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Text -- Judges 21:19-25 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Jdg 21:19 - -- Probably it was the feast of tabernacles, which they celebrated with more than ordinary joy. And that feast was the only season, at which the Jewish v...
Probably it was the feast of tabernacles, which they celebrated with more than ordinary joy. And that feast was the only season, at which the Jewish virgins were allowed to dance. But even this was not mixed dancing. No men danced with these daughters of Shiloh. Nor did the married women so forget their gravity, as to join with them. However their dancing thus in public, made them an easy prey: whence Bishop Hall observes, "The ambushes of evil spirits carry away many souls from dancing to a fearful desolation."
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Wesley: Jdg 21:21 - -- By whom we may understand not those only who were born or settled inhabitants there, but all those who were come thither upon this occasion, and for a...
By whom we may understand not those only who were born or settled inhabitants there, but all those who were come thither upon this occasion, and for a time sojourned there: for although only the males were obliged to go up to the three solemn feasts; yet the women had liberty to go, and those who were most devout did usually go.
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Which were near to the green where they danced.
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Wesley: Jdg 21:21 - -- Take them away by force, which they might the better do, because the women danced by themselves.
Take them away by force, which they might the better do, because the women danced by themselves.
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Wesley: Jdg 21:23 - -- _That is, each man his wife. By which we may see, they had no very favourable opinion of polygamy, because they did not allow it in this case, when it...
_That is, each man his wife. By which we may see, they had no very favourable opinion of polygamy, because they did not allow it in this case, when it might seem most necessary for the reparation of a lost tribe.
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By degrees, increasing their buildings as their number increased.
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Wesley: Jdg 21:25 - -- What wonder was it then, if all wickedness overflowed the land? Blessed be God for magistracy!
What wonder was it then, if all wickedness overflowed the land? Blessed be God for magistracy!
JFB -> Jdg 21:19; Jdg 21:21-22
JFB: Jdg 21:19 - -- The exact site of the place was described evidently for the direction of the Benjamites.
The exact site of the place was described evidently for the direction of the Benjamites.
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JFB: Jdg 21:21-22 - -- The dance was anciently a part of the religious observance. It was done on festive occasions, as it is still in the East, not in town, but in the open...
The dance was anciently a part of the religious observance. It was done on festive occasions, as it is still in the East, not in town, but in the open air, in some adjoining field, the women being by themselves. The young women being alone indulging their light and buoyant spirits, and apprehensive of no danger, facilitated the execution of the scheme of seizing them, which closely resembles the Sabine rape in Roman history. The elders undertook to reconcile the families to the forced abduction of their daughters. And thus the expression of their public sanction to this deed of violence afforded a new evidence of the evils and difficulties into which the unhappy precipitancy of the Israelites in this crisis had involved them.
Clarke: Jdg 21:19 - -- There is a feast of the Lord - What this feast was is not known: it might be either the passover, pentecost, or the feast of tabernacles, or indeed ...
There is a feast of the Lord - What this feast was is not known: it might be either the passover, pentecost, or the feast of tabernacles, or indeed some other peculiar to this place. All the above feasts were celebrated at that time of the year when the vines were in full leaf; therefore the Benjamites might easily conceal themselves in the vineyards; and the circumstances will answer to any of those feasts
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Clarke: Jdg 21:19 - -- On the east side of the highway, etc. - I can see no reason for this minute description, unless it intimates that this feast was to be held this yea...
On the east side of the highway, etc. - I can see no reason for this minute description, unless it intimates that this feast was to be held this year in rather a different place to that which was usual: and, as the Benjamites had been shut up in their strong hold in Rimmon, they might not have heard of this alteration; and it was necessary, in such a case, to give them the most circumstantial information, that they might succeed in their enterprise without being discovered.
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Clarke: Jdg 21:21 - -- And catch you every man his wife - That is, Let each man of the two hundred Benjamites seize and carry off a woman, whom he is, from that hour, to c...
And catch you every man his wife - That is, Let each man of the two hundred Benjamites seize and carry off a woman, whom he is, from that hour, to consider as his wife.
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Clarke: Jdg 21:22 - -- Be favorable unto them - They promise to use their influence with the men of Shiloh to induce them to consent to a connection thus fraudulently obta...
Be favorable unto them - They promise to use their influence with the men of Shiloh to induce them to consent to a connection thus fraudulently obtained, and which the necessity of the case appeared to them to justify
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Clarke: Jdg 21:22 - -- We reserved not to each man his wife in the war - The reading of the Vulgate is very remarkable: Miseremini eorum, non enim rapuerunt eas jure bella...
