Judges 20
CambridgeCh. 20. The vengeance of Israel The older narrative (A) seems to be contained in Judges 20:1 a (… went out), d (unto the Lord …), Judges 20:3-8; Judges 20:14; Judges 20:19; Judges 20:29; Judges 20:36 b, Judges 20:37 a, Judges 20:38-41; Judges 20:44 a, Judges 20:47; it describes the gathering of all the Israelites at Mizpah, their examination of the Levite and resolve to avenge him, the capture of Gibeah by ambush, the slaughter of 18,000 Benjamites. The other and much later narrative (B), Judges 20:1 b, c, Judges 20:2; Judges 20:9-13; Judges 20:15-18; Judges 20:20-28; Judges 20:30-36 a, Judges 20:37 b, Judges 20:42-43, Judges 20:44-46; Judges 20:48, gives a considerably different account, of which the main features are: the confederate action of the Israelite ecclesia; the three battles; the enormous numbers. Certain irreconcilable or superfluous elements in this narrative may be due to additions or glosses, e.g. Judges 20:11; Judges 20:18; Judges 20:27 b, Judges 20:28 a, Judges 20:31 a. Some scholars detect a third source by subdividing A, but the analysis does not yield very decisive results.
Judges 20:1
- the congregation was assembled] The two words at once stamp the character of source B; cf. in the Priestly Code Leviticus 8:4, Numbers 16:42; Numbers 20:2, Joshua 18:1; Joshua 22:12. The congregation Judges 21:10; Judges 21:13; Judges 21:16 (Hebr. ‘ηdhah, LXX synagτgη) is regularly used by P, and by writers under the influence of P, to describe Israel as a religious community (e.g. Exodus 12:3, Numbers 1:2, Joshua 22:16 etc., 1 Kings 8:5; 1 Kings 12:20). Less characteristic, but frequently found in the Priestly narrative, is the assembly Judges 20:2, Judges 21:5; Judges 21:8 (Hebr. ḳ ?βhβl, LXX usually ecclesia, sometimes synagτgη), to denote the people as an organized whole (e.g. Deuteronomy 31:30, Leviticus 16:17, Numbers 16:3, Ezra 10:12; Ezra 10:14 etc.), or as assembled for some special purpose, an invasion, or instruction, or worship. as one man] Cf. Judges 20:8; Judges 20:11; 1 Samuel 11:7, Ezra 3:1. The ancient stories in Judges give a different picture; a corporate national life was not attained till a later age. from Dan even to Beer-sheba] i.e. from North to South of Israel’s territory; cf. Judges 18:7 n. and 2 Samuel 3:10; 2 Samuel 24:2, contrast 1 Chronicles 21:2 etc. To include Israel on the E. of Jordan, with the land of Gilead is added (cf. Judges 21:8). Mizpah] may be identified with the hill Nebξ Samwξl, 4½ m. N.W. of Jerusalem, 2935 ft. above the sea, and about 3 m. from Tell el-Fϋl (Gibeah), in the centre of the Benjamite district. A holy place occupied the summit (1 Samuel 7:5 ff; 1 Samuel 10:17-24), probably from very early times. See further Jeremiah 40:6 ff.; 1Ma 3:46. While the narrative A speaks of Mizpah as the meeting-place of the Israelites (Judges 20:3, Judges 21:1), B refers to Beth-el (Judges 20:18; Judges 20:26, Judges 21:2).
Judges 20:2
- chiefs] Lit. the word = corner, of a house Job 1:19, or of a city Nehemiah 3:24; Nehemiah 3:31 f.; also a corner-stone Isaiah 28:16, cf. Jeremiah 51:26. As suggestive of support or prominence, the corner could be used in a metaphorical sense; cf. 1 Samuel 14:38, Isaiah 19:13. even of all the tribes] even of is not in the Hebr.; read and all the tribes with LXX. cod. A. presented themselves] took their stand, ready for what might happen; cf. Exodus 19:17, Deuteronomy 31:14, 1 Samuel 17:16. the assembly of the people of God] Only here; usually the assembly of Jehovah or of God, Deuteronomy 23:1-3, Nehemiah 13:1. The number 400,000 is obviously exaggerated; contrast the Song of Deborah, which reckons the warriors of all Israel at 40,000, Judges 5:8. The treatment of history in the narrative of B reflects the ideas of the church-nation of a later day; cf. the impossible figures of P, Exodus 12:37. Moore notes that the Roman army which destroyed Jerusalem in a.d. 70 numbered about 60,000; and the German army which captured Paris in 1870, about 240,000. that drew sword] Cf. Judges 20:15; Judges 20:17; Judges 20:25; Judges 20:35; Judges 20:46, Judges 8:10, 2 Samuel 24:9.
