Chapter 11:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Joshua Ruth
Judges 11
The birth of Jephthah, rejected by his brethren, ver. 1-3. The
Gileadites chuse him for their general, ver. 4-11. His treating with
the king of Ammon, ver. 12-28. His war with, and victory over
the Ammonites, ver. 29-33. His vow and the performance of it,
ver. 34-40.
Verse 1. Gileadite - So called, either from his father Gilead, or from the
mountain, or city of Gilead, the place of his birth. Son of a harlot -
That is, a bastard. And though such were not ordinarily to enter
into the congregation of the Lord, Deut. xxiii, 2. Yet God can
dispense with his own laws, and hath sometimes done honour to
base-born persons, so far, that some of them were admitted to be
the progenitors of the Lord Jesus Christ. And Gilead - One of the
children of that ancient Gilead, Num. xxxii, 1.
Verse 3. Of Tob - The name either of the land, or of the man who was
the owner or ruler of it. This place was in, or near Gilead, as
appears by the speedy intercourse which here was between
Jephthah and the Israelites. Vain men - Idle persons, who desired
rather to get their living by spoil and rapine, than by honest
labour. These evil persons Jephthah managed well, employing
them against the enemies of God, and of Israel, that bordered
upon them; and particularly upon parties of the Ammonites,
which made the Israelites more forward to chuse him for their
chieftain in this war. Went out - When he made excursions and
attempts upon the enemy.
Verse 4. Made war - The Ammonites had vexed and oppressed them
eighteen years, and now the Israelites begin to make opposition,
they commence a war against them.
Verse 5. Went - By direction from God, who both qualified him for, and
called him to the office of a judge, otherwise they might not have
chosen a bastard.
Verse 7. Expel me - And deprive me of all share in my father's goods,
which, though a bastard, was due to me. This expulsion of him
was the act of his brethren; but he here ascribes it to the elders of
Gilead; either because some of them were among these elders, as
is very probable from the dignity of this family; or because this
act, though desired by his brethren, was executed by the decree of
the elders, to whom the determination of all controversies about
inheritance belonged; and therefore it was their faults they did not
protect him from the injuries of his brethren.
Verse 8. Therefore - Being sensible that we have done thee injury, we
come now to make thee full reparation.
Verse 9. If, &c. - If you recall me from this place where I am now
settled, to the place whence I was expelled. Shall I, &c. - Will you
really make good this promise? Jephthah was so solicitous in this
case, either from his zeal for the public good, which required that
he should be so; or from the law of self-preservation, that he
might secure himself from his brethren; whose ill-will he had
experienced, and whose injuries he could not prevent, if, after he
had served their ends, he had been reduced to his private capacity.
Verse 10. The Lord be witness - The Lord be an hearer: so the Hebrew
word is. Whatever we speak it concerns us to remember, that God
is an hearer!
Verse 11. All his words - Or, all his matters, the whole business. Before
the Lord - That is, before the public congregation, wherewith God
was usually, and then especially present.
Verse 12. Messengers - That is, ambassadors, to prevent blood-shed, that
so the Israelites might be acquitted before God and men, from all
the sad consequences of this war; herein he shewed great
prudence, and no less piety. What hast thou, &c. - What
reasonable cause hast thou for this invasion? In my land - He
speaks this in the name of all the people.
Verse 13. My land - That is, this land of Gilead, which was mine, but
unjustly taken from me, by Sihon and Og, the kings of the
Ammonites; and the injury perpetuated by Israel's detaining it
from me. This land, before the conquests of Sihon and Og,
belonged partly to the Ammonites, and partly to the Moabites.
And indeed, Moab and Ammon did for the most part join their
interests and their forces.
Verse 16. The Red-sea - Unto which they came three times; once, Exod.
xiii, 18, again, a little after their passage over it, and a third time,
long after, when they came to Ezion Geber, which was upon the
shore of the Red-Sea, from whence they went to Kadesh; of this
time he speaks here.
Verse 17. Abode - Peaceably, and did not revenge their unkindness as
they could have done.
Verse 19. My place - That is, unto the land of Canaan, which God hath
given me.
Verse 20. Sihon fought - So Sihon was the aggressor, and the Israelites
were forced to fight in their own defense.
