Verse 2
4:2. Jabin — This Jabin was
probably descended from the
other prince of that name, who
fell by the hands of Joshua,
Joshua 11:11. He doubtless had
watched all opportunities to
recover his ancient possessions,
and to revenge his own and his
father’s quarrel. King of Canaan
— That is, of the land where
most of the Canaanites, strictly
so called, now dwelt, which
seems to have been the northern
part of Canaan. That reigned in
Hazor — In the territory or
kingdom of Hazor, which might
now be restored to its former
extent and power. Perhaps he had
seized on the spot where Hazor
formerly stood, and rebuilt that
city. Harosheth of the Gentiles
— So called, because it was much
frequented and inhabited by the
Gentiles; either by the
Canaanites, who, being beaten
out of their former possessions,
seated themselves in those
northern parts; or by other
nations coming thither for
traffic, whence Galilee, where
this was, is called Galilee of
the Gentiles.
Verse 3
4:3. Mightily oppressed — More
than former tyrants, from his
malice and hatred against the
Israelites, and from God’s just
judgment, the growing punishment
being suitable to their
aggravated wickedness.
Verse 4
4:4. A prophetess — Such a one
as Miriam, Exodus 15:23; Huldah,
2 Kings 22:14, and divers
others; but the word prophets,
or prophetesses, is ambiguous,
sometimes being meant of persons
extraordinarily inspired by God,
and endowed with the power of
working miracles, and
foretelling things to come; and
sometimes of persons endowed
with special gifts or graces,
for the better understanding and
discoursing about the word and
mind of God. Of this sort were
the sons of the prophets, or
such as were bred in the schools
of the prophets, who are often
called prophets, 1 Samuel 10:5;
1 Samuel 10:10. And because we
read nothing of Deborah’s
miraculous actions, some have
thought she was only a woman of
eminent holiness, and knowledge
of the Holy Scriptures, by which
she was singularly qualified for
judging the people according to
the laws of God. It appears,
however, from 4:7; 4:9, that she
was endowed with the gift of
prophecy, properly so called, or
of foretelling, at least in some
instances, future events. Judged
Israel — That is, determined
causes and controversies arising
among the Israelites, as is
implied, 4:5. And this Jabin
might suffer to be done,
especially by a woman. Yet the
frequent discharge of this part
of the judge’s office, whereby
she gained great power and
authority with the people, did,
in a peculiar manner, (though
not observed by the tyrant,)
prepare the way for her sliding
into the other part of her
office, which was to defend and
rescue the people from their
enemies.
Verse 5
4:5. And she dwelt — Or, as the
Septuagint and Vulgate
understand it, she sat: she had
her judgment-seat in the open
air, under the shadow of that
tree, which was an emblem of the
justice she administered there:
thriving and growing against
opposition, as the palm-tree
does under pressures. Came to
her — To have their suits and
causes determined by her
sentence.
Verse 6
4:6. Called Barak — By virtue of
that power which God had given
her, and the people owned in
her. Out of Kedesh-naphtali — So
called, to distinguish it from
other places of that name, one
in Judah, and another in
Issachar. Hath not the Lord, &c.
— That is, assuredly God hath
commanded thee; this is not the
fancy of a weak woman, which
peradventure thou mightest
despise; but the command of the
great God by my mouth, Mount
Tabor — A place most fit for his
purpose, as being in the borders
of divers tribes, and having a
large plain at the top of it,
where he might conveniently
marshal and discipline his army.
Naphtali and Zebulun — These she
names, because they were
nearest, and best known to
Barak, and therefore would
soonest be brought together;
because they were nearest, to
the enemy, and therefore must
speedily be assembled, or else
they were likely to be hindered
in their design; while the other
tribes, being at a distance, had
better opportunity of gathering
forces for their succour; and
because these had most smarted
under this oppressor, who was in
the heart of their country; but
these are not named exclusively,
as appears by the concurrence of
some other tribes.
Verse 7
4:7. Draw to thee — By my secret
and powerful providence,
ordering and overruling his
inclinations. In fixing the very
place, she gave him a sign which
might confirm his faith when he
came to engage.
