Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Judges 13-16: what if Sampson had prayed to Dagon?

 Judges 13-16 Complete Jewish Bible

Sampson rule Israel for 20 years and is a womanizing failure. Yet his god competes in tribal killing of many people. It is important that Sampson does not pray to Dagon.

Guide: CJB emphasis in bold (CJB online), text in green; NIV in magenta ; Nomads* discussion in yellow; and my comments in gray.   

*Participative Sunday-school-class at UBC led by Ken Tipton. My continually improved statement about Genesis 1:26-28 is at the end of this.)

Major concerns

1.       The writer seems concerned about “evil-from-Adonai’s-perspective” rather than evil.

a.       This may be an artifact of competitive monotheism: evil people can attribute their behavior to their God.

b.      The tribes intermarry yet ruthlessly destroy entire cities in sex squabbles.

2.      Like Abraham’s wife, Sarah, Manoach’s wife has a miraculous conception rather than a Divine conception (Mary).

3.      While Sampson is labeled a nazirite, Samuel and John the Baptist seem so described; https://www.biblegateway.com/resources/encyclopedia-of-the-bible/Nazirite-Nazarite.

No association with “Nazarene”.

4.       Sampson’s sex story seems a contest between Adonai and Dagon.

a.      A leader of Israel fatally choosing women from uncircumcised tribe seems a subplot.

b.      “Angel” and “man of God” seem interchangeable.

c.       The angel talks with the woman of another tribe.

d.      The value of food and burnt offerings is debatable.

Perhaps Hebrews cites Sampson because of the lessening/denigration of Dagon.

The scripture, CJB

 

13:1 Again the people of Isra’el did what was evil from Adonai’s perspective [If the writer had no agendum, “evil” would be sufficient.], and Adonai handed them over to the P’lishtim for forty years.

There was a man from Tzor‘ah from the family of Dan, whose name was Manoach; his wife was barren, childless. The angel of Adonai appeared to the woman and said to her, “Listen! You are barren, you haven’t had a child, but you will conceive and bear a son. Now, therefore, be careful not to drink any wine or other intoxicating liquor, and don’t eat anything uncleanFor indeed you will conceive and bear a son. No razor is to touch his head, because the child will be a nazir Nazirite [consecrated] for God from the womb. Moreover, he will begin to rescue Isra’el from the power of the P’lishtim.” [A virgin-born messiah to Israel? See “miraculous conception” in https://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/eshet-manoah/#.]

The woman came and told her husband; she said, “A man of God came to me; his face was fearsome, like that of the angel of God. I didn’t ask him where he came from, and he didn’t tell me his name. But he said to me, ‘Listen! You will conceive and bear a son, so now don’t drink any wine or other intoxicating liquor, and don’t eat anything unclean, because the child will be a nazir Nazirite [no association with “Nazarene”] for God from the womb until the day he dies.’” [No mention of not cutting his hair.]

Then Manoach prayed to Adonai, “Please, Adonai, let the man of God you sent come again to us and teach us what we should do for the child who will be born.” God paid attention to what Manoach said, and the angel of God came again to the woman as she sat in the field, but her husband Manoach wasn’t with her. 10 The woman hurried and ran to tell her husband, “Here! That man, the one who came to me the other day, he’s come again!” 11 Manoach got up, followed his wife, went to the man and said to him, “Are you the man who spoke to the woman?” He answered, “I am.” 12 Manoach asked, “Now, when what you said comes true, what are the guidelines for raising the child? What should be done for him?” 13 The angel of Adonai said to Manoach, “The woman should take care to do everything I said to her. 14 She shouldn’t eat anything that comes from a grapevine, she shouldn’t drink wine or other intoxicating liquor, and she shouldn’t eat anything unclean. [No mention of not cutting his hair.] She should do everything I ordered her to do.” [The man did not accept his wife’s report of the instructions! He was not loyal to her.]

