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Text -- Judges 10:1 (NET)

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10:1 After Abimelech’s death, Tola son of Puah, grandson of Dodo, from the tribe of Issachar, rose up to deliver Israel. He lived in Shamir in the Ephraimite hill country.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Abimelech priest (Eli Ithamar) of Nob, whom Saul killed; Ahimelech I,a priest, Ahimelech II; son of Abiathar son of Ahimelech I,a man who was part of David's fugitive band; a Hittite
 · Dodo grandfather of Tola the judge--before Saul's time,son of Ahohi; one of David's military elite,father of Elhanan, one of David's military elite from Bethlehem
 · Ephraim the tribe of Ephraim as a whole,the northern kingdom of Israel
 · Israel a citizen of Israel.,a member of the nation of Israel
 · Issachar the tribe of Israel that came from his Jacob's son Issachar,son of Jacob and Leah; founder of the tribe of Issachar,the tribe of Issachar in Israel,son of Obed-Edom
 · Puah son of Issachar
 · Shamir a town in the hill country of Judah,a town in the hill country of Ephraim,chief son of Micah (Uzziel Kohath Levi)
 · Tola son of Issachar,son of Puah (Dodo Issachar); the judge who succeeded Abimelech


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Tola | Shamir | SHAMIR (1) | Puah | PUNITES | PUAH; PUVAH | Oppression | Judge | Israel | ISSACHAR | ISRAEL, HISTORY OF, 2 | GENEALOGY, 8 part 1 | Dodo | DYE; DYEING | DODO; DODAI | CHRONOLOGY OF THE OLD TESTAMENT | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Jdg 10:1 - -- Not of himself, but raised by God, as the other judges were.

Not of himself, but raised by God, as the other judges were.

Wesley: Jdg 10:1 - -- Or, to save, which he did not by fighting against, and overthrowing their enemies, but by a prudent and pious government of them, whereby he kept them...

Or, to save, which he did not by fighting against, and overthrowing their enemies, but by a prudent and pious government of them, whereby he kept them from sedition, oppression, and idolatry.

Wesley: Jdg 10:1 - -- Which was in the very midst of the land.

Which was in the very midst of the land.

JFB: Jdg 10:1 - -- That is, "to save." Deliverance was necessary as well from intestine usurpation as from foreign aggression.

That is, "to save." Deliverance was necessary as well from intestine usurpation as from foreign aggression.

JFB: Jdg 10:1 - -- He was uncle to Abimelech by the father's side, and consequently brother of Gideon; yet the former was of the tribe of Issachar, while the latter was ...

He was uncle to Abimelech by the father's side, and consequently brother of Gideon; yet the former was of the tribe of Issachar, while the latter was of Manasseh. They were, most probably, uterine brothers.

JFB: Jdg 10:1 - -- As a central place, he made it the seat of government.

As a central place, he made it the seat of government.

Clarke: Jdg 10:1 - -- Tola the son of Puah - As this Tola continued twenty-three years a judge of Israel after the troubles of Abimelech’ s reign, it is likely that ...

Tola the son of Puah - As this Tola continued twenty-three years a judge of Israel after the troubles of Abimelech’ s reign, it is likely that the land had rest, and that the enemies of the Israelites had made no hostile incursions into the land during his presidency and that of Jair; which, together continued forty-five years.

TSK: Jdg 10:1 - -- am 2772, bc 1232, An, Ex, Is, 259 arose : Jdg 2:16, Jdg 3:9 defend : or, deliver, Heb. save Shamir : Jos 15:48

am 2772, bc 1232, An, Ex, Is, 259

arose : Jdg 2:16, Jdg 3:9

defend : or, deliver, Heb. save

Shamir : Jos 15:48

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Jdg 10:1 - -- Defend - The marginal reading "to deliver,"is far preferable. The word is the same as in Jdg 2:16, Jdg 2:18; Jdg 3:9, Jdg 3:15, Jdg 3:31, etc.,...

Defend - The marginal reading "to deliver,"is far preferable. The word is the same as in Jdg 2:16, Jdg 2:18; Jdg 3:9, Jdg 3:15, Jdg 3:31, etc., and is the technical word applied to the judges. Compare Neh 9:27 ("saviours who saved them,"the King James Version).

The term "there arose,"also marks Tola as one of the Judges, properly so called, raised by divine providence.

Tola and Puah - Both names of heads of houses in the tribe of Issachar 1Ch 7:1; Gen 46:13.

Shamir - Not the same as that mentioned in Jos 15:48, which was in the hill country of Judah. Issaehar would seem from this to have extended into the northern part of mount Ephraim.

Poole: Jdg 10:1 - -- There arose not of himself, but either chosen by the people; or rather, raised by God, as the other judges were. To defend Israel or, to save , wh...

