Learn Joshua 16: What It Means and Why It Matters
Chapter Summary: The Point
After Judah’s large allotment in the south, Joshua 16 turns to the inheritance of the children of Joseph, especially Ephraim. The lot gives Joseph’s descendants territory stretching from the Jordan near Jericho through Bethel, Beth Horon, Gezer, and toward the sea. Manasseh and Ephraim receive their inheritance as the two tribes descended from Joseph’s sons. Ephraim’s border is then described according to its families, with additional cities located inside Manasseh’s inheritance. The chapter ends by stating that Ephraim did not drive out the Canaanites who lived in Gezer. Those Canaanites remained in Ephraim’s territory and became forced laborers. Joshua 16 teaches that inheritance is God’s gift, tribal order matters, and partial obedience leaves unresolved dangers inside the promised land. The chapter also prepares for Joshua 17, where the house of Joseph asks for more land and receives Joshua’s command to clear the forested hill country.
Outline: The Structure of Joshua 16
- Verses 1-3: The lot for the children of Joseph
- Verse 4: Manasseh and Ephraim receive their inheritance
- Verses 5-7: Ephraim’s eastern and northern border
- Verses 8-9: Ephraim’s western border and cities inside Manasseh
- Verse 10: Ephraim fails to drive out the Canaanites in Gezer
Context: The Setting
Literary Flow and Genre: Joshua is Old Testament historical narrative with covenant and land-distribution records woven into the story. The book presents Israel’s entrance into Canaan under Joshua and teaches that God keeps his promises to the people he redeemed from Egypt. Joshua 16 belongs to The Distribution of the Land (Joshua 13:1-21:45) and begins the main account of Joseph’s Inheritance (Joshua 16:1-17:18). Land lists should be read by following boundaries, tribal names, repeated inheritance language, and the covenant tension between gift and obedience. Joshua 15 described Judah’s inheritance, while Joshua 17 continues Joseph’s allotment through Manasseh and the complaint of Joseph’s descendants.
History and Culture: Ancient tribal allotments used towns, roads, valleys, waters, and regional boundaries to define inheritance. The “lot” expresses God’s rule over the distribution rather than random chance. Joseph receives a double portion through Ephraim and Manasseh, which follows Jacob’s adoption and blessing of Joseph’s sons in Genesis 48. Ephraim’s failure at Gezer anticipates the wider problem described in Judges, where remaining Canaanite populations become a long-term spiritual and political danger. The chapter gives boundary details because the land is a concrete covenant gift, assigned to real families in real places.
Joshua 16 Commentary: The Walkthrough
Verses 1-3: The Lot for Joseph
The chapter opens with the lot for the children of Joseph. “The lot came out” means the inheritance is assigned under God’s providence. Israel receives land by divine gift, not tribal competition. The wording also connects this chapter to the larger distribution process in Joshua 13-21.
The boundary begins “from the Jordan at Jericho” and moves through the waters of Jericho, the wilderness, and the hill country to Bethel. That route moves from the Jordan valley into higher central territory. The geography matters because Joseph’s inheritance occupies a major central position in the land.
The line then runs from Bethel to Luz, passes the Archites at Ataroth, moves to the Japhletites, reaches lower Beth Horon, continues to Gezer, and ends at the sea. Beth Horon and Gezer were important western approaches. Joseph’s allotment has both spiritual and strategic weight, since it links central highlands to routes toward the coast.
Verse 4: Manasseh and Ephraim Receive
Verse 4 names Joseph’s sons: Manasseh and Ephraim. The children of Joseph take their inheritance through these two tribes. Jacob had blessed them as his own sons in Genesis 48, so Joseph’s family receives a double tribal share in Israel.
The order “Manasseh and Ephraim” may reflect Manasseh’s status as the firstborn, though Ephraim receives special prominence in Jacob’s blessing. The chapter keeps both sons together under Joseph, then turns first to Ephraim’s specific borders. Joshua 17 will give more detail about Manasseh.
This verse is brief, but it carries major covenant history. God preserves Joseph’s line inside Israel’s inheritance. The son sold into Egypt becomes the father of two tribes settled in the promised land. God’s earlier providence now becomes mapped inheritance.
Verses 5-7: Ephraim’s Eastern Boundary
Ephraim’s border is given “according to their families.” The land is assigned to households and clans, not only to a tribal name. Inheritance is both corporate and family-based, so the promise reaches the daily life of Israel’s households.