15 Manoach said to the angel of Adonai, “Please stay with us a bit longer, so that we can cook a young goat for you.” 16 The angel of Adonai said to Manoach, “Even if I do stay, I won’t eat your food; and if you prepare a burnt offering, you must offer it to Adonai.” For Manoach did not know that he was the angel of Adonai17 Manoach said to the angel of Adonai, “Tell us your name, so that when your words come true we can honor you.” 18 The angel of Adonai answered him, “Why are you asking about my name? It is wonderful beyond understanding.” 19 Manoach took the kid and the grain offering and offered them on the rock to Adonai. Then, with Manoach and his wife looking on, the angel did something wonderful — 20 as the flame went up toward the sky from the altar, the angel of Adonai went up in the flame from the altar. When Manoach and his wife saw it, they fell to the ground on their faces. 21 But the angel of Adonai did not appear again to Manoach or his wife. Then Manoach realized it had been the angel of Adonai. 22 Manoach said to his wife, “We will surely die, because we have seen God!” 23 But his wife said to him, “If Adonai had wanted to kill us, he wouldn’t have accepted a burnt offering and a grain offering from us, and he wouldn’t have shown us all this or told us such things at this time.” [Giving such good advice, Manoach’s wife deserves a name.]

24 The woman bore a son and called him Shimshon. The child grew, and Adonai blessed him. 25 The Spirit of Adonai began to stir him when he was in the Camp of Dan, between Tzor‘ah and Eshta’ol.


 

14:1 Shimshon went down to Timnah, and in Timnah he saw a woman who was one of the P’lishtim. He came up and told his father and mother, “I saw a woman in Timnah, one of the P’lishtim. Now get her for me to be my wife.” His father and mother replied, “Isn’t there any woman from the daughters of your kinsmen or among all my people? Must you go to the uncircumcised [Not committed to Jah’s covenant, and thus not of the chosen nation.] P’lishtim to find a wife?” Shimshon said to his father, “Get her for me. I like her.” His father and mother didn’t know that all this came from Adonai, who was seeking grounds for a quarrel with the P’lishtim. (At that time the P’lishtim were ruling Isra’el.) [Phil Beaver chooses to not follow a God so weak as to use sexual attraction to promote enmity between nations.]

Shimshon went down with his father and mother to Timnah. When they came to the vineyards of Timnah, a young lion roared at him. The Spirit Spirit [OT “Spirit” becomes NT “Holy Spirit”?] of Adonai came powerfully upon Shimshon, and barehanded he tore the lion to pieces as easily as if it had been a young goat. But he didn’t tell his father or mother what he had done. Then he went down and talked with the woman and found he still liked her.

Awhile later, as he was returning to claim his bride, he turned aside to look at the carcass of the lion and saw that there was now a swarm of bees in the body of the lion, and honeyHe scraped the honey out into his hands and went on, eating as he went; and when he came to his father and mother, he gave them some; and they ate too. But he didn’t tell them that he had scraped the honey out of the body of the lion [its carcass].

10 His father went down to the woman, and there Shimshon gave a banquet — this is what the young men used to do. 11 When the P’lishtim saw him, they provided thirty companions to be with him. 12 Shimshon said to them, “Let me present you with a riddle. If you can solve it within the seven days of the banquet and tell me the solution, I will give you thirty linen shirts and thirty changes of good clothes. 13 But if you can’t solve it, you give me thirty linen shirts and thirty changes of good clothes.” They answered, “Tell us the riddle, we want to hear it.” 14 So he said to them,

“Out of the eater came food;
out of the strong came sweetness.”

Three days passed, and they couldn’t solve the riddle. 15 On the seventh day, they said to Shimshon’s wife, “Coax your husband into telling us the solution to the riddle. Otherwise we’ll burn down your father’s house and you with it. You two called us here to turn us into paupers, didn’t you?” 16 Shimshon’s wife went to him in tears and said, “You don’t love me, you hate me! You told a riddle to my fellow countrymen, and you haven’t told me the answer.” He said to her, “Look, I haven’t even told it to my father and mother! Should I tell you?” 17 But she had been crying throughout the seven days of the banquet; so on the seventh day, because she had kept pressing him, he told her the solution; and she passed it on to her people18 Then, before sundown on the seventh day, the men of the city said to him,

“What is sweeter than honey?
and what is stronger than a lion?”