Verse 8
4:8. If thou wilt go with me,
then I will go — No doubt he
thought he had great reason for
making this resolution, because
he might want her advice in
doubtful matters, and her
authority also, both to raise
men and to keep them together in
good order, and likewise to
inspire them with courage. His
offer to go with her shows the
truth of his faith, for which he
is praised, Hebrews 11:32; but
his refusal to go without her
shows the weakness of his faith,
that he could not trust God’s
bare word, as he ought to have
done, without the pledge of the
presence of his prophetess.
Verse 9
4:9. The journey thou takest —
Hebrew, the way thou takest,
which may mean the course he had
resolved upon, not to go without
her. Shall not be for thine
honour — Though his faith was
accepted, yet the weakness of it
somewhat eclipsed his glory. The
Lord shall sell Sisera into the
hand of a woman — It is greatly
to the honour of a conqueror to
take the general of the enemy’s
army, or to kill him with his
own hand; which, she tells him,
should be denied him, as a small
punishment for his diffidence
and reluctance to comply with
her directions; and as he would
not go without a woman, so a
woman should take away his
honour from him.
Verse 10
4:10. With ten thousand men at
his feet — That is, following
him as their leader. Possibly it
also intimates that they were
all footmen, there being no
horses in Judea but what were
brought out of other countries.
This made the victory the more
glorious, by the overthrow of a
vast number of chariots and
horses in the opposite army.
Verse 11-12
4:11-12. Now Heber the Kenite —
The husband of Jael. Had severed
himself from the Kenites — From
the rest of his brethren, who
lived in the wilderness of
Judah. What the reason was of
his leaving them, is not known;
but there was a special
providence of God in it. Pitched
his tent — That is, his
dwelling, which probably was in
tents, as shepherds used to
live. They showed Sisera — That
is, his people showed him, or
his spies.
Verse 14
4:14. Deborah said unto Barak,
Up — Hebrew, Arise, Delay not.
If we have ground to believe
that God goes before us, we may
well go on with courage and
cheerfulness. Is not the Lord
gone before thee? — Namely, as
general of thine army, to fight
for thee. So Barak went down —
He did not make use of the
advantage which he had of the
hill, where he might have been
out of the reach of Sisera’s
iron chariots, but boldly
marched down into the valley, to
give him the opportunity of
using all his horses and
chariots, that so the victory
might be more glorious. 4:15.
The Lord discomfited Sisera —
The particulars of the battle
are not recorded in the sacred
text; but it evidently appears
from thence that there was
something extraordinary and
miraculous in this defeat of
Jabin’s host. The Hebrew word
יהם, jaham, imports that they
were discomfited with great
terror and noise, probably with
thunder, lightning, and hail-
stones, poured upon them from
heaven, as is implied 5:20; and
as the same word is used Joshua
10:10; and 1 Samuel 7:10.
Josephus confirms this opinion,
assuring us that “as soon as the
armies were engaged, there arose
a prodigious tempest of hail and
rain, which drove in the faces
of the Canaanites, and
occasioned a total rout of
them.” — Antiq., lib. 5. cap. 5.
The heavens, therefore, had the
principal share in this great
overthrow. With the edge of the
sword — That is, by the sword of
Barak and his army, whose
ministry God used; but so, it
seems, that they had little else
to do but to kill those whom
God, by more powerful arms, had
put to flight. And fled away on
his feet — He thought his
chariot not swift enough to
carry him out of danger, and
imagined he should be less
exposed to observation, and less
liable to be discovered, when he
fled like a common soldier. To
which we may add, that in
ancient times valiant men were
wonderfully swift of foot; as is
observed of Asahel, 2 Samuel
2:18; and every one knows it was
the character of Achilles among
the Greeks.
