
Text -- Judges 3:15 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Jdg 3:15 - -- This tribe was next to Eglon, and doubtless most afflicted by him; and hence God raiseth a deliverer.
This tribe was next to Eglon, and doubtless most afflicted by him; and hence God raiseth a deliverer.

Which is here noted, as a considerable circumstance in the following story.
Descended from Gera, one of Benjamin's sons (Gen 46:21).

JFB: Jdg 3:15 - -- This peculiarity distinguished many in the Benjamite tribe (Jdg 20:16). But the original word is rendered in some versions "both-handed," a view count...

JFB: Jdg 3:15 - -- The yearly tribute, which, according to Eastern fashion, would be borne with ostentatious ceremony and offered (Jdg 3:18) by several messengers.
The yearly tribute, which, according to Eastern fashion, would be borne with ostentatious ceremony and offered (Jdg 3:18) by several messengers.
Clarke: Jdg 3:15 - -- Ehud the son of Gera - a man left handed - איש אטר יד ימינו ish itter yad yemino , a man lame in his right hand, and therefore obliged...
Ehud the son of Gera - a man left handed -
Iliad, lib. vii., ver. 237
"But am in arms well practiced; many a Gree
Hath bled by me, and I can shift my shiel
From right to left; reserving to the las
Force that suffices for severest toil.
Cowper
Asteropaeus is also represented by Homer as an ambidexter, from which he derives great advantages in fight: -
Iliad, lib. xxi., ver. 161
So threatened he. Then raised Achilles hig
The Pelian ash: - and his two spears at onc
Alike, (a practiced warrior), with both hand
Asteropaeus hurled.
Cowper
We are informed by Aristotle, that Plato recommended to all soldiers to acquire by study and exercise an equal facility of using both hands. Speaking of Plato, he says:

Clarke: Jdg 3:15 - -- Sent a present unto Eglon - This is generally understood to be the tribute money which the king of Moab had imposed on the Israelites.
Sent a present unto Eglon - This is generally understood to be the tribute money which the king of Moab had imposed on the Israelites.
TSK -> Jdg 3:15
TSK: Jdg 3:15 - -- am 2679, bc 1325, An, Ex, Is, 166
cried unto : Jdg 3:9; Psa 50:15, Psa 78:34, Psa 90:15; Jer 29:12, Jer 29:13, Jer 33:3
a Benjamite : or, the son of J...
am 2679, bc 1325, An, Ex, Is, 166
cried unto : Jdg 3:9; Psa 50:15, Psa 78:34, Psa 90:15; Jer 29:12, Jer 29:13, Jer 33:3
a Benjamite : or, the son of Jemini
lefthanded : Heb. shut of his right hand, This Hebrew phrase intimates that, either through disease or disuse, he made little or no use of the right hand, but of his left only, and so was the less fit for war, because he would most likely wield a dagger awkwardlycaps1 . ycaps0 et God chose this left-handed man to be the minister of his retributive justice. It was God’ s right hand that gained Israel the victory, Psa 44:3; not the right hand of the instruments he employed. Jdg 20:16; 1Ch 12:2
sent a present : 1Sa 10:27; Pro 18:16, Pro 19:6, Pro 21:14; Isa 36:16

