Kevin P. Edgecomb , biblicalia, 28 November 2005, Sun, Moon and Storms
A few days ago, I was reading the John H. Walton paper "Joshua 10:12-15 and Mesopotamian Celestial Omen Texts" (181-190 in Faith, Tradition & History,
eds. A.R. Millard, J.K. Hoffmeier, and D.W. Baker) and came upon an
interesting idea, quite different from Walton's. First, the key verses,
Joshua 10.12-13:
אז ידבר יהושע ליהוה
ביום תת יהוה את־האמרי
לפני בני ישראל
ויאמר לעיני ישראל
שמש בגבעונ דום
וירח בעמק אילון
ןידם השמש וירח עמד
עד־יקם גוי איביו
הלא־היא כתובה על־ספר הישר
ויעמד השמש בחצי השמים
ולא־אץ לבוא כיום תמים
The NRSV renders this:
On the day when the LORD gave the Amorites over to the Israelites, Joshua spoke
to the LORD; and he said in the sight of Israel, "Sun, stand still at Gibeon,
and Moon, in the valley of Aijalon." And the sun stood still, and the moon
stopped, until the nation took vengeance on their enemies. Is this not written
in the Book of Jashar? The sun stopped in midheaven, and did not hurry to set
for about a whole day.
Now typically this passage has been taken to indicate
some kind of astronomical phenomenon, literally involving the sun and
moon. Yet, just prior to this (and please don't make me type any more
Hebrew!), the saving miracle of this battle was described as large
hailstones raining down on the fleeing enemy combatants (see vv. 9-11).
Furthermore, v. 14 appears to indicate that the amazing part was not
the miracle itself, but that the Lord acted upon the suggestion of
Joshua.
An idea came to me upon reading an excerpt of a balag-lamentation, "He Is a Storm, At the Healing" lines 10-15, given by Walton:
The heavens continually rumbled,
the earth continually shook;
The sun lay at the horizon
The moon stopped still in the midst of the sky
In the sky the great lights disappeared
An evil storm ... the nations
A deluge swept over the lands.
It appears to me that the request for and description
of the Sun and Moon to דמם/עמד is an ancient Hebrew idiom for a
sky-covering storm, which would stretch from horizon to horizon and
cover both Sun and Moon. I'll look into it more, of course, but it
certainly is an interesting possibility.