Judges 20:3
- The first half of the verse interrupts the connexion with Judges 20:1 d; it would be in place before Judges 20:14. The displacement was no doubt caused by the insertion of Jdg 20:2; Judges 20:9-13 into the older narrative. And the children of Israel etc.] Here follows A’s report of what happened at the meeting: the evidence of the Levite is heard. In B the assembly does not ask for evidence; their righteous indignation has been roused, and they proceed to act at once, Judges 20:9 ff.
Judges 20:5
- men of Gibeah] citizens of G.; cf. Judges 9:2 n. me they thought to have slain] See on Judges 19:22. Their design on the young woman would naturally involve getting rid of her husband (cf. Genesis 12:12).
Judges 20:6
- all the country of the inheritance of Israel] We hardly expect inheritance in plain prose; contrast Judges 19:29. The word may be a later insertion. they have committed lewdness] Similarly Hosea 6:9, Ezekiel 16:43; Ezekiel 22:9; lit. evil purpose, i.e. unchastity; in this sense the word is frequent in the Law of Holiness and in Ezekiel (see Driver, Introd, p. 49, No. 11). LXX. cod. A, Luc. omit lewdness and, perhaps rightly; the word may have been added to emphasize the iniquity.
Judges 20:7
- give … your … counsel] The same words in 2 Samuel 16:20.
Judges 20:8
- tent] As the parallelism shews, equivalent to house, cf. Judges 19:9 mg., 1 Kings 8:66, Psalms 132:3 tent of my house; a survival from the time when the Israelites actually lived in tents. The resolution is expressed in poetical parallelism, cf. 1 Kings 12:16, 2 Samuel 20:1; we are to supply in thought ‘until the crime be avenged.’ The same resolution, differently expressed, follows in Judges 20:9 ff.
Judges 20:9
- we will go up against it by lot] An accidental omission from the text makes it necessary to supply a verb; the LXX reads we will go up. Judging from Judges 20:18 and Judges 1:1, the object of casting lots was to find out which tribe should go up first to the attack.
Judges 20:10
- ten men … ten thousand) All this merely amounts to ‘one man in ten’; 40,000 are to forage for the 360,000. We are reminded of the circumstantial diffuseness of P, e.g. Numbers 1:2; Numbers 1:20; Numbers 1:22 etc.; see Driver, Introd, p. 130. The style of the verse is remarkably poor; e.g. the single prep. lamedh = to is used nine times in a variety of senses; and the text is corrupt. The rendering that they may do when they come smooths over the awkwardness of the Hebr. The LXX. cod.
A suggests a slight change and transposes the words, reading for the people that come to do to G. etc. The trouble lies in the expression for when they come (or that come); Moore and Budde would omit it as a gloss on the people; indeed there is no other way of obtaining a satisfactory sentence. The connexion is much improved by transposing the two halves of the v. and connecting with Judges 20:9 : we will go up against it by lot, to do to G. of B. according to … in Israel; and we will take ten men … to fetch victual for the people (Moore). Geba (see marg.) is a mistake for Gibeah, cf. Judges 20:33.
Judges 20:11
- the city] must be Gibeah. knit together] lit. united, associated, emphasizing the common action. The word is used in Ezekiel 37:16; Ezekiel 37:19 for the association of the tribes, and another form of it on Maccabaean coins to denote (prob.) the community of the Jews; NSI., p. 354.
Judges 20:12
- the tribe of Benjamin] So the Versions, reading the singular. The plural (see marg.) is probably due to a mistaken repetition of the plur. form of the word in the preceding sentence.
