Zebah in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
ze'-ba (zebhach, "victim"), zal-mun'-a (tsalmunna`,
"protection refused"): Two Midianite kings or chiefs whom
Gideon slew (Jdg 8:4-21; Ps 83:11 (Hebrew text, verse 12)).
The name zebhach (Zebee) is very much like that of ze'ebh
(Zeb, "Zeeb" in the Septuagint). Moore (Judgess, 220) says
that tsalmunna` is probably "a genuine Midianite name";
Noldeke conjectured that it contains that of a deity
(ts(a)lm), and a compound form tslmshzbh, is found in an
inscription from Teima, a place East of the Midianite
capital (Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum, II, cxiii f).
The narrative of Jdg 8:4-21 is not to be connected with that
of 8:1-3. Budde (Kurzer Hand-Comm. z. Altes Testament, XXII)
would join 8:4 to 6:34; Moore (ICC) following Budde's
earlier work (1890) would connect it with a part of 7:22b,
describing the direction of the flight, while Nowack (Hand-
Komm.) regards the battle of 8:11 as the same as that of
7:11 if; he then takes the latter part of 8:11 to refer to
the place of the camp at night. There are many difficulties
in forming a natural connection for the verses. It may be
noted that in 8:18 f Gideon is not "the least in my father's
house," as he represents himself to be in 6:15.
The whole section tells of a daring raid made by Gideon upon
the Midianites. Some of his own kin had been slain by
Midianite hordes at Ophrah (Jdg 8:18 f), and, stirred by
this, Gideon went in hot pursuit with 300 men (Jdg 8:4). He
requested provisions for his men from the people of Succoth
and Penuel, but was refused this. He then went on and caught
the Midianites unawares at Karkor (Jdg 8:10) and captured
their two chiefs. He then had his revenge on the two towns,
and returned probably to his home with the two notable
prisoners. These he determined to slay to avenge the death
of his own kinsmen, and called upon his eldest son to
perform this solemn public duty that he owed to the dead.
His son, apparently only a boy, hesitated, and he did the
deed himself. W. R. Smith (Lectures on the Religion of the
Semites, 2nd edition, 417, note) compares with this call to
Gideon's son the choice of young men or lads as sacrificers
in Ex 24:5, and says that the Saracens also charged lads
with the execution of their captives.
The narrative reminds one of David's romantic life in 1 Sam
25; 27; 30. It is throughout a characteristic picture of the
life of the early Hebrews in Israel, for whom it was a
sacred duty to avenge the dead. It affords a splendid
illustration of what is meant by the spirit of Yahweh coming
upon, or rather "clothing itself with" (Revised Version
margin) Gideon (Jdg 6:34); compare also Saul's call to
action (1 Sam 11:1-11), and also Jdg 19 f.
David Francis Roberts
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