We reserved not to each man his wife in the war - The reading of the Vulgate is very remarkable: Miseremini eorum, non enim rapuerunt eas jure bellantium atque victorum, sed rogantibus ut acciperent non dedistis, et a vestra parte peccatum est . - "Pardon them, for they have not taken them as victors take captives in war; but when they requested you to give them you did not; therefore the fault is your own."Here it is intimated that application had been made to the people of Shiloh to furnish these two hundred Benjamites with wives, and that they had refused; and it was this refusal that induced the Benjamites to seize and carry them off. Does not St. Jerome, the translator, refer to the history of the rape of the Sabine virgins? See below. Houbigant translates the Hebrew thus: Veniam quaeso illis date; non enim ad bellum duxerant suam quisque uxorem; et nisi eas illis nunc concedetis, delicti rei eritis . - "Pardon them, I beseech you, for they have not each taken his wife to the war; and unless you now give these to them, you will sin."This intimates that, as the Benjamites had not taken their wives with them to the war, where some, if not all, of them might have escaped; and the Israelites found them in the cities, and put them all to the sword; therefore the people of Shiloh should give up those two hundred young women to them for wives; and if they did not, it would be a sin, the circumstances of the case being considered
Our translation seems to give as a reason to the men of Shiloh why they should pardon this rape, that as they had not permitted the women to live in their war with Benjamin, therefore these men are now destitute; and the concession which they wish them to make may be considered as more of an obligation to the Israelites than to the Benjamites. It is an obscure sentence; and the reader, if not pleased with what is laid down, may endeavor to satisfy himself with others which he may find in different versions and commentators. The Vulgate gives a good sense to the passage; but probably Houbigant comes nearest to the meaning.
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Clarke: Jdg 21:23 - -- They went and returned unto their inheritance - It appears that the Benjamites acted in the most honorable way by the women whom they had thus viole...
They went and returned unto their inheritance - It appears that the Benjamites acted in the most honorable way by the women whom they had thus violently carried off; and we may rest assured they took them to an inheritance at least equal to their own, for it does not appear that any part of the lands of the Benjamites was alienated from them, and the six hundred men in question shared, for the present, the inheritance of many thousands.
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Clarke: Jdg 21:24 - -- Every man to his tribe - Though this must have been four months after the war with Benjamin, Jdg 20:47; yet it appears the armies did not disband ti...
Every man to his tribe - Though this must have been four months after the war with Benjamin, Jdg 20:47; yet it appears the armies did not disband till they had got the remnant of Benjamin settled, as is here related.
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Clarke: Jdg 21:25 - -- In those days there was no king in Israel - Let no one suppose that the sacred writer, by relating the atrocities in this and the preceding chapters...
In those days there was no king in Israel - Let no one suppose that the sacred writer, by relating the atrocities in this and the preceding chapters, justifies the actions themselves; by no means. Indeed, they cannot be justified; and the writer by relating them gives the strongest proof of the authenticity of the whole, by such an impartial relation of facts that were highly to be discredit of his country
I Have already referred to the rape of the Sabine virgins. The story is told by Livy, Hist. lib. i., cap. 9, the substance of which is as follows: Romulus having opened an asylum at his new-built city of Rome for all kinds of persons, the number of men who flocked to his standard was soon very considerable; but as they had few women, or, as Livy says, penuria mulierum , a dearth of women, he sent to all the neighboring states to invite them to make inter-marriages with his people. Not one of the tribes around him received the proposal; and some of them insulted his ambassador, and said, Ecquod feminis quoque asylum aperuissent? Id enim demum compar connubium fore ? "Why have you not also opened an asylum for Women, which would have afforded you suitable matches?"This exasperated Romulus, but he concealed his resentment, and, having published that he intended a great feast to Neptune Equester, invited all the neighboring tribes to come to it: they did so, and were received by the Romans with the greatest cordiality and friendship. The Sabines, with their wives and children, came in great numbers, and each Roman citizen entertained a stranger. When the games began, and each was intent on the spectacle before them, at a signal given, the young Romans rushed in among the Sabine women, and each carried off one, whom however they used in the kindest manner, marrying them according to their own rites with due solemnity, and admitting them to all the rights and privileges of the new commonwealth. The number carried off on this occasion amounted to near seven hundred; but this act of violence produced disastrous wars between the Romans and the Sabines, which were at last happily terminated by the mediation of the very women whose rape had been the cause of their commencement. The story may be seen at large in Livy, Plutarch, and others
Thus ends the book of Judges; a work which, while it introduces the history of Samuel and that of the kings of Judah and Israel, forms in some sort a supplement to the book of Joshua, and furnishes the only account we have of those times of anarchy and confusion, which extended nearly from the times of the elders who survived Joshua, to the establishment of the Jewish monarchy under Saul, David, and their successors. For other uses of this book, see the preface
Masoretic Notes on the Book of Judge
The number of verses in this book is six hundred and eighteen
Its Masoretic chapters are fourteen
And its middle verse is Jdg 10:8 : And that year they vexed and oppressed the children of Israel, etc
Corrected for a new edition, December 1, 1827. - A. C.