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jdg 3:15
Barnes: Jdg 3:15 - -- But when the children of Israel cried unto the Lord, the Lord raised them up a deliverer - The very same words as are used at Jdg 3:9. See, too...
But when the children of Israel cried unto the Lord, the Lord raised them up a deliverer - The very same words as are used at Jdg 3:9. See, too, Jdg 2:16, Jdg 2:18, and Neh 9:27.
Ehud "the Benjamite"was of the family or house of Gera 2Sa 16:5, the son of Bela, Benjamin’ s first-born, born before Jacob’ s descent into Egypt Gen 46:21, and then included among "the sons of Benjamin."The genealogy in 1Ch 8:6 intimates that Ehud (apparently written Abihud in Jdg 3:3) became the head of a separate house.
Left-handed - See the margin. The phrase is thought to describe not so much a defect as the power to use left and right hands equally well (compare Jdg 20:16; 1Ch 12:2).
A present - i. e. tribute 2Sa 8:2, 2Sa 8:6; 1Ki 4:21; Psa 72:10. The employment of Ehud for this purpose points him out as a chief of some distinction. He would be attended by a numerous suite Jdg 3:18. We may conclude that the destruction of the Benjamites Judg. 20 had not taken place at this time.
Poole -> Jdg 3:15
Poole: Jdg 3:15 - -- A Benjamite Heb. the son of Gemini , who was of the tribe of Benjamin, 2Sa 16:11 19:17 1Ki 2:8 . This tribe was next to him and doubtless most affli...
A Benjamite Heb. the son of Gemini , who was of the tribe of Benjamin, 2Sa 16:11 19:17 1Ki 2:8 . This tribe was next to him and doubtless most afflicted by him; and hence God raiseth a deliverer.
Left-handed which is here noted, partly as a mark of his courage, and strength, and activity; see Jud 20:16 ; and principally as a considerable circumstance in the following story, whereby he might more advantageously and unsuspectedly give the deadly blow.
Haydock -> Jdg 3:15
Haydock: Jdg 3:15 - -- Aod, signifies "praise," whence perhaps Josephus calls him Judes which has the same import. (Menochius) ---
He was a descendant of Jemini or Be...
Aod, signifies "praise," whence perhaps Josephus calls him Judes which has the same import. (Menochius) ---
He was a descendant of Jemini or Benjamin, by his son Gera, Genesis xlvi. 1. ---
Right. Septuagint and many interpreters agree, that Aod was "Ambidexter," a quality which Plato exhorted those who were designed for war, to strive to acquire. Several of the heroes before Troy are praised on this account; and the Scripture takes particular notice of 700 citizens of Gabaa, who could use both hands alike, and could hit even a hair with a stone, chap. xx. 16. The Jews explain itter, very absurdly; Aod "had his right hand maimed or tied:" (Calmet) and Protestants render "a man left-handed." (Haydock) ---
This would be a very awkward recommendation for a warrior, though it is pretended that such are more resolute, and more difficult to encounter than others. The number of the men at Gabaa who are praised for their skill, as well as the brave men of David, (1 Paralipomenon xii. 2,) shews sufficiently that the term does not mean left-handed. But the Scripture here takes notice that Aod could use his left hand so well, because he placed his dagger, contrary to custom, on his right side, and the motions of his left hand would not be so narrowly watched. Rufin does not agree with the present text of Josephus, which indeed seems very confused saying, "that all the strength of Aod lay in his left hand." Gelenius also translates, utraque manu ex æquo promptus; (Antiquities v. 5,) so that perhaps the Greek of Josephus may have been altered. ---
Presents; that is, tribute; an odious expression, instead of which the Scripture often puts presents, 1 Kings x. 27., and 1 Paralipomenon xviii. 2. No tribute was imposed in Persia till the reign of Darius Hystaspes; the subject had to make presents to the king. (Herodotus iii. 89.) (Calmet)
Gill -> Jdg 3:15
Gill: Jdg 3:15 - -- But when the children of Israel cried unto the Lord,.... After being long oppressed, and groaning under their burdens, and brought to a sense of their...
But when the children of Israel cried unto the Lord,.... After being long oppressed, and groaning under their burdens, and brought to a sense of their sins, and humiliation for them, they asked forgiveness of God, and deliverance from their bondage; for it is very probable they were until towards the close of those years stupid and hardened, and did not consider what was the reason of their being thus dealt with:
the Lord raised them up a deliverer; another saviour, one that he made use of as an instrument of their deliverance:
Ehud the son of Gera, a Benjamite, a man lefthanded; who is described by his parentage, a son of Gera, but who his father was is not known; by his tribe a Benjamite, in which Jericho was, Eglon possessed, and so might be more oppressed than any other part; and therefore the Lord stirred up one of that tribe to be the deliverer; and by his being a lefthanded man, as several of that tribe were, Jdg 20:16; though a Benjamite signifies a son of the right hand; and he perhaps was one of those lefthanded Benjamites that fled to the rock Rimmon, as Dr. Lightfoot u conjectures, Jdg 20:47; for that affair, though there related, was before this: the Septuagint calls him an "ambidexter", one that could use both hands equally alike; but the Hebrew phrase signifies one that is "shut up in his right hand" w; who has not the true use of it, cannot exercise it as his other hand, being weak and impotent, or contracted through disuse, or some disease; or, as Josephus x expresses it, who could use his left hand best, and who also calls him a young man of a courageous mind and strong of body, and says he dwelt at Jericho, and was very familiar with Eglon, and who by his gifts and presents had endeared himself to all about the king:
and by him the children of Israel sent a present unto Eglon the king of Moab; either their yearly tribute, or rather a gift unto him, to soften him, and reconcile him to them, and make their bondage easier; or to give him access to him with more confidence and safety, though it does not seem that they knew anything of Ehud's design.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jdg 3:1-31
TSK Synopsis: Jdg 3:1-31 - --1 The nations which were left to prove Israel.5 By communion with them they commit idolatry.8 Othniel delivered them from Chushan-rishathaim;12 Ehud f...
MHCC -> Jdg 3:12-30
MHCC: Jdg 3:12-30 - --When Israel sins again, God raises up a new oppressor. The Israelites did ill, and the Moabites did worse; yet because God punishes the sins of his ow...
Matthew Henry -> Jdg 3:12-30
Matthew Henry: Jdg 3:12-30 - -- Ehud is the next of the judges whose achievements are related in this history, and here is an account of his actions. I. When Israel sins again God ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jdg 3:15
Keil-Delitzsch: Jdg 3:15 - --
But when the Israelites cried to the Lord for help, He set them free through the Benjaminite Ehud , whom He raised up as their deliverer. Ehud was...
Constable -> Jdg 3:7--17:1; Jdg 3:12-30
