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Judges 15

Judges 15 is the fifteenth chapter of the Book of Judges in the Old Testament or the Hebrew Bible.[1] According to Jewish tradition the book was attributed to the prophet Samuel,[2][3] but modern scholars view it as part of the Deuteronomistic History, which spans in the books of Deuteronomy to 2 Kings, attributed to nationalistic and devotedly Yahwistic writers during the time of the reformer Judean king Josiah in 7th century BCE.[3][4] This chapter records the activities of judges Samson.[5] belonging to a section comprising Judges 13 to 16 and Judges 6:1 to 16:31.[6]

Judges 15
The pages containing the Book of Judges in Leningrad Codex (1008 CE).
BookBook of Judges
Hebrew Bible partNevi'im
Order in the Hebrew part2
CategoryFormer Prophets
Christian Bible partOld Testament (Heptateuch)
Order in the Christian part7

Text edit

This chapter was originally written in the Hebrew language. It is divided into 20 verses.

Textual witnesses edit

Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Codex Cairensis (895), Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008).[7]

Extant ancient manuscripts of a translation into Koine Greek known as the Septuagint (originally was made in the last few centuries BCE) include Codex Vaticanus (B;  B; 4th century) and Codex Alexandrinus (A;  A; 5th century).[8][a]

Analysis edit

A linguistic study by Chisholm reveals that the central part in the Book of Judges (Judges 3:7–16:31) can be divided into two panels based on the six refrains that state that the Israelites did evil in Yahweh's eyes:[10]

Panel One

A 3:7 ויעשו בני ישראל את הרע בעיני יהוה
And the children of Israel did evil in the sight of the LORD (KJV)[11]
B 3:12 ויספו בני ישראל לעשות הרע בעיני יהוה
And the children of Israel did evil again in the sight of the LORD
B 4:1 ויספו בני ישראל לעשות הרע בעיני יהוה
And the children of Israel did evil again in the sight of the LORD

Panel Two

A 6:1 ויעשו בני ישראל הרע בעיני יהוה
And the children of Israel did evil in the sight of the LORD
B 10:6 ויספו בני ישראל לעשות הרע בעיני יהוה
And the children of Israel did evil again in the sight of the LORD
B 13:1 ויספו בני ישראל לעשות הרע בעיני יהוה
And the children of Israel did evil again in the sight of the LORD

Furthermore from the linguistic evidence, the verbs used to describe the Lord's response to Israel's sin have chiastic patterns and can be grouped to fit the division above:[12]

Panel One

3:8 וימכרם, "and he sold them," from the root מָכַר, makar
3:12 ויחזק, "and he strengthened," from the root חָזַק, khazaq
4:2 וימכרם, "and he sold them," from the root מָכַר, makar

Panel Two

6:1 ויתנם, "and he gave them," from the root נָתַן, nathan
10:7 וימכרם, "and he sold them," from the root מָכַר, makar
13:1 ויתנם, "and he gave them," from the root נָתַן, nathan

Chapters 13–16 contains the "Samson Narrative" or "Samson Cycle", a highly structured poetic composition with an 'almost architectonic tightness' from a literary point-of-view.[13] The entire section consists of 3 cantos and 10 subcantos and 30 canticles, as follows:[13]

  • Canto I : the birth story of Samson (Judges 13:2–25)
  • Canto II : the feats of Samson in Timnah and Judah (Judges 14:1–16:3)
  • Canto III : Samson's exploits in the Valley of Sorek and the temple of Dagon (Judges 16:4–31).