Defender -> Jdg 21:25
Defender: Jdg 21:25 - -- This tragic indictment, first made in Jdg 17:6, is repeated in this final verse of the book. In between these accusations (Judges 17-21) is found the ...
This tragic indictment, first made in Jdg 17:6, is repeated in this final verse of the book. In between these accusations (Judges 17-21) is found the most appalling description of moral and spiritual chaos that one can encounter anywhere. Yet these people were the chosen people of God, and were no more than one generation away from Joshua and "the elders that outlived Joshua, who had seen all the great works of the Lord, that He did for Israel" (Jdg 2:7). Their fathers had served the Lord during that period, but then "there arose another generation after them" who "did evil in the sight of the Lord, and served Baalim" (Jdg 2:10, Jdg 2:11). It is highly probable that it was during this generation that the tragic events of Judges 17-21 took place (see Jdg 18:1, note; and Jdg 20:28, note). When the younger generation forsakes the faith of their fathers and begins to compromise with the pantheistic cultures of their ungodly neighbors, it may not be long before they descend into utter wickedness (Rom 1:21-32). Almost the same thing is happening to the current generation in America and other Christian nations today."
TSK: Jdg 21:19 - -- a feast : Exo 23:14-16; Lev 23:2, Lev 23:4, Lev 23:6, Lev 23:10, Lev 23:34; Num 10:10, Num 28:16, Num 28:26, Num 29:12; Deu 16:1, Deu 16:10, Deu 16:13...
a feast : Exo 23:14-16; Lev 23:2, Lev 23:4, Lev 23:6, Lev 23:10, Lev 23:34; Num 10:10, Num 28:16, Num 28:26, Num 29:12; Deu 16:1, Deu 16:10, Deu 16:13; Psa 81:3; Joh 5:1, Joh 7:2
yearly : Heb. from year to year
on the east side : or, toward the sun rising
of the highway : or, on
Lebonah : Maundrell supposes, that either Khan Leban, which is situated on the eastern side of a ""delicious vale,""four leagues south from Shechem, and two leagues north from Bethel, or the village of Leban, which is on the opposite side, occupies the site of the ancient Lebonah. It is eight hours, or about 24 miles, from Jerusalem, according to Dr. Richardson.
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TSK: Jdg 21:21 - -- dance : Jdg 11:34; Exo 15:20; 1Sa 18:6; 2Sa 6:14, 2Sa 6:21; Psa 149:3, Psa 150:4; Ecc 3:4; Jer 31:13; Mat 10:17; Luk 17:25
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TSK: Jdg 21:22 - -- Be favourable unto them : or, Gratify us in them, Phm 1:9-12
each man : Jdg 21:14; Gen 1:27, Gen 7:13; Mar 10:6-8; 1Co 7:2
give unto : Jdg 21:1, Jdg 2...
Be favourable unto them : or, Gratify us in them, Phm 1:9-12
each man : Jdg 21:14; Gen 1:27, Gen 7:13; Mar 10:6-8; 1Co 7:2
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TSK: Jdg 21:23 - -- and they went : It appears that the Benjamites acted in the most honourable way to the women they had thus violently carried off, and we may rest assu...
and they went : It appears that the Benjamites acted in the most honourable way to the women they had thus violently carried off, and we may rest assured, that they took them to an inheritance more than equal to their own. But this transaction, as well as the indiscriminate massacre of the people of Jabesh-gilead, as Dr. Gray observes, was certainly stamped with injustice and cruelty; and must be condemned on those principles which the Scriptures elsewhere furnish.
repaired : Jdg 20:48
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Jdg 21:19 - -- The Feast was probably the Passover, or one of the three great Jewish Feasts. In these unsettled times men went up to Shiloh (Seilun) only once a ye...
