11 entries
Josue 2:1-7 4 entries

RAHAB HIDES THE SPIES

MESSENGERS OF GOD.

Origen of Alexandria (c. 185–c. 254)

Meanwhile, the spies are sent by Jesus [Joshua] to Jericho and are received by the prostitute Rahab. Those spies, who are sent before the face of Jesus [Joshua], can also be considered the messengers of God, just as it is written, Behold, I send my messenger before your face who will prepare your paths.[1] This passage, fulfilled invisibly through others, was fulfilled visibly through John, about whom this was also written. Because the scribes and Pharisees did not believe him, the Lord spoke concerning the baptism of John and said that the prostitutes and publicans who believed[2] were baptized. The same thing is fulfilled in the fact that the prostitute received the spies of Jesus [Joshua] and is snatched away and brought back from the destruction of every hostile nation.

Homilies on Joshua 3.3

NO LONGER A PROSTITUTE.

Origen of Alexandria (c. 185–c. 254)

Nevertheless, our Jesus [Joshua] sends spies to the king of Jericho, and they are received hospitably by a prostitute. But the prostitute who received the spies sent by Jesus [Joshua] was no longer a prostitute since she received them. Indeed, everyone of us was a prostitute in his heart as long as he lived according to the desires and lusts of the flesh.

Homilies on Joshua 1.4

HER MERCY, NOT HER LYING, IS REWARDED.

St. Augustine of Hippo (354–430)

Therefore, no lie is just. Accordingly, when examples of lying are proposed to us from the sacred Scriptures, either they are not lies but are thought so for not being understood, or, if they are lies, they are not to be imitated because they cannot be just.

As for its being written that God dealt well with the Hebrew midwives[1] and with Rahab the harlot of Jericho, he did not deal well with them because they lied but because they were merciful to the men of God. And so, it was not their deception that was rewarded, but their benevolence; the benignity of their intention, not the iniquity of their invention.

Against Lying 15.31-32

FLAX SYMBOLIZES PURITY, HAVING BEEN BROKEN, TWISTED AND WASHED.

St. Jerome (c. 347–420) verse 6

I will be mindful of Rahab, of Rahab, that harlot who lodged Jesus’ [Joshua’s] secret agents, who lived in Jericho where Jesus [Joshua] had come and had dispatched the two spies. Jericho, that collapsed in seven days, is a type of this world, and as such is determined to kill the secret agents. Because, therefore, Jericho is bent upon killing the spies, Rahab, the harlot, alone received them, lodged them not on the ground floor but in the upper story of the roof—or, in other words, in the sublimity of her faith. She hid them under her stalks of flax. . . .

She believes in Jesus, and those whom Jericho is determined to destroy she protects in safety on her own roof. She harbors them on the roof—in the loftiness of her faith—and hides them under the stems of flax. Even though she is a harlot, she covers them with flax.

Flax with much labor and care becomes of dazzling whiteness. You yourselves know that flax grows from the soil and that when it has come forth from the ground, it is black; it has no beauty; it has no use. First, it is pulled up from the ground, broken, then twisted, afterwards washed. Next, it is pounded; finally, combed, and after so much care and hard work, it finally becomes white. Here, then, is the meaning: this harlot took the messengers in and covered them with her flax so that these agents might turn her flax into dazzling whiteness.

Homilies on the Psalms 18 (ps 86)

Josue 2:8-14 2 entries

THE FAITH OF RAHAB

ALL RACES CALLED THROUGH ISRAEL.

Theodoret of Cyr (c. 393–c. 458)

For he selected this one nation to teach the knowledge of God to all the others. Just as he had selected one man—at one time Moses, at another Joshua, at another Samuel, at another some other of the prophets—to look after the welfare of this race, one man who benefited his fellows by practicing true wisdom, so through the one race, Israel, he called all the races of the earth that shared the same nature to share the same religion. Rahab, the harlot, testifies that this is so. Though she belonged to a different race and was a harlot, she relied solely on their reputation, accepted their religion, abandoned her own beliefs and entrusted herself to strangers. We have heard, she said, what things the Lord your God has done to the Egyptians, and fear of you fell on us. Accordingly, she made a pact with the spies and sealed it with an oath.

On Divine Providence 10.49

RAHAB’S FAITH AND PROPHECY.

