
Text -- Judges 11:26 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Jdg 11:26
Wesley: Jdg 11:26 - -- Not precisely, but about that time, either from their coming out of Egypt; or, from their first conquest of those lands. He urges prescription, which ...
Not precisely, but about that time, either from their coming out of Egypt; or, from their first conquest of those lands. He urges prescription, which is by all men reckoned a just title, and it is fit it should be so for the good of the world, because otherwise the door would be opened both to kings, and to private persons, for infinite contentions and confusions.
Defender -> Jdg 11:26
Defender: Jdg 11:26 - -- The chronology of the period of the judges is difficult to decipher, but this statement of Jepthah's, inserted more or less incidentally in his polemi...
The chronology of the period of the judges is difficult to decipher, but this statement of Jepthah's, inserted more or less incidentally in his polemic against the king of Ammon, provides an important constraint on such estimates. The children of Israel conquered Heshbon, Aroer and Arnon, and "dwelt in the cities of the Amorites" (Num 21:24-26) shortly before they crossed the Jordan into Canaan. Thus, the time from the beginning of the conquest under Joshua until the judgeship of Jepthah was about 300 years. Judges of this period included Othniel (40 years), Ehud (80 years), Deborah (40 years), Gideon (40 years), Abimelech (3 years), Tola (23 years), and Jair (22 years). (Jdg 3:11, Jdg 3:30; Jdg 5:31; Jdg 8:28; Jdg 9:22; Jdg 10:2, Jdg 10:3). In addition, a total of 53 years of "oppression" are listed (Jdg 3:8, Jdg 3:14; Jdg 4:3; Jdg 6:1), plus 18 years just before Jepthah."
TSK -> Jdg 11:26
TSK: Jdg 11:26 - -- Heshbon : Num 21:25-30; Deu 2:24, Deu 3:2, Deu 3:6; Jos 12:2, Jos 12:5, Jos 13:10
Aroer : Deu 2:36
three hundred : Jdg 3:11, Jdg 3:30, Jdg 5:31, Jdg 8...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jdg 11:15-28
Barnes: Jdg 11:15-28 - -- Consult the marginal references. If the ark with the copy of the Law Deu 31:26 was at Mizpeh, it would account for Jephthah’ s accurate knowled...
Consult the marginal references. If the ark with the copy of the Law Deu 31:26 was at Mizpeh, it would account for Jephthah’ s accurate knowledge of it; and this exact agreement of his message with Numbers and Deuteronomy would give additional force to the expression, "he uttered all his words before the Lord"Jdg 11:11.
No mention is made of this embassy to Moab in the Pentateuch.
Into my place - This expression implies that the trans-Jordanic possessions of Israel were not included in the land of Canaan properly speaking.
The title "God of Israel"has a special emphasis here, and in Jdg 11:23. in a narrative of transactions relating to the pagan and their gods.
Chemosh was the national god of the Moabites (see the marginal references); and as the territory in question was Moabitish territory before the Amorites took it from "the people of Chemosh,"this may account for the mention of Chemosh here rather than of Moloch, or Milcom, the god of the Ammonites. Possibly the king of the children of Ammon at this time may have been a Moabite.
Jephthah advances another historical argument. Balak, the king of Moab, never disputed the possession of Sihon’ s kingdom with Israel.
Poole -> Jdg 11:26
Poole: Jdg 11:26 - -- Three hundred years not precisely, but about that time; either from their coming out of Egypt, or from their first conquest of those lands; and thus ...
Three hundred years not precisely, but about that time; either from their coming out of Egypt, or from their first conquest of those lands; and thus numbers are oft expressed: see Num 1:46 2:32 11:21 Jud 20:46 . He urgeth prescription, which is by all men reckoned a just title, and it is fit it should be so for the good of the world, because otherwise the door would be opened both to kings and to private persons for infinite contentions and confusions.
Haydock -> Jdg 11:26
Haydock: Jdg 11:26 - -- He. Hebrew, "While Israel," &c. ---
Years. He makes use of a round number. (Haydock) ---
Chronologists generally suppose that either more or fe...
