Text Study
A Peace Offering
Deuteronomy's laws of warfare include the requirement that a nation seek a
peaceful settlement before engaging in war.
By Jeffrey A. Spitzer
As their forty years in the wilderness drew to a close, the
fact that the people of Israel were to occupy the Promised land through
military conquest became an ever more present reality. When the tribes of Gad
and Reuben asked if they could remain outside of Canaan (biblical Israel) where
there was good grazing land for their cattle, Moses' immediate and outraged
response was "Will your brothers go to war while you stay here!"
(Numbers 32).
God Commands War, Moses Seeks Peace
As the people passed through the neighboring lands on the
way to Canaan, God warned them not to wage war or take land from Seir, the land
which had been given to the descendants of Jacob's brother Esau, nor to conquer
any of the land of Moab, which had been given to the children of Abraham's
nephew Lot (Deuteronomy 2).
This was not the case, however, with the Amorite King Sihon,
against whom God commanded Moses to wage war in order to "put the dread
and fear of [Israel] upon the people under heaven" (Deuteronomy 2:25).
Nevertheless, Moses pauses before war and sends "words of peace" to
Sihon, requesting a peaceful passage through Sihon's land. Moses assures Sihon
that the Israelites will not forage for food and that they will pay for the
water that they use.
How did God respond to Moses' offering of peace when God
demanded war? God "stiffened the will [of Sihon] and hardened his
heart" (as had been done to Pharoah in Egypt), and the people of Israel
wiped out the Amorite kings Sihon and Og.
The interaction seems similar to the narrative of Abraham
pleading with God not to destroy Sodom (Genesis 18). God announces that the
city will be destroyed, Abraham and Moses in turn attempt to prevent that
destruction but, because Sodom is truly evil, and because Sihon refuses Moses'
offer of peace, the cities are ultimately destroyed.
God is More Militant than People
Why are humans, or at least these humans, more willing to
offer terms of peace? Maybe, as God implies with respect to Og, King of Bashan,
"Do not fear him for I will give him and all his people and his land into
your hand" (Numbers 21:34 and Deuteronomy 3:2). Moses is reasonably afraid
of war, but God does not know fear. Indeed, as noted above, God wants to
"put the dread and fear of [Israel] upon the people under heaven."
Yet, when God later legislates the conduct of war, God
requires Israel to seek peace first:
When you come near a city to attack it, you shall
offer it words of peace. If it responds with peace and lets you in, then all
the people shall serve you at forced labor. But if it will not make peace but
war, then you shall besiege it (Deuteronomy 20:10-12).
God Adopts Moses' Approach
God's decision to destroy the Amorites (and even to harden
Sihon's heart) may be seen as a political necessity. In order to allow Israel
the opportunity to offer terms of peace in the future, God recognized the
importance of establishing Israel as a military power first. Alternatively, perhaps
God had a change of heart. According to a midrash, God not only annulled the
earlier decree, but did so based on Moses' teaching:
"'This is the Torah of the peace offering'
(Leviticus 7:11). Scripture says, '[The Torah's] ways are ways of pleasantness and
all of its paths are peace' (Proverbs 3:17). Everything which was written in
the Torah was written in order to create peace. Even though the Torah writes of
war, even the wars were written to create peace."
"So you find that the Holy
Blessed One annulled the decree of destruction for the sake of peace. When? God
had commanded Moses 'When you lay siege to a city for many days…' (Deuteronomy
20:19), God said 'You shall utterly destroy them' (Deuteronomy 20:17). But
Moses did not do this. Rather, Moses said, I will kill those who have sinned,
but those who have not sinned I will approach peacefully, as it says 'And I
sent messengers from the wilderness of Kedemot…words of peace…' (Deuteronomy
2:26). When Moses saw that they did not accept peace, he killed them…"
"The Holy Blessed One said, 'I
said "you shall utterly destroy them" but you did not do that. By
your life! Just as you, Moses, have said, so will I do!' as it says, 'When you
come close to a city to attack it, you will call out to it in peace' (Deuteronomy
20:10). Therefore it is written, '[The Torah's] ways are ways of pleasantness
and all of its paths are peace'" (Midrash Tanhuma Tzav 3).
Abarbanel: God Wants Peacemaking
According to the midrash, Moses taught God the necessity of
offering peace. The 15th century Portuguese commentator Isaac Abarbanel,
however, rejects this approach. God is the source of peace and clemency.
Abarbanel expresses this idea in his explanation of the reasons for offering
terms of peace:
The first reason is that it is
appropriate to "walk in God's ways" (Deuteronomy 28:9), and God does
not desire death or the destruction of the world but repentance. God extends
God's right hand to welcome the penitent, and that includes mortal kings and
other people….
Abarbanel continues with more "political"
explanations:
The second reason [to extend terms
of peace] is that conquering through peaceful means demonstrates both ability
and good character and peacefulness…but conquering a city through military
means might demonstrate ability but also cruelty and bad characteristics, which
is dangerous for an enduring kingship, as Isaiah says "Through mercy a
throne is established" (Isaiah 15:5)….
The third reason is that military
victory is always unsure…Have we not seen the many fall to the few or the
strong to the weak?…Therefore it is appropriate to choose true peace rather
than to trust in a doubtful victory. That is the reason why, when laying siege
to a city, an avenue for escape is always left for the besieged, lest a person
who has given up on his chances for a life of peace endanger his life just to
strike at his enemies. Therefore, it is always better to choose peace.
But
that does not mean that peace is mandated in all circumstances. There are wars
that are obligatory (like the wars against Amalek or against the Canaanites)
and wars that are discretionary (like the wars of King David to expand the
borders of the land of Israel).
The Terms of Peace
According
to Maimonides (although not according to Rashi), in all wars, even obligatory
wars, Israel is commanded to seek peace first. Furthermore, the terms of that
peace include conditions that will help assure Israel that the peace will be
real:
One does not wage war with anyone in the world until
one first seeks peace. This is equally true of both discretionary and
obligatory wars, as it says, "When you come near a city to attack it, you
shall offer it words of peace." If they agree to peace and accept the
seven commandments incumbent upon the descendants of Noah, not a single soul
among them may be killed, and they shall pay tribute… (Mishneh Torah, Laws of Kings 6:1).
The Noahide commandments, described in tractate Sanhedrin
(56b) of the Babylonian Talmud, form a rabbinic vision of basic, universal
ethics. These rules--which include the prohibition on murder and the
requirement to set up courts of justice--establish the norms of civil society
and responsible government, which would ensure that a peace treaty was indeed
an assurance of peace.
According to the Talmud Yerushalmi and other sources, Joshua
followed this policy of offering peace.
Before entering the land of Israel, Joshua sent out
a message, announcing that any people who want to leave, could do so; any who
would make peace, could do so; any who would make war, could do so (Shevi'it 6:1, 16b).
The results, however, describe a stark reality. According to
the Talmudic retelling of the biblical story, the Girgashites left, the
Gibeonites made peace, and the other 31 kingdoms fell to Joshua's army. Then as
now, finding partners for peace was and remains no small challenge.
Jeffrey A. Spitzer is the senior educator at Jewish
Family & Life! and produces the JSkyway online professional development
program for educators in Jewish schools. He also serves as a contributing editor
to MyJewishLearning.com.