
Text -- Judges 7:16 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
To make a shew of a vast army.

Wesley: Jdg 7:16 - -- Partly to preserve the flame from the wind and weather; and partly to conceal it, and surprise their enemy with sudden flashes of light.
Partly to preserve the flame from the wind and weather; and partly to conceal it, and surprise their enemy with sudden flashes of light.
JFB -> Jdg 7:16-22
JFB: Jdg 7:16-22 - -- The object of dividing his forces was, that they might seem to be surrounding the enemy. The pitchers were empty to conceal the torches, and made of e...
The object of dividing his forces was, that they might seem to be surrounding the enemy. The pitchers were empty to conceal the torches, and made of earthenware, so as to be easily broken; and the sudden blaze of the held-up lights--the loud echo of the trumpets, and the shouts of Israel, always terrifying (Num 23:21), and now more terrible than ever by the use of such striking words, broke through the stillness of the midnight air. The sleepers started from their rest; not a blow was dealt by the Israelites; but the enemy ran tumultuously, uttering the wild, discordant cries peculiar to the Arab race. They fought indiscriminately, not knowing friend from foe. The panic being universal, they soon precipitately fled, directing their flight down to the Jordan, by the foot of the mountains of Ephraim, to places known as the "house of the acacia" [Beth-shittah], and "the meadow of the dance" [Abel-meholah].
Clarke -> Jdg 7:16
Clarke: Jdg 7:16 - -- He divided the three hundred men - Though the victory was to be from the Lord, yet he knew that he ought to use prudential means; and those which he...
He divided the three hundred men - Though the victory was to be from the Lord, yet he knew that he ought to use prudential means; and those which he employed on this occasion were the best calculated to answer the end. If he had not used these means, it is not likely that God would have delivered the Midianites into his hands. Sometimes, even in working a miracle, God will have natural means used: Go, dip thyself seven times in Jordan. Go, wash in the pool Siloam.
TSK -> Jdg 7:16
TSK: Jdg 7:16 - -- three companies : This small number of men, thus divided, would be able to encompass the whole camp of the Midianites. Concealing the lamps in the pi...
three companies : This small number of men, thus divided, would be able to encompass the whole camp of the Midianites. Concealing the lamps in the pitchers, they would pass unobserved to their appointed stations; then, in the dead of the night, when most of the enemy were fast asleep, all at once breaking their pitchers one against another, with as much noise as they could, and blowing the trumpets and shouting; they would occasion an exceedingly great alarm. The obedience of faith alone could have induced such an expedient, which no doubt God directed Gideon to employ. - Scott.
a trumpet : Heb. trumpets in the hand of all of them
empty : 2Co 4:7
lamps : or, fire-brands, or torches

