
Text -- Judges 20:47-48 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Jdg 20:48 - -- Having destroyed those that came to Gibeah, and into the field, now they follow them home to their several habitations.
Having destroyed those that came to Gibeah, and into the field, now they follow them home to their several habitations.

Wesley: Jdg 20:48 - -- Comprehensively taken, so as to include women and children. If this seem harsh and bloody, either it may be ascribed to military fury; or perhaps it m...
Comprehensively taken, so as to include women and children. If this seem harsh and bloody, either it may be ascribed to military fury; or perhaps it may be partly justified, from that command of God in a parallel case, Deu 13:15, and from that solemn oath by which they had devoted to death all that came not up to Mizpeh, Jdg 21:5, which none of the Benjamites did.
JFB -> Jdg 20:48
JFB: Jdg 20:48 - -- This frightful vengeance, extending from Gibeah to the whole territory of Benjamin, was executed under the impetuous impulse of highly excited passion...
This frightful vengeance, extending from Gibeah to the whole territory of Benjamin, was executed under the impetuous impulse of highly excited passions. But doubtless the Israelites were only the agents of inflicting the righteous retributions of God; and the memory of this terrible crisis, which led almost to the extermination of a whole tribe, was conducive to the future good of the whole nation.
TSK: Jdg 20:47 - -- six hundred : Jdg 21:13; Psa 103:9, Psa 103:10; Isa 1:9; Jer 14:7; Lam 3:32; Hab 3:2, rock of Rimmon, The rock Rimmon was doubtless a strong place; bu...
six hundred : Jdg 21:13; Psa 103:9, Psa 103:10; Isa 1:9; Jer 14:7; Lam 3:32; Hab 3:2, rock of Rimmon, The rock Rimmon was doubtless a strong place; but it is uncertain where situated. It is probable however, that it was near, and took its name from, the village of Remmon, mentioned by Eusebius, fifteen miles north from Jerusalem. It appears that rocks are still resorted to in the East, as places of security; and some of them are even capable of sustaining a siege. Deut. Lam. Roque says, that ""The Grand Seignior, wishing to seize the person of the emir (Fakr-eddin, prince of the Druses), gave orders to the pacha to take him prisonercaps1 . hcaps0 e accordingly came in search of him, with a new army, in the district of Chouf, which is part of mount Lebanon, wherein is the village of Gesin, and close to it, the rock which served for a retreat to the emir. It is named in Arabic, Magara Gesin, i.e., the cavern of Gessin, by which name it is famous. The pacha pressed the emir so closely, that this unfortunate prince was obliged to shut himself up in the cleft of a great rock, with a small number of his officers. The pacha besieged him there several months; and was going to blow up the rock by a mine, when the emir capitulated.""

TSK: Jdg 20:48 - -- smote them : Deu 13:15-17; 2Ch 25:13, 2Ch 28:6-9; Pro 18:19
came to hand : Heb. was found
they came to : Heb. were found
smote them : Deu 13:15-17; 2Ch 25:13, 2Ch 28:6-9; Pro 18:19
came to hand : Heb. was found
they came to : Heb. were found

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jdg 20:48
Barnes: Jdg 20:48 - -- They treated Benjamin as devoted to utter destruction, as Jericho had been Jos 6:17, Jos 6:21, and the whole tribe was all but actually extirpated. ...
Poole: Jdg 20:47 - -- In a cave within that rock, where they fortified themselves and fetched in provision as they had opportunity; which they could easily do, when the h...
In a cave within that rock, where they fortified themselves and fetched in provision as they had opportunity; which they could easily do, when the heat of the battle was over, and the Israelites were not solicitous to pursue them farther.

Poole: Jdg 20:48 - -- Having destroyed those that came to Gibeah, and into the field, now they follow them home to their several habitations.
The men of every city comp...
Having destroyed those that came to Gibeah, and into the field, now they follow them home to their several habitations.
The men of every city comprehensively taken, so as to include women and children. If this seem harsh and bloody, either it may be ascribed to military fury; or rather, it may be justified; partly, from that high guilt brought upon the whole tribe, in which it is no wonder if their infants suffered, which was not unusual in such cases, as Num 31:17 1Sa 15:3 Jos 7:15 ; partly, from that command of God in a parallel case, Deu 13:15 ; and partly, from that solemn oath by which they had anathematized or devoted to death all that came not up to Mizpeh, Jud 21:5 , which none of the Benjamites did; for which cause also they destroyed all the men, women, and children of Jabesh-gilead, Jud 21:10 .
Haydock: Jdg 20:47 - -- Escape. Mercy was shewn to these, as the tribe had been already treated with sufficient severity. St. Jerome says, they were "reserved for the sake...
Escape. Mercy was shewn to these, as the tribe had been already treated with sufficient severity. St. Jerome says, they were "reserved for the sake of the apostle Paul," (epit. Paul.; Menochius) who was descended from some of them. (Haydock) ---
Remmon, near Gabaa, Zacharias xiv. 10. Eusebius places it fourteen miles north of Jerusalem. (Calmet)

Haydock: Jdg 20:48 - -- And villages, is not expressed in Hebrew, &c. But as both cities, and all the inhabitants were destroyed, the villages would share the same fate, (H...
And villages, is not expressed in Hebrew, &c. But as both cities, and all the inhabitants were destroyed, the villages would share the same fate, (Haydock) as being under a curse. The Israelites concluded, from the exemplary vengeance which had been taken of Sodom and Gomorra, that they were authorized to treat their brethren in guilt with the utmost severity. (Calmet)
Gill: Jdg 20:47 - -- But six hundred men,.... Who were all that were left of 26,700
turned and fled to the wilderness; turned out of the highway or common road, and bei...
But six hundred men,.... Who were all that were left of 26,700
turned and fled to the wilderness; turned out of the highway or common road, and being swift of foot, got to a wilderness; what wilderness is not certain:
unto the rock Rimmon, and abode in the rock Rimmon four months; very probably in a cave of that rock, which might be large enough to hold such a number; Saul is said to have just the same number under it, and David had also a like number in a cave at Engedi, 1Sa 14:2, and from hence these men might send out of their number to fetch in provision for them from parts adjacent, after the heat of the action was over, and the rage and fury of the Israelites subsided.

Gill: Jdg 20:48 - -- And the men of Israel turned again upon the children of Benjamin,.... After they had destroyed their army, the city of Gibeah, and the inhabitants of ...
And the men of Israel turned again upon the children of Benjamin,.... After they had destroyed their army, the city of Gibeah, and the inhabitants of it: not content with this, in their wrath and fury, turned and went:
and smote them with the edge of the sword, as well the men of every city; even men, women, and children, in every city of Benjamin, at least all that lay in their way; and which they might do to be avenged on them, for sending out their militia against them, which had made such a slaughter among them to the loss of 40,000 men, or to fulfil their oath, that such who came not to Mizpeh should be put to death; for which reason also the inhabitants of Jabeshgilead, as well as of the cities of Benjamin, were put to death, men, women, and children, dealing in the same severity with them as with the Canaanitish nations, or as with a city given to idolatry:
as the beast, and all that came to hand; spared no living creature, herds and flocks:
also they set on fire all the cities that they came unto; which belonged to the tribe of Benjamin, so exceedingly wroth were they with them, for protecting such that had been the authors of such abominable wickedness, and for the loss of the lives of so many valuable men.

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...
