Joshua Chapter 13 verse 28 Holy Bible

ASV Joshua 13:28

This is the inheritance of the children of Gad according to their families, the cities and the villages thereof.
read chapter 13 in ASV

BBE Joshua 13:28

This is the heritage of the children of Gad by their families, with its towns and its unwalled places
read chapter 13 in BBE

DARBY Joshua 13:28

This is the inheritance of the children of Gad according to their families, the cities and their hamlets.
read chapter 13 in DARBY

KJV Joshua 13:28

This is the inheritance of the children of Gad after their families, the cities, and their villages.
read chapter 13 in KJV

WBT Joshua 13:28

This is the inheritance of the children of Gad after their families, the cities, and their villages.
read chapter 13 in WBT

WEB Joshua 13:28

This is the inheritance of the children of Gad according to their families, the cities and the villages of it.
read chapter 13 in WEB

YLT Joshua 13:28

This `is' the inheritance of the sons of Gad, for their families, the cities and their villages.
read chapter 13 in YLT

Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 28. - This is the inheritance of the children of Gad. The cause of the difference between the Reubenites and the Gadites may perhaps be thus explained. While both inhabited a similar tract of country, a country from its open and pastoral character likely to develop a hardy and healthy race of men, the Reubenites were exposed to the seductions of the Moabitish worship of Chemosh, which, when combined with an ancestral temperament by no means prone to resist such influences (see Genesis 49:4), soon proved fatal to a tribe, itself not numerous (Deuteronomy 33:6), and hemmed in on every side but the north by the unbelievers. The temperament inherited by the Gadites added to their more favourable situation and the nature of their pursuits, developed a hardy and warlike race ready to do battle, and fearless of their foes (1 Chronicles 5:18). Of this tribe came the valiant Jephthah, and of it also came the brave soldiers of David, whose qualifications stir to poetry the sober chronicler of Judah (1 Chronicles 12:8). We may see here the influence of circumstances on the character of a people. Originally (1 Chronicles 5:18) the Reubenites and the Gadites were alike. But the Reubenites, as we have seen, from unfavourable surroundings, lost the character which the Gadites, more favourably situated, were enabled to preserve. And the distinctions of tribes, producing as they did a separate esprit de corps in each tribe, will serve to explain why one tribe did not immediately succumb to influences which proved fatal to another. In the end, as we know, all the people of Gad fell victims to the temptations which surrounded them, and, save in the case of Levi, Judah, and Benjamin, and the few faithful Israelites who went over to them, irrevocably. The same phenomenon may be observed in the history of nations generally. As long as their manners were simple and their morals pure, they have preserved their liberty, and in many cases have acquired empire. As soon as their bodies were enervated by luxury, and their minds corrupted by vice, they fell a prey to foes whom formerly they would have despised. Thus fell the Greek and Boman republics, thus the Britons became an easy prey to the Saxons, and the Saxons to the Danes. In every instance the history of a tribe and of a nation serves to illustrate the maxim that "righteousness exalteth a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people."

Ellicott's Commentary