
Text -- Judges 5:8 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Jdg 5:8 - -- They did not only submit to idolatry when they were forced to it by tyrants, but they freely chose it.
They did not only submit to idolatry when they were forced to it by tyrants, but they freely chose it.

Wesley: Jdg 5:8 - -- New to them, and unknown to their fathers, and new in comparison of the true and everlasting God of Israel, being but of yesterday.
New to them, and unknown to their fathers, and new in comparison of the true and everlasting God of Israel, being but of yesterday.

Wesley: Jdg 5:8 - -- That is, in their walled cities, which have gates and bars; gates are often put for cities; then their strong holds fell into the hands of their enemi...
That is, in their walled cities, which have gates and bars; gates are often put for cities; then their strong holds fell into the hands of their enemies.

Wesley: Jdg 5:8 - -- There was not, the meaning is not, that all the Israelites had no arms, but, either they had but few arms among them, being many thousands of them dis...
There was not, the meaning is not, that all the Israelites had no arms, but, either they had but few arms among them, being many thousands of them disarmed by the Canaanites and Philistines, or that they generally neglected the use of arms, as being without all hope of recovering their liberty.
JFB -> Jdg 5:6-8
JFB: Jdg 5:6-8 - -- The song proceeds in these verses to describe the sad condition of the country, the oppression of the people, and the origin of all the national distr...
The song proceeds in these verses to describe the sad condition of the country, the oppression of the people, and the origin of all the national distress in the people's apostasy from God. Idolatry was the cause of foreign invasion and internal inability to resist it.
Clarke -> Jdg 5:8
Clarke: Jdg 5:8 - -- They chose new gods - This was the cause of all their calamities; they forsook Jehovah, and served other gods; and then was war in their gates - the...
They chose new gods - This was the cause of all their calamities; they forsook Jehovah, and served other gods; and then was war in their gates - they were hemmed up in every place, and besieged in all their fortified cities; and they were defenseless, they had no means of resisting their adversaries; for even among forty thousand men, there was neither spear nor shield to be seen. The Vulgate gives a strange and curious turn to this verse: Nova bella elegit Dominus, et portas hostium ipse subvertit ; "The Lord chose a new species of war, and himself subverted the gates of the enemy."Now, what was this new species of war? A woman signifies her orders to Barak; he takes 10,000 men, wholly unarmed, and retires to Mount Tabor, where they are immediately besieged by a powerful and well-appointed army. On a sudden Barak and his men rush upon them, terror and dismay are spread through the whole Cannanitish army, and the rout is instantaneous and complete. The Israelites immediately arm themselves with the arms of their enemies, and slay all before them; they run, and are pursued in all directions. Sisera, their general, is no longer safe in his chariot; either his horses fail, or the unevenness of the road obliges him to desert it, and fly away on foot; in the end, the whole army is destroyed, and the leader ingloriously slain. This was a new species of war, and was most evidently the Lord’ s doings. Whatever may be said of the version of the Vulgate, (and the Syriac and Arabic are something like it), the above are all facts, and show the wondrous working of the Lord.
TSK -> Jdg 5:8

