What I Noticed Today (Judges 19-21)
Judges 19
Judges 19 tells the story of a Levite whose concubine ran away back to her father.
Note: Judges 19 opens with the phrase, “In those days Israel had no king.” This is the third out of four occurrences of the phrase (Judges 17:6, 18:1, 19:1, 21:25). With no central authority, the Israelites continued to decline socially, morally, and in their relationship with God.
- After four months, the Levite goes to the father’s house to implore her to come home.
- After five days at the father’s house, the Levite and his concubine set out on the journey home.
- It was late in the day, and he refused to stop at Jerusalem because the Jebusites still occupied Jerusalem.
Note: Had the Israelites taken over the land as God had told them to Jerusalem would have already been an Israelite city.
- Instead, they passed by Jerusalem to go to Gibeah, an Israelite city.
- The Levite and his concubine were shown hospitality by an elderly man who invited them to spend the night at his house.
- Worthless men came along and wanted to have sex with the man.
- Instead, the man gave the men his own virgin daughter and the concubine, whom the men assaulted all night.
- The concubine was killed in the assault.
- The Levite discovered her body when he was preparing to leave the next morning.
- He cut her up and sent a piece of her to each of the twelve tribes of Israel to show what had been done.
- The people who saw her agreed some response to the atrocity was necessary.
Note: The Danites didn’t follow God’s instructions to take their land, so they end up looking elsewhere. That led them to Micah. Micah had led his entire family into idolatry. Even a Levite priest had succumbed by hiring himself out as a priest in a house full of idols. The Danites stole Micah’s idols and ephods and took the Levite priest with them. From one act of sin, an entire family became idolatrous, then a priest, and then an entire tribe. A little leaven leavens the whole lump!
Some thoughts for further consideration:
- Our lives and our world are no different today. People excuse a small sin, and suddenly a family is in sin, then a neighborhood, a city, and the nation. It doesn’t take long for sin to take hold and pull us away from God’s best! It is indeed a sad commentary, but sometimes Christians treat each other with less caring and less respect than non-believers!
Judges 20
News of the murder of the Levite’s concubine united the tribes of Israel against the city of Gibeah (the tribe of Benjamin) where the murder occurred.
In verses 1-11, all the people of Israel assembled and came before the Lord at Mizpah.
Note: The reference to “from Dan to Beersheba” refers to all the tribes from north to south. The reference to “the land of Gilead” refers to the eastern tribes across the Jordan. Mizpah is a few miles from Gibeah on the border between Benjamin and Ephraim.
- The Benjamites were not represented among the tribes who gather at Mizpah.
- The Israelites asked how this outrage occurred, and the Levite explained what had happened to him and his concubine at Gibeah.
- The people of Israel united and sent ten men out of every hundred to punish Gibeah for the outrage.
In verses 12-13, the people of Israel sent messengers to the city of Gibeah, demanding they give up the men who murdered the concubine, but they refused.
In verses 14-18, the Benjamites assembled an army of 26,000 swordsmen plus 700 choice men from Gibeah. The Israelites came against them with an army of 400,000 men
- The Israelites did not ask God IF they should fight the Benjamites, but WHO should go first. God said the tribe of Judah should go first.
Note: When they inquired of God, they used the term Elohim, the generic term for God, rather than the covenantal name for God, Yahweh.
In verses 19-28, the Israelites fought against their brothers the Benjamites:
- The army of the tribe of Judah came up against the tribe of Dan and lost the battle on the first day, with 22,000 men of Israel killed.
- The people of Israel wept and inquired of God again. God sent them into battle, and they lost again on the second day, with 18,000 men of Israel killed.
- Finally, the Israelites came together, wept, fasted all day, and gave peace and fellowship offerings. Then they inquired of the Lord (using the name Yahweh). This time, God said He would hand the Benjamites over to the army of Israel.
- The next day the Israelites defeated the Benjamites by killing 25,100 of them.
- Only 600 Benjamites survived by escaping into the rock of Rimmon, where they stayed for four months.
- The Israelites turned back and destroyed all the towns of Benjamin by burning them to the ground and killing all the animals.
Judges 21
In verses 1-7, the Israelites realized the tribe of Benjamin was nearly wiped out:
- All the women and only 600 of the men of Benjamin survived the civil war.
- This caused another problem for the Israelites because they had sworn an oath not to give any of their daughters to the Benjamites in marriage, so now with no women, the tribe was in danger of extinction.
In verses 8-12, the Israelites developed a plan to avoid extinction for the tribe of Benjamin:
- The Israelites discovered that no one from the clan of Jabesh-Gilead had come to the assembly or joined the army against the Benjamites.
- The assembly sent 12,000 warriors to Jabesh-Gilead, who killed every man and woman, sparing only the virgin women.
- The Israelites sent a message of peace and gave the 400 virgins from Jabesh-Gilead to the Benjamites.
- But this did not supply enough women, so they allowed the Benjamites to take women during a festival to the Lord at Shiloh. This, they reasoned, allowed them not to break their oath not to give wives to the Benjamites.
Note: A matter of semantics - they would not give their daughters, but the Benjamites were allowed to take them!
Some thoughts for further consideration:
- There were many opportunities for the disasters of the last few chapters to be avoided. If the city fathers of Gilead had gotten rid of the worthless men within the city as they should have, none of this would have happened. If the Levite and homeowner had stood up to the worthless men, this would not have happened. If the city of Gibeah had given up the worthless men who murdered the concubine, the civil war would not have occurred. If the army of Israel had fasted, wept, and restored their relationship to God before attempting to go up against the Benjamites, they would not have lost the first two battles. If the men of Israel had not made such a rash vow to prohibit giving their daughters to the men of Benjamin, the tribe would not have faced near extinction.
- So many failures of leadership are in this story of the Benjamites, the Levite, and the people of Israel! Men who do not have the courage to trust God and follow Him faithfully, are prone to developing their own solutions to problems, and man’s solution is never God’s best!
What did you notice in your study today? Feel free to visit the website and leave a question or a comment.