Judges 15:5-20
Context15:5 He lit the torches 1 and set the jackals loose in the Philistines’ standing grain. He burned up the grain heaps and the standing grain, as well as the vineyards and olive groves. 15:6 The Philistines asked, 2 “Who did this?” They were told, 3 “Samson, the Timnite’s son-in-law, because the Timnite 4 took Samson’s 5 bride and gave her to his best man.” So the Philistines went up and burned her and her father. 6 15:7 Samson said to them, “Because you did this, 7 I will get revenge against you before I quit fighting.” 8 15:8 He struck them down and defeated them. 9 Then he went down and lived for a time in the cave in the cliff of Etam.
15:9 The Philistines went up and invaded 10 Judah. They arrayed themselves for battle 11 in Lehi. 15:10 The men of Judah said, “Why are you attacking 12 us?” The Philistines 13 said, “We have come up to take Samson prisoner so we can do to him what he has done to us.” 15:11 Three thousand men of Judah went down to the cave in the cliff of Etam and said to Samson, “Do you not know that the Philistines rule over us? Why have you done this to us?” He said to them, “I have only done to them what they have done to me.” 15:12 They said to him, “We have come down to take you prisoner so we can hand you over to the Philistines.” Samson said to them, “Promise me 14 you will not kill 15 me.” 15:13 They said to him, “We promise! 16 We will only take you prisoner and hand you over to them. We promise not to kill you.” They tied him up with two brand new ropes and led him up from the cliff. 15:14 When he arrived in Lehi, the Philistines shouted as they approached him. But the Lord’s spirit empowered 17 him. The ropes around his arms were like flax dissolving in 18 fire, and they 19 melted away from his hands. 15:15 He happened to see 20 a solid 21 jawbone of a donkey. He grabbed it 22 and struck down 23 a thousand men. 15:16 Samson then said,
“With the jawbone of a donkey
I have left them in heaps; 24
with the jawbone of a donkey
I have struck down a thousand men!”
15:17 When he finished speaking, he threw the jawbone down 25 and named that place Ramath Lehi. 26
15:18 He was very thirsty, so he cried out to the Lord and said, “You have given your servant 27 this great victory. But now must I die of thirst and fall into hands of the Philistines?” 28 15:19 So God split open the basin 29 at Lehi and water flowed out from it. When he took a drink, his strength 30 was restored and he revived. For this reason he named the spring 31 En Hakkore. 32 It remains in Lehi to this very day. 15:20 Samson led 33 Israel for twenty years during the days of Philistine prominence. 34
[15:5] 1 tn Heb “He set fire to the torches.”
[15:6] 3 tn Heb “and they said.” The subject of the plural verb is indefinite.
[15:6] 4 tn Heb “he”; the referent (the Timnite) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
[15:6] 5 tn Heb “his”; the referent (Samson) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
[15:6] 6 tn The Hebrew text expands the statement with the additional phrase “burned with fire.” The words “with fire” are redundant in English and have been omitted from the translation for stylistic reasons. Some textual witnesses read “burned…her father’s house,” perhaps under the influence of 14:15. On the other hand, the shorter text may have lost this phrase due to haplography.
[15:7] 7 tn The Niphal of נָקָם (naqam, “to avenge, to take vengeance”) followed by the preposition ב (bet) has the force “to get revenge against.” See 1 Sam 18:25; Jer 50:15; Ezek 25:12.
[15:7] 8 tn Heb “and afterward I will stop.”
[15:8] 9 tn Heb “He struck them, calf on thigh, [with] a great slaughter.” The precise meaning of the phrase “calf on thigh” is uncertain.
[15:9] 11 tn Or “spread out.” The Niphal of נָטָשׁ (natash) has this same sense in 2 Sam 5:18, 22.
[15:10] 12 tn Or “come up against.”
[15:10] 13 tn Heb “they”; the referent (the Philistines) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
[15:12] 14 tn Or “swear to me.”
[15:12] 15 tn Heb “meet [with hostility]”; “harm.” In light of v. 13, “kill” is an appropriate translation.
[15:13] 16 tn Heb “No,” meaning that they will not harm him.
[15:14] 17 tn Heb “rushed on.”
[15:14] 18 tn Heb “burned with.”
[15:14] 19 tn Heb “his bonds.”
[15:15] 21 tn Heb “fresh,” i.e., not decayed and brittle.
[15:15] 22 tn Heb “he reached out his hand and took it.”
[15:15] 23 tn The Hebrew text adds “with it.” This has not been included in the translation for stylistic reasons.
[15:16] 24 tn The precise meaning of the second half of the line (חֲמוֹר חֲמֹרָתָיִם, khamor khamoratayim) is uncertain. The present translation assumes that the phrase means, “a heap, two heaps” and refers to the heaps of corpses littering the battlefield. Other options include: (a) “I have made donkeys of them” (cf. NIV; see C. F. Burney, Judges, 373, for a discussion of this view, which understands a denominative verb from the noun “donkey”); (b) “I have thoroughly skinned them” (see HALOT 330 s.v. IV cj. חמר, which appeals to an Arabic cognate for support); (c) “I have stormed mightily against them,” which assumes the verb חָמַר (khamar, “to ferment; to foam; to boil up”).
[15:17] 25 tn Heb “from his hand.”
[15:17] 26 sn The name Ramath Lehi means “Height of the Jawbone.”
[15:18] 27 tn Heb “you have placed into the hand of your servant.”
[15:18] 28 tn Heb “the uncircumcised,” which in context refers to the Philistines.
[15:19] 29 tn The word translated “basin” refers to a circular-shaped depression in the land’s surface.
[15:19] 31 tn Heb “named it”; the referent (the spring) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
[15:19] 32 sn The name En Hakkore means “Spring of the one who cries out.”