Matthew Henry
Here Is,
who can stand before envy? The Ephraimites had the same quarrel with Gideon (Judg 8:1), who was of Manasseh on their side Jordan, as Jephthah was of Manasseh on the other side Jordan. Ephraim and Manasseh were hearer akin than any other of the tribes, being both the sons of Joseph, and yet they were more jealous one of another than any other of the tribes. Jacob having crossed hands, and given Ephraim the preference, looking as far forward as the kingdom of the ten tribes, which Ephraim was the head of, after the revolt from the house of David, that tribe, not content with that honour in the promise, was displeased if Manasseh had any honour done it in the mean time. It is a pity that kindred or relationship, which should be an inducement to love and peace, should be ever an occasion (as it often proves) of strife and discord.
A brother offended is harder to be won than a strong city, and contentions among brethren are as the bars of a castle. The anger of the Ephraimites at Jephthah was,
didst thou not call us to go with thee? For a good reason. Because it was the men of Gilead that had made him their captain, not the men of Ephraim, so that he had no authority to call them. Had his attempt miscarried for want of their help, they might justly have blamed him for not desiring it. But when the work was done, and done effectually, the Ammonites being subdued and Israel delivered, there was no harm done, though their hands were not employed in it.
Cursed be their anger, for it was fierce. Those resentments that have the least reason for them have commonly the most rage in them. Jephthah was now a conqueror over the common enemies of Israel, and they should have come to congratulate him, and return him the thanks of their tribe for the good services he had done; but we must not think it strange if we receive ill from those from whom we deserve well. Jephthah was now a mourner for the calamity of his family upon his daughter’s account, and they should have come to condole with him and comfort him; but barbarous men take a pleasure in adding affliction to the afflicted. In this world, the end of one trouble often proves the beginning of another; nor must we ever
boast as though we had put off the harness.
I called you, and you delivered me not out of their hands. Had that been true which they charged him with, yet it would not have been a just ground of quarrel; but it seems it was false, and, as the matter of fact now appears, he had more cause to quarrel with them for deserting the common interests of Israel in a time of need. It is no new thing for those who are themselves most culpable to be most clamorous in accusing the innocent.
I put my life in my hands, that is, “exposed myself to the utmost peril in what I did, having so small an army,” The honour they envied was bought dearly enough; they needed not to grudge it to him; few of them would have ventured so far for it.
The Lord delivered them into my hands. If God was pleased so far to make use of me for his glory, why should you be offended at that? Have you any reason to
fight against me? Isa. not that in effect to fight against God, in whose hand I have been only an unworthy instrument?”
fugitives. It is an ill thing to fasten names or characters of reproach upon persons or countries, as is common, especially upon those that lie under outward disadvantages: it often occasions quarrels that prove of ill consequence, as it did here. See likewise what a mischievous thing an abusive tongue is, that calls ill names, and gives scurrilous language: it
sets on fire the course of nature, and is set on fire of hell(Jas 3:6), and many a time cuts the throat of him that uses it, as it did here, Ps 34:8. If these Ephraimites could have denied themselves the poor satisfaction of calling the Gileadites
fugitives, they might have prevented a great deal of bloodshed; for
grievous words stir up anger, and who knows how great a matter a little of that fire may kindle?
First, Cruelty enough in the destruction of them. Sufficient surely was
the punishment which was inflicted by many; when they were routed in the field, there needed not this severity to cut off all that escaped. Shall the sword devour for ever? Whether Jephthah is to be praised for this I know not; perhaps he saw it to be a piece of necessary justice.
Secondly, Cunning enough in the discovery of them. It seems the Ephraimites, though they spoke the same language with other Israelites, yet had got a custom in the dialect of their country to pronounce the Hebrew letter
Shinlike
Samech, and they had so strangely used themselves to it that they could not do otherwise, no, not to save their lives. We learn to speak by imitation; those that first used
sfor
sh, did it either because it was shorter or because it was finer, and their children learnt to speak like them, so that you might know an Ephraimite by it; as in England we know a west-country man or a north-country man, nay, perhaps a Shropshire man, and a Cheshire man, by his pronunciation.
Thou art a Galilean, and thy speech betrays thee. By this the Ephraimites were discovered. If they took a man that they suspected to be an Ephraimite, but he denied it, they bade him say
Shibboleth; but either he
could not, as our translation reads it, or he did not heed, or frame, or direct himself, as some read, to pronounce it aright, but said
Sibboleth, and so was known to be an Ephraimite, and was slain immediately.
Shibbolethsignifies a
river or stream: “Ask leave to go over Shibboleth, the river.” Those that were thus cut off made up the whole number of slaughtered Ephraimites forty-two thousand, Judg 11:6. Thus another mutiny of that angry tribe was prevented.
Art thou an Ephraimite? No, now rather of any tribe than that.
Shibboleth.
fugitives. He that rolls the stone of reproach unjustly upon another, let him expect that it will justly return upon himself.