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Text -- Judges 14:18 (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 14:18
Wesley: Jdg 14:18 - -- _If you had not employed my wife to find it out, as men plough up the ground with an heifer, thereby discovering its hidden parts; he calls her heifer...
_If you had not employed my wife to find it out, as men plough up the ground with an heifer, thereby discovering its hidden parts; he calls her heifer, because she was joined with him in the same yoke.
JFB -> Jdg 14:12-18; Jdg 14:18
JFB: Jdg 14:12-18 - -- Riddles are a favorite Oriental amusement at festive entertainments of this nature, and rewards are offered to those who give the solution. Samson's r...
Riddles are a favorite Oriental amusement at festive entertainments of this nature, and rewards are offered to those who give the solution. Samson's riddle related to honey in the lion's carcass. The prize he offered was thirty sindinim, or shirts, and thirty changes of garments, probably woolen. Three days were passed in vain attempts to unravel the enigma. The festive week was fast drawing to a close when they secretly enlisted the services of the newly married wife, who having got the secret, revealed it to her friends.
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JFB: Jdg 14:18 - -- A metaphor borrowed from agricultural pursuits, in which not only oxen but cows and heifers were, and continue to be, employed in dragging the plough....
A metaphor borrowed from agricultural pursuits, in which not only oxen but cows and heifers were, and continue to be, employed in dragging the plough. Divested of metaphor, the meaning is taken by some in a criminal sense, but probably means no more than that they had resorted to the aid of his wife--an unworthy expedient, which might have been deemed by a man of less noble spirit and generosity as releasing him from the obligation to fulfil his bargain.
Clarke -> Jdg 14:18
Clarke: Jdg 14:18 - -- If ye had not ploughed with my heifer - If my wife had not been unfaithful to my bed, she would not have been unfaithful to my secret; and, you bein...
If ye had not ploughed with my heifer - If my wife had not been unfaithful to my bed, she would not have been unfaithful to my secret; and, you being her paramours, your interest was more precious to her than that of her husband. She has betrayed me through her attachment to you. Calmet has properly remarked, in quoting the Septuagint, that to plough with one’ s heifer, or to plough in another man’ s ground, are delicate turns of expression used both by the Greeks and Latins, as well as the Hebrews, to point out a wife’ s infidelities. Thus Theognis, Gnom. v. 581: -
"I detest a woman who gads about, and also a libidinous man, who wishes to plough in another man’ s ground.
Fundum alienium arat, incultum familiarem deserit
Plautus
"He ploughs another’ s farm, and leaves his own heritage uncultivated.
Milo domi non est, perepre at Milone profect
Arva vacant, uxor non minus inde parit
Martial
"Milo is not at home, and Milo being from home, his field lies uncultivated; his wife, nevertheless, continues to breed, and brings forth children.
There is the same metaphor in the following lines of Virgil: -
Hoc faciunt, nimo ne luxu obtusior usus
Sit genitali arvo, sulcosque oblimet inertes
Geor. l. iii., v. 135
In this sense Samson’ s words were understood by the Septuagint, by the Syriac, and by Rabbi Levi. See Bochart, Hierozoic. p. 1, lib. ii., cap. 41, col. 406. The metaphor was a common one, and we need seek for no other interpretation of the words of Samson.
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jdg 14:18
Barnes: Jdg 14:18 - -- They try to give the answer in a way to make it appear that they had guessed it. Samson saw at once that she had betrayed him. He lets them know in ...
They try to give the answer in a way to make it appear that they had guessed it. Samson saw at once that she had betrayed him. He lets them know in a speech, which was of the nature of a riddle, that he had discovered the treachery.
Poole -> Jdg 14:18
Poole: Jdg 14:18 - -- If you had not employed my wife to find it out , as men plough up the ground with a heifer, thereby discovering its hidden parts: he calls her
hei...
If you had not employed my wife to find it out , as men plough up the ground with a heifer, thereby discovering its hidden parts: he calls her
heifer either because he now suspected her wantonness and too much familiarity with that friend which she afterwards married; or because she was joined with him in the same yoke; or rather, because they used such in ploughing.