Shimshon answered,

If you hadn’t plowed with my young cow,
you wouldn’t have solved my riddle now.”

19 Then the Spirit of Adonai came over him powerfully. He went down to Ashkelon, killed thirty of their men, took their good clothes, and gave them to the men who had “solved” the riddle. He was boiling with rage, so he went straight up to his father’s house, 20 and his wife was given to the companion who had been best man at the wedding. [A curse on his best man.] [Sampson’s rage over his wife’s betrayal could have taught him never to reveal precious secrets with his wife. Or, he could have learned monogamy for life after judiciously choosing his mate. We’ll see more of the story.]


 

15:1 But after a while, during the wheat-harvest season, Shimshon went to see his wife. He brought a young goat for her and said to her father, “I want to go to my wife in her room.” But he wouldn’t let him. Her father said, “I really thought you hated her altogether, so I gave her to your best man. But her younger sister — isn’t she even prettier? Why not take her instead?” Shimshon said to them, “This time I’m through with the P’lishtim! I’m going to do something terrible to them!” So Shimshon went and caught three hundred foxes. Then he took torches, tied pairs of foxes to each other by their tails, and put a torch in the knot of every pair of tails. Then he set the torches on fire and let the foxes loose in wheat fields of the P’lishtim. In this way he burned up the harvested wheat along with the grain waiting to be harvested, and the olive orchards as well. The P’lishtim asked, “Who did this?” They answered, “Shimshon the son-in-law of the man from Timnah, because he took Shimshon’s wife and gave her to his best man.” Then the P’lishtim came up and burned both her and her father to death. Shimshon said to them, “I will certainly have my revenge on you for doing such a thing; but after I do, I’ll stop.” Infuriated, he began killing them right and left; it was a massacre. Then he went down and stayed in the cave at the ‘Eitam Rock.

The P’lishtim went up, pitched camp in Y’hudah and attacked Lechi. 10 The men of Y’hudah said, “Why are you attacking us?” They replied, “To arrest Shimshon, that’s why — to treat him the way he treated us.” 11 Then 3,000 men from Y’hudah went down to the cave at the Eitam Rock and said to Shimshon, “Don’t you know that the P’lishtim are our rulers? What are you doing to us?” He answered, “I’ve only treated them the way they treated me.” 12 They said to him, “We’ve come down to arrest you and hand you over to the P’lishtim.” Shimshon replied, “Swear to me that you won’t fall on me yourselves.” 13 They said to him, “No, but we will tie you up and hand you over to them. However, we promise not to kill you.” So they tied him up with two new ropes and brought him up from the rock. 14 When he got to Lechi, the P’lishtim came running and shouting at him; and the Spirit of Adonai came on him powerfully. The ropes on his arms became as weak as burnt flax and fell from his arms. 15 He found a fresh donkey jawbone, took it in his hand, and with it he struck down a thousand men. 16 Shimshon said,

“With the jawbone of a donkey I left heaps piled on heaps!
With the jawbone of a donkey I killed a thousand men!

17 After he finished speaking he threw the jawbone away, and the place came to be called Ramat-Lechi [jawbone heights].

18 Then he felt very thirsty, so he called on Adonai, saying, “You accomplished this great rescue through your servant. But am I now to die from thirst and fall into the hands of the uncircumcised?” 19 Then God made a gash in the crater at Lechi, and water came out. When he had drunk, his spirit came back; and he revived. This is why the place was called ‘Ein-HaKorei [the spring of him who called], and it is there in Lechi until now. 20 He judged Isra’el in the period of the P’lishtim for twenty years. [It seems he was unmarried.]