The distribution of the 10 subcantos into 3 cantos is a regular 2 + 4 + 4, with the number of canticles per subcanto as follows:[13]

  • Canto I: 3 + 3
  • Canto II: 3 + 3 + 3 + 5 (3 + 2?)
  • Canto III: 2 + 2 + 3 + 3

The number of strophes per canticle in each canto is quite uniform with numerical patterns in Canto II showing a 'concentric symmetry':[13]

  • Canto I: 4 + 4 + 4 | 4 + 4 + 4
  • Canto Ila: 4 + 3 + 3 | 4 + 4 + 4 | 3 + 3 + 4 (concentric)
  • Canto IIb: 4 + 4 + 3 + 4? + 4 (concentric)
  • Canto III: 4 + 4 | 4 + 4 | 4 + 4 + 4 | 3 + 3 + 4

The structure regularity within the whole section classifies this composition as a 'narrative poetry' or 'poetic narrative'.[14]

Besides the thematic symmetry, parts of the narrative shows an observable structure with chapter 13 balances chapter 16 (each consisting of three sub-sections with a fourfold asking and answer discourse at the center) whereas chapters 14 and 15 show a parallelism in form and content.[15][16]

Chapter 15:1–19 has the following structure:[15][17]

A. After a while ... Samson visited (15:1–3)
1. speech between Samson and father-in-law.
2. parental objection
3. Samson's rejection of the possibility of another woman.
B. Samson went (15:4–6a)
1. action involving animals (foxes).
C. The Philistines came up (15:6b–8)
1. action involving retaliation, a vicious act
D. The Philistines came up (15:9–19)
1. speech between Judahites, Philistines and Samson;
2. Philistines threaten third party to beat Samson
3. Spirit of YHWH and Samson's victory.

Samson's revenge (15:1–8) edit

Samson's desire for his woman coincides with the harvest season, a time of fertility (cf. Ruth 2)., and he brought a peace offering as if all is forgiven, displaying 'his obliviousness to social convention'.[18] The woman's father offered Samson another deal, the younger sister (cf. Saul to David, 1 Samuel 17:25; 18:17–22), but this was declined and followed by Samson's superheroic vengeance, attaching torches to the tails of 300 foxes to set fire among the standing grain, vineyards, and olive groves of the Philistines.[18] The Philistines retaliated by setting the whole family of Samson's wife-to-be on fire.[18] Samson had an outburst that he killed many Philistines as vengeance, then withdrew to a cave in Etam(verse 8).[18]

Verse 8 edit

And he struck them hip and thigh with a great blow, and he went down and stayed in the cleft of the rock of Etam.[19]
  • "Hip and thigh": from Hebrew: "soq al-yarek", probably an idiom for "total victory".[20]
  • "Rock of Etam": presumed to be a place down in a valley or creek with caves to hide. Etam is mentioned as village (hasher) in the territory of Simeon (1 Chronicles 4:32), which was within Judah (Joshua 19:1–9), ater fortified by Jeroboam and listed between Bethlehem and Tekoa (2 Chronicles 11:6).[21]

Samson defeats the Philistines (15:9–20) edit

 
"Samson Slaying a Philistine", a marble sculpture by Giambologna c. 1562.

Israelites are elsewhere portrayed as tending to collaborate with the enemy than to revolt (cf. Exodus 2:14; 5:21), thus the men of Judah would rather to hand over Samson to the Philistines to avoid an attack (cf. 2 Samuel 20:14–22).[18] As many as 3,000 men of Judah came to Samson to bind him as instructed by the Philistines, but starting with an accusation of wrongdoing ('What is this that you have done to us?') to convince Samson to allow himself to be given over peacefully to the enemy.[22] Samson went with the Philistines until Lehi before he had an outburst with a 'power fuelled by the divine frenzy', breaking the ropes that bind him with an imagery of 'fire' (verse 14), then using the jawbone of a donkey (another animal motif) to kill a thousand Philistine men.[23]

The basic elements of this fight recalls a similar pattern in Samson's fight with the lion oin the vineyards of Timnah as follows:[24]

Judges 14:5–6 Judges 15:14–19
A lion comes "roaring"
to meet Samson
The Philistines come "shouting"
to meet Samson
The Spirit of YHWH
rushes upon Samson
The Spirit of YHWH
rushes upon Samson
Samson "tears" the lion in two Samson "strikes down" the Philistines

