YINR 929: Tanach Yomi
“Rav Adda, son of Rabbi Ḥanina, said: Had Israel not sinned in earlier times they would have been given the five books of the Torah and the book of Joshua alone. They needed the book of Joshua because it includes the arrangement of Eretz Yisrael.” (Nedarim 22b). אָמַר רַב אַדָּא בַּר רַבִּי חֲנִינָא אִלְמָלֵא חָטְאוּ יִשְׂרָאֵל לֹא נִתְּנוּ לָהֶם אֶלָּא חֲמִשָּׁה חֻמְשֵׁי תּוֹרָה וְסֵפֶר יְהוֹשֻׁעַ בִּלְבַד מִפְּנֵי שֶׁיֵּשׁ בּוֹ סֵדֶר אֶרֶץ יִשְׂרָאֵל From the moment that Moshe stepped up to confront Pharaoh in Egypt, the Israelites have had two leaders—Moshe and Joshua. Moshe brought the nascent nation out of Egypt. He shepherded a nation of slaves into the people of Israel. Seamlessly, he transferred his leadership to Joshua. The people knew Joshua from early on. He was the hero of the early battle with Amalek. He was on Mount Sinai with Moshe. He confronted the spies. He protected Moshe’s reputation against Eldad and Medad. He may have been Moshe’s successor, but he was with Moshe and the people the whole way. When Joshua died, though, there was no one to take over for him. Now things begin to splinter. A cycle begins wherein the people misbehave, God gets angry and punishes them by bringing in a local nation to harass them. The people repent and cry out to God. God sends a Judge to save the people. The people are peaceful for a little while, but then the cycle begins again. Wash, rinse, repeat. The Gemara in Nedarim implies that the story was meant to end with the death of Joshua. Once the great leaders of the Exodus ushered the people into the Promised Land and divided it accordingly, God’s promise to Avraham, Yitzchak, and Yaacov would be complete. The people would live in the land peacefully. But that’s not what happened. The people sinned with the Golden Calf and the spies and continued to sin. Because the story was meant to end, there was no third leader waiting in the wings. But what about Calev? Calev’s story is repeated here from Joshua. Calev was the last surviving person from the wilderness. Like Moshe and Joshua, he was known to the people. But the Calev story is repeated here because it shows that Calev was not a leader of the whole people. Calev was a leader of the tribe of Yehudah. He acted in the self interest of that tribe, as he was supposed to do. After Joshua, there did not need to be a leader of everyone. Each tribe should have acted as they needed to in their land. Unfortunately, that plan did not work out. Instead of the story ending with chapter 24 of Joshua, the book of Judges begins.
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