<SPAN name="p252a"></SPAN>
<hr class="sect_35" />
<h3> CHAPTER <abbr title="5">V.</abbr><br/><br/> <span> <i>ABIMELECH AND JEPHTHAH.</i><br/> <abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr> <abbr title="chapters 9 through 12">ix.–xii.</abbr> <span class="nowrap">B.C. <abbr title="circa">circ.</abbr> 1249<abbr title="through">–</abbr>1188.</span></span></h3>
<p class="chaphdbrk in_dropcap">
<span class="dropcap">A</span>FTER the death of Gideon, Jehovah, whose minister he had been for the deliverance of the people, was again forgotten by the Israelites. Forgetting Gideon, forgetting Him who had sent Gideon, they made Baal-Berith, <i>Baal of the Covenant</i>, their god, and set up his sanctuary even in Shechem, though hallowed by the memories of the <span id="p252_207" class="nowrap">patriarchs<SPAN href="#fn_207" class="anchor">207</SPAN></span>
and the solemn ratification of the <span id="p252_208" class="nowrap">Law<SPAN href="#fn_208" class="anchor">208</SPAN>.</span></p>
<p>Meanwhile Gideon’s 70 sons appear to have exercised authority over some portion of the country. One of them, whose name was
<span class="smcap">Abimelech</span>, the son of a slave a Canaanite native of Shechem, after consultation with his mother’s brethren and her relatives
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 9">ix.</abbr> 1), suggested that in place of the divided authority of his numerous brothers, he, <i>their bone and their flesh</i>
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 9">ix.</abbr> 2), should be vested with the supreme authority.<SPAN id="p253"> </SPAN>The spirit of clanship was strong. <i>He is our brother</i>, whispered the family to the Shechemites, who at length fell in with the scheme, and lent Abimelech seventy pieces of silver from the sanctuary of Baal-Berith.</p>
<p>With the money he hired a body of men, and going to his father’s house at Ophrah, murdered all his brethren, save
<span class="smcap">Jotham</span> the youngest, who managed to escape. He was now left alone, and was solemnly anointed king by the men of Shechem, who thus formally signified their revolt from the Hebrew commonwealth. Tidings of what was going on reached the ears of Jotham. Emerging from his hiding-place, he stationed himself on one of the rocky inaccessible spurs of Mount <span id="p253_209" class="nowrap">Gerizim<SPAN href="#fn_209" class="anchor">209</SPAN>,</span>
and taking up his parable from the variegated foliage of the valley below and the neighbouring forest, bade the men of Shechem listen while he addressed to them the earliest Parable, that of the Bramble-King. <i>Once, he said, the Trees went forth to anoint a king over them. The Olive, the Vine, the Fig were each asked to accept the royal dignity, but each declined;<SPAN id="p254"> </SPAN>the Olive could not leave his fatness, or the Fig-tree his sweetness, or the Vine the juice of his grapes. Recourse was then had to the Bramble, which not only accepted the proffered honour, but bade the other trees put their trust in its shadow, and threatened, if they did not, that fire should come forth from it and devour even the cedars of Lebanon.</i> Jotham then reminded the Shechemites of the services his father had rendered to the nation, and rebuked them for their gross ingratitude to his family. If they thought they had done well in electing Abimelech, the Bramble-King, he bade them rejoice in him; if not, he hoped a fire might come forth from the king, in whose shadow they had placed their trust, and destroy him and all who had joined in electing him. With these words the speaker fled.</p>
<p>In a short time his words were fulfilled. For three years Abimelech maintained his supremacy, residing himself at Arumah
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 9">ix.</abbr> 41), not far from Shechem, while that place was entrusted to Zebul, his viceroy. During the joyous season of the <span id="p254_210" class="nowrap">vintage<SPAN href="#fn_210" class="anchor">210</SPAN></span>
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 9">ix.</abbr> 27) Gaal the son of Ebed, a leader of a body of freebooters tried to persuade the people of Shechem to transfer their allegiance from Abimelech, who was but half a kinsman, to the Hivite tribe of Hamor. Intelligence of this movement reached the ears of Zebul, who without delay sent word to Abimelech, bidding him levy his forces and surprise the plotters in the city. After a desperate battle Abimelech captured the place, put the entire population to the sword, and sowed the ruins of the city with salt
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 9">ix.</abbr> 45). A remnant, however, of the insurgents took refuge in the temple of Baal-Berith. Thither Abimelech pursued them at the head of his followers, whom he commanded on their way to cut down boughs from the trees on the wooded eminence<SPAN id="p255"> </SPAN>of Zalmon
(<abbr title="Psalm 68">Ps. lxviii.</abbr> 14) close to the city. These he piled against the hold, set them on fire, and suffocated and burnt the refugees. From Shechem he repaired to <span id="p255_211" class="nowrap">Thebez<SPAN href="#fn_211" class="anchor">211</SPAN></span>
(<i>Tûbas</i>) and speedily captured the town; but again the inhabitants took refuge in one of its strong towers, and there held out. Forcing his way up to it, Abimelech was about to repeat the stratagem he had found so successful at Shechem
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 9">ix.</abbr> 52), when a woman flung a fragment of millstone at his <span id="p255_212" class="nowrap">head<SPAN href="#fn_212" class="anchor">212</SPAN>.</span>
Unwilling to die thus ingloriously, he bade his armour-bearer thrust him through with his sword, and so expired.</p>
<p>Other judges now succeeded, of whom
<span class="smcap">Tola</span>, of the tribe of Issachar, governed Israel for a space of 23 years at Shamir in Mount Ephraim
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 10">x.</abbr> 1, 2); he was succeeded by
<span class="smcap">Jair</span> of Gilead, who during 22 years shared his almost regal honours with his thirty sons
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 10">x.</abbr> 3, 4).</p>
<p class="sectbrk align_ctr">
<i>Invasion of the Ammonites; Jephthah.</i></p>
<p class="secthdbrk">