The Feast was probably the Passover, or one of the three great Jewish Feasts. In these unsettled times men went up to Shiloh (Seilun) only once a year 1Sa 1:3 instead of thrice; only the males kept the Feasts, and therefore the virgins of Shiloh would naturally be the only maidens present, and the public festival would be a likely occasion for their festive dances. It is, however, possible that some particular feast unique to Shiloh is meant, like the yearly sacrifice of David’ s family in Bethlehem 1Sa 20:29.
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Barnes: Jdg 21:22 - -- Ye did not give ... - i. e., they had not broken the oath mentioned in Jdg 21:1, so as to be guilty of taking the Lord’ s name in vain. Th...
Ye did not give ... - i. e., they had not broken the oath mentioned in Jdg 21:1, so as to be guilty of taking the Lord’ s name in vain. They did not give their daughters to Benjamin: the Benjamites had taken them by force. Such casuistry as this condemns the system of oaths, and illustrates the wisdom of our Lord’ s precept Mat 5:33-37.
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Barnes: Jdg 21:23 - -- Compare the very similar account of the rape of the Sabine women by the Romero youths at the festival of the Consualia, as related by Livy.
Compare the very similar account of the rape of the Sabine women by the Romero youths at the festival of the Consualia, as related by Livy.
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Barnes: Jdg 21:25 - -- The repetition of this characteristic phrase (compare Jdg 17:6; Jdg 18:1; Jdg 19:1) is probably intended to impress upon us the idea that these diso...
The repetition of this characteristic phrase (compare Jdg 17:6; Jdg 18:1; Jdg 19:1) is probably intended to impress upon us the idea that these disorders arose from the want of a sufficient authority to suppress them. The preservation of such a story, of which the Israelites must have been ashamed, is a striking evidence of the divine superintendence and direction as regards the Holy Scriptures.
\brdrb \brdrs \brdrw30 \brsp20
Poole: Jdg 21:19 - -- Yearly on the three solemn feasts, in which they used some honest and holy recreations; among which dancing was one, Exo 15:20 1Sa 18:6 2Sa 6:14 ; an...
Yearly on the three solemn feasts, in which they used some honest and holy recreations; among which dancing was one, Exo 15:20 1Sa 18:6 2Sa 6:14 ; and probably it was the feast of tabernacles, which they did celebrate with more than ordinary joy, Deu 16:13-15 .
Which is on the north side of Beth-el Heb. which is on the north of Beth-el . Which doth not relate to
Shiloh which was so known a place, that it was frivolous to describe it by such circumstances, even by places much less known than itself; but to the
feast which as to that part or exercise of the feast here especially concerned and mentioned, to wit, the dancing of the virgins, was not celebrated in Shiloh, but in a neighboring place more convenient for that purpose.
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Poole: Jdg 21:21 - -- The daughters of Shiloh by whom he may possibly understand not those only who were born or settled inhabitants there, (as many conceive,) but all tho...
The daughters of Shiloh by whom he may possibly understand not those only who were born or settled inhabitants there, (as many conceive,) but all those who were come thither upon this occasion, and for a time sojourned there; for although only the males were obliged to go up to the three solemn feasts, yet it is apparent that the women had liberty to go, and those who were most devout did usually go, and others, upon special reasons or occasions: see 1Sa 1:7,21,22 2:1 Luk 2:22,23,41-43 . And it may be justly presumed, especially concerning those women that lived at no great distance from the place of public worship, that they came thither in great numbers. Moreover, the daughters of Shiloh, strictly so called, are not only they that lived in that town or city, but in the country belonging to it, which off comes under the name of the city to which it belongs. And these may be here particularly named, because though others might come, yet they were under great obligations to come, because of their nearness to the place.
The vineyards were near to their dancing-place.
Catch ye every man his wife take them away by force or violence; which they might the better do, because mixed dances were not used by the people of God in their solemnities, but the women danced by themselves, and therefore were more liable to this rape.
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Poole: Jdg 21:22 - -- Be favourable unto them pass by their offence, if not for their sakes, whom necessity forced to this course; yet for our sakes, and indeed for your o...
Be favourable unto them pass by their offence, if not for their sakes, whom necessity forced to this course; yet for our sakes, and indeed for your own sakes; for both you and we have done them a great injury in prosecuting them with so much fury, as to endanger the utter extinction of the whole tribe; and therefore this is the least we can do by way of reparation.
In the war either, first, In the war with Jabesh-gilead, wherein they should have taken care to reserve a sufficient number, which they might have done, by sparing either so many of the married women as were necessary, who, their former husbands being slain, might have been married to those Benjamites; or as many of the younger virgins, who, within a little time, might have been married to them, whom many suppose that they slew. Or, secondly, In the war with the Benjamites, in which they acknowledge their cruelty in destroying the women with such fury, as not to leave a competent number for the men which were left. See Jud 20:48 . Ye
did not give unto them at this time, that ye should be guilty
Quest. Whether this did really discharge them from their oath?
