Judges 11:1

As the son of a harlot, Jephthah has no legal standing in the tribe. GILEAD BEGAT] Throughout the rest of the narrative Gilead is the name of a place, not a person (cp. Judges 12:7). Here Gilead's 'sons' represent the legitimate tribesmen.... [ Continue Reading ]

Judges 11:3

TOB] must have been near Gilead, probably to the NE. (cp. 2 Samuel 10:6). VAIN MEN] see on Judges 9:4. 'Broken men,' such as came to David at the cave of Adullam (1 Samuel 22:2). WENT OUT] on forays.... [ Continue Reading ]

Judges 11:9

Jephthah insists on being more than a hired captain: he will be reinstated in the tribe, and placed at its head permanently: cp. 1 Samuel 11:15.... [ Continue Reading ]

Judges 11:11

BEFORE THE LORD] in the holy place at Mizpeh, so that there would be no going back from the bargain. 12-28. Jephthah and the Ammonite chieftain. For this appeal to the enemy's sense of right cp. Numbers 20:14., an event to which Jephthah here refers.... [ Continue Reading ]

Judges 11:18

Jephthah points out that Israel made a wide detour so as to leave the real territory of Moab free; he does not refer specifically to Amnion, but in the following vv., as here, he seems to have Moab specially in his mind. The two peoples were akin to one another: cp. Genesis 19:37; Genesis 19:38.... [ Continue Reading ]

Judges 11:19

See Numbers 21:21. Heshbon Isaiah 16 m. E. of the Jordan, and 12 m. S. of the capital of Ammon. The Amorite territory had belonged to Moab formerly (Numbers 21:26).... [ Continue Reading ]

Judges 11:23

Jephthah's argument (see on Judges 11:19) is that no land had been taken from Moab or Ammon, only from the aboriginal Amorites.... [ Continue Reading ]

Judges 11:24

CHEMOSH] properly, the god of Moab. The Ammonite god was Milcom (1 Kings 11:33, etc.). It has been inferred that Jephthah, or the narrator of Jephthah's words, believed in the existence and power of Chemosh as in that of Jehovah: but this cannot be held to be certain: see also Judges 11:27. An inter... [ Continue Reading ]

Judges 11:26

AROER] on the N. bank of the Arnon, like HESHBON and JAHAZ, is a Moabite town. The Ammonite town, Rabbath-Ammon, is unmentioned. THREE HUNDRED YEARS] The different periods hitherto mentioned in the book amount to 301 years. 29-33. Jephthah's Victory over Ammon.... [ Continue Reading ]

Judges 11:29

THE SPIRIT OF THE LORD] cp. 7:34. In Judges 11:11 Jephthah and all the people are already at Mizpeh. If these words stand in the right place, they must refer to further journeys taken by Jephthah to rouse the whole people, previous to attacking the Ammonites. 30, 31. Cp. the vows of Jacob (Genesis 2... [ Continue Reading ]

Judges 11:33

THE PLAIN OF VINEYARDS] should be a proper name, Abel-cheramim (so RV). 34-40. The fulfilment of Jephthah's vow. The tragic story is told with consummate art and noble reticence. There is no reason to doubt its literal truth.... [ Continue Reading ]

Judges 11:35

THOU] The pronoun is emphatic. Jephthah had had troubles enough both from his kinsmen and his foes. When his daughter comes out to meet him, the full significance of his self-imposed vow bows him strengthless to the ground.... [ Continue Reading ]

Judges 11:37

BEWAIL MY VIRGINITY] The greatest grief of a Hebrew woman consisted in being childless. The writer leaves us in no doubt of her fate.... [ Continue Reading ]

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