Judges 20:13
- deliver up the men … that we may put them to death] Similarly 1 Samuel 11:12. the sons of Belial] See on Judges 19:22. put away evil] Read the evil, lit. burn up, consume the evil; a frequent expression in Deut., e.g. Deuteronomy 13:5, Deuteronomy 17:7; Deuteronomy 17:12, Deuteronomy 22:22.
Judges 20:15
- The figures in this account are inconsistent. The entire muster of Benjamites is reckoned here at 26,700; while Judges 20:35; Judges 20:47 give a total 25,700, and Judges 20:44-47 a total 25,600. Some mss. of the LXX (cod. A, Luc. etc.), followed by Vulgate, read twenty and five thousand men here (see marg.); but this may be merely an attempt to harmonize with the numbers in Judges 20:35; Judges 20:47. seven hundred chosen men] Repeated in Judges 20:16 and applied to the left-handed slingers. The words can hardly be original in both places, and the Versions agree in giving them only once. Probably they should be omitted here, and the verse ended with the inhabitants of Gibeah; the insertion of were numbered would be required when the following words were added.
Judges 20:16
- Then, keeping the text of this v. as it stands, we are told that the Benjamite host included a company of 700 left-handed and exceptionally skilful warriors, just as David’s army was strengthened by a similar band, 1 Chronicles 12:2. Josephus understood the narrative in this way, Ant. Judges 20:2; Judges 20:10. The alternative is to omit the first half of this verse, and make the 700 chosen men refer to the inhabitants of Gibeah, and every one (rather, all this army) could sling … and not miss refer to the entire host. But this does not seem natural, and to cut out left-handed as merely borrowed from Judges 3:15 is to remove a feature which has the appearance of originality.
Judges 20:18
- The Israelite host is mustered (Judges 20:17), and all is ready for an advance against Gibeah (Judges 20:19 f.), when the entire army marches off to Beth-el, 10 m. distance from Mizpah (if = Nebî Samwîl), to consult the divine oracle. Such a change of position at such a moment is almost incredible, and unnecessary, one would think, inasmuch as Mizpah itself was a sanctuary (Judges 20:1). Although Beth-el has a place in the B narrative (Judges 20:26 f.), this verse can hardly belong to the original form of it. And there are indications which confirm the impression that the verse is a gloss; contrast ‘asked counsel of God’ with ‘asked counsel of Jehovah’ Judges 20:23; Judges 20:27; the question and response of the oracle are imitated from Judges 1:1-2; in the account which follows all Israel acts together, not under the initiative of Judah; in the Hebr. Judges 20:18-19 begin with the same word and they arose. went up to Beth-el] Vulgate they came to the house of God, that is to Shiloh: an interesting attempt to get over a theoretical difficulty; see on Judges 20:27, and cf. Judges 21:2 n.
Judges 20:20
- From B; repeating the substance of Jdg 20:19 (from A). The words went out … set the battle in array against them occur in Genesis 14:8, a document probably not earlier than the exile.
Judges 20:21
- The numbers here and in Judges 20:25 are again prodigious: the Benjamites, without losing a man themselves (as is implied in Judges 20:35; Judges 20:44-47), kill 40,000 Israelites in the two battles. Why this loss on the Israelite side? Probably the narrator considered that even the champions of the divine justice were not free from blame; they had not begun the holy war with due religious observances. Or, if Judges 20:18 is not a later addition, because they had consulted the oracle merely to enquire which tribe should go up first.
Judges 20:22
- To make sense this and Judges 20:23 should change places. After the men of Israel the Vulgate adds trusting to their prowess and numbers, i.e. it was the presumption of the Israelites which caused their defeat.
Judges 20:23
- wept before the Lord] Cf. Judges 20:26, Judges 2:4, Judges 21:2. After went up we should supply to Beth-el, as in Judges 20:26.
