Judges 2:4
Context2:4 When the Lord’s messenger finished speaking these words to all the Israelites, the people wept loudly. 1
Judges 7:21
Context7:21 They stood in order 2 all around the camp. The whole army ran away; they shouted as they scrambled away. 3
Judges 20:43
Context20:43 They surrounded the Benjaminites, chased them from Nohah, 4 and annihilated 5 them all the way to a spot east of Geba. 6
Judges 20:46
Context20:46 That day twenty-five thousand 7 sword-wielding Benjaminites fell in battle, all of them capable warriors. 8
1 tn Heb “lifted their voices and wept.”
2 tn Heb “each in his place.”
3 tn Or “fled.”
4 tc The translation assumes the reading מִנּוֹחָה (minnokhah, “from Nohah”; cf. 1 Chr 8:2) rather than the MT’s מְנוּחָה (mÿnukhah, “resting place”).
5 tn Heb “tread down, walk on.”
6 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.”
7 sn The number given here (twenty-five thousand 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.
8 tn Heb “So all the ones who fell from Benjamin were twenty-five thousand men, wielding the sword, in that day, all of these men of strength.