-
2. ISRAEL'S MORAL CONDITION AND THE WAR ON BENJAMIN
CHAPTER 19 The Levite and His Concubine
_ 1. The Levite and the unfaithful woman (Judges 19:1)_
2. The fate of the concubine (Judges 19:22)
The r...
-
JUDGES 19-21. In the story of the outrage of Gibeah, there is a
combination of history and midrash. Hosea (Judges 9:9) makes allusion
to the days of Gibeah, as a time of notorious moral depravity in
I...
-
With instinctive art the Hebrew story-teller leaves much to the
imagination (cf. Judges 11:39); but at the end of the verse he adds a
detail which betrays the pathos of the tragedy....
-
The Crime at Gibeah and Its Punishment Judges 19:1 to Judges 21:25
_The Levite and His Concubine Judges 19:1-30_
And it came to pass in those days, when there was no king in Israel,
that there was a...
-
_AND THE MAN, THE MASTER OF THE HOUSE, WENT OUT UNTO THEM, AND SAID
UNTO THEM, NAY, MY BRETHREN, NAY, I PRAY YOU, DO NOT SO WICKEDLY;
SEEING THAT THIS MAN IS COME INTO MINE HOUSE, DO NOT THIS FOLLY._...
-
THE WICKEDNESS OF GIBEAH
A Levite and his concubine meet with foul treatment at Gibeah, a town
of Benjamin. The indignation of the other tribes is roused against the
Benjamites.
This chapter gives th...
-
LIFE WITHOUT LAW
JUDGES
_PHILIP SMITH_
CHAPTER 19
V1 At that time, *Israel’s people had no king. A man from Levi’s
*tribe lived in the hills. These were where Ephraim’s *tribe was.
The part where...
-
HER HANDS WERE UPON THE THRESHOLD. — As though they had been
stretched out towards her husband in one last agony of appeal (Vulg.,
_sparsis in limine cnanibus_)_.
_...
-
וַ יָּ֨קָם אֲדֹנֶ֜יהָ בַּ † בֹּ֗קֶר
וַ...
-
Judges 20:1; Judges 21:1
FROM JUSTICE TO WILD REVENGE
Judges 19:1; Judges 20:1;...
-
The story of the Levite occupies three Chapter s and is again a mirror
held up to the times, revealing startling moral conditions and showing
the conflict of good and evil among them.
In considering t...
-
They stayed in the marketplace of Gibeah because no one invited them
in for the night. At last, an old man, also from Ephraim, invited them
in to receive food, a night's lodging and provisions for the...
-
The sad narrative of so detestable an action, and issuing from so
detestable a cause, is enough to put to the blush our depraved nature.
Who that reads it but must exclaim, Lord! what is man! And when...
-
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 17 THROUGH 21.
The Chapter s that follow (17-21) are not comprised in the historical
order of this book. They lift the veil to disclose some incidents of
the...
-
AND HER LORD ROSE UP IN THE MORNING,.... Very early no doubt, and it
is scarcely reasonable to think he should sleep quietly after such a
riot, and his concubine or wife delivered up to the lust of su...
-
And her lord rose up in the morning, and opened the doors of the
house, and went out to go his way: and, behold, the woman his
concubine was fallen down [at] the door of the house, and her hands
[were...
-
_Went out to go his way_ Concluding, without doubt, that the
Gibeathites had conveyed away his concubine, and would keep her, and
therefore he hasted home to take proper measures for the recovery of
h...
-
1 A Leuite goeth to Bethlehem to fetch home his wife.
16 An old man entertaineth him at Gibeah.
22 The Gibeonites abuse his concubine to death.
29 He diuideth her into twelue pieces to send them to...
-
And her lord rose up in the morning, and opened the doors of the
house, and went out to go his way, considering the idea of ever
recovering his concubine as being utterly hopeless in this den of
iniqu...
-
THE SHAMEFUL ACT OF THE MEN OF GIBEAH...
-
ANOTHER LEVITE'S DIVERSION
(vv. 1:21)
The history of a different Levite was involved in the moral corruption
that afflicted Israel in the time of the Judges. We are reminded in
verse 1 that there wa...
-
The posture either of one that had fallen down, or of one that was
laid down to sleep, her hands or arms (for the Hebrew word signifies
both) leaning upon the threshold and being put under her head; a...
-
Judges 19:27 a
‘And her lord rose up in the morning, and opened the doors of the
house, and went out to go his way.'
Once he was satisfied that the crowd had gone, and unaware of what had
happened to...
-
CONTENTS: The Levite and his concubine. Wickedness of Gibeonites.
CHARACTERS: Levite, concubine, her father.
CONCLUSION: Because men like not to retain God in their knowledge, God
gives them up to vi...
-
Judges 19:1. _In those days,_ while Phinehas was highpriest, and in
the first generation after Joshua's death. He is called her husband,
Judges 19:3; and it was adultery for a woman so espoused to con...
-
_Whither goest thou?_
and whence comest thou?
THE PAST AND THE FUTURE
These two questions were usually proposed of old to the traveller, by
the inhabitants of any district through which he might be...
-
JUDGES—NOTE ON JUDGES 19:1 In__ one of the most sordid stories in
the Bible, rape, murder, and cruelty lead to the death of an innocent
woman and, eventually, to civil war.
⇐
-
JUDGES—NOTE ON JUDGES 19:27 The Levite’s reaction to his
concubine’s death illustrates his heartlessness. His gruesome
response was intended to rally the 12 tribes against Gibeah. HAS NEVER
HAPPENED O...
-
A TRAGIC CHAPTER IN ISRAEL’S HISTORY
(Judges 19:1.)
_HOMILETICS_
This chapter contains the history of an unmitigated abomination.
Perhaps the best comment upon it is to pass it by. But nothing in
hu...
-
EXPOSITION
JUDGES 19:1
WHEN THERE WAS NO KING (Judges 17:6; Judges 18:1; Judges 21:25). It
appears from
-
[Now again, in chapter nineteen it says,] It came to pass in those
days, when there was no king in Israel (Judges 19:1),
Now no king in Israel. You see Israel was intended by God to be a
theocracy. Go...