
Text -- Judges 20:33 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB: Jdg 20:33 - -- A palm-grove, where Baal was worshipped. The main army of the confederate tribes was drawn up there.
A palm-grove, where Baal was worshipped. The main army of the confederate tribes was drawn up there.

Hebrew, "the caves of Gibeah"; a hill in which the ambuscades lay hid.
Clarke -> Jdg 20:33
Clarke: Jdg 20:33 - -- Put themselves in array at Baal-tamar - The Israelites seem to have divided their army into three divisions; one was at Baal-tamar, a second behind ...
Put themselves in array at Baal-tamar - The Israelites seem to have divided their army into three divisions; one was at Baal-tamar, a second behind the city in ambush, and the third skirmished with the Benjamites before Gibeah.
TSK -> Jdg 20:33
TSK: Jdg 20:33 - -- rose up : Jos 8:18-22
put themselves : There appear to have been three divisions of the Israelitish armycaps1 . ocaps0 ne at Baal-tamar (which was si...
rose up : Jos 8:18-22
put themselves : There appear to have been three divisions of the Israelitish armycaps1 . ocaps0 ne at Baal-tamar (which was situated, says Eusebius, near Gibeah); a second behind the city in ambush; and a third, who skirmished with the Benjamites before Gibeah.

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jdg 20:33
Barnes: Jdg 20:33 - -- Baal-tamar is only mentioned here. It took its name from some palm-tree that grew there; perhaps the same as the "palm-tree of Deborah, between Rama...
Baal-tamar is only mentioned here. It took its name from some palm-tree that grew there; perhaps the same as the "palm-tree of Deborah, between Ramah and Bethel"Jdg 4:5, the exact locality here indicated, since "the highway"Jdg 20:31 along which the Israelites enticed the Benjamites to pursue them, leads straight to Ramah, which lay only a mile beyond the point where the two ways branch off.
The meadows of Gibeah - The word rendered "meadow"is only found here. According to its etymology, it ought to mean a "bare open place", which is particularly unsuitable for an ambush. However, by a change in the vowel-points, without any alteration in the letters, it becomes the common word for "a cavern".
Poole -> Jdg 20:33
Poole: Jdg 20:33 - -- Out of their place where they had disposed themselves, that they might fall upon the Benjamites, when they were drawn forth to a sufficient distance ...
Out of their place where they had disposed themselves, that they might fall upon the Benjamites, when they were drawn forth to a sufficient distance from their city, and when they were pursuing that party, mentioned Jud 20:30 .
Came forth out of their places to execute what was agreed upon, even to take Gibeah, and burn it, as they actually did, Jud 20:37 .
Haydock -> Jdg 20:33
Haydock: Jdg 20:33 - -- Baalthamar, the plain of Jericho; (Chaldean) or rather a village in the vicinity of Gabaa, which Eusebius calls Besthamar.
Baalthamar, the plain of Jericho; (Chaldean) or rather a village in the vicinity of Gabaa, which Eusebius calls Besthamar.
Gill -> Jdg 20:33
Gill: Jdg 20:33 - -- And all the men of Israel rose up out of their place,.... The main body of the army, which fled before Benjamin, when they were come to a proper place...
And all the men of Israel rose up out of their place,.... The main body of the army, which fled before Benjamin, when they were come to a proper place, stopped, and rose up out of it, and stood in their own defence:
and put themselves in array at Baaltamar; drew up in a line of battle at that place, facing their enemies, in order to engage with them: this place the Targum calls the plains of Jericho, that being the city of palm trees, which Tamar signifies; and so Jarchi interprets it; but these are too far off; it must be some place near Gibeah. Jerom w speaks of a little village in his time in those parts, called Bethamari, and may be thought to be this same place; perhaps in the times of the old Canaanites here was a grove of palm trees, in which Baal was worshipped, from whence it had its name:
and the liers in wait of Israel came forth out of their places, even out of the meadows of Gibeah; or plain of Gibeah, as the Targum; for as the city was built on a hill, at the bottom of it were a plain and fine meadows of grass, and here an ambush was placed at some little distance from the city; and when the army of the Benjaminites were drawn off from it, in pursuit of Israel, these came forth and placed themselves between them and the city.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jdg 20:1-48
TSK Synopsis: Jdg 20:1-48 - --1 The Levite in a general assembly declares his wrong.8 The decree of the assembly.12 The Benjamites, being cited, make head against the Israelites.18...
MHCC -> Jdg 20:1-48
MHCC: Jdg 20:1-48 - --The Israelites' abhorrence of the crime committed at Gibeah, and their resolution to punish the criminals, were right; but they formed their resolves ...
Matthew Henry -> Jdg 20:26-48
Matthew Henry: Jdg 20:26-48 - -- We have here a full account of the complete victory which the Israelites obtained over the Benjamites in the third engagement: the righteous cause w...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jdg 20:29-48
Keil-Delitzsch: Jdg 20:29-48 - --
The Victory on the Third Day's Engagement . - Jdg 20:29. The account of this commences with the most important point, so far as their success was c...
Constable: Jdg 17:1--21:25 - --III. THE RESULTS OF ISRAEL'S APOSTASY chs. 17--21
The following two extended incidents (ch. 17-21) differ from t...

Constable: Jdg 19:1--21:25 - --B. The Immorality of Gibeah and the Benjamites chs. 19-21
Chapter 19 records an event that provoked civi...

Constable: Jdg 20:1-48 - --2. The civil war in Israel ch. 20
This chapter continues the story begun in chapter 19. The emph...