 

16:1 Shimshon went to ‘Azah Gaza, where he saw a prostitute and went in to spend the night with her. The people in ‘Azah were told that Shimshon had come, so they surrounded the place where he was and also set an ambush for him all night at the city gate. Their plan was to do nothing at night, but to wait until morning and then kill him. However, Shimshon stayed in bed until midnight; then he got up, took hold of the doors of the city gate and the two posts as well, pulled them up, bar and all, hoisted them on his shoulders, and carried them up to the top of the hill overlooking Hevron.

After this, he fell in love [I’m surprised this is a biblical phrase. Also, Samson and Delila is a case of him attracted to her without her loving him.] with a woman who lived in the Sorek Valley, whose name was D’lilahThe chiefs of the P’lishtim went up to her and said, “Coax him into telling you where his great strength comes from and how we can overcome him, so that we can tie him up and subdue him. If you do, each of us will give you 1,100 pieces of silver.” D’lilah said to Shimshon, “Please tell me what it is that makes you so strong, and how someone could tie you up and subdue you.” Shimshon replied, “If they tie me up with seven fresh bowstrings that have never been dried, I will become as weak as any other man.” The chiefs of the P’lishtim brought up to her seven fresh bowstrings which had not been dried, and she tied him up with them. Now she had people lying in wait in the inside room. So she said to him, “Shimshon! The P’lishtim have come for you!” But he snapped the bowstrings as easily as a piece of straw breaks when it touches fire, and the source of his strength remained unknown.

10 D’lilah said to Shimshon, “You’re making fun of me, telling me lies. Now, come on, tell me what it takes to tie you up.” 11 “All it takes,” he answered, “is to tie me up with new ropes that haven’t been used. Then I’ll become weak and be like anyone else.” 12 So D’lilah took new ropes, tied him up, and said to him, “Shimshon! The P’lishtim have come for you!” (The people lying in wait were in the inside room.) But he broke the ropes from off his arms like a thread.

13 D’lilah said to Shimshon, “Till now you’ve been making fun of me and telling me lies. Tell me what it takes to tie you up.” He said, “If you weave the seven locks of my hair across thread on a loom.” 14 So she fastened her cloth work in the loom with a pin and wove his hair in, then said to him, “Shimshon! The P’lishtim have come for you!” He awoke from his sleep and pulled away the loom pin and the interwoven cloth. 15 She said to him, “How can you say you love me when your heart isn’t with me? Three times you’ve made fun of me, and you haven’t told me the source of your great strength.”

16 Every day she kept nagging at him and pressing at him, till it bothered him to death [surprised this old saw came from the Bible], 17 so that he finally told her everything. He said to her, “No razor has ever touched my head, because I have been a nazir of God since I was born. If someone shaves me, then my strength will leave me; and I will be like any other man.” 18 When D’lilah saw that he had really confided in her, she sent and summoned the chiefs of the P’lishtim with the message, “Come up this one last time, because he has finally told me the truth.” The chiefs of the P’lishtim went up to her and brought the money with them. 19 She had him go to sleep in her lap and called for a man to shave off his seven locks of hair. Then she began tormenting him, but his strength had gone away. 20 She said, “Shimshon! The P’lishtim have come for you!” He awoke from his sleep and said, “I’ll get out this time, just as I shook myself loose before.” But he didn’t know that Adonai had left him21 So the P’lishtim seized him, gouged out his eyes and took him down to ‘Azah. There they bound him with two bronze chains and put him to work grinding grain at the mill in the prison. 22 However, after the hair on his head had been cut off, it began growing back again.

23 The chiefs of the P’lishtim assembled to offer a great sacrifice to their god Dagon [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dagon]. As they celebrated they sang,

“Our god has handed over to us
our enemy Shimshon.”

24 Upon seeing him, the people praised their god:

“Our god has handed over to us
our enemy, who destroyed our land
and killed so many of us.”