Thereafter Samson used a proverb to declare his victory in a 'war-taunt' with word play of the root h-m-r (could mean 'donkey' or 'pile up', in parallel to the many slain Philistines as'heaps and heaps').[23] The record of the amazing victory over the Philistines concludes with Samson's plea to God to quench his thirst, characteristically with a hyperbole if 'God intends to reward the hero of Israel with death by thirst' (verse 18).[23] God responded by splitting open a spring from a rocky hollow (cf. Elijah and Moses) so that Samson could drink and be revived.[23] Verse 20 marks the end of the first part of Samson epic, to be followed by the story of Samson's fall in the next chapter.[23]

Verse 20 edit

And he judged Israel in the days of the Philistines twenty years.[25]
  • "In the days of the Philistines": serves as a reminder of Samson's limitation, that his acts as a judge started and ended within the period of the Philistine occupation, so Samson did not fully deliver Israel from the oppression of the Philistines.[26] The final victory against the Philistines would be achieved under the leadership of Samuel in Eben-Ezer (1 Samuel 7:1213), "twenty years" after the return of the Ark of the Covenant by the Philistines.[27]

See also edit

  • Related Bible parts: Judges 13, Judges 14, Judges 16, Hebrews 11
  • Notes edit

    1. ^ The whole book of Judges is missing from the extant Codex Sinaiticus.[9]

    References edit

    1. ^ Halley 1965, p. 173.
    2. ^ Talmud, Baba Bathra 14b-15a)
    3. ^ a b Gilad, Elon. Who Really Wrote the Biblical Books of Kings and the Prophets? Haaretz, June 25, 2015. Summary: The paean to King Josiah and exalted descriptions of the ancient Israelite empires beg the thought that he and his scribes lie behind the Deuteronomistic History.
    4. ^ Niditch 2007, p. 177.
    5. ^ Niditch 2007, p. 185.
    6. ^ Chisholm 2009, pp. 251–252.
    7. ^ Würthwein 1995, pp. 35–37.
    8. ^ Würthwein 1995, pp. 73–74.
    9. ^   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Codex Sinaiticus". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
    10. ^ Chisholm 2009, p. 251.
    11. ^ Judges 3:7 Hebrew Text Analysis. Biblehub
    12. ^ Chisholm 2009, p. 252.
    13. ^ a b c d Kim 1993, p. 424.
    14. ^ Kim 1993, pp. 424, 426.
    15. ^ a b Exum, J. Cheryl (1980). Literary Patterns in the Samson Saga: An Investigation of Rhetorical Style in Biblical Prose. University Microfilms. pp. 68–69.
    16. ^ Kim 1993, p. 103.
    17. ^ Kim 1993, pp. 103–104.
    18. ^ a b c d e Niditch 2007, p. 186.
    19. ^ Judges 15:8 ESV
    20. ^ Webb 2012, p. 380.
    21. ^ Webb 2012, pp. 380–381.
    22. ^ Niditch 2007, pp. 186–187.
    23. ^ a b c d e Niditch 2007, p. 187.
    24. ^ Webb 2012, p. 385.
    25. ^ Judges 15:20 KJV
    26. ^ Webb 2012, p. 390.
    27. ^ Keil, Carl Friedrich; Delitzsch, Franz. Commentary on the Old Testament (1857-1878). 2 Samuel 3. Accessed 24 Juni 2018.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.

    Sources edit

    External links edit

    • Jewish translations:
      • Shoftim - Judges - Chapter 15 (Judaica Press). Hebrew text and English translation [with Rashi's commentary] at Chabad.org
    • Christian translations:
      • Online Bible at GospelHall.org (ESV, KJV, Darby, American Standard Version, Bible in Basic English)
      • Judges chapter 15. Bible Gateway

