Jephthah in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
jef'-tha (yiphtach, "opened," or "opener," probably
signifying "Yahweh will open"; Iephthae; used as the name of
a place, as in Josh 15:43; 19:14; of a man, Jdg 10:6 through
12:7): Ninth judge of the Israelites. His antecedents are
obscure. Assuming Gilead to be the actual name of his
father, his mother was a harlot. He was driven from home on
account of his illegitimacy, and went to the land of Tobit
in Eastern Syria (Jdg 11:2,3). Here he and his followers
lived the life of freebooters.
The Israelites beyond the Jordan being in danger of an
invasion by the Ammonites, Jephthah was invited by the
elders of Gilead to be their leader (Jdg 11:5,6).
Remembering how they had expelled him from their territory
and his heritage, Jephthah demanded of them that in the
event of success in the struggle with the Ammonites, he was
to be continued as leader. This condition being accepted he
returned to Gilead (Jdg 11:7-11). The account of the
diplomacy used by Jephthah to prevent the Ammonites from
invading Gilead is possibly an interpolation, and is thought
by many interpreters to be a compilation from Nu 20 through
21. It is of great interest, however, not only because of
the fairness of the argument used (Jdg 11:12-28), but also
by virtue of the fact that it contains a history of the
journey of the Israelites from Lower Egypt to the banks of
the Jordan. This history is distinguished from that of the
Pentateuch chiefly by the things omitted. If diplomacy was
tried, it failed to dissuade the Ammonites from seeking to
invade Israel. Jephthah prepared for battle, but before
taking the field paused at Mizpeh of Gilead, and registered
a vow that if he were successful in battle, he would offer
as a burnt offering to Yahweh whatsoever should first come
from his doors to greet him upon his return (Jdg 11:29-31).
The battle is fought, Jephthah is the victor, and now his
vow returns to him with anguish and sorrow. Returning to his
home, the first to greet him is his daughter and only child.
The father's sorrow and the courage of the daughter are the
only bright lights on this sordid, cruel conception of God
and of the nature of sacrifice. That the sacrifice was made
seems certain from the narrative, although some critics
choose to substitute for the actual death of the maiden the
setting the girl apart for a life of perpetual virginity.
The Israelite laws concerning sacrifices and the language
used in Jdg 11:39 are the chief arguments for the latter
interpretation. The entire narrative, however, will hardly
bear this construction (11:34-40).
Jephthah was judge in Israel for 6 years, but appears only
once more in the Scripture narrative. The men of Ephraim,
offended because they had had no share in the victory over
the Ammonites, made war upon Gilead, but were put to rout by
the forces under Jephthah (Jdg 12:1-6).
C. E. Schenk
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