The eastward border runs from Ataroth Addar to upper Beth Horon. The boundary then goes westward at Michmethath on the north, turns eastward to Taanath Shiloh, passes east of Janoah, descends to Ataroth and Naarah, reaches Jericho, and goes out at the Jordan. The description forms a boundary line rather than a travel story.
The mention of Shiloh’s area is significant because Shiloh will become a central place for Israel’s worship in Joshua 18. Ephraim’s region will hold a major sanctuary location. The inheritance therefore sits near later covenant administration. The land is more than space for settlement; it becomes a setting for worship, leadership, and obedience.
Verses 8-9: Ephraim’s Cities and Villages
The border runs from Tappuah westward to the brook of Kanah and ends at the sea. Verse 8 concludes, “This is the inheritance of the tribe of the children of Ephraim according to their families.” The repeated inheritance language emphasizes God’s settled gift. Ephraim’s land is marked, named, and received.
Verse 9 adds cities set apart for Ephraim “in the middle of the inheritance of the children of Manasseh.” This arrangement may seem unusual, but it fits the close relationship between the Joseph tribes. The sons of Joseph share a connected inheritance, and some Ephraimite cities sit within Manasseh’s larger territory.
The phrase “all the cities with their villages” shows that inheritance includes urban centers and dependent settlements. Ancient cities often governed nearby villages and farmland. The chapter therefore assigns livable territory, not abstract lines on a map. God’s promise reaches homes, fields, gates, and family life.
Verse 10: Gezer and Unfinished Obedience
The chapter ends with a serious failure: “They didn’t drive out the Canaanites who lived in Gezer.” Ephraim receives a real inheritance, yet obedience remains incomplete. The gift of land brings the duty of faithfulness. Gezer stands as the named example.
The Canaanites remain in Ephraim’s territory “to this day” and become servants for forced labor. Forced labor may look like control, but the verse presents a failure to carry out the conquest command. Practical advantage replaces full obedience. Israel gains workers and leaves a covenant danger inside the land.
This ending prepares readers for Judges 1:29, where the same failure is repeated. It also helps explain why later Israel struggles with compromise, idolatry, and divided loyalties. The chapter closes with tension. Ephraim receives inheritance from God, and Ephraim leaves part of the task undone.
Application: The Practice
Personal Faith and Discipleship
- Receive God’s gifts humbly | Joseph’s descendants receive their inheritance by lot, which presents the land as God’s assigned gift. Christian discipleship begins with receiving grace as gift before speaking of service, effort, or fruitfulness. References: Joshua 16:1-4.
- Obey beyond advantage | Ephraim keeps the Canaanites in Gezer as forced labor, which turns incomplete obedience into economic benefit. Faithfulness in that setting meant removing what God commanded them to remove; Christian obedience now requires surrendering profitable compromises that oppose God’s word. References: Joshua 16:10.
- Honor family faithfulness | Ephraim’s inheritance is described according to families. Believers should see ordinary household faithfulness as part of God’s covenant care, since Scripture often brings God’s promises into family, work, and place. References: Joshua 16:5, 8.
Church and Community
- Value concrete stewardship | The boundary list teaches that God’s gifts are specific and entrusted to real communities. Churches should steward people, places, resources, and responsibilities with care rather than treating ministry as an abstract idea. References: Joshua 16:1-9.
- Guard against useful compromise | Ephraim’s forced labor arrangement exposes the temptation to keep what appears beneficial while leaving disobedience unresolved. A church must resist habits that produce visible gains while weakening holiness, truth, or trust. References: Joshua 16:10.
- Remember shared identity | Ephraim and Manasseh receive inheritance as the children of Joseph. Congregations should honor the unity God gives while recognizing distinct callings and responsibilities within the body. References: Joshua 16:4, 9.
Leadership and Teaching
- Teach boundaries clearly | Joshua 16 gives careful borders because God’s people needed to know what had been entrusted to them. Leaders serve well when they define responsibilities, expectations, and biblical convictions with clarity. References: Joshua 16:1-9.
- Name partial obedience | The chapter speaks plainly about Ephraim’s failure at Gezer. Pastors and teachers should address incomplete obedience directly, especially when compromise has become normal or useful. References: Joshua 16:10.