There arose not of himself, but either chosen by the people; or rather, raised by God, as the other judges were. To defend Israel or, to save , which he did not by fighting against and overthrowing their enemies, but by a prudent and pious government of them, whereby he kept them from sedition, and oppression, and tyranny, as also from idolatry, as may be gathered from Jud 10:6 , which if not restrained and purged out, would have brought certain ruin upon them.

In Shamir in Mount Ephraim

which was in the very heart and midst of the land.

Haydock: Jdg 10:1 - -- Uncle of Abimelech, i.e., Half-brother to Gedeon, as being born of the same mother, but by a different father, and of a different tribe. (Challoner)...

Uncle of Abimelech, i.e., Half-brother to Gedeon, as being born of the same mother, but by a different father, and of a different tribe. (Challoner) ---

The wife of Joas might have been married to a person of the tribe of Issachar, by whom she had Phua, who was half-brother of Gedeon. (Haydock) ---

Thola was cousin-german of Abimelech. (St. Augustine, q. xlvii., &c.) The Israelites elected Thola for their judge, (Abulensis) out of respect to Gedeon, (Cornelius a Lapide) that he might put an end to the commotions which had been excited by the tyrant. (Menochius) -- Joatham might be passed over on account of his youth. The Septuagint and Chaldean have "Thola, the son of Phua, the son of his uncle by the father's side," which may be true, if the brother of Gedeon adopted him; or this uncle might refer to Abimelech. The uncertainty arises from the Hebrew Dodo, which may be taken as a proper name. "Phua, the son of Dodo;" (Pagnin; Protestants, &c.; Haydock) or as denoting a relation, the paternal uncle of Abimelech, or of Thola, (Bonfrere, &c.; Calmet) or simply "his kinsman." The Hebrew, Septuagint, &c., assert that Thola "arose to defend or to save Israel." He seems to have kept all quiet during the 23 years of his administration. ---

Samir. Septuagint (Alexandrian) reads "Samaria;" but the city was not built till the reign of Amri. There was a city on a mountain, (Haydock) called Samir, in the tribe of Juda, (Josue xv. 48,) different from this. (Menochius) ---

People were at liberty to dwell where they pleased, out of their own tribe. (Calmet) ---

This judge was buried among the Ephraimites. (Haydock) ---

But we know not the exact place where Samir stood. (Calmet) ---

There seems, however, to be no inconvenience in allowing that there was a town in the vicinity of Sichem, long before Amri made Samaria the capital of his kingdom; (see 3 Kings xiii. 22., and xvi. 24,) and here Thola might reside. He was probably the eldest, or of the second branch, of Issachar, (Numbers xxvi. 23, ) of great nobility and virtue, and the 10th judge of Israel.

Gill: Jdg 10:1 - -- And after Abimelech there arose to defend Israel,.... To save, deliver, and protect Israel; which does not necessarily imply that Abimelech did; for h...

And after Abimelech there arose to defend Israel,.... To save, deliver, and protect Israel; which does not necessarily imply that Abimelech did; for he was no judge of God's raising up, or the people's choosing, but usurped a kingly power over them; and was so far from saving and defending them, that he involved them in trouble and distress, and ruled over them in a tyrannical manner, and left them in the practice of idolatry: it only signifies that after his death arose a person next described to which this may well be attributed, that he was raised up as a judge by the Lord; and though we read of no enemies particularly, that he delivered the people from in his days, yet it is not impossible nor unlikely that there might be such, though not made mention of; besides, he might be said to save them, as the word signifies, in that he was an happy instrument of composing those differences and dissensions, which Abimelech had occasioned, and of recovering them from the idolatry they had fallen into in his times, and of protecting them in their liberties, civil and religious: and this was

Tola the son of Puah, the son of Dodo, a man of Issachar; he was of the tribe of Issachar, and bore the same name as the eldest son of Issachar did, as his father Puah had the name of the second son of Issachar, 1Ch 7:1 and as for Dodo his grandfather, this is elsewhere mentioned as the name of a man, as it doubtless is here, 2Sa 23:9 though some copies of the Targum, the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions, render it, the son of his uncle, or father's brother; meaning that his father Puah was the son of Abimelech's uncle, or father's brother, and so was one of the family which was raised up to be a judge after his death; but it is not likely that Gideon, the father of Abimelech, and Puah, the father of this man, should be brethren, when the one was of the tribe of Manasseh, and the other of the tribe of Issachar:

and he dwelt in Shamir in Mount Ephraim: that is, when he became judge in Israel he removed to this place, as being in the midst of the tribes, and near the tabernacle of Shiloh, and so fit for a judge to reside in, to whom the people might apply from all parts to have justice and judgment administered to them. It is called Shamir in Mount Ephraim, to distinguish it from another of the same name in the mountain of Judah, Jos 15:48 it seems to have its name from the thorns which grew about it.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Jdg 10:1 Heb “a man of Issachar.”