Answ First, It seems to excuse those parents of these virgins who were not acquainted with the plot, and did neither directly nor indirectly give their daughters to them, but they were taken away by force, without their knowledge and consent. If it be said those parents might and should have retaken their daughters from them; it may be replied, that they could not do so before they were corrupted, and the rulers of Israel would not assist them with their power to recover them. And it is a maxim, That many things which ought not to be done, when once they are done, should not be undone. And for those parents who were conscious of the design, it is probable they kept their daughters at home to avoid this. Secondly, Either the oath was made with an exception of the case of the total extirpation of a tribe, or it was a rash oath to do what was out of their power, or what they could not lawfully do, to wit, utterly to destroy a tribe out of Israel, which therefore they here speak of with horror, Jud 21:3,6 ; and if so, as they sinned in making it, so they were not obliged to keep it; it being an acknowledged truth, that rash and sinful oaths are better broken than kept. Thirdly. Yet they cannot be wholly excused from sin in this matter; for as it was folly to take such an oath as it is expressed, so the manner of freeing themselves from their own snare is fraudulent and injurious to the parents, in disposing of their children without their consent.
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Poole: Jdg 21:23 - -- According to their number , i.e. each man his wife, as is said, Jud 21:22 . By which we may see they had no very favourable opinion of polygamy , bec...
According to their number , i.e. each man his wife, as is said, Jud 21:22 . By which we may see they had no very favourable opinion of polygamy , because they did not allow it is this case, when it might seem most necessary for the reparation of a lost tribe.
Returned into their inheritance ; which being very near the place, they could speedily do before the parents could obtain redress.
Repaired the cities ,
and dwelt in them ; not at that instant, which could not be; but by degrees, increasing their buildings as their number increased.
Haydock: Jdg 21:19 - -- Counsel, among themselves. (Haydock) ---
Solemnity. It is not known which is meant, as all the three great festivals occurred during the time tha...
Counsel, among themselves. (Haydock) ---
Solemnity. It is not known which is meant, as all the three great festivals occurred during the time that the vines were covered with leaves; (ver. 20) or this feast might be one peculiar to the city of Silo, in memory of the ark being transported thither. Vatable thinks that the description here given, regards the place where the dance was to be, as all must have known the situation of the city. Silo rather lies to the west than to the east, (Calmet) if we draw a line from Bethel to Sichem, but the road might be circuitous. (Haydock) ---
St. Jerome places Silo ten miles west of Sichem. ---
Lebona may be Chan Lebna, four miles to the south of it. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Jdg 21:21 - -- To dance; not in a lascivious manner, as a certain heretical interpreter would have it, but out of a religious motive. (Menochius) ---
Such dances ...
To dance; not in a lascivious manner, as a certain heretical interpreter would have it, but out of a religious motive. (Menochius) ---
Such dances were formerly very common among all nations. The Therapeuts, who are supposed to have been the first Jewish converts to the Christian faith, in Egypt, and were remarkable for their modesty and serious deportment, danced nevertheless in their religious assemblies, first in two separate bands, and afterwards men and women together. (Philo, contemplat.) The women still dance round the tombs of their relatives, in Palestine, with solemn lamentations. (Roger, and Le Brun's Voyages) ---
Come. Josephus insinuates, that the women were to be seized as they came from different parts to the solemnity. But it hance appears that they were coming out to the city; (Calmet) though it is very probable that the virgins did not all belong to it, but came from all Israel: for why should the people of Silo be forced to supply wives for these surviving Benjamites, against whose character they might reasonably entertain such strong objections? But, if all the assembly agreed that the Benjamites should select from among their daughters whomsoever they could lay their hands on, they could not complain that they were treated with peculiar severity. (Haydock) ---
But did not the Israelites offend by giving this counsel, so contrary to the import of their vow? And were not the Benjamites equally guilty in following such advice? It is answered that, in odious matters words must be taken in all their rigour, and the person who vows not to give, does not engage himself to reclaim if the thing be taken. Those who gave the advice are not perhaps deserving of excuse, on account of the artifice which they employ to get rid of their oath; but the rest, who were not apprised of it till after the execution, were surely without blame; and the Benjamites, who followed the counsel of respectable men, in such circumstances, cannot be considered as guilty of a rape, &c. (Grotius, Jur. ii. 13.; Cornelius a Lapide) (Calmet) ---
St. Ambrose (ep. 6,) seems to be of this opinion. Tostat and others cannot, however, approve of these arguments. "As they erroneously supposed that they were bound by their oath, they prudently turned aside to advise the rape." (Tirinus) ---
So Liranus, &c. ---
But this was only a human prudence. (Haydock) ---
The ancients gave counsel to the Benjamites, to ask the people of Silo to give them their daughters in marriage, knowing they would not grant the request, that they might afterwards have recourse to the expedient of taking them by force. "No doubt they were not without blame. For as they believed that their oath was binding, they ought neither to have done nor to have advised any thing, by which it might be violated." (Salien, in the year of the world 2622.) ---
The rape at Silo preceded that of the Sabines, at Rome, about 700 years, and both probably happened in September. (Tirinus)
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Haydock: Jdg 21:22 - -- Part. Hebrew is variously translated; but the Septuagint and Arabic agree with the Vulgate. By your refusal, and by your oath, you have constrained...