25 When they were in high spirits they said, “Summon Shimshon to amuse us.” So they called Shimshon out of the prison, and he amused them. When they put him between the columns, 26 Shimshon said to the boy holding him by the hand, “Let me feel the columns supporting the building, so that I can lean on them.” 27 The building was full of men and women; and all the chiefs of the P’lishtim were there; in addition to them, there were about three thousand men and women on the roof, watching, as Shimshon performed28 Shimshon called to Adonai, “Adonai Elohim, [Lord, Sovereign Lord] just this once, please, think of me, and please, give me strength, so that I can take revenge on the P’lishtim for at least one of my two eyes.” 29 Shimshon got a good hold on the two middle columns supporting the building and leaned on them, on one with his right hand and on the other with his left. 30 Then, crying, “Let me die with the P’lishtim!” he pushed with all his might; and the building collapsed on the chiefs and on all the people inside. So he killed more at his death than he had killed during his life.

31 His brothers and all his father’s family came down, took him, brought him up and buried him between Tzor‘ah and Eshta’ol, in the tomb of his father Manoach. He had judged Isra’el twenty years. [Who was Manoach’s wife?]

[Perhaps the point of this story is that Israel’s Lord, Adonai, is more powerful than the Philistines’ god, Dagon. Interestingly, one could infer from this story that knowing the write word empowers a person to prevail. For example, if the writer had Sampson praying to Dagon, Sampson would need to fail to affirm Adonai. I prefer humility to The God, whatever it may be. In fact humility seems sufficient. For conversation, I may and can express, “The God, whatever it may be”, to perceive humility, because “The God” seems arrogant.]



[My opinion is that Genesis 1:26-28 informs humankind to flourish in goodness rather than accommodate badness and allow evil:

Then God said, “Let us make mankind in our image, in our likeness, so that they may rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, over the livestock and all the wild animals, and over all the creatures that move along the ground.”

So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.

God blessed them and said to them, “Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue itRule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves on the ground.

This, the conclusion of the first chapter of the Holy Bible informs Today that humankind may and can rule on earth. Acceptance of this power, authority, and responsibility is human being (verb). Human-beings pursue necessary-goodness to actual-reality. The rest of the Bible discloses the chaos that ensues if most individuals choose wanton behavior -- neglect the laws of physics and progeny; progeny reaches psychology.

The civic collective cannot rule if most fellow citizens practice/nourish badness and allow evil. It’s a matter of personal choice: either pursue human being (verb) or yield to evil.

Political and religious philosopher Yeshua affirmed Genesis 1:26-28, e.g. in Matt 5:48 (be as perfect as goodness), 18:18 (don’t expect error-correction), and 19:4-6 (don’t divide/lessen goodness). 

Today there are more than 8,000 religions and 45,000 Christian sects on earth. Today is time for individuals to accept the power, the authority, and the responsibility to practice civic integrity. “Ourselves” may either continue to leave reliable responsibility to “our Posterity”, referring to the preamble to the US Constitution, or practice necessary goodness.

Notes re modern perspective:

1.      Since monotheism is a human construct, I use “The God, whatever it may be”, to express objection to any doctrinal God yet reserve humility.

a.      Blue highlight is to emphasize the pronoun usages, our and we.

b.     Perhaps the “we” infers an androgynous pair, like a married couple

c.      It seems human choice may and can conform to the laws of physics and progeny

d.     Yet human inspiration and motivation are driven by goodness

e.      When goodness is uncertain, humility prevails.

2.      Scholars understand that humankind in its present mutation is Homo sapiens (HS)

a.      Distinguished by brains with synapses and neurons with speed and capacity to handle exponential complexities

b.     Indeed the dominant species on earth and extensions

c.      Yet HS challenged-to, perhaps will-not, control earth as much as possible.

                                                             i.      Remarkably after 200,000 years, sexual-attraction dominates society.