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Jdg 10:1-18 - --1 Tola judges Israel in Shamir.3 Jair, whose thirty sons had thirty cities.6 The Philistines and Ammonites oppress Israel.10 In their misery God sends...

MHCC: Jdg 10:1-5 - --Quiet and peaceable reigns, though the best to live in, yield least variety of matter to be spoken of. Such were the days of Tola and Jair. They were ...

Matthew Henry: Jdg 10:1-5 - -- Quiet and peaceable reigns, though the best to live in, are the worst to write of, as yielding least variety of matter for the historian to entertai...

Keil-Delitzsch: Jdg 10:1-5 - -- Of these two judges no particular deeds are mentioned, no doubt because they performed none. Jdg 10:1-2 Tola arose after Abimelech's death to d...

Constable: Jdg 3:7--17:1 - --II. THE RECORD OF ISRAEL'S APOSTASY 3:7--16:31   ...

Constable: Jdg 6:1--10:6 - --D. The fourth apostasy 6:1-10:5 The writer of Judges structured this book so the story of Gideon would b...

Constable: Jdg 8:1--16:31 - --B. Present Failures vv. 8-16 Jude next expounded the errors of the false teachers in his day to warn his...

Constable: Jdg 10:1-5 - --4. The judgeships of Tola and Jair 10:1-5 No great military feats marked the judgeships of these...

Constable: Jdg 10:1-2 - --Tola's judgeship 10:1-2 Tola (meaning "worm" in Hebrew) "arose to save Israel" from the ...

Constable: Jdg 10:1--13:25 - --2. The seriousness of the error vv. 10-13 v. 10 The things the false teachers did not understand but reviled probably refer to aspects of God's reveal...

Guzik: Jdg 10:1-18 - --Judges 10 - Two Minor Judges and More Oppression A. Two "minor" judges. 1. (1-2) Tola. After Abimelech there arose to save Israel Tola t...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Judges (Book Introduction) JUDGES is the title given to the next book, from its containing the history of those non-regal rulers who governed the Hebrews from the time of Joshua...

JFB: Judges (Outline) THE ACTS OF JUDAH AND SIMEON. (Jdg 1:1-3) ADONI-BEZEK JUSTLY REQUITED. (Jdg. 1:4-21) SOME CANAANITES LEFT. (Jdg 1:22-26) AN ANGEL SENT TO REBUKE THE ...

TSK: Judges (Book Introduction) The book of Judges forms an important link in the history of the Israelites. It furnishes us with a lively description of a fluctuating and unsettled...

TSK: Judges 10 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Jdg 10:1, Tola judges Israel in Shamir; Jdg 10:3, Jair, whose thirty sons had thirty cities; Jdg 10:6, The Philistines and Ammonites oppr...

Poole: Judges (Book Introduction) BOOK OF JUDGES THE ARGUMENT THE author of this book is not certainly known, whether it was Samuel, or Ezra, or some other prophet; nor is it mate...

Poole: Judges 10 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 10 Tola judgeth Israel; and Jair, whose thirty sons had thirty cities, Jud 10:1-5 . The people’ s idolatry, Jud 10:6 . The Philistines...

MHCC: Judges (Book Introduction) The book of Judges is the history of Israel during the government of the Judges, who were occasional deliverers, raised up by God to rescue Israel fro...

MHCC: Judges 10 (Chapter Introduction) (Jdg 10:1-5) Tola and Jair judge Israel. (Jdg 10:6-9) The Philistines and Ammonites oppress Israel. (Jdg 10:10-18) Israel's repentance.

Matthew Henry: Judges (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Judges This is called the Hebrew Shepher Shophtim , the Book of Judges, which the Syria...

Matthew Henry: Judges 10 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter we have, I. The peaceable times Israel enjoyed under the government of two judges, Tola and Jair (Jdg 10:1-5). II. The troublesom...

Constable: Judges (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The English title, Judges, comes to us from the Latin translation (...

Constable: Judges (Outline) Outline I. The reason for Israel's apostasy 1:1-3:6 A. Hostilities between the Israelites an...

Constable: Judges Judges Bibliography Aharoni, Yohanan. Land of the Bible. Phildelphia: Westminster Press, 1962. ...

Haydock: Judges (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION. THE BOOK OF JUDGES. This Book is called Judges, because it contains the history of what passed under the government of the judge...

Gill: Judges (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JUDGES The title of this book in the Hebrew copies is Sepher Shophetim, the Book of Judges; but the Syriac and Arabic interpreters ...

Gill: Judges 10 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JUDGES 10 This chapter gives an account of two judges of Israel, in whose days they enjoyed peace, Jdg 10:1, after which they sinni...

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