The only description of this that you could have is the Old Testament.
Yes, which is why I quoted from it. But it is their (Jewish) history and their book. Most prophets sent to try and correct people and explain what they were doing that God did not want, were not well received.
Since we can see this enacted even today (perhaps not with prophets, but with anyone who tries to say that others are doing something wrong), it makes sense - to me.
The OT also gives a reason that the nations were being driven out, and it wasn't because the land was promised to the Israelites. It was because of the despicable things that those nations were doing first. The land wasn't 'given' to the Israelites before then. I can draw on other sources to show that these nations committed such things as human/child sacrifice.
Honestly, I'm not entirely sure that the Israelites understood what the promised land was. Not since Christ came and explained that the 'kingdom' is within us.
The vast majority of humans before Jesus had no knowledge of the Bible or of Jehovah, and the vast majority were not approached by "propets and servants" and told that they needed to change.
All of the humans before Jesus (and many afterward for a long time also) had no knowledge of the bible :)
But when I said that I think there was no reason it wasn't the same for them (those outside of Israel)... I meant that there us no reason that they were not willing to listen also, same as the Israelites. I do think that many of them had some similar knowledge about a 'high god'. that this all originated in the same place. But as each went their own way, beliefs and religions splintered off and changed (or were forgotten) as well. Then the new beliefs sometimes got carried into other cultures, mixing with the older beliefs, and so on and so on.
Of course, one can see from different religious texts that certain truths were carried among them all... love neighbor, do not repay evil with evil... but that these weren't necessarily followed.
Tammy