Judges 1:32

1:32 The people of Asher live among the Canaanites residing in the land because they did not conquer them.

Judges 3:26

3:26 Now Ehud had escaped while they were delaying. When he passed the carved images, he escaped to Seirah.

Judges 4:24

4:24 Israel’s power continued to overwhelm King Jabin of Canaan until they did away with him.

Judges 8:33

Israel Returns to Baal-Worship

8:33 After Gideon died, the Israelites again prostituted themselves to the Baals. They made Baal-Berith their god.

Judges 11:16

11:16 When they left Egypt, Israel traveled through the desert as far as the Red Sea and then came to Kadesh.

Judges 14:11

14:11 When the Philistines saw he had no attendants, they gave him thirty groomsmen who kept him company.

Judges 18:23

18:23 When they called out to the Danites, the Danites turned around and said to Micah, “Why have you gathered together?”

Judges 18:31

18:31 They worshiped Micah’s carved image 10  the whole time God’s authorized shrine 11  was in Shiloh.

Judges 19:21

19:21 So he brought him to his house and fed the donkeys. They washed their feet and had a meal. 12 

Judges 20:41

20:41 When the Israelites turned around, the Benjaminites panicked 13  because they could see that disaster was on their doorstep. 14 

Judges 20:43

20:43 They surrounded the Benjaminites, chased them from Nohah, 15  and annihilated 16  them all the way to a spot east of Geba. 17 

Judges 20:47

20:47 Six hundred survivors turned and ran away to the wilderness, to the cliff of Rimmon. They stayed there four months.

tn Heb “The hand of the Israelites became more and more severe against.”

tn Heb “cut off.”

tn Heb “Jabin king of Canaan.” The proper name and title have been replaced by the pronoun (“he”) in the translation for stylistic reasons.

sn Baal-Berith was a local manifestation of the Canaanite storm god. The name means, ironically, “Baal of the covenant.” Israel’s covenant allegiance had indeed shifted.

tn Heb “For when they went up from.”

tn Or “went.”

tn Heb “When they saw him, they gave him thirty companions and they were with him.” Instead of כִּרְאוֹתָם (kirotam, “when they saw”) some ancient witnesses (e.g., some mss of the LXX) assume the reading בְּיִרְאָתָם (bÿyiratam, “because they feared”).

tn Heb “they”; the referent (the Danites) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

tn Heb “they set up for themselves.”

10 tn Heb “the carved image that Micah had made.”

11 tn Heb “the house of God.”

12 tn Heb “ate and drank.”

13 tn Or “were terrified.”

14 tn Heb “disaster touched against them.”

15 tc The translation assumes the reading מִנּוֹחָה (minnokhah, “from Nohah”; cf. 1 Chr 8:2) rather than the MT’s מְנוּחָה (mÿnukhah, “resting place”).

16 tn Heb “tread down, walk on.”

17 tn 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.”