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Civil War Breaks Out

20 All the Israelites from Dan to Beer Sheba[a] and from the land of Gilead[b] left their homes[c] and assembled together[d] before the Lord at Mizpah. The leaders[e] of all the people from all the tribes of Israel took their places in the assembly of God’s people, which numbered[f] 400,000 sword-wielding foot soldiers. The Benjaminites heard that the Israelites had gone up to Mizpah. Then the Israelites said, “Explain how this wicked thing happened!” The Levite,[g] the husband of the murdered woman, spoke up, “I and my concubine stopped in[h] Gibeah in the territory of Benjamin[i] to spend the night. The leaders of Gibeah attacked me and at night surrounded the house where I was staying.[j] They wanted to kill me; instead they abused my concubine so badly that she died. I took hold of my concubine and carved her up and sent the pieces[k] throughout the territory occupied by Israel,[l] because they committed such an unthinkable atrocity[m] in Israel. All you Israelites,[n] make a decision here!”[o]

All Israel rose up in unison[p] and said, “Not one of us will go home![q] Not one of us will return[r] to his house! Now this is what we will do to Gibeah: We will attack the city as the lot dictates.[s] 10 We will take ten of every group of a hundred men from all the tribes of Israel (and a hundred of every group of a thousand, and a thousand of every group of ten thousand) to get supplies for the army.[t] When they arrive in Gibeah of Benjamin, they will punish them for the atrocity that they committed in Israel.”[u] 11 So all the men of Israel gathered together at the city as allies.[v]

12 The tribes of Israel sent men throughout the tribe[w] of Benjamin, saying, “How could such a wicked thing take place?[x] 13 Now, hand over the good-for-nothings[y] in Gibeah so we can execute them and purge Israel of wickedness.”[z] But the Benjaminites refused to listen to their Israelite brothers. 14 The Benjaminites came from their cities and assembled at Gibeah[aa] to make war against the Israelites. 15 That day the Benjaminites mustered from their cities 26,000 sword-wielding soldiers, besides 700 well-trained soldiers from Gibeah.[ab] 16 Among this army[ac] were 700 specially trained left-handed soldiers.[ad] Each one could sling a stone and hit even the smallest target.[ae] 17 The men of Israel (not counting Benjamin) had mustered 400,000 sword-wielding soldiers, every one an experienced warrior.[af]

18 The Israelites went up to Bethel and asked God,[ag] “Who should lead the charge against the Benjaminites?”[ah] The Lord said, “Judah should lead.” 19 The Israelites got up the next morning and moved[ai] against Gibeah. 20 The men of Israel marched out to fight Benjamin; they[aj] arranged their battle lines against Gibeah. 21 The Benjaminites attacked from Gibeah and struck down 22,000 Israelites that day.[ak]

22 The Israelite army[al] took heart[am] and once more arranged their battle lines, in the same place where they had taken their positions the day before. 23 The Israelites went up and wept before the Lord until evening. They asked the Lord, “Should we[an] again march out to fight[ao] the Benjaminites, our brothers?”[ap] The Lord said, “Attack them.”[aq] 24 So the Israelites marched toward[ar] the Benjaminites the next day. 25 The Benjaminites again attacked them from Gibeah and struck down 18,000 sword-wielding Israelite soldiers.[as]

26 So all the Israelites, the whole army,[at] went up to[au] Bethel. They wept and sat there before the Lord; they did not eat anything[av] that day until evening. They offered up burnt sacrifices and tokens of peace[aw] to the Lord. 27 The Israelites asked the Lord (for the ark of God’s covenant was there in those days; 28 Phinehas son of Eleazar, son of Aaron, was serving the Lord[ax] in those days), “Should we[ay] once more march out to fight the Benjaminites our brothers,[az] or should we[ba] quit?” The Lord said, “Attack, for tomorrow I will hand them[bb] over to you.”