St. Clement of Rome (fl. c. 92-101)

For her faith and hospitality Rahab the harlot was saved. For when the spies were sent forth into Jericho by Joshua the son of Nun, the king of the land perceived that they were coming to spy out his country, and [he] sent forth men to seize them, that being seized they might be put to death. So the hospitable Rahab received them and hid them in the upper chamber under the flax stalks. And when the messengers of the king came near and said, The spies of our land entered into your house; bring them forth, for the king so orders, then she answered, The men truly, whom you seek, came to me, but they departed immediately and are journeying on the way; and she pointed out to them the opposite road. And she said to the men, Without a doubt I perceive that the Lord your God will deliver this city to you; for the fear and the dread of you is fallen upon its inhabitants. When therefore it shall come to pass that you take it, save me and the house of my father. And they said to her, It shall be even so as you have spoken to us. Therefore, when you perceive that we are coming, you shall gather all your folk beneath your roof, and they shall be saved; for as many as shall be found outside of the house shall perish. And moreover they gave her a sign, that she should hang out from her house a scarlet thread, thereby showing beforehand that through the blood of the Lord there shall be redemption for all them that believe and hope on God. You see, dearly beloved, not only faith, but prophecy, is found in the woman. 1

Clement 12

Josue 2:15-24 5 entries

THE SPIES ESCAPE JERICHO

WAIT THREE DAYS.

St. Jerome (c. 347–420) verse 16

She counsels them and says, Wait here for three days. Not one day does she specify, nor two days, but definitely three days. Notice what she says: Wait three days. She does not designate three nights but three days, for hers was an enlightened heart. Then she says, and after three days—but what does she say? Do not go through the open plains, she warns, but go up the mountain way. The faith of the church is not laid in the valleys but is established on the mountains. Later, indeed, Jericho is overthrown, but this harlot alone is preserved untouched; hence, the Lord says, I will be mindful of Rahab; that is, on the day of judgment, I will be mindful of her who welcomes my messengers.

Homilies on the Psalms 18 (ps 86)

THE HOUSE OF SALVATION.

Origen of Alexandria (c. 185–c. 254)

Also this commandment is given to the person who was once a prostitute: All, it says, who will be found in your house will be saved. But concerning those who go out from the house, we ourselves are free of them by your oath. Therefore, if anyone wants to be saved, let him come into the house of this one who was once a prostitute. Even if anyone from that people wants to be saved, let him come in order to be able to attain salvation. Let him come to this house in which the blood of Christ is the sign of redemption. For among those who said, His blood be upon us and upon our children,[1] the blood of Christ is for condemnation. For Jesus had been appointed for the ruin and the resurrection of many.[2] Therefore, for those refuting his sign, his blood effects punishment; for those who believe, salvation.

Let no one persuade himself, let no one deceive himself. Outside this house, that is, outside the church, no one is saved. If anyone goes outside, he is responsible for his own death. This is the significance of the blood, for this is also the purification that is manifest through the blood.

Homilies on Joshua 3.5

A SIGN OF FAITH.

St. Ambrose of Milan (c. 333–397) verse 21

A harlot saw this; and she who in the destruction of the city lost all hope of any means of safety, because her faith had conquered, bound a scarlet thread in her window, and thus uplifted a sign of her faith and the banner of the Lord’s passion; so that the semblance of the mystic blood, which should redeem the world, might be in memory. So, from outside the city, the name of Joshua was a sign of victory to those who fought. From within, the semblance of the Lord’s passion was a sign of salvation to those in danger.

On the Christian Faith 5.10.127

A SCARLET CORD.

St. Jerome (c. 347–420) verse 21

So, too, with a mystic reference to the shedding of blood, it was a scarlet cord which the harlot Rahab (a type of the church) hung in her window that she might be saved at the destruction of Jericho.

Letter 52.3

Origen of Alexandria (250) verse 19

Ch. 55 — Salvation Outside the Church

If someone of that people wishes to be saved, let him come into this house, so that he may be able to obtain his salvation. . . . Let no one, then, be persuaded otherwise, nor let anyone deceive himself; outside this house, that is, outside the Church, no one is saved. For if anyone go outside, he shall be guilty of his own death.

Homilies on Joshua 3:5