
Text -- Judges 4:17 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Jdg 4:17 - -- For women had their tents apart from their husbands. And here he thought to lurk more securely than in her husband's tent.
For women had their tents apart from their husbands. And here he thought to lurk more securely than in her husband's tent.

Wesley: Jdg 4:17 - -- Not a covenant of friendship, which they were forbidden to make with that cursed people, but only a cessation of hostilities, which he afforded them b...
Not a covenant of friendship, which they were forbidden to make with that cursed people, but only a cessation of hostilities, which he afforded them because they were peaceable people, abhorring war, and wholly minding pasturage, and were not Israelites, with whom his principal quarrel was; and especially by God's over - ruling disposal of his heart to favour them who were careful to keep themselves uncorrupted with Israel's sins, and therefore preserved from their plagues.
JFB -> Jdg 4:17-18
JFB: Jdg 4:17-18 - -- According to the usages of nomadic people, the duty of receiving the stranger in the sheik's absence devolves on his wife, and the moment the stranger...
According to the usages of nomadic people, the duty of receiving the stranger in the sheik's absence devolves on his wife, and the moment the stranger is admitted into his tent, his claim to be defended or concealed from his pursuers is established.
TSK -> Jdg 4:17
TSK: Jdg 4:17 - -- fled : Job 12:19-21, Job 18:7-12, Job 40:11, Job 40:12; Psa 37:35, Psa 37:36, Psa 107:40; Pro 29:23; Amo 5:19, Amo 5:20
Jael : Jdg 5:6, Jdg 5:24
peace...
fled : Job 12:19-21, Job 18:7-12, Job 40:11, Job 40:12; Psa 37:35, Psa 37:36, Psa 107:40; Pro 29:23; Amo 5:19, Amo 5:20