Haydock -> Jdg 14:18
Haydock: Jdg 14:18 - -- Down, at which time the day ended among the Jews. ---
Heifer. This proverbial expression means, that another's property had been used against hims...
Down, at which time the day ended among the Jews. ---
Heifer. This proverbial expression means, that another's property had been used against himself; (Delrio adag.162) or it may intimate, that improper liberties had been taken with Samson's wife, (Calmet) as her so readily taking one of them for her husband, (ver. 20) might lead us to suspect. (Haydock) ---
The Greek and Latin authors speak of a faithless wife in similar terms. (Theognis. lviii., &c.)
Gill -> Jdg 14:18
Gill: Jdg 14:18 - -- And the men of the city said unto him, on the seventh day, before the sun went down,.... And so soon, enough to free them from the obligation they oth...
And the men of the city said unto him, on the seventh day, before the sun went down,.... And so soon, enough to free them from the obligation they otherwise would have been under, to have given him the sheets and changes of raiment agreed unto:
what is sweeter than honey? nothing, at least that was known, sugar not being invented. Julian the emperor n, in commendation of figs, shows, from various authors, that nothing is sweeter than they, excepting honey:
and what is stronger than a lion? no creature is, it is the strongest among beasts, Pro 30:30. Homer o gives the epithet of strong to a lion:
and he said unto them, if ye had not ploughed with my heifer; meaning his wife, whom he compares to an heifer, young, wanton, and unaccustomed to the yoke p; and by "ploughing" with her, he alludes to such creatures being employed therein, making use of her to get the secret out of him, and then plying her closely to obtain it from her; and this diligent application and search of theirs, by this means to inform themselves, was like ploughing up ground; they got a discovery of that which before lay hid, and without which they could never have had the knowledge of, as he adds:
ye had not found out my riddle; the explanation of it. Ben Gersome and Abarbinel interpret ploughing of committing adultery with her; in which sense the phrase is used by Greek and Latin writers q; but the first sense is best, for it is not said, "ploughed my heifer", but with her.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Jdg 14:18
NET Notes: Jdg 14:18 Plowed with my heifer. This statement emphasizes that the Philistines had utilized a source of information which should have been off-limits to them. ...
Geneva Bible -> Jdg 14:18
Geneva Bible: Jdg 14:18 And the men of the city said unto him on the seventh day before the sun went down, What [is] sweeter than honey? and what [is] stronger than a lion? A...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jdg 14:1-20
TSK Synopsis: Jdg 14:1-20 - --1 Samson desires a wife of the Philistines.6 In his journey he kills a lion.8 In a second journey he finds honey in the carcase.10 Samson's marriage f...
MHCC -> Jdg 14:10-20
MHCC: Jdg 14:10-20 - --Samson's riddle literally meant no more than that he had got honey, for food and for pleasure, from the lion, which in its strength and fury was ready...
Matthew Henry -> Jdg 14:10-20
Matthew Henry: Jdg 14:10-20 - -- We have here an account of Samson's wedding feast and the occasion it gave him to fall foul upon the Philistines. I. Samson conformed to the custom ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jdg 14:10-20
Keil-Delitzsch: Jdg 14:10-20 - --
Samson's Wedding and Riddle . - Jdg 14:10. When his father had come down to the girl (sc., to keep the wedding, not merely to make the necessary pr...
Constable -> Jdg 3:7--17:1; Jdg 8:1--16:31; Jdg 13:1--16:31; Jdg 14:1-20; Jdg 14:1--16:31; Jdg 14:15-20
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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...
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Constable: Jdg 13:1--16:31 - --F. The sixth apostasy chs. 13-16
"From chapters 13 to 18, the author concentrates on the tribe of Dan, w...
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Constable: Jdg 14:1-20 - --2. Samson's intended marriage to the Timnite ch. 14
Chapter 13 describes Samson's potential: his...
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Constable: Jdg 14:1--16:31 - --3. The consequences of the error vv. 14-16
vv. 14-15 Jude quoted loosely from a prophecy Enoch gave recorded in the Book of 1 Enoch.62 Though God had ...
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