3.      The rest of the Holy Bible expresses the validity of Genesis 1:26-28:  Humankind may and can rule on earth, hoping to control it.

a.      Genesis 1 predates the existence of Israel by at least 1500 years.

b.     About 2000 years have passed since Yeshua lived.

c.      War in the Middle East threatens humankind’s opportunity.

d.     It seems time to pay more attention to primitive thought.]

Sunday, November 3, 2024

Judges 4-5; a time when Israel, the nation, seems a matriarchy

 Judges 4, Complete Jewish Bible

Deborah, prophetess and ruler of Israel, uses general Barak’s 10,000 soldiers and turncoat Jael to protect Israeli girls from being taken as booty by the Canaanites. Actual reality is not always what-we-always-thought.

Guide: CJB emphasis in bold (CJB online), text in green; NIV in magenta ; Nomads* discussion in yellow; and my comments in gray.   

*Participative Sunday-school-class at UBC led by Ken Tipton. My continually improved statement about Genesis 1:26-28 is at the end of this.)

Major concerns

1.      It seems, at the time of this story, Israel was a matriarchy.

2.      Barak is Deborah’s servant and warrior protecting Israeli girls from abuse by the enemy. The men don’t have a clue as to who is in charge.

3.      Deborah seems to control Jael, a Canaanite wife.

4.      We have the opportunity to be humble to The God but are not benefiting from reported history. Do Bible readers

a.      Doubt history?

b.      Doubt the literal Bible?

c.       Project personal belief onto the Bible, e.g., impose patriarchy onto matriarchy?

d.      Is personal opinion more important than humility to The God’s opinion?

The scripture, CJB

4:1 But after Ehud had died, the people of Isra’el again did what was evil from Adonai’s perspective. [It is interesting that the writer is not satisfied with “evil” so adds “from Adonai’s perspective”. Does the writer have some regard for the Baals and the Asherahs? Asherah was female or goddess. See Judges 3.] So Adonai handed them over to Yavin king of Kena‘an. He ruled from Hatzor; and the commander of his army was Sisra, who lived in Haroshet-HaGoyim. The people of Isra’el cried out to Adonai, because he had 900 iron chariots, and for twenty years he cruelly oppressed the people of Isra’el.

Now D’vorah, a woman and a prophet, the wife of Lapidot, was judging Isra’el at that timeShe used to sit under D’vorah’s Palm between Ramah and Beit-El, in the hills of Efrayim [Delphi, Greece is in hill country and its Oracle was female.]; and the people of Isra’el would come to her for judgment. She sent for Barak the son of Avino‘am, from Kedesh in Naftali, and said to him: “Adonai has given you this order: ‘Go, march to Mount Tavor, and take with you 10,000 men from the people of Naftali and Z’vulun. I will cause Sisra, the commander of Yavin’s army, to encounter you at the Kishon River with his chariots and troops; and I will hand him over to you.’”

Barak answered her: “If you go with me, I’ll go; but if you won’t go with me, I won’t go.” She replied, “Yes, I will gladly go with you; but the way you are doing it will bring you no glory; because Adonai will hand Sisra over to a woman.” Then D’vorah set out and went with Barak to Kedesh. 10 Barak summoned Z’vulun and Naftali to come to Kedesh. Ten thousand men followed him, and D’vorah went up with him. [In other words, Barak could have chosen to go alone and get the glory. However, the glory goes to a surprise woman who appears in V 21. ]

11 Now Hever the Keini had cut himself off from the rest of Kayin, the descendants of Hovav Moshe’s father-in-law; he had pitched his tent near the oak at Tza‘ananim, which is close to Kedesh. 12 Sisra was informed that Barak the son of Avino‘am had gone up to Mount Tavor. 13 So Sisra rallied his chariots, all 900 iron chariots, and all the troops he had with him, from Haroshet-HaGoyim to the Kishon River.

14 D’vorah said to Barak: “Get going! This is the day when Adonai will hand Sisra over to you! Adonai has gone out ahead of you!” So Barak went down from Mount Tavor with 10,000 men following him; 15 and Adonai threw Sisra, all his chariots and his entire army into a panic before Barak’s sword; so that Sisra got down from his chariot and fled on foot. 16 But Barak pursued the chariots and the army all the way to Haroshet-HaGoyim. Sisra’s entire army was put to the sword; not one man was left. [We’ll read, in Judges 5, that Israeli girls, 1 or 2 per dead soldier, benefit from Barak’s (Deborah’s) victory.]

17 However, Sisra ran on foot to the tent of Ya‘el the wife of Hever the Keini, because there was peace between Yavin [V 2] the king of Hatzor and the family of Hever the Keini. 18 Ya‘el went out to meet Sisra and said to him, “Come in, my lord; stay here with me; and don’t be afraid.” So he went into her tent, and she covered him with a blanket [sex. See https://www.thetorah.com/article/yael-the-kenite-kills-sisera]19 He said to her, “Please give me a little water to drink — I’m thirsty.” She opened a goatskin of milk, gave him some to drink, and covered him up again. 20 He said to her, “Stand at the entrance to the tent; and if anyone asks you if somebody is here, say, ‘No.’” 21 But when he was deeply asleep, Ya‘el the wife of Hever took a tent peg and a hammer in her hand, crept in to him quietly and drove the tent peg into his temple, right through to the ground; so that he died without waking up. 22 So here is Barak pursuing Sisra, and Ya‘el steps out to meet him and says, “Come, I will show you the man you are looking for.” He goes into her tent; and there is Sisra, lying dead with the tent peg through his temple.

23 Thus God on that day defeated Yavin the king of Kena‘an in the presence of the people of Isra’el. 24 The hand of the people of Isra’el came down more and more heavily against Yavin the king of Kena‘an, until they had completely destroyed Yavin the king of Kena‘an.

5:1 On that day D’vorah and Barak the son of Avino‘am sang this song:

2:1 “When leaders in Isra’el dedicate themselves,
and the people volunteer,
you should all bless Adonai.
Hear, kings; listen, princes;

I will sing to Adonai!
I will sing praise to Adonai
the God of Isra’el.

Adonai, when you went out from Se‘ir,
when you marched out from the field of Edom;
the earth quaked, and the sky shook;
yes, the clouds poured down torrents. [Physics is not mysterious.]
The mountains melted at the presence of Adonai,

at Sinai, before Adonai the God of Isra’el.

“In the days of Shamgar the son of ‘Anat,
in the days of Ya‘el, the main roads were deserted;
travelers walked the byways.
The rulers ceased in Isra’el, they ceased,

until you arose, D’vorah,
arose a mother in Isra’el.

“They chose new gods when war was at the gates.
Was there a shield or spear to be seen
among Isra’el’s forty thousand men?
My heart goes out to Isra’el’s leaders

and to those among the people who volunteer.
All of you, bless Adonai.

10 “You who ride white donkeys,
sitting on soft saddle-blankets,
and you walking on the road,
talk about it! [New Testament writers project Jesus onto this image.]
11 Louder than the sound of archers at the watering-holes

will they sound as they retell
the righteous acts of Adonai,
the righteous acts of his rulers in Isra’el.

“Then Adonai’s people marched down to the gates.

12 Awake, awake, D’vorah!
Awake, awake, break into song!
Arise, Barak! Lead away your captives,
son of Avino‘am!

13 “Then a remnant of the nobles marched down;
the people of Adonai marched down to me like warriors.
14 From Efrayim came those rooted in ‘Amalek.

Behind you, Binyamin is with your peoples.
From Makhir the commanders marched down,
and from Z’vulun those holding the musterer’s staff.
15 The princes of Yissakhar were with D’vorah,
Yissakhar, along with Barak;
into the valley they rushed forth behind him.
Among the divisions of Re’uven
they made great resolutions in their hearts.
16 But why did you stay at the pens for the sheep,
and listen to the shepherd’s flute playing for the flocks?
Concerning the divisions of Re’uven
there were great searchings of heart. [doubt]
17 Gil‘ad lives beyond the Yarden.
Dan — why does he stay by the ships?