29 So Israel hid men in ambush outside Gibeah. 30 The Israelites attacked the Benjaminites the next day;[bc] they took their positions against Gibeah just as they had done before. 31 The Benjaminites attacked[bd] the army, leaving the city unguarded.[be] They began to strike down their enemy[bf] just as they had done before. On the main roads (one leads to Bethel, the other to Gibeah) and in the field, they struck down[bg] about thirty Israelites. 32 Then the Benjaminites said, “They are defeated just as before.” But the Israelites said, “Let’s retreat[bh] and lure them[bi] away from the city into the main roads.” 33 [bj] All the men of Israel got up from their places and took their positions at Baal Tamar, while the Israelites hiding in ambush jumped out of their places west of Gibeah. 34 Then 10,000 men, well-trained soldiers from all Israel, made a frontal assault against Gibeah; the battle was fierce.[bk] But the Benjaminites did not realize that disaster was at their doorstep.[bl] 35 The Lord annihilated Benjamin before Israel; the Israelites struck down that day 25,100 sword-wielding Benjaminites.[bm] 36 Then the Benjaminites saw they were defeated.

The Israelites retreated before[bn] Benjamin, because they had confidence in the men they had hidden in ambush outside Gibeah. 37 The men hiding in ambush made a mad dash[bo] to Gibeah. They[bp] attacked[bq] and put the sword to the entire city. 38 The Israelites and the men hiding in ambush had arranged a signal. When the men hiding in ambush[br] sent up a smoke signal from the city, 39 the Israelites counterattacked.[bs] Benjamin had begun to strike down the Israelites;[bt] they struck down[bu] about thirty men. They said, “There’s no doubt about it! They are totally defeated as in the earlier battle.” 40 But when the signal, a pillar of smoke, began to rise up from the city, the Benjaminites turned around and saw the whole city going up in a cloud of smoke that rose high into the sky.[bv] 41 When the Israelites turned around, the Benjaminites panicked[bw] because they could see that disaster was on their doorstep.[bx] 42 They retreated before the Israelites, taking the road to the wilderness. But the battle overtook[by] them as men from the surrounding cities struck them down.[bz] 43 They surrounded the Benjaminites, chased them from Nohah,[ca] and annihilated[cb] them all the way to a spot east of Geba.[cc] 44 So 18,000 Benjaminites, all of them capable warriors, fell dead. 45 The rest[cd] turned and ran toward the wilderness, heading toward the cliff of Rimmon. But the Israelites[ce] caught[cf] 5,000 of them on the main roads. They stayed right on their heels[cg] all the way to Gidom and struck down 2,000 more. 46 That day 25,000[ch] sword-wielding Benjaminites fell in battle, all of them capable warriors.[ci] 47 But 600 survivors turned and ran away to the wilderness, to the cliff of Rimmon. They stayed there four months. 48 The Israelites returned to the Benjaminite towns[cj] and put the sword to them. They wiped out the cities,[ck] the animals, and everything they could find. They set fire to every city in their path.[cl]