He. Hebrew, "While Israel," &c. ---
Years. He makes use of a round number. (Haydock) ---
Chronologists generally suppose that either more or fewer years had elapsed; (Menochius) and the Scripture only relates what Jephte said. (Sa) ---
The Jews reckon 394. Some date from the coming out of Egypt 305. (Calmet) ---
Petau has 365. But as Jephte only speaks of the time during which the Israelites had occupied the land, the 40 years' sojournment must be deducted, and still Petau will have 25 years too many; (Haydock) whereas "those who adduce the title of prescription, are accustomed rather to increase than to diminish the length of time." (Usher, p. 74.) ---
Hence this author allows only 263 years. Houbigant comes rather nearer to the number of Jephte, and reckons 281, which the ambassadors might represent, in a round number as 300. (Proleg.) ---
Salien almost agrees with Usher dating 306 years from the exit, and 266 from the victory over Sehon. He observes, with Eusebius, that Hercules instituted the Olympic games in the first year of Jephte, in the year of the world 2849. But they were restored, and became a famous epoch only 400 years after. He place the first rape of Helen by Theseus at the same time, when she was about 12 years ole. In her 24th, she was stolen again by Paris, and gave occasion to the famous siege of Troy. (Haydock)
Gill -> Jdg 11:26
Gill: Jdg 11:26 - -- While Israel dwelt in Heshbon and her towns,.... This was the principal city, which formerly belonged to the Moabites, and was taken from them by Siho...
While Israel dwelt in Heshbon and her towns,.... This was the principal city, which formerly belonged to the Moabites, and was taken from them by Sihon; who being conquered by Israel, it fell into their hands, and they inhabited it, and the towns adjacent to it, from that time to the present; see Num 21:25.
and in Aroer and her towns; another city with its villages, taken at the same time, and ever since inhabited by the Israelites, even by the tribe of Gad, who rebuilt it; it lay near the river Arnon; see Num 32:34.
and in all the cities that be along by the coasts of Arnon; which lay along by the side of that river, which divided Moab from the kingdom of the Amorites; these Israel had dwelt in three hundred years; and during this time, neither Balak king of Moab, nor any of his successors, had ever disputed Israel's title to those cities, or commenced a war with them on account of them; but they had continued in the peaceable enjoyment of them so long as three hundred years; which are thus reckoned in the Jewish chronology z; Joshua governed Israel twenty eight years, Othniel forty, Ehud eighty, Deborah forty, Gideon forty, Abimelech three, Tola twenty three, Jair twenty two, and eighteen years Israel was oppressed by the children of Ammon, which with the six years of Jephthah make just three hundred; so that, according to this computation, there were six years short of it; but being so near, the round number is given:
why therefore did ye not recover them within that time? signifying they ought to have put in their claim sooner, and endeavoured to have recovered them long before this time, if they had any right unto them; wherefore Jephthah pleads prescription, and which in a course of time ought to take place; or otherwise the world would be full of endless contentions and controversies, and kingdoms and states would never be at peace, nor each one know and enjoy for certainty its proper domains.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jdg 11:1-40
TSK Synopsis: Jdg 11:1-40 - --1 The covenant between Jephthah and the Gileadites, that he should be their head.12 The treaty of peace between him and the Ammonites is in vain.29 Je...
MHCC -> Jdg 11:12-28
MHCC: Jdg 11:12-28 - --One instance of the honour and respect we owe to God, as our God, is, rightly to employ what he gives us to possess. Receive it from him, use it for h...
Matthew Henry -> Jdg 11:12-28
Matthew Henry: Jdg 11:12-28 - -- We have here the treaty between Jephthah, now judge of Israel, and the king of the Ammonites (who is not named), that the controversy between the tw...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jdg 11:12-28
Keil-Delitzsch: Jdg 11:12-28 - --
Jephthah's Negotiations with the King of the Ammonites. - Jdg 11:12. Before Jephthah took the sword, he sent messengers to the king of the Ammonites...

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--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...

Constable: Jdg 11:1--12:8 - --3. Deliverance through Jephthah 11:1-12:7
To prepare for the recital of Israel's victory over th...
