Judah in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
(yehudah; in Gen 29:35 Codex Vaticanus, Ioudan; Codex
Alexandrinus, Iouda; elsewhere Codices Vaticanus and
Alexandrinus, Ioudas):
1. Jacob's Son:
The 4th son born to Jacob by Leah in Paddan-aram (Gen 29:35,
etc.). Of this patriarch's life only scanty details remain
to us. He turned his brethren from their purpose to slay
Joseph, persuading them to sell him to the Midianites at
Dothan (Gen 37:26 ff). A dark stain is left upon his memory
by the disgraceful story told in Genesis 38. Reuben
forfeited the rights of primogeniture by an act of infamy;
Simeon and Levi, who came next in order, were passed over
because of their cruel and treacherous conduct at Shechem;
to Judah, therefore, were assigned the honors and
responsibilities of the firstborn (34; 35:22; 49:5 ff). On
the occasion of their first visit to Egypt, Reuben acted as
spokesman for his brethren (42:22,37). Then the leadership
passed to Judah (43:3, etc.). The sons of Joseph evidently
looked askance upon Judah's promotion, and their own claims
to hegemony were backed by considerable resources (49:22
ff). The rivalry between the two tribes, thus early visible,
culminated in the disruption of the kingdom. To Judah, the
"lion's whelp," a prolonged dominion was assured (49:9 ff).
2. Tribe of Judah:
The tribe of Judah, of which the patriarch was the name-
father, at the first census in the wilderness numbered
74,600 fighting men; at Sinai the number "from 20 years old
and upward" was 76,500 (Nu 1:27; 26:22; see NUMBERS). The
standard of the camp of Judah, with which were also the
tribes of Zebulun and Issachar, was to the East of the
tabernacle "toward the sunrising," the prince of Judah being
Nahshon, the son of Amminadab (Nu 2:3). Caleb, the son of
Jephunneh, represented Judah among the spies (Nu 13:6); he
also was told off to assist at the future allocation of the
tribal portions (Nu 34:19).
3. Territory:
The land assigned to Judah lay in the South of Israel
(see JUDAH, TERRITORY OF), comprising part of the mountain,
the Shephelah, and the maritime plain. The information given
of its conquest is meager and cannot be arranged in a self-
consistent story. In Josh 11:21 ff, the conquest is ascribed
to Joshua. Caleb is described as conquering at least a
portion in Josh 14:12; 15:13 ff; while in Jdg 1 the tribes
of Judah and Simeon play a conspicuous part; and the latter
found a settlement in the South within the territory of
Judah The tribal organization seems to have been maintained
after the occupation of the land, and Judah was so loosely
related to the northern tribes that it was not expected to
help them against Sisera. Deborah has no reproaches for
absent Judah. It is remarkable that no judge over Israel
(except Othniel, Jdg 3:9-11) arose from the tribe of Judah.
The first king of all Israel was chosen from the tribe of
Benjamin. This made acquiescence on the part of Judah easier
than it would have been had Saul sprung from the ancient
rival, Ephraim. But the dignity of Judah was fully
vindicated by the splendid reigns of David and Solomon, in
lineal descent from whom the Saviour of the world should
come. The further history of the tribe is merged in that of
Israel.
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