Verse 16-17
4:16-17. There was not a man
left — In the field; for there
were some who fled away, as
Sisera did. The tent of Jael —
For women had their tents apart
from their husbands. And here he
probably thought he would be
more secret and secure than in
her husband’s tent, or in any
other place in that encampment,
as it would have been a much
greater insult to Heber for any
Israelite to search for him
there than in any other of his
tents. For there was peace
between Jabin and the house of
Heber — Not a covenant of
friendship, which they were
forbidden to make with the
Canaanites, but a cessation of
hostilities, which Jabin granted
them, because they were
peaceable people, abhorring war,
and wholly minding pasturage,
and were not Israelites, with
whom his principal quarrel was.
Add to this, that God disposed
his heart to favour those who
were careful to shun idolatry,
and other sins wherewith Israel
had corrupted themselves.
Verse 18-19
4:18-19. Jael said unto him,
Turn in, my lord — If Jael now
intended to betray and deliver
him to Barak, or otherwise to
injure him, her addressing him
in this manner was dissimulation
and treachery, and is not to be
excused. But it is highly
probable that she had now no
other intention toward him, in
inviting him into her tent, than
merely to afford him that
shelter and protection which he
sought of her, and such relief
and refreshment as she would
have afforded to any weary and
distressed Israelite.
Accordingly she covered him with
a mantle, that he might take
rest in sleep, and when he asked
for a little water to drink,
because he was thirsty, she
opened a bottle of milk and gave
him drink. In what she did
afterward she seems to have been
actuated by a divine impulse or
suggestion, of which she had
beforehand neither thought nor
conception. God, it must be
remembered, had foretold by the
prophetess, not only before the
battle, but before the
enterprise to shake off the yoke
of Jabin was undertaken, that he
would deliver Sisera “into the
hand of a woman,” 4:9. This
method then, God, who is wise in
all his ways, and holy in all
his works, took to accomplish
this prediction. He brought
Sisera to Jael’s tent, disposed
her mind to invite him in, and
when he lay sunk in sleep,
powerfully suggested to her mind
what before was the very reverse
of all her thoughts, namely, to
take his life, and that in a way
so very singular and
unprecedented, that one can
hardly suppose she would ever
have thought of it, had not God
put it into her mind, and
impelled her to it. Bishop
Patrick justly observes, “she
might as well have let Sisera
lie in his profound sleep till
Barak took him, if she had not
felt a divine power moving her
to this, that the prophecy of
Deborah might be fulfilled.” Dr.
Waterland is of the same
opinion. “It can scarce be
doubted,” says he, “but that
Jael had a divine direction or
impulse to stir her up to this
action. The enterprise was
exceeding bold and hazardous,
above the courage of her sex,
and the resolution she took very
extraordinary, and so it has the
marks and tokens of its being
from the extraordinary hand of
God.” Certainly, as Dr. Dodd
remarks, “nothing but this
authority from God could warrant
such a fact, which seemed a
breach of hospitality, and to be
attended with several other
crimes; but was not so when God,
the Lord of all men’s lives,
ordered her to execute his
sentence upon Sisera. In this
view all is clear and right, and
no objectors will be able to
prove there was any treachery in
it: for she ought to obey God
rather than man; and all
obligations to man cease, when
brought in competition with our
higher obligations toward God.”
And that this is the true view
of the action appears still more
evident from the celebration of
it by Deborah the prophetess, in
a hymn or song of solemn praise
and thanksgiving offered to God
on the occasion of it: see
5:24-27. In Dr. Leland’s answer
to Christianity as Old as the
Creation, p. 2, and in Saurin’s
11th Discourse, vol. 3, the
reader will find a more complete
justification of this affair.
Verse 21-22
4:21-22. Then Jael took a nail
of the tent — That is, one of
that sort on which the cords of
the tent were fastened, and
which consequently were of a
large size. Come, and I will
show thee the man whom thou
seekest — Thus both parts of
Deborah’s prophecy concerning
Sisera were fulfilled. He was
delivered into the hand of
Barak, according to the
prediction, 4:7; but not alive,
and therefore not to Barak’s
honour, as was foretold 4:9.
For, when he came into her tent,
behold Sisera lay dead, and the
nail was in his temples. |