-
This gives a wider signification to Judges 11:2, and shows that
Jephthah’s “brethren” include his fellow tribesmen....
-
CHAPTER 11 JEPHTHAH AND THE AMMONITES
_ 1. Jephthah's covenant (Judges 11:1)_
2. The messages to Ammon (Judges 11:12)
3. Jephthah's vow and victory (Judges 11:29)
4. Jephthah keeps his vow ...
-
JEPHTHAH'S YOUTH. Jephthah (God _opens_ the womb) is the Othello of
Israelitish history, a splendid barbarian, little blessed with the
soft phrase of peace, familiar with moving accidents by flood and...
-
_and drive me out of my father's house_ See Judges 11:2 _n._Apparently
custom allowed certain rights to the sons of concubines, as in the
ancient Babylonian code of Ḫammurabi; S. A. Cook, _Moses and
Ḫ...
-
_Jephthah Delivers Israel Judges 11:1-28_
Now Jephthah the Gileadite was a mighty man of valor, and he was the
son of a harlot: and Gilead begat Jephthah,
2 And Gilead's wife bare him sons; and his wi...
-
_AND JEPHTHAH SAID UNTO THE ELDERS OF GILEAD, DID NOT YE HATE ME, AND
EXPEL ME OUT OF MY FATHER'S HOUSE? AND WHY ARE YE COME UNTO ME NOW
WHEN YE ARE IN DISTRESS?_
Jephthah said ... Did not ye hate me...
-
JEPHTHAH'S VICTORY OVER THE AMMONITES. HIS RASH VOW
1-11. The Choice of Jephthah....
-
LIFE WITHOUT LAW
JUDGES
_PHILIP SMITH_
CHAPTER 11
V1 Jephthah, a man from Gilead’s family, was a brave soldier.
Gilead was his father. V2 His mother was a woman who sold her body for
sex. Gilead’...
-
DID NOT YE HATE ME? — The elders of Gilead must at least have
permitted his expulsion by his brethren.
THEREFORE. — i.e., with the express desire to repair the old wrong....
-
וַ יֹּ֤אמֶר יִפְתָּח֙ לְ זִקְנֵ֣י
גִלְעָ֔ד הֲ
-
GILEAD AND ITS CHIEF
Judges 10:1; Judges 11:1
THE scene of the history shifts now to the east of Jordan, and we
learn first of the influence which the region called Gilead was coming
to have in Hebre...
-
TURNING TO A REJECTED LEADER
Judges 10:17; Judges 11:1
The life of Jephthah is a great consolation to those whose birth has
been irregular. The sin of his parents was not allowed permanently to
injur...
-
At last deliverance came through Jephthah, whose history is full of
interest. He was the son of a harlot and had been thrust out from his
inheritance by the legitimate sons of his father. Evidently th...
-
Jephthah was a brave man whose mother was a harlot. The men of Gilead
allowed his brethren to drive him away so he could not receive a part
of the inheritance of their father. He went to live in the l...
-
And Jephthah said unto the elders of Gilead, Did not ye hate me, and
(f) expel me out of my father's house? and why are ye come unto me now
when ye are in distress?
(f) Often those things which men r...
-
_House. Perhaps he saw some of his brothers among them: though he
might speak thus to the magistrates, because they had not prevented
this injustice, (Calmet) as it was their duty to do. (Haydock)_...
-
If the Reader connects with this view of Jephthah, the history of
Joseph with his brethren, he will discover some similarity. But if he
spiritualizeth the subject with a greater than Joseph, and recol...
-
My object being no more than a sketch, as most of you know, I desire
to say but a few words on such of the Chapter s as bear a similar
character to that which has been already pointed out in the early...
-
THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS CHAPTER S 9, 10, 11, AND 12.
After Gideon's death we see the results of this distance from God in
the internal struggles which took place between the children of
Israel...
-
AND JEPHTHAH SAID UNTO THE ELDERS OF GILEAD,.... In answer to their
request; who though not backward to engage in the war with them, yet
thought it proper to take this opportunity to upbraid them with...
-
_Did ye not hate me, and 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...
-
1 The Couenant betweene Iephthah and the Gileadites, that hee should
be their head.
12 The treaty of peace betweene him and the Ammonites is in vaine.
29 Iephthahs vow.
32 His conquest of the Ammon...
-
And Jephthah said unto the elders of Gilead, in reminding them of the
former harsh treatment which he had received at their hands, DID NOT
YE HATE ME AND EXPEL ME OUT OF MY FATHER'S HOUSE, namely, by...
-
JEPHTHAH CHOSEN AS LEADER AGAINST AMMON...
-
JEPHTHAH; AN UNUSUAL LEADER
(vv. 1-11)
There was one man whose capacities for leadership stood out above
others in Israel, Jephthah a Gileadite, but he was not popular, being
the son of a prostitute...
-
1-11 Men ought not to be blamed for their parentage, so long as they
by their personal merits roll away any reproach. God had forgiven
Israel, therefore Jephthah will forgive. He speaks not with conf...
-
DID NOT YE EXPEL ME OUT OF MY FATHER'S HOUSE, 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
a...
-
Judges 11:7 Jephthah H3316 said H559 (H8799) elders H2205 Gilead H1568
hate H8130 (H8804) expel H1644 ...
-
‘ And Jephthah said to the elders of Gilead, “Did you not hate me,
and drive me from my father's house? And why are you now come to me,
when you are in distress?” '
Jephthah's reply demonstrates that...
-
CONTENTS: Jeptha's awful vow and the victory over the Ammorites.
CHARACTERS: God, Holy Spirit, Jeptha, his daughter.
CONCLUSION: A Christian in the hands of the Spirit is assured of
success in the u...
-
Judges 11:1. _Jephthah son of a harlot._ The Hebrew is the same as in
Joshua 2:1. The rabbins mostly read here, as Joshua 2., son of a
hostess.
Judges 11:3. Vain men,
-
_Jephthah the Gileadite._
JEPHTHAH
It is common to regard Jephthah as one of the wildest characters of
the Bible--a rough and heedless man; alike rash in vowing and
heartless in fulfilling; one whom...
-
_CHOICE OF A LEADER; AND SLAUGHTER OF THE ENEMY_
Judges 11:1.
CRITICAL NOTES.— JUDGES 11:1. THE GILEADITE.] Many regard this as
not a definite patronymic, but indicating that he belonged to the clan...
-
EXPOSITION
JUDGES 11:1
The narrative here goes back probably some years, to explain the
antecedents of Jephthah, who was about to play so prominent a part in
the ensuing history. Jephthah we learn wa...
-
He was a mighty man of valour, he was the son of a harlot: and Gilead
begat Jephthah. And Gilead's wife bore him sons; and the wife's sons
when they grew up, they threw Jephthah out, and they said, Yo...
-
Acts 7:9; Genesis 26:27; Genesis 37:27; Genesis 45:4; Genesis 45:5;...
-
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;...