Sisera in Easton's Bible Dictionary
(Egypt. Ses-Ra, "servant of Ra"). (1.) The captain of
Jabin's
army (Judg. 4:2), which was routed and destroyed by
the army of
Barak on the plain of Esdraelon. After all was lost
he fled to
the settlement of Heber the Kenite in the plain of
Zaanaim.
Jael, Heber's wife, received him into her tent with
apparent
hospitality, and "gave him butter" (i.e., lebben, or
curdled
milk) "in a lordly dish." Having drunk the
refreshing beverage,
he lay down, and soon sank into the sleep of the
weary. While he
lay asleep Jael crept stealthily up to him, and
taking in her
hand one of the tent pegs, with a mallet she drove
it with such
force through his temples that it entered into the
ground where
he lay, and "at her feet he bowed, he fell; where he
bowed,
there he fell down dead." The part of Deborah's song
(Judg.
5:24-27) referring to the death of Sisera (which is
a "mere
patriotic outburst," and "is no proof that purer
eyes would have
failed to see gross sin mingling with Jael's service
to Israel")
is thus rendered by Professor Roberts (Old Testament
Revision):
"Extolled above women be Jael,
The wife of Heber the Kenite,
Extolled above women in the tent.
He asked for water, she gave him milk;
She brought him cream in a lordly dish.
She stretched forth her hand to the nail,
Her right hand to the workman's hammer,
And she smote Sisera; she crushed his head,
She crashed through and transfixed his temples.
At her feet he curled himself, he fell, he lay
still;
At her feet he curled himself, he fell;
And where he curled himself, there he fell dead."
(2.) The ancestor of some of the Nethinim who
returned with
Zerubbabel (Ezra 2:53; Neh. 7:55).
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