Joshua
17
- This was the allotment for the tribe of
Manasseh as Joseph's firstborn, that is, for Makir, Manasseh's firstborn.
Makir was the ancestor of the Gileadites, who had received Gilead and Bashan
because the Makirites were great soldiers.
- So this allotment was for the rest of the
people of Manasseh -- the clans of Abiezer, Helek, Asriel, Shechem, Hepher
and Shemida. These are the other male descendants of Manasseh son of Joseph
by their clans.
- Now Zelophehad son of Hepher, the son of
Gilead, the son of Makir, the son of Manasseh, had no sons but only daughters,
whose names were Mahlah, Noah, Hoglah, Milcah and Tirzah.
- They went to Eleazar the priest, Joshua
son of Nun, and the leaders and said, "The LORD commanded Moses to give
us an inheritance among our brothers." So Joshua gave them an inheritance
along with the brothers of their father, according to the LORD'S command.
- Manasseh's share consisted of ten tracts
of land besides Gilead and Bashan east of the Jordan,
- because the daughters of the tribe of Manasseh
received an inheritance among the sons. The land of Gilead belonged to the
rest of the descendants of Manasseh.
- The territory of Manasseh extended from
Asher to Micmethath east of Shechem. The boundary ran southward from there
to include the people living at En Tappuah.
- (Manasseh had the land of Tappuah, but Tappuah
itself, on the boundary of Manasseh, belonged to the Ephraimites.)
- Then the boundary continued south to the
Kanah Ravine. There were towns belonging to Ephraim lying among the towns
of Manasseh, but the boundary of Manasseh was the northern side of the ravine
and ended at the sea.
- On the south the land belonged to Ephraim,
on the north to Manasseh. The territory of Manasseh reached the sea and bordered
Asher on the north and Issachar on the east.
- Within Issachar and Asher, Manasseh also
had Beth Shan, Ibleam and the people of Dor, Endor, Taanach and Megiddo, together
with their surrounding settlements (the third in the list is Naphoth).
- Yet the Manassites were not able to occupy
these towns, for the Canaanites were determined to live in that region.
- However, when the Israelites grew stronger,
they subjected the Canaanites to forced labor but did not drive them out completely.
- The people of Joseph said to Joshua, "Why
have you given us only one allotment and one portion for an inheritance? We
are a numerous people and the LORD has blessed us abundantly."
- "If you are so numerous," Joshua
answered, "and if the hill country of Ephraim is too small for you, go
up into the forest and clear land for yourselves there in the land of the
Perizzites and Rephaites."
- The people of Joseph replied, "The
hill country is not enough for us, and all the Canaanites who live in the
plain have iron chariots, both those in Beth Shan and its settlements and
those in the Valley of Jezreel."
- But Joshua said to the house of Joseph --
to Ephraim and Manasseh -- "You are numerous and very powerful. You will
have not only one allotment
- but the forested hill country as well. Clear
it, and its farthest limits will be yours; though the Canaanites have iron
chariots and though they are strong, you can drive them out."
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