But recent judgments had not the effect of restraining the people from apostasy. To the worship of Baal and Astarte they now added that of the gods of Syria, of Zidon, of Moab and Ammon, as also of the Philistines. The national punishment they thus drew down upon themselves came from two quarters. On the south-west and along the fertile borders of the Shephelah the Philistines rose and reduced a portion of the country to subjection, while the tribes on the east of Jordan fell a<SPAN id="p256"> </SPAN>prey to the Ammonites, and for 18 years endured the humiliation of irksome oppression. Nor were they the only sufferers, for the Ammonites crossed the Jordan and carried on their ravages even in the territories of Judah, Benjamin, and Ephraim
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 10">x.</abbr>
6<abbr title="through">–</abbr>9). So terrible was the oppression they now endured, that at length the Israelites were roused to a deep repentance; finding it in vain to cry unto their false gods in the day of tribulation, they put them away, and besought Jehovah if only this once to stretch forth His hand and deliver them. <i>Grieved for the misery of Israel</i>
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 10">x.</abbr> 16), the Lord raised up a deliverer in the person of
<span class="smcap">Jephthah</span>, a base-born native of Gilead. Driven forth from his father’s house by his legitimate sons, Jephthah had fled into the land of Tob, somewhere on the east of Gilead, where putting himself at the head of brave but lawless men, he lived the life of a freebooter, making incursions from time to time into the territories of neighbouring tribes, and living on the proceeds of the spoil
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 11">xi.</abbr>
1<abbr title="through">–</abbr>3).</p>
<p>Determined to throw off the Ammonitish yoke, the tribes on the east of Jordan now turned to Jephthah, and promised him the chieftaincy, if he would undertake to lead them against the enemy. Jephthah consented, and it was formally agreed that, in the event of success, he should retain the supreme command. His first step was to send an embassy to the Ammonites urging the right of the Israelites to the land of Gilead. This being unsuccessful, he prepared for open war, and traversing Gilead and Manasseh collected warriors from such places as acknowledged his authority. But before entering on the campaign, in imitation probably of heathen customs, and especially of the Ammonites
(<abbr title="Second Kings">2 Kin.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 3">iii.</abbr> 27), he solemnly vowed to offer as a burnt-offering to Jehovah whatever should first come forth from his house to meet him on his return from<SPAN id="p257"> </SPAN>battle. The engagement took place in the forests of Gilead, and the Ammonites were utterly routed. Twenty cities, from Aroer on the Arnon to Minnith and Abel Keramim (<i>the Meadow of the Vineyards</i>), fell into the hands of the conqueror
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 11">xi.</abbr> 33).</p>
<p>But his rash and heathenish vow cast a deep shadow on his triumphal return. As he drew near his home in Mizpeh (<i>the Watch-tower</i>) of Gilead, his daughter and only child came forth to meet him with timbrels and with dances. When the father saw her he rent his clothes, and with the utmost grief made known to her his vow, from which he declared he could not go back. But the noble maiden did not decline the awful sacrifice demanded of her. All she requested was that for two months she might be allowed to wander with her companions among the mountain-gorges of her native Gilead, and bewail her virginity. At the expiration of this period she returned to her father, and Jephthah without referring the matter to the High-priest, or remembering the strict commands of the law on this <span id="p257_213" class="nowrap">subject<SPAN href="#fn_213" class="anchor">213</SPAN>,</span>
his spirit clouded with gloomy superstition, <i>did with her according to his vow that he had vowed</i>
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 11">xi.</abbr> 39). The memory of this awful sacrifice was kept up by a yearly festival, lasting four days, during which the daughters of Israel went up into the mountains of Gilead to praise and lament the death of their heroic sister.</p>
<p>Jephthah, however, was not long suffered either to enjoy his triumph, or lament the fatal vow which had stained it. Like Gideon before him, he had to encounter the complaints of the proud and jealous tribe of Ephraim for not summoning them to share the glories of the late victory. In vindication of their absurd claims, they even threatened to burn his house over his head, and invaded the territory of the Gileadites, whom they<SPAN id="p258"> </SPAN>taunted with being <i>fugitives of Ephraim among the Ephraimites and Manassites</i>. A second tribal war ensued, in which the men of Ephraim were thoroughly worsted. Rushing routed to the fords of the Jordan, they found them already in possession of Jephthah’s forces, who allowed none to cross that failed to pronounce the word <span id="p258_214" class="nowrap"><i>Shibboleth</i><SPAN href="#fn_214" class="anchor">214</SPAN>.</span>
Upwards of 42,000 revealed their Ephraimite origin by substituting the simple <i>s</i> for <i>sh</i>, and were massacred. The supreme authority, for which he had covenanted, Jephthah only lived to enjoy for 6 years, when he died, and was buried in one of the cities of his native land
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 12">xii.</abbr>
1<abbr title="through">–</abbr>7).</p>
<p>After him other and obscurer judges rose to display the growing tendency towards hereditary monarchy. Thus
<span class="smcap">Ibzan</span> of Bethlehem in Zebulun judged, at least north-western Israel, for 7 years, and conferred a portion of his dignity on his 30 sons and 30 daughters;
<span class="smcap">Elon</span> of the same tribe ruled for 10 years; and after him
<span class="smcap">Abdon</span>, of Pirathon in the land of Ephraim, about 6 miles from Shechem, exercised the supremacy for 8 years, and was succeeded in a portion of his almost regal honours by his numerous children
(<abbr title="Judges">Judg.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 12">xii.</abbr>
8<abbr title="through">–</abbr>14).</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />