What does Joshua 15:62 mean?
What is the meaning of Joshua 15:62?

Nibshan

• This town finishes the second trio in the “wilderness” portion of Judah’s allotment (Joshua 15:61-62). Though its exact ruins have not been located, Scripture treats it as a literal settlement, part of the inheritance God promised to Judah (Genesis 17:8; Joshua 13:1-7).

• The very mention of a little-known place underscores how completely God fulfills His word: every corner of the land is cataloged, not just famous sites (cf. Joshua 21:45, “Not one of all the LORD’s good promises to Israel failed; every one was fulfilled,”).

• For believers today, Nibshan reminds us that no promise of God is too small to escape His notice.


the City of Salt

• Located near the Dead Sea—often called the Salt Sea (Genesis 14:3)—this town’s name ties it to the region’s most dominant natural feature.

• Salt in Scripture pictures permanence and covenant faithfulness (Leviticus 2:13; Numbers 18:19). By planting Judah’s boundary beside the Salt Sea, the LORD quietly reinforces the unchanging nature of His covenant with the tribe.

• Later victories “in the Valley of Salt” (2 Samuel 8:13; 2 Kings 14:7) will remind Israel that God still fights for them in this same region.


En-gedi

• En-gedi, meaning “spring of the young goat,” is a lush oasis west of the Dead Sea. David hid among its cliffs when pursued by Saul (1 Samuel 23:29; 24:1-2).

• Songs 1:14 praises its vineyards and fragrant blossoms, showing that even the wilderness can blossom under God’s care.

• By fixing En-gedi within Judah, God grants His people a life-giving refuge—an emblem of grace amid barrenness (Isaiah 35:1).


six cities

• Verse 61 lists three names (Beth-arabah, Middin, Secacah); verse 62 adds three more (Nibshan, the City of Salt, En-gedi), then totals them: “six cities.” The count testifies that nothing in God’s record-keeping is careless.

• This numerical summary also mirrors earlier portions of Joshua where cities are grouped and numbered (Joshua 15:32; 19:38), displaying orderly distribution and fairness among the tribes.


along with their villages

• God’s catalog includes not only principal towns but also their dependent hamlets. He sees the unnamed people who live “in the villages” just as clearly as those inside city walls (Psalm 139:1-3).

• The phrase signals comprehensive possession: Judah is to inhabit the whole territory, fulfilling the mandate of Numbers 33:53, “You are to take possession of the land and settle in it,”.


summary

Joshua 15:62 is more than a footnote in an ancient land deed. By naming Nibshan, the City of Salt, and En-gedi, then summing them as “six cities, along with their villages,” the Spirit highlights God’s meticulous faithfulness. Every promised inch of Judah’s wilderness—from obscure Nibshan to the famous oasis of En-gedi—comes under covenant ownership. The verse assures us that the LORD who counts towns also counts hairs on His children’s heads (Matthew 10:30). Nothing He promises is forgotten, and no place—or person—lies beyond His care.

What archaeological evidence supports the existence of the cities in Joshua 15:61?
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