Part. Hebrew is variously translated; but the Septuagint and Arabic agree with the Vulgate. By your refusal, and by your oath, you have constrained them to take what you would not, (Calmet) or could not grant. Protestants, "Be favourable to them for our sakes, because we reserved not to each man his wife, in the war; for ye did not give unto them, at that time, that ye should be guilty." (Haydock) ---
You have not to answer for the infraction of the oath, since you did not give your daughters. (Calmet) ---
They had not objections to the Benjamites on any other head, and the young women were not very reluctant. (Tirinus) ---
It is wonderful that the high priest, Phinees, appears so little on this occasion. If he had spoken in the name of God, the rest would have been under no perplexity.
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Haydock: Jdg 21:24 - -- Himself. This remark has been made twice before, respecting the conduct of Michas and of Dan, both which deserved reprehension. It seems to be adde...
Himself. This remark has been made twice before, respecting the conduct of Michas and of Dan, both which deserved reprehension. It seems to be added here for the same purpose, that we might not be so much startled at the relation of such strange proceedings. Soon after this event, the angel came to upbraid the Israelites, chap. ii. 1. (Haydock) ---
There was not judge perhaps, but anarchy then prevailed. (Du Hamel) ---
At least the people were under more restraint when they had kings, (Worthington) or judges divinely appointed at their head. (Haydock)
Gill: Jdg 21:19 - -- Then they said,.... Some of the elders that sat in council debating this matter, and considering of ways and means to assist their brethren the Benjam...
Then they said,.... Some of the elders that sat in council debating this matter, and considering of ways and means to assist their brethren the Benjaminites, and preserve their tribe from being lost:
behold, there is a feast of the Lord in Shiloh yearly; where the tabernacle then was, and before which the males of Israel were obliged to appear three times of the year; and this was one of them, as is clear by its being called a feast of the Lord; and therefore cannot design any civil festival or fair kept for trade and commerce. Some have thought of the feast of the passover, but it is most likely to be the feast of tabernacles, as Abarbinel takes it to be; which in Jewish writings is emphatically called "the feast"; and the time of year when that was kept was a time of great rejoicing, on account of the fruits of the earth being gathered in, and the reading of the law and especially at the tithe of drawing of water at this feast; insomuch that it is said e that he who never saw the rejoicing at drawing of water never saw rejoicing in his life, which was attended with piping, and dancing, and singing. It is pretty strange what Kimchi notes, that this may be either one of the above feasts, or the day of atonement, at which, he says, the daughters of Israel used to go and dance in the vineyards, according to the words of the Rabbins; when though that is reckoned among the feasts, Lev 23:1 it was properly a fast, as it is called, Act 27:9 and all tokens of festivity and joy were forbidden on it; and where these words of their Rabbins are to be met with, he says not: in a place
which is on the north side of Bethel; we rightly supply "in a place": for the intention is not to describe the situation of Shiloh, which was well known, but a place not far from it, where at this festival the daughters of Shiloh used to dance:
on the east side of the highway that goeth up from Bethel to Shechem; this place lay to the east of a public road, that led from Bethel to Shechem:
and on the south of Lebonah; which Mr. Maundrell f takes to be a place now called Kane Leban, which stands on the east side of a delightful vale, having a village of the same name standing opposite to it on the other side of the vale; one of these places, either that Kane or the village, is supposed to be the Lebonah mentioned Jdg 21:19 to which both the name and situation seem to agree.
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Gill: Jdg 21:20 - -- Therefore they commanded the children of Benjamin,.... The two hundred men of the tribe that wanted wives; they ordered them as follows, and which the...