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Footnotes

  1. Judges 20:1 sn Dan was located in the far north of the country, while Beer Sheba was located in the far south. This encompassed all the territory of the land of Canaan occupied by the Israelites.
  2. Judges 20:1 sn The land of Gilead was on the eastern side of the Jordan River.
  3. Judges 20:1 tn Heb “went out.”
  4. Judges 20:1 tn Heb “and the assembly was convened as one man.”
  5. Judges 20:2 tn Heb “the cornerstones”; or “the supports.” The word is used of leaders in only three other texts—1 Sam 14:38; Isa 19:13; Zech 10:4.
  6. Judges 20:2 tn The words “which numbered” are supplied in the translation for clarification.
  7. Judges 20:4 tn Heb “The man, the Levite.”
  8. Judges 20:4 tn Heb “came to.”
  9. Judges 20:4 tn Heb “which belongs to Benjamin.”
  10. Judges 20:5 tn Heb “arose against me and surrounded against me the house at night.”
  11. Judges 20:6 tn Heb “her”; the referent is more naturally stated in English as “the pieces.”
  12. Judges 20:6 tn Heb “throughout all the territory of the inheritance of Israel.”
  13. Judges 20:6 tn Heb “a wicked and disgraceful [thing].”
  14. Judges 20:7 tn Heb “Look, all of you sons of Israel.”
  15. Judges 20:7 tn Heb “give for yourselves a word and advice here.”
  16. Judges 20:8 tn Heb “as one man.”
  17. Judges 20:8 tn Heb “to his tent.”
  18. Judges 20:8 tn Or “turn aside.”
  19. Judges 20:9 tn Heb “against her by lot.” The verb “we will go up” (נַעֲלֶה, naʿaleh) has probably been accidentally omitted before “against her” (עָלֶיהָ, ʿaleha).sn As the lot dictates. The Israelite soldiers intended to cast lots to determine which tribe would lead the battle charge (see v. 18).
  20. Judges 20:10 tn Or “people.”
  21. Judges 20:10 tn Heb “to do at their arrival in Geba of Benjamin according to all the disgraceful [thing] which he [collective = “Benjamin”] did in Israel.” Here “Geba” must be an error for “Gibeah.”
  22. Judges 20:11 tn Heb “gathered at the city as one man, united.”
  23. Judges 20:12 tc The MT reads the plural, but surely the singular (which is supported by the LXX and Vulgate) is preferable here.
  24. Judges 20:12 tn Heb “What is this wicked thing which happened among you?”
  25. Judges 20:13 tn Heb “the men, sons of wickedness.”
  26. Judges 20:13 tn Heb “and burn away wickedness from Israel.”
  27. Judges 20:14 tn Heb “assembled from the cities at Gibeah.”
  28. Judges 20:15 tn Heb “besides from the ones living in Gibeah they mustered 700 choice men.”
  29. Judges 20:16 tn Heb “And from all this people.”
  30. Judges 20:16 tn Heb “700 choice men, bound/restricted in the right hand.” On the significance of the idiom, “bound/restricted in the right hand,” see the translator’s note on 3:15.
  31. Judges 20:16 tn “at a single hair and not miss.”
  32. Judges 20:17 tn Heb “a man of war.”
  33. Judges 20:18 tn Heb “They arose and went up to Bethel and asked God, and the Israelites said.”
  34. Judges 20:18 tn Heb “Who should go up for us first for battle against the sons of Benjamin?”
  35. Judges 20:19 tn Heb “encamped.”
  36. Judges 20:20 tn Heb “the men of Israel.” The noun phrase has been replaced by the pronoun (“they”) in the translation for stylistic reasons.
  37. Judges 20:21 tn Heb “The sons of Benjamin came out of Gibeah and they struck down in Israel that day 22,000 men to the ground.”
  38. Judges 20:22 tn Heb “The people, the men of Israel.”
  39. Judges 20:22 tn Or “encouraged one another.”
  40. Judges 20:23 tn Heb “I” (collective singular).
  41. Judges 20:23 tn Heb “approach for battle.”
  42. Judges 20:23 tn Heb “my brother” (collective singular).
  43. Judges 20:23 tn Heb “Go up against him” (collective singular).
  44. Judges 20:24 tn Heb “drew near to.”
  45. Judges 20:25 tn Heb “And Benjamin went out to meet them from Gibeah the second day, and they again struck down among the sons of Israel 18,000 men to the ground, all of these were wielding the sword.”
  46. Judges 20:26 tn Heb “and all the people.”
  47. Judges 20:26 tn Heb “went up and came [to].”
  48. Judges 20:26 tn Traditionally, “fasted.”
  49. Judges 20:26 tn Or “peace offerings.”
  50. Judges 20:28 tn Heb “standing before him.”
  51. Judges 20:28 tn Heb “I” (collective singular).
  52. Judges 20:28 tn Heb “my brother” (collective singular).
  53. Judges 20:28 tn Heb “I” (collective singular).
  54. Judges 20:28 tn Heb “him” (collective singular).
