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Some of the key biblical events around Moses had quite close parallels in the story of Joshua. In the Exodus story, Joshua accompanied Moses onto the mountain, and was the only person other than Moses who could enter the tabernacle.

In the Book of Exodus, Moses held out his rod and parted the Red Sea. The importance of the priests was given greater emphasis in the Book of Joshua, and as soon as their feet touched the waters of the Jordan, the waters stopped flowing and the people could cross. In the first case, parting the water allowed the Israelites to cross over and defeat the Egyptians who were pursuing them; in the second case, parting the water allowed the Israelites to cross over and defeat the Canaanites who were before them.

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Q: How are Joshua leading the Israelites across the Jordan River and Moses leading them across the Red Sea the same?
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Who led the Israelites across the The Red Sea andThe Jordan River?

According to the Bible, Joshua led the Israelites across the River Jordan.


Whom did God appoint to be the leader of Israel after Moses?

Joshua was the leader of the Israelites after the death of Moses. It was him that led them across the Jordan River into the promised land (Canaan.)


Who was commissioned to lead god's people into canaan?

Joshua was commissioned to lead God's people into Canaan after the death of Moses. God instructed Joshua to be strong and courageous, promising to be with him just as He was with Moses. Joshua successfully led the Israelites across the Jordan River and into the Promised Land.


Is it true or false that Joshua led Israel across the Red Sea and into Canaan as God had commanded?

False. According to the Biblical narrative, Moses led the Israelites across the Sea of Reeds, and Joshua later led them across the Jordan River.According to archaeologists, there is no evidence to suggest that Joshua lived at all. (Though absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.)


How old was Joshua when he led the Israelites across the Jordan River?

The biblical account is a little confusing when it comes to the age and status of Joshua. For example, the Book of Numbers identifies Joshua in quick succession as the young man and servant of Moses, then as a ruler of the tribe of Ephraim. In any event, his early appearance in the Exodus means he must have been a relatively old man by the time he led the Israelites across the Jordan. To have achieved all that he is credited with, he must have remained a strong and active leader until his death at the age of 110 years.


What part of the promised Land did Joshua capture?

God told Moses to prepare a young Hebrew, Joshua, to assume the leadership of the Israelites upon Moses' death. Forty years later, the Israelites were camped on the eastern side of the Dead Sea when Moses died. God told Joshua it was time to lead the people across the Jordan River into the Promised Land. In the Hebrew Bible, the "Land of Canaan" extends from Lebanon southward across Gaza to the "Brook of Egypt" and eastward to the Jordan River Valley, thus including modern Israel and the Palestinian Territories. The Lord helped Joshua lead the Hebrew people into the Promised Land. When they entered this land, the Israelites had to cross the Jordan River. At God's command, Joshua told the priests to take the Ark of the Covenant into the river. A great battle with the people of the land of Canaan took place by the city of Gabaon. The Israelites defeated their enemies and put them to flight while God rained stones from heaven on those who were fleeing, so that more perished from the stones than from the swords of the Israelites. The day was coming to an end, but the Israelites had not yet routed their enemies. Joshua then prayed to God and cried out aloud before the people, "Sun, stand still, and moon, do not move..." And the sun did stand still, and night did not come until the Israelites had defeated their enemies.


How wide was the Jordan river where Joshua led the people across?

The Bible does not explicitly mention the width of the Jordan River at that point. Currently the Jordan River is rather weak, but at that time, several meters wide.


Who was the military leader that led the Israelites into the promised land?

According to the Book of Joshua, the brilliant military commander, Joshua, led the Israelites to conquer Canaan, with the help of God.The strong consensus of modern historians is that the Israelites never conquered Canaan, that they were themselves rural Canaanites who migrated peacefully from the region of the rich coastal cities into the hitherto sparsely populated hinterland. Lawrence E. Stager says ('Forging an Identity', in The Oxford History of the Biblical World) of the thirty one cities said to be taken by Joshua and the Israelites, twenty have been plausibly identified with excavation sites. Of these, only Bethel and Hazor show evidence of cultural discontinuity consistent with an invasion, and it is even debated whether the destruction of Hazor XIII was as late as that of Late Bronze Age Bethel. There was no conquest of Canaan - the story of Joshua and his military genius evolved centuries later, to provide the Hebrew people with a glorious past.For more information, please visit: http://christianity.answers.com/bible/the-book-of-joshua-explained


Who was chosen to lead the israelites after moses death?

Moses picked Joshua to lead the people after his death as commanded by the LORD. Deut 3:28 But commission Joshua, and encourage and strengthen him, for he will lead this people across and will cause them to inherit the land that you will see. See also last chapter in Deuteronomy followed by the book of Joshua.


Can Joshua of the Bible be verified as historical?

The Book of Joshua describes how Joshua led the Israelites across the River Jordan and conquered the entire land of the Canaanites. Whether Joshua is historical depends first of all on whether that conquest is verified as historical, and it fails this first test. In the last quarter of a century, archaeological evidence has been the prime factor in finally disproving the conquest of the Canaanites, in addition to critical study of the biblical texts.The conquest model described in the Bible had strong support among historians and scholars until around the middle part of the twentieth century, but has since been all but abandoned by mainstream scholars and continues to be pressed by only a few conservative scholars (Lester L Grabbe, Ancient Israel: What Do We Know and How Do We Know It?, P102).


Why did the Israelites need Jericho?

According to Joshua, Jericho was the first city to be conquered in order to allow access to the promised land. Also, it was an important location for the local religions, and so the destruction would have been a psychological attack on the region as well.


What did the Israelites do after they reach canaan?

A:According to the Book of Joshua, the first thing Joshua ordered done was to spy out the city of Jericho. Once the Israelites were all safely across the River Jordan, they then attacked Jericho, slaughtering every man, woman and child, save only Rahab, who had helped Joshua's spies. They then attached the city of Ai and once again committed genocide against the people. A problem with this story is that there is no evidence anywhere in the Palestinian hinterland of a military invasion towards the end of the Bronze Age. Archaeologists say that Jericho had been abandoned around 1550 BCE and the city and its walls no longer existed at the time attributed to Joshua. The name of the next city, Ai, actually means 'a ruin', an extremely improbable name for a thriving city, but evidence that the settlement was already abandoned and a ruin when the first Hebrew people began arriving in the Canaanite hinterland. Most scholars now say that the Israelites were actually Canaanites who migrated peacefully from the region of the coastal cities into the hitherto sparsely populated Canaanite hinterland. When they arrived they did what any new arrivals would do - build houses and begin to farm.