Sisera in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
sis'-er-a (cicera', of doubtful meaning; S(e)isara):
(1) Given in Judges 4 as the captain of the army of Jabin,
king of Hazor. The accounts given of the battle of Sisera
with Barak, as found in Judges 4 and 5, have important
points of difference. The first is a prose, the second a
poetic narrative. In the first only Naphtali and Zebulun are
mentioned as being under the command of Barak; in the second
6 tribes are given as being under his command. In Judges 4
Sisera is known as the captain of Jabin's forces, while in
Judges 5 he seems to have been an independent leader. There
is also a difference as to the scene of the battle and as to
the manner in which Sisera met his death at the hand of
Jael. Because of these points of difference, added to the
fact that this is the only account, in these early times,
where a king did not lead his own forces, it is thought by
many that there is here the combination of two traditions
dealing with different and distinct events.
Sisera resided in Harosheth of the Gentiles, a place
identified with el-Charithiyeh, on the right bank of the
Kishon and commanding the way from the Central Plain to the
sea. Taking the versions in the two chapters of Judges as
being the account of a single campaign, we find Deborah
urging Barak to combine the forces of Israel to wage war
with Sisera as the representative of Jabin, the king of
Hazor. The scene of the battle was on the plain at the foot
of the slopes of Mt. Tabor (Jdg 4:12-14), or at the foot of
the Carmel heights (Jdg 5:19). The attack of Barak and
Deborah was so furious, animated as it was by the hatred of
Sisera and the Canaanites, that the hosts of Sisera were put
to rout, and Sisera,
deserting his troops, fled on foot to the Northeast. He took
refuge in the tent of Heber, near Kedesh, and here met death
at the hands of Jael, the wife of Heber (see JAEL). Sisera's
name had long produced fear in Israel because of his
oppression of the people, his vast army and his 900 chariots
of iron. His overthrow was the cause of much rejoicing and
was celebrated by the song in which Deborah led the people.
See DEBORAH.
It is interesting to note that the great rabbi Aqiba, who
fought so valiantly in the Jewish war for independence as
standard bearer to Bar-cocheba, was descended from the
ancient warlike Sisera of Harosheth.
(2) In Ezr 2:53 and Neh 7:55 the name Sisera, after a long
interval, reappears in a family of the Nethinim. There is no
evidence that the latter Sisera is connected by family
descent with the former.
C. E. Schenk
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