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jdg 4:17
Barnes: Jdg 4:17 - -- Sisera went, not to Heber’ s tent, but to Joel’ s, as more secure from pursuit. Women occupied a separate tent. Gen 18:6, Gen 18:10; Gen 2...
Poole -> Jdg 4:17
Poole: Jdg 4:17 - -- To the tent of Jael for women had their tents apart from their husbands, Gen 24:67 31:33 . And here he thought to lurk more securely than in her husb...
To the tent of Jael for women had their tents apart from their husbands, Gen 24:67 31:33 . And here he thought to lurk more securely than in her husband’ s tent.
There was peace not a league or covenant of friendship, which they were forbidden to make with that cursed people, but only a cessation of hostilities, which he afforded them because they were a peaceable people, abhorring war, and wholly minding pasturage, and were not Israelites, with whom his principal quarrel was; and especially by God’ s overruling disposal of his heart to favour them who were careful to keep themselves uncorrupted with Israel’ s sins, and therefore are preserved from their plagues.
Haydock -> Jdg 4:17
Haydock: Jdg 4:17 - -- Tent. The women had separate tents from their husbands. Haber, it seems, was from home, and was not molested by the Chanaanites. He continued neut...
Tent. The women had separate tents from their husbands. Haber, it seems, was from home, and was not molested by the Chanaanites. He continued neuter during this war. What then must we think of the conduct of his wife? Commentators generally justify her, as the Scripture gives her great commendations, and as the family of the Cinites enjoyed the religion and privileges of the Israelites. Hence this portion of it could not make a league with the enemy of God's people, to the detriment of the latter; and if they did, they were bound to break it as soon, at least, as God manifested his will, that the enemy should be destroyed. Jahel might however deserve the praise of fortitude, which the Scripture gives her, and yet mingle some human imperfection in her manner of acting. She seems to speak with fraud, and to betray the sacred rights of hospitality; and it is doubtful whether Haber himself could renounce the alliance with Jabin, (particularly if they had taken mutual oaths to observe it, as was then customary) without informing him of his resolution. Fides, quando promititur, etiam hosti servanda est. (St. Augustine, ep. i. ad Bonif.) See Grotius, Jur. iii. 19. (Calmet) ---
Yet, if she told a lie, it was only an officious one, (Menochius) such as Sisara desired should be told for his safety, ver. 20. (Haydock) ---
It is lawful to use stratagems against an enemy. (Salien, in the year of the world 2741. See Josue ii., and viii. 4. Debbora pronounces the name of Jahel to be most blessed, (chap. v. 24,) which shews that she was inspired by God to kill Sisara. If we consider her action in any other light, it will certainly appear very shocking, as Rahab could not escape the accusation of treason towards her country by any other means. Aod, Judith, &c., who washed their hands in the blood of sinners, (Psalm lvii. 11,) would undoubtedly have been condemned at any merely human tribunal, which would not admit the plea of inspiration. (Haydock) ---
Besides this secret impulse, Jahel might be acquainted with the prediction of Debbora, (ver. 9,) and with the miraculous victory which encouraged her to destroy the common enemy, (Abulensis, Josephus, &c.; Tirinus) the only remnant of an immense army. (Haydock) ---
The peace which subsisted between her family and the Chanaanites, was a forced one, (Tirinus) and perhaps consisted only in the former being allowed to live quietly (Du Hamel) in the midst of these idolaters, whose manners they abhorred; (Haydock) while the Israelites, though at a greater distance, were so severely treated even when they were so weak as to adore the idols (Tirinus) of their oppressors. Thus the divine Providence was pleased to reward virtue, and to punish infidelity. (Haydock) ---
The Fathers consider Debbora as a figure of the Synagogue, which begins the attack against the empire of the devil, while the victory is reserved for the Christian Church, represented by Jahel, a woman living among the Israelites, though of a different nation, and engrafted, as it were, like the wild olive on the good olive tree. She gains strength in the midst of persecutions, and, armed with the cross of Christ, destroys the captain of the worldly empire. (Origen, hom v.; St. Augustine, contra Faust. xii. 31, &c.) (Calmet) ---
Jahel was also a figure of the blessed Virgin, who crushed the serpent's head. (Worthington)
Gill -> Jdg 4:17
Gill: Jdg 4:17 - -- Howbeit, Sisera fled away on his feet,.... Got off, and made his escape
to the tent of Jael, the wife of Heber the Kenite; before spoken of, Jdg 4:...
Howbeit, Sisera fled away on his feet,.... Got off, and made his escape
to the tent of Jael, the wife of Heber the Kenite; before spoken of, Jdg 4:11; and he made to that, because he might think himself safer in a tent than in a town; and especially in the tent of a woman, where he might imagine no search would be made; for women of note, in those times, had separate tents, see Gen 24:67; and the rather he made his escape hither for a reason that follows:
for there was peace between Jabin the king of Hazor and the house of Heber the Kenite; which Jabin might the more readily come into, because these were not Israelites, nor did they make any claim to the country, and lived only in tents, and attended their flocks, and were a quiet people, and not at all disposed to war; and it might be so ordered by the providence of God, as a rebuke to the Israelites for their sins, when those who were only proselytes kept close to the worship of God, and so enjoyed liberty, peace, and prosperity.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jdg 4:1-24
TSK Synopsis: Jdg 4:1-24 - --1 Deborah and Barak deliver them from Jabin and Sisera.17 Jael kills Sisera.
MHCC -> Jdg 4:17-24
MHCC: Jdg 4:17-24 - --Sisera's chariots had been his pride and his confidence. Thus are those disappointed who rest on the creature; like a broken reed, it not only breaks ...
Matthew Henry -> Jdg 4:17-24
Matthew Henry: Jdg 4:17-24 - -- We have seen the army of the Canaanites totally routed. It is said (Psa 83:9, Psa 83:10, where the defeat of this army is pleaded as a precedent for...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jdg 4:17-22
Keil-Delitzsch: Jdg 4:17-22 - --
Sisera took refuge in the tent of Jael, the wife of Heber the Kenite, to escape the sword of the Israelites, as king Jabin lived at peace with the h...

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...