  55. Judges 20:30 tn Heb “the third day.”
  56. Judges 20:31 tn Heb “went out to meet.”
  57. Judges 20:31 tn Heb “and they were drawn away from the city.”
  58. Judges 20:31 tn Heb “from the army wounded ones.”
  59. Judges 20:31 tn The words “they struck down” are supplied in the translation for clarification.
  60. Judges 20:32 tn Or “run away.”
  61. Judges 20:32 tn Heb “him” (collective singular).
  62. Judges 20:33 sn Verses 33-36a give a condensed account of the battle from this point on, while vv. 36b-48 offer a more detailed version of how the ambush contributed to Gibeah’s defeat.
  63. Judges 20:34 tn Heb “heavy”; or “severe.”
  64. Judges 20:34 tn Heb “And they did not know that touching against them was disaster.”
  65. Judges 20:35 tn Heb “And the sons of Israel struck down in Benjamin that day 25,100 men, all of these wielding the sword.”
  66. Judges 20:36 tn Heb “gave place to.”
  67. Judges 20:37 tn Heb “hurried and put off [their hiding place].”
  68. Judges 20:37 tn Heb “the men hiding in ambush.”
  69. Judges 20:37 tn Or “deployed.” The verb normally means “to lead” or “to draw.”
  70. Judges 20:38 tn Heb “they”; the referent (the men hiding in ambush) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
  71. Judges 20:39 tn Heb “turned in the battle.”
  72. Judges 20:39 tn Heb “And Benjamin began to strike down wounded ones among the men of Israel.”
  73. Judges 20:39 tn The words “they struck down” are supplied in the translation for clarification.
  74. Judges 20:40 tn Heb “Benjamin turned after him and, look, the whole city went up toward the sky.”
  75. Judges 20:41 tn Or “were terrified.”
  76. Judges 20:41 tn Heb “disaster touched against them.”
  77. Judges 20:42 tn Heb “clung to”; or “stuck close.”
  78. Judges 20:42 tn Heb “and those from the cities were striking them down in their midst.”
  79. Judges 20:43 tc The translation assumes the reading מִנּוֹחָה (minnokhah, “from Nohah”; cf. 1 Chr 8:2) rather than the MT’s מְנוּחָה (menukhah, “resting place”).
  80. Judges 20:43 tn Heb “tread down, walk on.”
  81. Judges 20:43 tc Heb “unto the opposite of Gibeah toward the east.” Gibeah cannot be correct here, since the Benjaminites retreated from there toward the desert and Rimmon (see v. 45). A slight emendation yields the reading “Geba.”
  82. Judges 20:45 tn Heb “they”; the referent (the rest [of the Benjaminites]) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
  83. Judges 20:45 tn Heb “and they”; the referent (the Israelites) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
  84. Judges 20:45 tn Heb “gleaned.” The word is an agricultural term which pictures Israelites picking off the Benjaminites as easily as one picks grapes from the vine.
  85. Judges 20:45 tn Heb “stuck close after them.”
  86. Judges 20:46 sn The number given here (25,000 sword-wielding Benjaminites) is an approximate figure; v. 35 gives the more exact number (25,100). According to v. 15, the Benjaminite army numbered 26,700 (26,000 + 700). The figures in vv. 35 (rounded in vv. 44-46) and 47 add up to 25,700. What happened to the other 1,000 men? The most reasonable explanation is that they were killed during the first two days of fighting. G. F. Moore (Judges [ICC], 429) and C. F. Burney (Judges, 475) reject this proposal, arguing that the narrator is too precise and concerned about details to omit such a fact. However, the account of the first two days’ fighting emphasizes Israel’s humiliating defeat. To speak of Benjaminite casualties would diminish the literary effect. In vv. 35, 44-47 the narrator’s emphasis is the devastating defeat that Benjamin experienced on this final day of battle. To mention the earlier days’ casualties at this point is irrelevant to his literary purpose. He allows readers who happen to be concerned with such details to draw conclusions for themselves.
  87. Judges 20:46 tn Heb “So all the ones who fell from Benjamin were 25,000 men, wielding the sword, in that day, all of these men of strength.
  88. Judges 20:48 tn Heb “to the sons of Benjamin.”
  89. Judges 20:48 tc The translation is based on the reading מֵעִיר מְתִים (meʿir metim, “from a city of men,” i.e., “an inhabited city”), rather than the reading מֵעִיר מְתֹם (meʿir metom, “from a city of soundness”) found in the Leningrad Codex (L).
  90. Judges 20:48 tn Heb “Also all the cities that were found they set on fire.”