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jdg 5:8
Barnes: Jdg 5:8 - -- The "war in the gates"describes the hostile attacks of the Canaanites, which were the punishment of the idolatry of the Israelites (compare the marg...
The "war in the gates"describes the hostile attacks of the Canaanites, which were the punishment of the idolatry of the Israelites (compare the marginal references), and the reduction of Israel to an unarmed and unresisting state under the Philistine dominion. See Jdg 3:31 note.
Poole -> Jdg 5:8
Poole: Jdg 5:8 - -- They did not only submit to idolatry when they were forced to it by tyrants, but they freely chose new gods ; new to them, and unknown to their fat...
They did not only submit to idolatry when they were forced to it by tyrants, but they freely chose new gods ; new to them, and unknown to their fathers, and new in comparison of the true and everlasting God of Israel, being but upstarts, and of yesterday.
In the gates i.e. in their walled cities, which have gates and bars; gates are oft put for cities, as Gen 22:17 Deu 17:2 Oba 1:11 . Then their strongest holds fell into the hands of their enemies.
Was there i.e. there was not; the meaning is not that all the Israelites had no arms, for here is mention made only of shields or spears; so they might have swords, and bows, and arrows to offend their enemies; but either that they had but few arms among them, being many thousands of them disarmed by the Canaanites; or that they generally neglected the use of arms, as being utterly dispirited, and without all hope of recovering their lost liberty, and being necessitated to other employments for subsistence.
Haydock -> Jdg 5:8
Haydock: Jdg 5:8 - -- Israel. What could be more astonishing and new, than this method of warfare, in which a few unarmed Israelites gain the victory over an immense ar...
Israel. What could be more astonishing and new, than this method of warfare, in which a few unarmed Israelites gain the victory over an immense army, and oblige the general, to leap from his chariot, that he may escape observation? A woman calls to battle. Hebrew is rather different, "They chose new gods:" some copies of the Septuagint have "vain gods, (Calmet) as barley bread." Others agree with the Hebrew, "Then war was in the gates." Jabin would not allow any arms in the country, and hence Samgar was forced to use the implements of husbandry. So the Philistines afterwards would not suffer the Hebrews to have a smith among them, lest they should make arms, 1 Kings xiii. 19, 22.
Gill -> Jdg 5:8
Gill: Jdg 5:8 - -- They chose new gods,.... That is, Israel, as most of the Jewish commentators interpret it; for the verb is singular, and Israel agrees well with it: t...
They chose new gods,.... That is, Israel, as most of the Jewish commentators interpret it; for the verb is singular, and Israel agrees well with it: this they did after the death of Joshua; it refers to their first idolatry, begun by Micah, Jdg 17:1 they chose other gods than the true God; Baalim and Ashtaroth they are said to serve, Jdg 2:11, and besides the gods of the Canaanites and Phoenicians, they sought after and introduced new ones from other places, or the same may be meant; since all besides the true God, the eternal Jehovah, the Ancient of days, and everlasting King, are new gods that lately sprung up: the Arabic and Syriac versions are,"God chose a new king;''so Ben Gersom; to perfect this wonder; for not only Sisera and his army were drawn to the gates of Israel to a proper place to fall in, but the victory was not obtained by Israel by their own force and strength; for they had no weapons of war, not a shield nor a spear, but for a very few men, but it was the Lord that fought for them in a new way; the former sense seems best, and agrees with what follows:
then was war in the gates; when they fell into idolatry, then God suffered the judgment of war to come upon them, even into the gates of their fortified cities, which were the security of them, and where were their courts of judicature, but by war disturbed and made to cease:
was there a shield or spear seen among forty thousand in Israel? though the number of the Israelites were several hundred thousands, yet there were not to be seen among them shields and spears sufficient for 40,000; or not one among 40,000 was armed; which was owing either to their negligence and sloth in not providing themselves with arms, or not taking care of them in a time of peace; so that when war came into their gates, they had nothing to defend themselves with, or annoy their enemies; or to their cowardice, not daring to take up a shield or spear in their own defence; or to the enemy, Jabin king of Canaan, having disarmed them, that they might not be able to make a revolt, from him, and recover their liberties. Ben Gersom refers it to the times of Joshua, when there was no need of a shield and spear among the 40,000 of the children of Reuben, Gad, and Manasseh, that came over Jordan with them, since God fought for them; and the Targum seems to understand it of Sisera's army, that came against Israel with shields, spears, and swords; and makes the number of them to be in all 300,000, which is just the number of foot soldiers Josephus makes his army to consist of; and yet, though so numerous and so well armed, could not stand before Barak with 10,000 men only; See Gill on Jdg 4:17, the words rather refer to the cival war of the Benjamites with the Israelites, when 40,000 of the latter were killed, which was before the times of Deborah, Jdg 20:21.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Jdg 5:8 Traditionally “forty thousand,” but this may be an instance where Hebrew term אֶלֶף (’elef) refers to ...
Geneva Bible -> Jdg 5:8
Geneva Bible: Jdg 5:8 They chose new gods; then [was] war in the gates: was there a ( d ) shield or spear seen among forty thousand in Israel?
( d ) They had no heart to r...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jdg 5:1-31
MHCC -> Jdg 5:6-11
MHCC: Jdg 5:6-11 - --Deborah describes the distressed state of Israel under the tyranny of Jabin, that their salvation might appear more gracious. She shows what brought t...
Matthew Henry -> Jdg 5:6-11
Matthew Henry: Jdg 5:6-11 - -- Here, I. Deborah describes the distressed state of Israel under the tyranny of Jabin, that the greatness of their trouble might make their salvation...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jdg 5:8
Keil-Delitzsch: Jdg 5:8 - --
Jdg 5:8 describes the cause of the misery into which Israel had fallen. חדשׁים אלהים is the object to יבחר , and the subject is to ...

Constable: Jdg 4:1--5:31 - --C. The third apostasy chs. 4-5
Chapters 4 and 5 are complementary versions of the victory God gave Israe...

Constable: Jdg 5:1-31 - --2. Deborah's song of victory ch. 5
One writer called this song "the finest masterpiece of Hebrew...

Constable: Jdg 5:1--7:25 - --A. Previous Failures vv. 5-7
Jude cited three examples of failure from the past to warn his readers of t...

Constable: Jdg 5:1-31 - --1. The example of certain Israelites v. 5
Jude's introductory words were polite (cf. 2 Peter 1:1...