    judges, fifteenth, chapter, book, judges, testament, hebrew, bible, according, jewish, tradition, book, attributed, prophet, samuel, modern, scholars, view, part, deuteronomistic, history, which, spans, books, deuteronomy, kings, attributed, nationalistic, dev. Judges 15 is the fifteenth chapter of the Book of Judges in the Old Testament or the Hebrew Bible 1 According to Jewish tradition the book was attributed to the prophet Samuel 2 3 but modern scholars view it as part of the Deuteronomistic History which spans in the books of Deuteronomy to 2 Kings attributed to nationalistic and devotedly Yahwistic writers during the time of the reformer Judean king Josiah in 7th century BCE 3 4 This chapter records the activities of judges Samson 5 belonging to a section comprising Judges 13 to 16 and Judges 6 1 to 16 31 6 Judges 15 chapter 14chapter 16 The pages containing the Book of Judges in Leningrad Codex 1008 CE BookBook of JudgesHebrew Bible partNevi imOrder in the Hebrew part2CategoryFormer ProphetsChristian Bible partOld Testament Heptateuch Order in the Christian part7 Contents 1 Text 1 1 Textual witnesses 2 Analysis 3 Samson s revenge 15 1 8 3 1 Verse 8 4 Samson defeats the Philistines 15 9 20 4 1 Verse 20 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksText editThis chapter was originally written in the Hebrew language It is divided into 20 verses Textual witnesses edit Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition which includes the Codex Cairensis 895 Aleppo Codex 10th century and Codex Leningradensis 1008 7 Extant ancient manuscripts of a translation into Koine Greek known as the Septuagint originally was made in the last few centuries BCE include Codex Vaticanus B G displaystyle mathfrak G nbsp B 4th century and Codex Alexandrinus A G displaystyle mathfrak G nbsp A 5th century 8 a Analysis editA linguistic study by Chisholm reveals that the central part in the Book of Judges Judges 3 7 16 31 can be divided into two panels based on the six refrains that state that the Israelites did evil in Yahweh s eyes 10 Panel One A 3 7 ויעשו בני ישראל את הרע בעיני יהוהAnd the children of Israel did evil in the sight of the LORD KJV 11 B 3 12 ויספו בני ישראל לעשות הרע בעיני יהוהAnd the children of Israel did evil again in the sight of the LORD dd B 4 1 ויספו בני ישראל לעשות הרע בעיני יהוהAnd the children of Israel did evil again in the sight of the LORD dd dd Panel Two A 6 1 ויעשו בני ישראל הרע בעיני יהוהAnd the children of Israel did evil in the sight of the LORD B 10 6 ויספו בני ישראל לעשות הרע בעיני יהוהAnd the children of Israel did evil again in the sight of the LORD dd B 13 1 ויספו בני ישראל לעשות הרע בעיני יהוהAnd the children of Israel did evil again in the sight of the LORD dd dd Furthermore from the linguistic evidence the verbs used to describe the Lord s response to Israel s sin have chiastic patterns and can be grouped to fit the division above 12 Panel One 3 8 וימכרם and he sold them from the root מ כ ר makar 3 12 ויחזק and he strengthened from the root ח ז ק khazaq 4 2 וימכרם and he sold them from the root מ כ ר makar Panel Two 6 1 ויתנם and he gave them from the root נ ת ן nathan 10 7 וימכרם and he sold them from the root מ כ ר makar 13 1 ויתנם and he gave them from the root נ ת ן nathan Chapters 13 16 contains the Samson Narrative or Samson Cycle a highly structured poetic composition with an almost architectonic tightness from a literary point of view 13 The entire section consists of 3 cantos and 10 subcantos and 30 canticles as follows 13 Canto I the birth story of Samson Judges 13 2 25 Canto II the feats of Samson in Timnah and Judah Judges 14 1 16 3 Canto III Samson s exploits in the Valley of Sorek and the temple of Dagon Judges 16 4 31 The distribution of the 10 subcantos into 3 cantos is a regular 2 4 4 with the number of canticles per subcanto as follows 13 Canto I 3 3 Canto II 3 3 3 5 3 2 Canto III 2 2 3 3 The number of strophes per canticle in each canto is quite uniform with numerical patterns in Canto II showing a concentric symmetry 13 Canto I 4 4 4 4 4 4 Canto Ila 