When Moses heard that the spies had returned from their enterprise, he went to his great
house of study, where all Israel too assembled, for it was a square of twelve miles,
affording room to all. 521 There too the spies betook themselves and were requested to
give their report. Pursuing the tactics of slanderers, they began by extolling the land,
so that they might not by too unfavorable a report arouse the suspicion of the community.
They said: "We came unto the land whither thou sentest us, and surely it floweth with
milk and honey." This was not an exaggeration, for honey flowed from the trees under
which the goats grazed, out of whose udders poured mile, so that both mile and honey
moistened the ground. But they used these words only as an introduction, and the passed on
to their actual report, which they had elaborated during those forty days, and by means of
which they hoped to be able to induce the people to desist from their plan of entering
Palestine. 522 "Nevertheless," they continued, "the people be strong that
dwell in the land, and the cities are walled, and very great: and moreover we saw children
of Anak there." Concerning the latter they spoke an untruth with the intention of
inspiring Israel with fear, for the sons of Anak dwelt in Hebron, whither Caleb alone had
gone to pray at the graves of the Patriarchs, 523 at the same time as the Shekinah went
there to announce to the Patriarch that their children were now on the way to take
possession of the land which had been promised to them of yore. 524 To intensify to the
uttermost their fear of the inhabitants of Palestine, they furthermore said: "The
Amalekites dwell in the land of the South." They threatened Israel with Amalek as one
threatens a child with a strap that had once been employed to chastise him, for they had
had bitter experiences with Amalek. The statement concerning Amalek was founded on fact,
for although southern Palestine had not originally been their home, still they had
recently settled there in obedience to the last wish of their forefather Esau, who had
bidden them cut off Israel from their entrance into the promised land. "If,
however," continued the spies in their report, "you are planning to enter the
land from the mountain region in order to evade Amalek, let us inform you that the
Hittites, and the Jebussites, and the Amorites dwell in the mountains; and if you plan to
go there by sea, let us inform you that the Canaanites dwell by the sea, and along the
Jordan." 525
As soon as the spies had completed their report, Joshua arose to contradict them, but they
gave him no chance to speak, calling out to him: "By what right dost thou, foolish
man, presume to speak? Thou hast neither sons nor daughters, so what dost thou care if we
perish in our attempt to conquer the land? We, on the other hand, have to look out for our
children and wives." Joshua, therefore, very much against his will, had to be silent.
Caleb now considered in what way he could manage to get a hearing without being shouted
down as Joshua had been.
Caleb had given his comrades an entirely false impression concerning his sentiments, for
when these formed the plan to try to make Israel desist from entering Palestine, they drew
him into their council, and he pretended to agree with them, whereas he even then resolved
to intercede for Palestine. Hence, when Caleb arose, the spies were silent, supposing he
would corroborate their statements, a supposition which his introductory words tended to
strengthen. He began: "Be silent, I will reveal the truth. This is not all for which
we have to thank the son of Amram." But to the amazement of the spies, his next words
praised, not blamed, Moses. He said: "Moses - it is he who drew us up out of Egypt,
who clove the sea for us, who gave us manna as food." In this way he continued his
eulogy on Moses, closing with the words: "We should have to obey him even if he bade
us ascend to heaven upon ladders!" 526 These words of Caleb were heard by all the
people, for his words were so mighty that they could be heard twelve miles off. It was
this same powerful voice that had saved the life of the spies. For when the Canaanites
first took note of them and suspected them of being spies, the three giants, Ahiman,
Sheshai, and Talmai pursued them and caught up with them in the plain of Judea. When
Caleb, hidden behind a fence, saw that the giants were at their heels, he uttered such a
shout that the giants fell down in a swoon because of the frightful din. When they had
recovered, the giants declared that they had pursued the Israelites not because of the
fruits, but because they had suspected them of the wish to burn their cities. 527
Caleb's mighty voice did not, however, in the least impress the people or the spies, for
the latter, far from retracting their previous statements, went so far as to say: "We
be not able to go up against the people; for they are stronger than we, they are so strong
that even God can not get at them. The land through which we had gone to search it is a
land that eateth up the inhabitants thereof through disease; and all the people that we
saw in it are men of wicked traits. And here we saw men upon sight of whom we almost
swooned in fright, the giants, the sons of Anak, which come of giants: and we were in our
own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight." 528 At these last words,
God said: "I have not objection to your saying, 'We were in our own sight as
grasshoppers,' but I take it amiss if you say, 'And so we were in their sight,' for how
can you tell how I made you appear in their sight? How do you know if you did not appear
to them to be angels?" 529
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