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Judges 5

5
Song of Deborah. 1#Ex 15:1. On that day Deborah sang this song—and Barak, son of Abinoam:
2#This canticle is an excellent example of early Hebrew poetry, even though some of its verses are now obscure. When uprising broke out in Israel,
when the people rallied for duty—bless the Lord!
3Hear, O kings! Give ear, O princes!
I will sing, I will sing to the Lord,
I will make music to the Lord, the God of Israel.
4#The Lord himself marches to war in support of Israel. Storm and earthquake are part of the traditional imagery of theophany; cf. Ex 19:16, 18–20; Dt 33:2–3; Ps 18:7–15; 77:17–20; 144:5–7. #Dt 33:2; Ps 68:8–9; Hb 3:3–15. Lord, when you went out from Seir,
when you marched from the plains of Edom,
The earth shook, the heavens poured,
the clouds poured rain,
5The mountains streamed,
before the Lord, the One of Sinai,
before the Lord, the God of Israel.
6In the days of Shamgar, son of Anath,#Jgs 3:31.
in the days of Jael, caravans ceased:
Those who traveled the roads
now traveled by roundabout paths.#Is 33:8.
7Gone was freedom beyond the walls,
gone indeed from Israel.
When I, Deborah, arose,
when I arose, a mother in Israel.#A mother in Israel: the precise meaning of the term “mother” is unclear, except that it seems to indicate Deborah’s position of leadership, and so may be a title (cf. 2 Sm 20:19).
8New gods were their choice;
then war was at the gates.
No shield was to be found, no spear,
among forty thousand in Israel!
9My heart is with the leaders of Israel,
with the dedicated ones of the people—bless the Lord;
10Those who ride on white donkeys,
seated on saddle rugs,
and those who travel the road,
Sing of them
11to the sounds of musicians at the wells.
There they recount the just deeds of the Lord,
his just deeds bringing freedom to Israel.
12Awake, awake, Deborah!
Awake, awake, strike up a song!
Arise, Barak!
Take captive your captors, son of Abinoam!
13Then down went Israel against the mighty,
the army of the Lord went down for him against the warriors.
14#The poet praises the tribes that participated in the war against Sisera: Ephraim, Benjamin, Machir (later regarded as a clan of Manasseh), Zebulun, Issachar, and Naphtali, the tribe of Barak (cf. 4:6). By contrast, the tribes of Reuben, Gilead (elsewhere a region occupied by Reubenites and Gadites), Dan, and Asher are chided for their lack of participation. The more distant tribes of Judah and Simeon are not mentioned, and some historians believe they were not part of Israel at this time. From Ephraim, their base in the valley;
behind you, Benjamin, among your troops.
From Machir came down commanders,
from Zebulun wielders of the marshal’s staff.
15The princes of Issachar were with Deborah,
Issachar, faithful to Barak;
in the valley they followed at his heels.
Among the clans of Reuben
great were the searchings of heart!
16Why did you stay beside your hearths
listening to the lowing of the herds?
Among the clans of Reuben
great were the searchings of heart!
17Gilead stayed beyond the Jordan;
Why did Dan spend his time in ships?
Asher remained along the shore,
he stayed in his havens.
18Zebulun was a people who defied death,
Naphtali, too, on the open heights!#Jgs 4:10.
19The kings came and fought;
then they fought, those kings of Canaan,
At Taanach by the waters of Megiddo;
no spoil of silver did they take.
20From the heavens the stars#Stars: the heavenly host, or angelic army. The roles played by the stars and the flash floods underscore the divine involvement in the battle (cf. 5:4–5). fought;
from their courses they fought against Sisera.#Jgs 4:15.
21The Wadi Kishon swept them away;
the wadi overwhelmed them, the Wadi Kishon.#Jgs 4:7, 13; Ps 83:10.
Trample down the strong!#Trample down the strong!: the meaning of these words is obscure. If this interpretation is correct, Deborah is the one addressed.
22Then the hoofs of the horses hammered,
the galloping, galloping of steeds.
23“Curse Meroz,”#Meroz: an unknown locality in which Israelites probably resided, since its inhabitants are cursed for their failure to participate in the battle. says the messenger of the Lord,
“curse, curse its inhabitants!
For they did not come when the Lord helped,
the help of the Lord against the warriors.”
24Most blessed of women is Jael,#Jgs 4:17; Jdt 13:18; Lk 1:42.
the wife of Heber the Kenite,
blessed among tent-dwelling women!
25He asked for water, she gave him milk,
in a princely bowl she brought him curds.#Jgs 4:19.
26#Jgs 4:21. With her hand she reached for the peg,
with her right hand, the workman’s hammer.
She hammered Sisera, crushed his head;
she smashed, pierced his temple.
27At her feet he sank down, fell, lay still;
down at her feet he sank and fell;
where he sank down, there he fell, slain.
28#The scene shifts to the household of the slain Canaanite general, where the anxious foreboding of Sisera’s mother is countered by the assurances of the noblewomen. From the window she looked down,
the mother of Sisera peered through the lattice:
“Why is his chariot so long in coming?
why are the hoofbeats of his chariots delayed?”
29The wisest of her princesses answers her;
she even replies to herself,
30“They must be dividing the spoil they took:
a slave woman or two for each man,
Spoil of dyed cloth for Sisera,
spoil of ornate dyed cloth,
a pair of ornate dyed cloths for my neck in the spoil.”
31So perish all your enemies, O Lord!#Ps 83.
But may those who love you be like the sun rising in its might!
And the land was at rest for forty years.#Jgs 3:11, 30; 8:28.

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Judges 5: NABRE

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