Jesus refuses the path of military conquest (John 18:36), commands love of enemies (Matthew 5:44), and redirects the warfare metaphor to spiritual rather than ethnic conflict (Ephesians 6:12). Paul treats the Canaanite peoples typologically: believers are to "put to death" (Greek: nekrosate) the sins of their old nature (Colossians 3:5), not ethnic populations.
The trajectory of canonical revelation moves from ethnic holy war to the cross as the paradigmatic act of divine justice, suggesting the conquest commands are morally transitional rather than permanently normative.
Many critical scholars, including William Dever and Israel Finkelstein, argue that the conquest as described in Deuteronomy-Joshua did not occur as a coordinated military campaign. Archaeological evidence suggests that many "Canaanite" cities show no destruction layers consistent with the Joshua narrative, and that the earliest Israelites were largely indigenous to Canaan rather than a distinct invading group. On this reading, the genocide commands functioned as retrospective theological ideology, defining Israelite identity against its Canaanite neighbors, rather than as orders given before and during an actual unified conquest.
The Hebrew lo-techayeh kol-neshamah ("you shall not let live any breath/soul") in Deuteronomy 20:16 uses neshamah, the same word used in Genesis 2:7 for the divine breath God gave humanity. The six named peoples in verse 17 (Hittites, Amorites, Canaanites, Perizzites, Hivites, Jebusites) form a standard biblical list of Canaanite peoples, occurring in virtually identical form in Exodus 3:8, 23:23, and elsewhere. The repetition of this formulaic list across Exodus, Deuteronomy, and Joshua suggests a conventional literary-theological designation rather than a precise ethnographic description.
The verb hacharem tacharim ("completely destroy") uses an intensive form of herem, emphasizing totality.
Deuteronomy 20 distinguishes sharply between two types of warfare: against distant cities (verses 10-15, with options for surrender and tribute) and against the six named peoples (verses 16-18). " The command is framed as a preventative measure against religious contamination rather than ethnic extermination per se. The same concern pervades Deuteronomy 7:1-6.
Joshua's failure to fully execute the herem is treated throughout Judges as the cause of Israel's subsequent apostasy, a narrative that reinforces the theological rather than ethnic character of the command.
Sources: Published scholarship View all →
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