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jdg 7:16
Barnes: Jdg 7:16 - -- Gideon himself took the command of one company, and sent the other two under their respective captains to different sides of the camp Jdg 7:18, Jdg ...
Poole -> Jdg 7:16
Poole: Jdg 7:16 - -- Into three companies to make a show of a vast army encompassing them.
Lamps or, torches , made of such materials as would quickly take fire, and k...
Into three companies to make a show of a vast army encompassing them.
Lamps or, torches , made of such materials as would quickly take fire, and keep it for some time.
Within the pitchers partly to preserve the flame from the violence of wind and weather; and partly to conceal it, and surprise their enemy with sudden and unexpected flashes of light.
Haydock -> Jdg 7:16
Haydock: Jdg 7:16 - -- Lamps, or flambeaux, (Calmet) made of wood, full of turpentine. (Haydock) ---
The soldiers held one end in their hand, and when they had thrown dow...
Lamps, or flambeaux, (Calmet) made of wood, full of turpentine. (Haydock) ---
The soldiers held one end in their hand, and when they had thrown down their pitchers, the sudden light, the sound of trumpets and of men on three sides of the camp, threw the various nations into the utmost consternation, as they very naturally supposed that they were surrounded with a great army. God also sent among them the spirit of confusion, so that they knew not one another. An ancient author, under the name of Tertullian, asserts that the 300 men were on horseback, and conquered by virtue of the cross, as the letter T, in Greek, stands for 300; (Calmet) and St. Augustine (q. 37,) follows up this idea, saying that, as the Greeks are put by the apostle for all the Gentiles, this letter was to insinuate, that the Gentiles chiefly would believe in Christ. Some of the Fathers have given a like mysterious explanation of the 318 servants of Abraham, as the two first letter of the name of Jesus denote 18. (Eucher.) (Genesis xiv. 14.) (St. Ambrose, de Abr. i. 3.) ---
We can never conquer our spiritual enemies, without a lively faith in our crucified Saviour. If Amama, and other enemies of the cross of Christ, ridicule these pious meditations of the Fathers, we need not wonder. See Apocalypse xiii. 18. (Haydock)
Gill -> Jdg 7:16
Gill: Jdg 7:16 - -- And he divided the three hundred men into three companies,.... One hundred in a company, partly to make the better figure, a show of an army, with a r...
And he divided the three hundred men into three companies,.... One hundred in a company, partly to make the better figure, a show of an army, with a right and left wing, and partly that they might fall upon the camp of Midian in different parts:
and he put a trumpet in every man's hand; they that returned of the trumpeters having left their trumpets behind them, whereby there was a sufficient number for three hundred men; and these were put into their hands, that when they blew them together, the, noise would be very great; and it would seem as if they were an exceeding great army, and so very much terrify their enemies:
with empty pitchers, and lamps with the pitchers; the pitchers were of earth, and so easily broken, and would make a great noise when clashed against each other; and these were empty of water, or otherwise would not have been fit to put lamps into, and the lamps put in them were not of oil; for then, when the pitchers were broken, the oil would have run out; but were a kind of torches, made of rosin, wax, pitch, and such like things; and these were put into the pitcher, partly to preserve them from the wind, and chiefly to conceal them from the enemy, till just they came upon them, and then held them out; which in a dark night would make a terrible blaze, as before they served to give them light down the hill into the camp.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Jdg 7:16 They hid the torches inside the earthenware jars to disguise their approach and to keep the torches from being extinguished by the breeze.
Geneva Bible -> Jdg 7:16
Geneva Bible: Jdg 7:16 And he divided the three hundred men [into] three companies, and he put a trumpet in every man's hand, with empty pitchers, and lamps ( h ) within the...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jdg 7:1-25
TSK Synopsis: Jdg 7:1-25 - --1 Gideon's army of two and thirty thousand is brought to three hundred.9 He is encouraged by the dream and interpretation of the burley cake.16 His st...
Maclaren -> Jdg 7:13-23
Maclaren: Jdg 7:13-23 - --Judges 7:13-23
To reduce thirty-two thousand to three hundred was a strange way of preparing for a fight; and, no doubt, the handful left felt some si...
MHCC -> Jdg 7:16-22
MHCC: Jdg 7:16-22 - --This method of defeating the Midianites may be alluded to, as exemplifying the destruction of the devil's kingdom in the world, by the preaching of th...
Matthew Henry -> Jdg 7:16-22
Matthew Henry: Jdg 7:16-22 - -- Here is, I. The alarm which Gideon gave to the hosts of Midian in the dead time of the night; for it was intended that those who had so long been a ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jdg 7:15-18
Keil-Delitzsch: Jdg 7:15-18 - --
When therefore he had heard the dream related and interpreted, he worshipped, praising the Lord with joy, and returned to the camp to attack the ene...
Constable -> Jdg 3:7--17:1; Jdg 5:1--7:25; Jdg 6:1--10:6; Jdg 6:1--8:33; Jdg 6:33--7:19; Jdg 7:1-25; Jdg 7:15-18

Constable: Jdg 5:1--7:25 - --A. Previous Failures vv. 5-7
Jude cited three examples of failure from the past to warn his readers of t...

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 6:1--8:33 - --1. The story of Gideon 6:1-8:32
Tanner also pointed out that the Gideon narrative consists of fi...

Constable: Jdg 6:33--7:19 - --Gideon's personal struggle to believe God's promise 6:33-7:18
"The primary matter in the...

Constable: Jdg 7:1-25 - --3. The example of certain pagans v. 7
This example shows God's judgment on those who practice im...