Therefore they commanded the children of Benjamin,.... The two hundred men of the tribe that wanted wives; they ordered them as follows, and which they spake with authority, being the elders of the congregation, Jdg 21:16.
saying, go and lie in wait in the vineyards; which might belong to Shiloh, or it may be to Lebonah, which perhaps is the same with Bethlaban, famous for its wine with the Misnic writers; who say g the second places for wine are Bethrimah and Bethlaban; and I suspect that Bethrimah is the same with Bethrimmon, near which was the rock Rimmon these men were in; now this being the time of year when the vintage was just over, the vines were full of branches and leaves, under which the men might the better hide themselves; and the grapes being gathered, there were no men in the vineyards, and so might lie in wait safely, and under cover.
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Gill: Jdg 21:21 - -- And see, and, behold, if the daughters of Shiloh come out to dance in dances,.... As they used to do at this festival, not along with men, but by them...
And see, and, behold, if the daughters of Shiloh come out to dance in dances,.... As they used to do at this festival, not along with men, but by themselves; and so might the more easily be taken and carried off; and though only males were obliged to appear from all parts at this feast, yet females might come if they would; and, no doubt, from neighbouring places, at least many did; however, the daughters of Shiloh, who dwelt where the tabernacle was, these always attended the feast with demonstrations of joy, and among the rest with dancing, and that as expressive of spiritual and religious joy, as in the case of Miriam, and the Israelitish women, Exo 15:20 and as in latter times the most religious men used to express their joy at this feast; now the two hundred men in the vineyards, which lay near the field where these virgins used to dance at this time, were to watch and observe when they came out of the city thither, and were engaged in such an exercise:
then come ye out of the yards, and catch you every man his wife of the daughters of Shiloh, and go to the land of Benjamin; they are directed to rush out at once upon them, as they were dancing, secure, as they thought, from molestation and danger; and they were to take everyone one, not more, and go off directly with them to their own tribe.
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Gill: Jdg 21:22 - -- And it shall be, when their fathers or their brethren come unto us to complain,.... Of this rape of their daughters or sisters, or to bring an action ...
And it shall be, when their fathers or their brethren come unto us to complain,.... Of this rape of their daughters or sisters, or to bring an action against them, and desire they might be summoned before them, the elders of the people, and be tried and judged according to law for what they had done; or to put them upon going to war with them again for such treatment of them:
that we will say unto them, be favourable unto them for our sakes; for the sake of the elders, who advised them to do what they did; or for the sake of us Israelites, your sake and ours, who were too severe upon them, and prosecuted the war with too much vigour, which made what they have done necessary, or otherwise a tribe must have been lost in Israel:
because we reserved not to each man his wife in the war; either in the war with Benjamin, which they carried on with such wrath and fury as to destroy all the women, so that there were no wives left for the men that remained, which they now repented of; or in the war with Jabeshgilead, they did not reserve enough of the women taken, only four hundred virgins, whereas there were six hundred men: but the first seems best:
for ye did not give unto them at this time, that you should be guilty; the meaning is, that if they had any uneasiness upon their minds about the oath which they had taken, not to give any of their daughters in marriage to Benjamin, they need not be disturbed at that, since they did not "give" them to them, but these "took" them by force; which was the scheme these elders contrived to secure from the violation of the oath. This they proposed to say to quiet them, and make them easy, to which other things might have been added as that these were their brethren, and not strangers they were married to, and not to mean men, but to men of large estates, having the whole inheritance of the tribe of Benjamin devolved upon them; and their daughters would be the original mothers of the posterity of that tribe in succeeding ages.
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Gill: Jdg 21:23 - -- And the children of Benjamin did so,.... Went and laid wait in the vineyards, and when the daughters of Shiloh came out to dance, they rushed upon the...
And the children of Benjamin did so,.... Went and laid wait in the vineyards, and when the daughters of Shiloh came out to dance, they rushed upon them:
and took them wives according to their number; two hundred of them, each man a wife, and no more; for though polygamy was in use in those times, and if at any time necessary, and could be excused, it might seem now; yet it was not indulged to, neither by the elders, nor by the children of Benjamin:
of them that danced whom they caught; the rape of the Sabine virgins by Romulus, at the arena plays and shows, mentioned by various authors h, and the carrying off of fifteen Spartan virgins from the dances by Aristomenes the Messenian i, are sometimes observed as parallel cases to this, and justified by it, particularly that of Romulus k:
and they went and returned unto their inheritance; the six hundred Benjaminites, with their wives, returned to their own tribe, which was their inheritance by lot; and these, being the only survivors, had a right to the whole:
and repaired the cities, and dwelt in them: in process of time they rebuilt the cities the Israelites had burnt in the late war, and repeopled them as their posterity increased. And the Jewish writers say, that in later times they were allowed to marry with other tribes as before, since the oath only bound those present at Mizpeh; for they observe, that it ran only:
there shall not any of us, &c. not any of our sons; they might give wives to Benjamin, and so in time they became numerous again.
