· Translation: KJV

Joshua 12:14the king of Hormah, one; the king of Arad, one;

The setting

Central Canaan, ~1400 BC. Joshua's scribe carefully records each conquered stronghold. Modern-day southern Israel.

The emotion here: quiet satisfaction recording systematic divine intervention

The original word

echad (אֶחָד) — one, single, emphasizing each individual complete victory

Why it matters

Hormah means 'destruction' - Israel turned their greatest defeat into victory

Read with care

What most readers miss in Joshua 12:14

Arad controlled the copper mines - this was economic warfare, not just military

Common misconceptionThis seems like repetitive record-keeping, but each city represented years of warfare and God's specific intervention in impossible battles

Bible Genome reading

Joshua 12:14 — Bible Genome reading

SpeakerNarrator
Eraconquest
Primary emotionresting
Literary typenarrative

Emotional genome

Comfort power40%
Quotability20%
Memorability30%
Crisis relevance20%
Standalone10%
Themes:victorycompletion

In context

No verse stands alone.

Read the conversation around it.

Open Joshua 12

Joshua 12:14 comes from the book of Joshua, written during the conquest period. These words are attributed to Narrator. The dominant emotion in this verse is resting, with a comfort power of 40% and a tone that is reverent. It belongs to the narrative genre of biblical literature. Key themes include victory, completion. Notable phrases: king of Hormah; king of Arad.

Your reflection

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