Verse 22. The coasts - Or, borders; together with all the land included
within those borders. Wilderness - Namely, the desert of Arabia.
Verse 23. So the Lord - God, the sovereign Lord of all lands, hath given
us this land; this he adds, as a farther and convincing reason;
because otherwise it might have been alledged against the former
argument, that they could gain no more right to that land from
Sihon, than Sihon himself had.
Verse 24. Wilt not thou - He speaks according to their absurd opinion:
the Ammonites and Moabites got their land by conquest of the old
inhabitants, whom they cast out; and this success, though given
them by the true God, for Lot's sake, Deut. ii, 9, 19, they
impiously ascribe to their God Chemosh, whose gift they owned
to be a sufficient title.
Verse 25. Than Balak - Art thou wiser than he? Or hast thou more right
than he had? Balak, though he plotted against Israel, in defense of
his own land, which he feared they would invade and conquer, yet
never contended with them about the restitution of those lands
which Sihon took from him or his predecessors.
Verse 26. Three hundred years - Not precisely, but about that time,
either from their coming out of Egypt; or, from their first conquest
of those lands. He urges prescription, which is by all men
reckoned a just title, and it is fit it should be so for the good of the
world, because otherwise the door would be opened both to kings,
and to private persons, for infinite contentions and confusions.
Verse 27. I have not - I have done thee no wrong. Be judge - Let him
determine this controversy by the success of this day and war.
Verse 29. Spirit came - Indued him with a more than ordinary courage
and resolution. Manasseh - That is, Bashan, which the half tribe of
Manasseh beyond Jordan inhabited. Mizpeh of Gilead - So called
to distinguish it from other cities of the same name, having
gathered what forces he suddenly could, he came hither to the
borders of the Ammonites.
Verse 33. Minnith - A place not far from Rabbah, the chief city of the
Ammonites. Subdued before Israel - It does not appear, that he
offered to take possession of the country. Tho' the attempt of
others to wrong us, will justify us in the defense of our own right,
yet it will not authorize us to do them wrong.
Verse 34. His daughter - In concert with other virgins, as the manner
was.
Verse 35. Trouble me - Before this, I was troubled by my brethren; and
since, by the Ammonites; and now most of all, tho' but
occasionally, by thee. Opened my mouth - That is, I have vowed.
Cannot go back - That is, not retract my vow; I am indispensably
obliged to perform it.
Verse 36. Do to me - Do not for my sake make thyself a transgressor; I
freely give my consent to thy vow.
Verse 37. Mountains - Which she chose as a solitary place, and therefore
fittest for lamentation. Bewail - That I shall die childless, which
was esteemed both a curse and a disgrace for the Israelites,
because such were excluded from that great privilege of
increasing the holy seed, and contributing to the birth of the
Messiah.
Verse 39. Did with her - Jephthah's daughter was not sacrificed, but only
devoted to perpetual virginity. This appears,
1. From ver. 37, 38, where we read, that she bewailed not her
death, which had been the chief cause of lamentation, if that had
been vowed, but her virginity:
2. From this ver. 39, where, after he had said, that he did with her
according to his vow; he adds, by way of declaration of the matter
of that vow, and she knew no man. It is probably conceived, that
the Greeks, who used to steal sacred histories, and turn them into
fables, had from this history their relation of Iphigenia (which
may be put for Jephtigenia) sacrificed by her father Agamemnon,
which is described by many of the same circumstances wherewith
this is accompanied.
Verse 40. The daughter of Jephthah - It is really astonishing, that the
general stream of commentators, should take it for granted, that
Jephthah murdered his daughter! But, says Mr. Henry, "We do not
find any law, usage or custom, in all the Old Testament, which
doth in the least intimate, that a single life was any branch or
article of religion." And do we find any law, usage or custom
there, which doth in the least intimate, that cutting the throat of an
only child, was any branch or article of religion? If only a dog had
met Jephthah, would he have offered up that for a burnt-offering?
No: because God had expressly forbidden this. And had he not
expressly forbidden murder? But Mr. Poole thinks the story of
Agamemnon's offering up Iphigenia took its rise from this.
Probably it did. But then let it be observed, Iphigenia was not
murdered. Tradition said, that Diana sent an hind in her stead, and
took the maid to live in the woods with her.
Chapter 11:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Joshua Ruth
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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