3. Samson . . . arose at midnight, and took the doors of the gate of
the city--A ruinous pile of masonry is still pointed out as the site
of the gate. It was probably a part of the town wall, and as this ruin
is "toward Hebron," there is no improbability in the tradition.
carried them up to the top of an hill that is before Hebron--That hill
is El-Montar; but by Hebron in this passage is meant "the mountains of
Hebron"; for otherwise Samson, had he run night and day from the time
of his flight from Gaza, could only have come on the evening of the
following day within sight of the city of Hebron. The city of Gaza was,
in those days, probably not less than three-quarters of an hour distant
from El-Montar. To have climbed to the top of this hill with the
ponderous doors and their bolts on his shoulders, through a road of
thick sand, was a feat which none but a Samson could have accomplished
[VAN
DE
VELDE].
JFB.
Picture Study Bible