Asher stayed by the shore of the sea,
remaining near its bays.
18 The people of Z’vulun risked their lives,
Naftali too, on the open heights.

19 “Kings came; they fought.
Yes, the kings of Kena‘an fought
at Ta‘anakh, by the waters of Megiddo;
but they took no spoil of silver.
20 They fought from heaven, the stars in their courses;

yes, they fought against Sisra.
21 The Kishon River swept them away,
that ancient river, the Kishon River. [43 miles long from Gilboa Mountains NW to the Mediterranean Sea at Haifa, Israel.]
O my soul, march on with strength!
22 Then the horses’ hoofs pounded the ground,
their mighty steeds galloping at full speed.

23 “‘Curse Meroz!’ said the angel of Adonai,
‘Curse the people living there with a bitter punishment
for not coming to help Adonai,

to help Adonai against the mighty warriors.’

24 Ya‘el will be blessed more than all women.
The wife of Hever the Keini

will be blessed more than any woman in the tent [How many women in the tent?].
25 He asked for water, and she gave him milk;

In an elegant bowl she brought him curds.
26 Then she took a tent peg in her left hand
and a workman’s hammer in her right;
with the hammer she struck Sisra, pierced his skull,
yes, she shattered and crushed his temple.
27 He sank down at her feet, he fell and lay there;
he sank at her feet
, he fell —
where he sank down, there he fell dead [I thought he was covered with a blanket.].

28 Sisra’s mother looks out the window;
peering out through the lattice she wonders,
‘Why is his chariot so long in coming?
Why are his horses so slow to return?’
29 The wisest of her ladies [reminds me of the Greek chorus or moral reflection] answer her,

and she repeats it to herself,
30 ‘Of course! They’re collecting and dividing the spoil —
a girl, two girls for every warrior,
[These would have been Israeli women!]
for Sisra booty of dyed clothing,
a plunder of colorfully embroidered garments,
two embroidered scarves for every soldier’s neck.’

31 “May all your enemies perish like this, Adonai;
but may those who love him be like the sun
going forth in its glory!” [This is the writer, expressing to Adonai the hopes of the writer.]

Then the land had rest for forty years.

[The subjugation of women is not in a person’s self-interest, whether male or female. Considering girls as spoils of war – 2 for every soldier -- does not benefit female leaders. In this story, Barak seems a pawn in a matriarch’s scheme to protect Israeli women.]


[My view is that Genesis 1:26-28 informs humankind to flourish in goodness rather than accommodate badness and allow evil:

Then God said, “Let us make mankind in our image, in our likeness, so that they may rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, over the livestock and all the wild animals, and over all the creatures that move along the ground.”

So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.

God blessed them and said to them, “Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue itRule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves on the ground.

This, the conclusion of the first chapter of the Holy Bible informs Today that humankind may and can rule on earth. Acceptance of this power, authority, and responsibility is human being (verb) – is pursuit of necessary-goodness or actual-reality. The rest of the Bible discloses the chaos that ensues if most individuals choose wanton behavior, chiefly, neglecting the laws of physics and progeny, which reaches psychology.

The civic collective cannot rule if most fellow citizens practice/nourish badness and allow evil. It’s a matter of personal choice: either pursue human being (verb) or accommodate sacrifice to evil.

Political and religious philosopher Yeshua affirmed Genesis 1:26-28, e.g. in Matt 5:48 (be as perfect as goodness), 18:18 (don’t expect error-correction), and 19:4-6 (don’t divide goodness). 

Today there are more than 8,000 religions and 45,000 Christian sects on earth. Today is time for individuals to accept the power, the authority, and the responsibility to practice civic integrity. “Ourselves” may either continue to leave reliable responsibility to “our Posterity”, referring to the preamble to the US Constitution, or practice necessary goodness.]