Judges 20:26
- and all the people] Either transl. even all the people, or omit as a doublet of all the children of Israel. Cf. Judges 20:22. offered burnt offerings and peace offerings] Similarly under circumstances of distress Judges 21:4, 1 Samuel 7:9; 1 Samuel 13:9. The significance of the burnt offering lay in its being wholly made over to the Deity upon the altar; the special feature of the peace (or safety, or thank) offering was the sacred meal, shared by the Deity and the worshippers. 27b, 28a. The words in brackets give an interesting specimen of the theoretical treatment of history. To some later editor or scribe it seemed highly irregular that all Israel should offer sacrifices in any other place than the sanctuary of the ark. Accordingly the parenthesis explains that the ark in these days was at Beth-el! i.e. it must have been temporarily removed from Shiloh (Joshua 18 :1 P, 1 Samuel 4): and the sanctuary of the ark must have been served by the only legitimate priesthood (cf. Numbers 25:7; Numbers 31:6 P). For a similar adaptation of ancient practice to later theory cf. 2 Chronicles 1:3-6 with 1 Kings 3:4. If the present passage had come from the author of A, it would have stood earlier in the narrative, when the first enquiry of the oracle is mentioned. the ark of the covenant of God] So 1 Samuel 4:4, 2 Samuel 15:24, 1 Chronicles 16:6 (all). The phrase ark of the covenant is common in D and Dtc. passages, though occasionally found in J and JE. stood before it] The usual expression is stood before Him, Jehovah: Deuteronomy 10:8; Deuteronomy 18:7, Ezekiel 44:15, 2 Chronicles 29:11. to-morrow etc.] Not until the Israelites have made their peace with God (Judges 20:23; Judges 20:26) are they to be allowed to win a victory.
Judges 20:29
- From the narrative A, which describes, not the two battles and Jehovah’s direct interference (Judges 20:23; Judges 20:28; Judges 20:35), but the stratagem by which the Israelites captured the city; cf. Joshua 8:4-8 JE. This v. continues Judges 20:19. liers in wait] Plural, while Judges 20:33; Judges 20:36-38 use the sing. collect., the ambush. The plural may refer to the various parties posted round about the city.
Judges 20:30
- on the third day] The account of the battle becomes exceedingly confused. It seems to be rounded off at Judges 20:35 in the usual way, with a statement of the result and numbers slain; but in Judges 20:36 ff. we find the battle still in progress, and we go through the various incidents again. This repetition is due partly to the combination of the narratives A and B, and partly, it would seem, to the insertion of editorial expansions or glosses. In the main Judges 20:30-36 a come from the later source B; and in the main 36b–47 may be assigned to the earlier source A. Details which appear to lie outside these two versions, or merely repeat phrases from them, may be regarded, provisionally, as later additions; see on Judges 20:31; Judges 20:37 b, Judges 20:43, Judges 20:44 b – Judges 20:46.
Judges 20:31
- The opening sentence follows the pattern of Jdg 20:21; Judges 20:25. The remainder of the v. raises difficulties; it is partly repeated in Judges 20:39; the pretence of flight does not come properly till Judges 20:32. Either we may regard as additional glosses they were drawn away from the city (there is no and in the Hebr.), and the topographical note in the high ways, of which … to Gibeah, leaving the statement that the Benjamites began to smite and kill in the open country as on the former occasions (so Moore): or we may retain the words just quoted, and slightly rearrange them on the model of Jdg 20:32; Judges 20:39 : they were drawn away from the city into the highways, of which … to Gibeah, and they began to smite and kill in the field about thirty men of Israel (so Budde, Nowack, who distinguish three, instead of two versions). The first alternative has the merit of simplicity. to Gibeah] cannot be right, for the Israelites were retreating towards the N., away from Gibeah; the general direction of the two roads must be the same. For Gibeah, therefore, read Gibeon; at a short distance beyond Tell el-Fûl the road branches northwards to Beitîn (= Beth-el) and N.W. to el-Jib (= Gibeon), 3 m. N.W. of Tell el-Fûl.
Judges 20:33
- rose up … set themselves in array] The Israelites had taken up their position opposite Gibeah and then retired northwards (Judges 20:30-32); now, apparently, after the feigned retreat they take up a second position at a further distance from Gibeah. But this is hardly the natural meaning of the words; rose up implies a new action (e.g. Judges 20:19) rather than the repetition of a movement which had already begun. It is in fact difficult to fit Judges 20:33 a into the context. May it then come from the A narrative, and form the sequel of Jdg 20:29? This would give us an allusion to the battle, which otherwise is missing from A: after the ambush was set round Gibeah (Judges 20:29), the main army of Israel took up its position in Baal-tamar (Judges 20:33 a).