- Connect inheritance to mission | Joseph’s inheritance is a gift, yet the final verse shows that possession required obedience. Christian teaching should hold together grace, identity, and faithful practice without turning obedience into self-salvation. References: Joshua 16:1-10.
- Trace long consequences | Gezer’s remaining Canaanites become a sign of future trouble in Israel’s story. Leaders should help people see how small tolerated compromises can shape a community over time. References: Joshua 16:10.
Interpretive Options: The Differences
How should Ephraim’s failure at Gezer be understood?
- Broad Christian consensus: Ephraim’s failure to drive out the Canaanites in Gezer is a serious mark of incomplete obedience. The Canaanites become forced laborers, but their continued presence still violates the conquest command. The verse prepares readers for the recurring compromise described in Judges.
- Some Christian interpreters: The verse also shows the mixed condition of Israel’s possession during the land-distribution period. Israel receives real inheritance, and yet the full enjoyment of the land requires continued obedience. This reading emphasizes the tension between promise received and obedience still required.
Why were Ephraimite cities located inside Manasseh’s inheritance?
- Broad consensus: Ephraim and Manasseh are closely connected because both descend from Joseph. Cities inside Manasseh’s territory show a shared inheritance arrangement within the house of Joseph rather than a mistake in the record. The wording preserves both tribal distinction and family connection.
- A geographical-administrative reading: Some Christian interpreters understand the cities as practical assignments within a larger regional settlement pattern. Ancient boundaries often involved towns, villages, and clan areas in arrangements more complex than modern political maps. This view fits the chapter’s concern with actual settlement rather than simple straight-line borders.
Common Misreadings: The Mistakes
“Joshua 16 is only a land list with little theological value.” The chapter records God’s promise becoming tribal inheritance. The lot, Joseph’s double portion, family boundaries, and Gezer’s failure all teach that God gives real gifts and calls his people to real obedience.
“Ephraim’s forced labor arrangement proved that the Gezer problem was solved.” Forced labor gave Ephraim control over the Canaanites, yet the verse identifies their continued presence as a failure to drive them out. The chapter treats useful compromise as unfinished obedience.
“Joseph’s inheritance replaces the rest of Israel’s inheritance.” Joseph’s descendants receive a double portion through Ephraim and Manasseh, but the surrounding chapters assign land to the tribes across Israel. Joshua 16 highlights Joseph’s place within the whole covenant people.
Leading: The Teaching Guide
The Aim: Joshua 16 teaches that God gives Joseph’s descendants a real inheritance in the land, and Ephraim’s failure at Gezer warns that covenant gifts must be received with covenant obedience (vv. 1-10).
A Teaching Flow:
- Begin with the lot for Joseph and explain why inheritance by lot points to God’s rule over the land assignment (vv. 1-4).
- Trace Ephraim’s borders and cities, emphasizing that God’s promise becomes concrete in families, towns, and settled responsibility (vv. 5-9).
- End with Gezer and show how one verse of incomplete obedience prepares readers for wider compromise in Israel’s later history (v. 10).
The Approach: Teach the chapter as covenant land distribution rather than as a bare geography lesson. Keep the exposition tied to promise, inheritance, family responsibility, and the danger of useful compromise. In the wider storyline of Scripture, Joseph’s inheritance shows God keeping old promises, while the unresolved failure at Gezer points forward to Israel’s need for deeper deliverance and a faithful King.
Cross-References: The Connections
Genesis 48:5-20 – Jacob adopts Ephraim and Manasseh and gives Joseph’s sons their special place among Israel’s tribes.
Numbers 26:52-56 – The land is assigned by lot according to tribal size, which explains the allotment process behind Joshua 16.
Deuteronomy 7:1-5 – Moses commands Israel to remove the Canaanite nations because their idolatry would endanger covenant faithfulness.
Judges 1:29 – Ephraim’s failure to drive out the Canaanites from Gezer is repeated as part of Israel’s wider incomplete conquest.
1 Kings 9:15-17 – Gezer later appears as a significant city connected with royal building activity in Solomon’s reign.
Hebrews 11:21 – Joseph’s sons appear in the New Testament as part of the faith-filled blessing Jacob gave before his death.
Ephesians 1:11 – Paul’s language of inheritance helps Christians see that God’s people receive their appointed portion by divine purpose in Christ.
Further Study: The Articles
Coming Soon!
Joshua 16 Commentary: Joseph’s Inheritance and Ephraim’s Border