The Israelis Attack the Tribe of Benjamin

20 Then the entire Israeli nation—from Dan to Beer-sheba, including the territory of Gilead—came out for war. The army assembled as one united force to God at Mizpah. The officials of the entire nation, including every tribe of Israel, took their stand in the assembly of the people of God: 400,000 foot soldiers, all of them[a] expert swordsmen. While the descendants of Benjamin were learning that the Israelis had gone up to Mizpah, the Israelis asked, “Somebody tell us how this evil could happen?”

So the descendant of Levi, the husband of the murdered woman, spoke up and replied, “I came to spend the night at Gibeah, which is part of Benjamin, along with my mistress. But the officials of Gibeah attacked me and surrounded the house because of me. They intended to kill me, but instead they tortured my mistress to death. So I grabbed my mistress, cut her in pieces, and sent her remains[b] throughout the territory of Israel’s inheritance, because they’ve committed a vile, stupid outrage in Israel. So look, all you Israelis! Speak up and give us your advice!”

Then the entire army stood up as a single unit and declared, “Nobody’s going back to his tent, and nobody’s going home! This is what we’ll do to Gibeah: we’re going to assemble an army by lottery. 10 We’ll take ten men out of 100 from all of the tribes of Israel. We’ll appoint 100 out of 1,000 and 1,000 out of 10,000 to supply provisions for the army. And when we reach Gibeah in the territory of Benjamin, we’ll punish them for all of the stupid things that they’ve done in Israel.” 11 That’s how the army of Israel came to be gathered together to attack the city, united as a single unit.

12 The tribes of Israel sent men throughout the entire tribe of Benjamin to ask them, “What is this evil thing that has occurred among you? 13 Now then, hand over the men—those ungodly men,[c] and we’ll execute them in order to remove this evil from Israel.”

But the descendants of Benjamin wouldn’t obey the request of their own relatives, the Israelis, 14 so the descendants of Benjamin assembled from the cities of Gibeah to fight the Israelis in battle. 15 The day of the battle,[d] the army from the descendants of Benjamin numbered 26,000 expert swordsmen from their cities, not including the inhabitants of Gibeah, who numbered 700 special forces soldiers. 16 Out of all these soldiers, 700 of them were left-handed—and each one could sling a stone at a hair and never miss. 17 But the Israeli army—not counting the tribe of Benjamin—numbered 400,000 expert swordsmen, all of them battle-hardened soldiers.[e]

Civil War Lays Waste to the Tribe of Benjamin

18 The Israelis mounted up, traveled to Bethel, and asked God what to do.[f] They said, “Who is to lead us in our opening attack against the descendants of Benjamin?”

The Lord replied, “Judah is to open the attack.”

19 So the Israelis got up in the morning, encamped near Gibeah, 20 and the army of Israel went out to fight the tribe of Benjamin, assembling in battle array against them at Gibeah. 21 The descendants of Benjamin came out of Gibeah, and 22,000 soldiers of Israel fell in battle that day.

22 But the army—the men of Israel—encouraged themselves and arrayed for battle again the next day in the same place where they had gathered the day before. 23 From there[g] the Israelis went up and wept in the Lord’s presence until evening. Then they asked the Lord, “Should we attack the descendants of[h] Benjamin again?”

The Lord replied, “Attack them.”[i]

24 So the Israelis attacked the descendants of Benjamin for a second day, 25 and the tribe of Benjamin went to war against them from Gibeah during that second day, and 18,000 soldiers from the Israelis—all of them expert swordsmen—fell to the ground. 26 All the Israelis, including its army, went up from there to Bethel and wept, remaining there in the Lord’s presence, fasting throughout the day until dusk, when they offered burnt offerings and peace offerings in the Lord’s presence. 27 The Israelis inquired of the Lord, since the Ark of the Covenant was there[j] at that time 28 while Eleazar’s son Phinehas, a descendant of Aaron, served before it in those days. They asked, “Should we go out to war again against the descendants of our relative Benjamin, or shall we cease?”

And the Lord answered, “Go out, and tomorrow I will deliver them into your control.”