But the language of the verse does not inspire confidence in its originality (lit. the men of Israel rose up from his place!); on the other hand the mention of Baal-tamar may well be ancient. Perhaps we may describe this half-verse as an early addition. See further below. Baal-tamar] Site unknown, but not far from Gibeah; Eusebius (OS 238, 75) declares that the name was surviving in the locality as Beth-tamar. Baal-tamar = B. of the palm-tree, a rare instance of the god Baal being associated with a tree; cf. Jeremiah 2:27[63]. The palm was a symbol of Ashtoreth rather than of Baal. [63] See Baudissin, Adonis u. Esmun (1911), p. 176. Winckler interprets differently, Baal is Tamar, i.e. Ishtar-Ashtoreth, the local deity possessing the attributes of god and goddess: Gesch. Israels ii. 98 ff. brake forth] Elsewhere of the sea or a river, Job 38:8; Job 40:23, Ezekiel 32:2; from the same root comes the name of the fountain at Jerusalem, Gihon the gusher. So here, of the Hers in wait bursting forth from ambush; as applied in this way to warfare the word is used in Aramaic. Cf. the parallel account from A in Judges 20:37. Maareh-geba] Supposed to mean the bare or open space of G., but probably a mistake for maarâb legeba, i.e. west of Geba, LXX. cod. A and mss., Vulgate; a late usage, 2 Chronicles 32:30; 2 Chronicles 33:14. Geba is either a mistake for Gibeah (as in Judges 20:10), or more probably = Jeba‘, N.E. of Gibeah.
Judges 20:34
- ten thousand chosen men] Apparently the men who had formed the ambush: they now moved from their place of concealment, and posted themselves between the city and the Benjamites, who were chasing the men of Israel, so as to cut off the possibility of retreat. evil was close upon them] lit. was about to touch them; cf. Judges 20:41 evil had touched them. Cf. Joshua 8:14. The recurrence of the words in Judges 20:41 has led to the suggestion (made by Torrey) that Judges 20:35-36 a once stood after Judges 20:41, and that a scribe, glancing from the similar endings of Jdg 20:41; Judges 20:34, accidentally transposed Judges 20:35-36 a to their present position, where they destroy the natural order of events. The composition of this chapter is so entangled that we may readily assume a disturbance of the text here as in other places (e.g. Judges 20:22 f.). An alternative reconstruction is proposed by Budde, who assigns the passage to A: ‘And Israel set liers in wait against Gibeah round about (Judges 20:29), while all the men of Israel rose up out of their place, and set themselves in array at Baal-tamar (Judges 20:33 a). And there came over against Gibeah 10,000 chosen men out of all Israel, and the battle was sore (Judges 20:34 a). Thereupon the liers in wait of Israel brake forth out of their place west of Geba (Judges 20:33 b); but they knew not that evil was close upon them’ (Judges 20:34 b); then follow Judges 20:36 b–38. This gives a fairly lucid order; but it is based upon a rather different treatment of the chapter from that which is being followed.
Judges 20:35
- As elsewhere the account of the battle is brought to an end with a summing up of the numbers slain, Judges 20:21; Judges 20:25; Judges 20:46, Judges 3:29, Joshua 8:25. For the numbers see on Judges 20:15. This later source B, it is to be noted, ascribes the victory to the direct interference of Jehovah; cf. 2 Chronicles 13:15; 2 Chronicles 14:12, where the same verb smote occurs.
Judges 20:36
- the children of Benjamin] must refer to the 600 survivors. This half verse introduces the account of the flight, which is continued by Judges 20:42. Clause b may be regarded as a continuation of Jdg 20:29 in the narrative of A; the description of the feint is parallel to that in Judges 20:32 b.
Judges 20:37
- hasted and rushed] as did the ambush at Ai, Joshua 8:19; but the words are different. See Judges 9:33 n. drew themselves along] Cf. Judges 4:6. But the massacre of the inhabitants anticipates the signal; the destruction of the city does not begin till the smoke is seen to rise. This half of the verse appears to be a gloss on cl. a, added by some reader who wanted to make rushed upon Gibeah more explicit.