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Gill: Jdg 21:24 - -- And the children of Israel departed thence at that time, every man to his tribe and to his family,.... The war being ended, and things settled as well...
And the children of Israel departed thence at that time, every man to his tribe and to his family,.... The war being ended, and things settled as well as circumstances would admit of, for the preservation of the tribe of Benjamin, who were the cause of it, and had suffered so much in it; the Israelites that had met at Mizpeh, and who had not fallen in the war, returned to their respective countries, to their wives and children, and the business of their callings:
and they went out from thence every man to his inheritance; divided by lot to them, to their estates and possessions, which each had a right unto.
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Gill: Jdg 21:25 - -- In those days there was no king in Israel,.... No supreme magistrate, Joshua being dead, and as yet no judge in Israel had risen up; for all related i...
In those days there was no king in Israel,.... No supreme magistrate, Joshua being dead, and as yet no judge in Israel had risen up; for all related in the five last chapters of this book were done between the death of Joshua and the time of the judges:
every man did that which was right in his own eyes; there being none to restrain him from it, or punish him for it; and this accounts for the many evil things related, as the idolatry of Micah and the Danites, the base usage of the Levite's concubine, the extreme rigour and severity with which the Israelites treated their brethren the Benjaminites, the slaughter of the inhabitants of Jabeshgilead, and the rape of the daughters of Shiloh.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Jdg 21:22 Heb “You did not give to them, now you are guilty.” The MT as it stands makes little sense. It is preferable to emend לֹא...
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NET Notes: Jdg 21:25 Each man did what he considered to be right. The Book of Judges closes with this note, which summarizes the situation of the Israelite tribes during t...
Geneva Bible: Jdg 21:19 Then they said, Behold, [there is] a feast of the LORD in Shiloh yearly [in a place] which [is] on the ( h ) north side of Bethel, on the east side of...
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Geneva Bible: Jdg 21:22 And it shall be, ( i ) when their fathers or their brethren come unto us to complain, that we will say unto them, Be favourable unto them for our sake...
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Geneva Bible: Jdg 21:23 And the children of Benjamin did so, and took [them] wives, according to their ( k ) number, of them that danced, whom they caught: and they went and ...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jdg 21:1-25
TSK Synopsis: Jdg 21:1-25 - --1 The people bewail the desolation of Benjamin.8 By the destruction of Jabesh-gilead they provide them four hundred wives.16 They advise the remainder...
MHCC -> Jdg 21:1-25
MHCC: Jdg 21:1-25 - --Israel lamented for the Benjamites, and were perplexed by the oath they had taken, not to give their daughters to them in marriage. Men are more zealo...
Matthew Henry -> Jdg 21:16-25
Matthew Henry: Jdg 21:16-25 - -- We have here the method that was taken to provide the 200 Benjamites that remained with wives. And, though the tribe was reduced to a small number, ...
Keil-Delitzsch: Jdg 21:17-19 - --
Still Benjamin must be preserved as a tribe. The elders therefore said, " Possession of the saved shall be for Benjamin, "i.e., the tribe-land of Be...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jdg 21:20-21 - --
The Kethibh ויצו in the singular may be explained on the ground that one of the elders spoke and gave the advice in the name of the others. ×...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jdg 21:22 - --
" And when the fathers or brethren of the virgins carried off, come to us to chide with us, we (the elders) will say to them (in your name), Pres...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jdg 21:23 - --
The Benjaminites adopted this advice. They took to themselves wives according to their number, i.e., two hundred (according to Jdg 21:12, compared w...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Jdg 21:24-25 - --
In Jdg 21:24 and Jdg 21:25, the account of this event is brought to a close with a twofold remark: (1) that the children of Israel, i.e., the repres...
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...
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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...
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Constable: Jdg 21:1-25 - --3. The preservation of Benjamin ch. 21
In chapter 20 Israel tried desperately to destroy the tri...
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Constable: Jdg 21:16-24 - --Israel's second sufficient solution: a technical loophole 21:16-24
The writer constructe...
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