4 3 3 4 4 4 3 3 4 concentric Canto IIb 4 4 3 4 4 concentric Canto III 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 4 The structure regularity within the whole section classifies this composition as a narrative poetry or poetic narrative 14 Besides the thematic symmetry parts of the narrative shows an observable structure with chapter 13 balances chapter 16 each consisting of three sub sections with a fourfold asking and answer discourse at the center whereas chapters 14 and 15 show a parallelism in form and content 15 16 Chapter 15 1 19 has the following structure 15 17 A After a while Samson visited 15 1 3 1 speech between Samson and father in law 2 parental objection 3 Samson s rejection of the possibility of another woman dd dd B Samson went 15 4 6a 1 action involving animals foxes dd dd C The Philistines came up 15 6b 8 1 action involving retaliation a vicious act dd dd D The Philistines came up 15 9 19 1 speech between Judahites Philistines and Samson 2 Philistines threaten third party to beat Samson 3 Spirit of YHWH and Samson s victory dd dd Samson s revenge 15 1 8 editSamson s desire for his woman coincides with the harvest season a time of fertility cf Ruth 2 and he brought a peace offering as if all is forgiven displaying his obliviousness to social convention 18 The woman s father offered Samson another deal the younger sister cf Saul to David 1 Samuel 17 25 18 17 22 but this was declined and followed by Samson s superheroic vengeance attaching torches to the tails of 300 foxes to set fire among the standing grain vineyards and olive groves of the Philistines 18 The Philistines retaliated by setting the whole family of Samson s wife to be on fire 18 Samson had an outburst that he killed many Philistines as vengeance then withdrew to a cave in Etam verse 8 18 Verse 8 edit And he struck them hip and thigh with a great blow and he went down and stayed in the cleft of the rock of Etam 19 Hip and thigh from Hebrew soq al yarek probably an idiom for total victory 20 Rock of Etam presumed to be a place down in a valley or creek with caves to hide Etam is mentioned as village hasher in the territory of Simeon 1 Chronicles 4 32 which was within Judah Joshua 19 1 9 ater fortified by Jeroboam and listed between Bethlehem and Tekoa 2 Chronicles 11 6 21 Samson defeats the Philistines 15 9 20 edit nbsp Samson Slaying a Philistine a marble sculpture by Giambologna c 1562 Israelites are elsewhere portrayed as tending to collaborate with the enemy than to revolt cf Exodus 2 14 5 21 thus the men of Judah would rather to hand over Samson to the Philistines to avoid an attack cf 2 Samuel 20 14 22 18 As many as 3 000 men of Judah came to Samson to bind him as instructed by the Philistines but starting with an accusation of wrongdoing What is this that you have done to us to convince Samson to allow himself to be given over peacefully to the enemy 22 Samson went with the Philistines until Lehi before he had an outburst with a power fuelled by the divine frenzy breaking the ropes that bind him with an imagery of fire verse 14 then using the jawbone of a donkey another animal motif to kill a thousand Philistine men 23 The basic elements of this fight recalls a similar pattern in Samson s fight with the lion oin the vineyards of Timnah as follows 24 Judges 14 5 6 Judges 15 14 19 A lion comes roaring to meet Samson The Philistines come shouting to meet Samson The Spirit of YHWH rushes upon Samson The Spirit of YHWH rushes upon Samson Samson tears the lion in two Samson strikes down the Philistines Thereafter Samson used a proverb to declare his victory in a war taunt with word play of the root h m r could mean donkey or pile up in parallel to the many slain Philistines as heaps and heaps 23 The record of the amazing victory over the Philistines concludes with Samson s plea to God to quench his thirst characteristically with a hyperbole if God intends to reward the hero of Israel with death by thirst verse 18 23 God responded by splitting open a spring from a rocky hollow cf Elijah and Moses so that Samson could drink