24-26. Joshua, and all Israel with
him, took Achan—He with his children and all his property,
cattle as well as movables, were brought into one of the long broad
ravines that open into the Ghor, and after being stoned to death (), his corpse, with all belonging to him, was consumed to
ashes by fire. "All Israel" was present, not only as
spectators, but active agents, as many as possible, in inflicting the
punishment—thus testifying their abhorrence of the sacrilege, and
their intense solicitude to regain the divine favor. As the divine
law expressly forbade the children to be put to death for their
father's sins (Deuteronomy 24:16), the
conveyance of Achan's "sons and daughters" to the place of
execution might be only as spectators, that they might take warning
by the parental fate; or, if they shared his punishment (Deuteronomy 24:16), they had probably been accomplices in his crime, and,
indeed, he could scarcely have dug a hole within his tent without his
family being aware of it.