29 So Israel set soldiers in ambush around Gibeah. 30 The Israelis went out against the descendants of Benjamin on the third day, arraying themselves against Gibeah as they had done previously. 31 They attacked the army and were drawn away from the city as they began to inflict casualties on the soldiers along the roads to Bethel and Gibeah, just as they had done the other times. About 30 soldiers from Israel fell in battle there[k] and in the fields.

32 Then the descendants of Benjamin told themselves,[l] “They’re falling right in front of us, just like before!”

But the army of Israel told themselves, “Let’s draw them away by escaping to the highways from the city.” 33 So the entire army of Israel moved from their location and arrayed themselves at Baal-tamer while that part of their army moved from their ambush positions from Maareh-geba. 34 As 10,000 of Israel’s best soldiers came to fight Gibeah, the battle became fierce, but the army of Benjamin didn’t know that disaster was close at hand. 35 The Lord struck Benjamin in the full view of Israel. As a result, the Israelis destroyed 25,100 soldiers of Benjamin that day, all expert swordsmen.

36 Then the descendants of Benjamin realized that they had been defeated. The army of Israel pretended to retreat from the army of Benjamin, knowing that they had set some soldiers in ambush near Gibeah. 37 The soldiers in ambush rushed out to attack Gibeah, deploying in force[m] and executing the entire city with swords. 38 Meanwhile, the army of Israel had arranged to signal their soldiers who had been hiding in ambush by sending up a cloud of smoke from the city. 39 The army of Israel turned around in the battle, and the army of Benjamin began to attack and kill about 30 soldiers, thinking, “Now we’re really defeating them,[n] just like before.”

40 But then the smoke began to rise from the city in a column. The army of Benjamin observed behind them that the whole city was going up in flames[o] straight into the sky! 41 At that point, as the army of Israel turned back to face the army of Benjamin,[p] the army of Benjamin was filled with terror, because they realized that disaster was about to overtake them. 42 So they turned tail and ran away from the army of Israel toward the wilderness, but they were overtaken in battle when soldiers came out from the cities to destroy them.[q] 43 They surrounded the army of Benjamin, pursuing them ceaselessly until they defeated them near the east-facing[r] border of Gibeah. 44 That’s how 18,000 men from the tribe of Benjamin fell in battle, all of whom were valiant soldiers. 45 The rest of them turned and ran into the wilderness in the direction of the rock of Rimmon, but 5,000 of them were killed on the highways while 2,000 of them were overtaken and killed near Gidom.

46 To sum up, the soldiers from the tribe of Benjamin who died that day totaled 25,000 men, all of them expert swordsmen and valiant soldiers. 47 However, 600 soldiers ran into the wilderness in the direction of the rock of Rimmon, where they remained as fugitives for four months. 48 Meanwhile, the army of Israel went back to fight the surviving[s] descendants of Benjamin. They attacked the entire city with swords, including its cattle and everyone they could find. Then they set fire to all of the cities that they could find.

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Footnotes

  1. Judges 20:2 The Heb. lacks all of them
  2. Judges 20:6 The Heb. lacks remains
  3. Judges 20:13 Lit. men of Belial; i.e. men so wicked as to be worthy of death
  4. Judges 20:15 The Heb. lacks of the battle
  5. Judges 20:17 Lit. them men of war
  6. Judges 20:18 The Heb. lacks what to do
  7. Judges 20:23 Lit. Then
  8. Judges 20:23 Lit. of my brother; the descendants of Benjamin personified as an individual
  9. Judges 20:23 Lit. him; i.e. the descendants of Benjamin personified as an individual
  10. Judges 20:27 The Heb. lacks there
  11. Judges 20:31 The Heb. lacks fell in battle there
  12. Judges 20:32 The Heb. lacks told themselves
  13. Judges 20:37 The Heb. lacks in force
  14. Judges 20:39 Lit. Now they are defeated in front of us
  15. Judges 20:40 The Heb. lacks in flames
  16. Judges 20:41 The Heb. lacks back to face the army of Benjamin
  17. Judges 20:42 Lit. them among them
  18. Judges 20:43 Lit. near the rising of the sun
  19. Judges 20:48 The Heb. lacks surviving