Judges 20:38
- a great cloud of smoke] Omit great (hereb, an ungrammatical form) with LXX. cod. A and mss., Syr., Vulgate, as an incorrect repetition of the preceding word (’ôrçb).
Judges 20:39
- And the men of Israel turned] The turn, however, does not come properly till Judges 20:41. Read with a slight change and that the men of I. should turn, as part of the appointed sign; Judges 20:38 will then end with in the battle. The marg. may thus be disregarded. and Benjamin etc.] A parallel version of Jdg 20:31-32.
Judges 20:40
- looked behind them] Cf. Joshua 8:20. It almost seems as if the account of the capture of Ai by a similar stratagem had influenced the present narrative. the whole of the city] Cf. Deuteronomy 13:16 ‘and thou shalt burn the city with fire as a whole offering unto Jehovah thy God’; but perhaps the word is hardly intended to bear its technical sense of holocaust here.
Judges 20:41
- amazed] An archaism in English, for bewildered; cf. St Mark 10:32, 1 Peter 3:6 (AV., contrast RV.).
Judges 20:42
- unto the way of the wilderness] in the direction of the barren hilly region, E. of Gibeah, which descends from the Central Highlands to the Jordan valley. out of the cities] i.e. the Benjamite cities on the line of the flight. But all the male Benjamites had been out with the army, and most of them killed: so read out of the city, i.e. Gibeah; the reference will then be to the men who formed the ambush. For in the midst thereof (lit. of him) read in the midst, as Joshua 8:22. The Benjamites suddenly found themselves caught between Israelites in front and rear. The men of Ai were intercepted in the same way. The verse comes from the B narrative: cf. Judges 20:21; Judges 20:25 destroyed them. With the correction of the text the marg. becomes unnecessary.
Judges 20:43
- The unidiomatic style (and … and are not in the original), together with the obscurity of the sense, prove that the text is corrupt. Of the various attempts to emend it, the following is as plausible as any: taking the two Hebr. words for the Benjamites … chased them as a doublet of the next two at their resting place, trode them down, and omitting the latter, we may read they cut down (LXX. cod. B) Benjamin and pursued him as far as over against Geba toward the sunrising. The Gibeah of the text was not E. of the flying Benjamites; as elsewhere it is confused with Geba = Jeba‘, 3 m. N.E. of Tell el-Fûl. Jeba‘ lies on the way to Rammôn; but before the fugitives could reach their place of refuge (Rimmon Judges 20:45), the narrow defile of the Wadi Suwçnît (1 Samuel 14:4 ff.), between Jeba‘ and Machmâs, would stop further pursuit: accordingly over against Geba they were cut down.
Judges 20:44
- eighteen thousand men] Contrast the number in Judges 20:35 from B. The first half of the v. may be assigned to A, and connects with Judges 20:47; the second half has found its way here from Judges 20:46, probably by a copyist’s error.
Judges 20:45
- the rock of Rimmon] now Rammôn, rises from the plateau due E. of Beth-el, visible from all sides; it lies rather more than 8 m. N.E. of Tell el-Fûl.gleaned of them] For the figure cf. Judges 8:2. unto Gidom] Site unknown; the Versions therefore guess, LXX. cod. A Gilead, Syr Gibeon. With the change of a vowel, we may read until they cut them off (gid‘âm), the word used in Judges 21:6.
Judges 20:46
- For the total here cf. on Judges 20:35. This and the preceding verse appear to be, not fragments from the B narrative, but editorial additions: the first part of Jdg 20:45 is borrowed from Judges 20:47, the figures in Judges 20:46 are obtained by adding up those in Judges 20:44 (from A) and 45; contrast B’s total in Judges 20:35.
Judges 20:47
- A’s version of the final flight. The 600 survivors have a part to play in the sequel.
Judges 20:48
- This v. (from B) records the destruction of the Benjamites who had not taken part in the conflict. the entire city] The marg. is to be preferred, lit. the city of men, a phrase only found again in Deuteronomy 2:34; Deuteronomy 3:6, and there, as here, in connexion with devoting a city or people to destruction. The Israelites were determined to make the tribe of Benjamin a ḥ ?érem: cf. Judges 21:10-11, Judges 1:17 n.