and be revived 23 Verse 20 marks the end of the first part of Samson epic to be followed by the story of Samson s fall in the next chapter 23 Verse 20 edit And he judged Israel in the days of the Philistines twenty years 25 In the days of the Philistines serves as a reminder of Samson s limitation that his acts as a judge started and ended within the period of the Philistine occupation so Samson did not fully deliver Israel from the oppression of the Philistines 26 The final victory against the Philistines would be achieved under the leadership of Samuel in Eben Ezer 1 Samuel 7 12 13 twenty years after the return of the Ark of the Covenant by the Philistines 27 See also editAscalon Enhakkore Men of Judah Philistines Ramathlehi Rock of Etam Spirit of the Lord Timnite Related Bible parts Judges 13 Judges 14 Judges 16 Hebrews 11Notes edit The whole book of Judges is missing from the extant Codex Sinaiticus 9 References edit Halley 1965 p 173 Talmud Baba Bathra 14b 15a a b Gilad Elon Who Really Wrote the Biblical Books of Kings and the Prophets Haaretz June 25 2015 Summary The paean to King Josiah and exalted descriptions of the ancient Israelite empires beg the thought that he and his scribes lie behind the Deuteronomistic History Niditch 2007 p 177 Niditch 2007 p 185 Chisholm 2009 pp 251 252 Wurthwein 1995 pp 35 37 Wurthwein 1995 pp 73 74 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Codex Sinaiticus Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Chisholm 2009 p 251 Judges 3 7 Hebrew Text Analysis Biblehub Chisholm 2009 p 252 a b c d Kim 1993 p 424 Kim 1993 pp 424 426 a b Exum J Cheryl 1980 Literary Patterns in the Samson Saga An Investigation of Rhetorical Style in Biblical Prose University Microfilms pp 68 69 Kim 1993 p 103 Kim 1993 pp 103 104 a b c d e Niditch 2007 p 186 Judges 15 8 ESV Webb 2012 p 380 Webb 2012 pp 380 381 Niditch 2007 pp 186 187 a b c d e Niditch 2007 p 187 Webb 2012 p 385 Judges 15 20 KJV Webb 2012 p 390 Keil Carl Friedrich Delitzsch Franz Commentary on the Old Testament 1857 1878 2 Samuel 3 Accessed 24 Juni 2018 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Sources editChisholm Robert B Jr 2009 The Chronology of the Book of Judges A Linguistic Clue to Solving a Pesky Problem PDF Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 52 2 247 55 Coogan Michael David 2007 Coogan Michael David Brettler Marc Zvi Newsom Carol Ann Perkins Pheme eds The New Oxford Annotated Bible with the Apocryphal Deuterocanonical Books New Revised Standard Version Issue 48 Augmented 3rd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 528881 0 Halley Henry H 1965 Halley s Bible Handbook an abbreviated Bible commentary 24th revised ed Zondervan Publishing House ISBN 0 310 25720 4 Hayes Christine 2015 Introduction to the Bible Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 18827 1 Kim Jichan 1993 The Structure of the Samson Cycle Kok Pharos Publishing House ISBN 978 90 390 0016 8 Niditch Susan 2007 10 Judges In Barton John Muddiman John eds The Oxford Bible Commentary first paperback ed Oxford University Press pp 176 191 ISBN 978 0 19 927718 6 Retrieved February 6 2019 Webb Barry G 2012 The Book of Judges New International Commentary on the Old Testament Eerdmans Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8028 2628 2 Wurthwein Ernst 1995 The Text of the Old Testament Translated by Rhodes Erroll F Grand Rapids MI Wm B Eerdmans ISBN 0 8028 0788 7 Retrieved January 26 2019 Younger K Lawson 2002 Judges and Ruth The NIV Application Commentary Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 20636 1 External links editJewish translations Shoftim Judges Chapter 15 Judaica Press Hebrew text and English translation with Rashi s commentary at Chabad org Christian translations Online Bible at GospelHall org ESV KJV Darby American Standard Version Bible in Basic English Judges chapter 15 Bible Gateway Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Judges 15 amp oldid 1196736833, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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