A BARBER’S RAZOR

A BARBER’S RAZOR

Ezekiel 5:1-8 NET.

1 “As for you, son of man, take a sharp sword and use it as a barber’s razor. Shave off some of the hair from your head and your beard. Then take scales and divide up the hair you cut off. 2 Burn a third of it in the fire inside the city when the days of your siege are completed. Take a third and slash it with a sword all around the city. Scatter a third to the wind, and I will unleash a sword behind them. 3 But take a few strands of hair from those and tie them in the ends of your garment. 4 Again, take more of them and throw them into the fire, and burn them up. From there, a fire will spread to all the house of Israel. 5 “This is what the sovereign LORD says: This is Jerusalem; I placed her in the center of the nations with countries all around her. 6 Then she defied my regulations and my statutes, becoming more wicked than the nations and the countries around her. Indeed, they have rejected my regulations, and they do not follow my statutes. 7 “Therefore this is what the sovereign LORD says: Because you are more arrogant than the nations around you, you have not followed my statutes and have not carried out my regulations. You have not even carried out the regulations of the nations around you! 8 “Therefore this is what the sovereign LORD says: I — even I — am against you, and I will execute judgment among you while the nations watch.

Who was Ezekiel?

He was a prophet during the exile, and his life story is mostly contained in his own writings, which have been preserved in the Bible. Ezekiel’s name means either ‘God is strong’ or ‘God strengthens,’ and he was the son of Buzi, a priest from the Zadok lineage.

His writings reveal that he was among the exiles who journeyed to Babylon with King Jehoiachin following Nebuchadnezzar’s capture of Jerusalem in 597 B.C.

Ezekiel mentions living on the banks of the river Chebar at a place called Tell Abib. That is not the same as modern-day Tel-Aviv. The word simply means “mound of the flood.”

Josephus reports that he was very young when the Jewish exiles left Jerusalem, though this might be an overstatement. His prophetic journey appears to have begun around 593-592 B.C., as seen in the visions and oracles in the first two chapters. These early visions do not seem immature at all.

Ezekiel’s records are precisely dated, which helps us trace more clearly the development of his teachings compared to prophets like Isaiah and Jeremiah, whose writings lack a strict chronological order. The structure of Ezekiel’s prophecies shows a clear sense of organization and artistic design, making it easier to follow the historical background and the prophet’s learning as God’s watchman, responsible for delivering God’s messages during turbulent times.

The last recorded date appears in 29:17, specifically the month of Nisan in the twenty-seventh year of the captivity. This places us in the year 570 B.C. How much longer he lived and worked is unknown. Since his first recorded prophecy is definitively dated to 593-592 B.C., his prophetic activity must have spanned at least twenty-two years.

During his time by the Chebar River in Babylon, he lived in a house (3:24, 8:1) and was happily married. The year 588 B.C. brought a double sorrow for the prophet. That year marked the beginning of the final, devastating siege of Jerusalem, which led to the fall of the Jewish kingdom and the destruction of the Temple. Right after this painful event, his wife passed away. He was advised not to weep loudly for the dead but to mourn quietly. This silent period lasted for over a year, allowing him time to grieve in his own way. 

Today’s text reveals that the title the LORD used for Ezekiel was “son of man.” From Daniel’s prophecy, we learn that the title “son of man” would be one held by the Messiah. Sure enough, Jesus came and introduced himself as the Son of Man. Like Ezekiel, our Lord served as both a prophet and a priest. As the Son of Man, Jesus served as the one mediator between God and men. Ezekiel prefigured the coming Messiah in the many ways he communicated God’s message to his people.

The LORD’s instructions to Ezekiel (1-4).

God told Ezekiel to take a sharp sword and use it as a barber’s razor. He said to shave off some of the hair from his head and your beard. The hair was to symbolize the lives of the people who would go through the exile. Even the act of cutting his hair was significant because a priest was not allowed to do so under the law (Leviticus 21:5). This was a shock and shame moment for Ezekiel.

He was to take scales and divide up the hair he cut off. This showed that not everyone would face the same troubles during the exile. It is important to recognize that the whole nation deserved the worst, but not everyone would experience it. As a nation as a whole, the Hebrews had broken their covenant with God, and all of them deserved the consequences of breaking that covenant. But even as they were being judged, God showed grace and did not give all the Israelites everything they deserved.

God told Ezekiel to burn a third of the hair in the fire inside the city when the days of his siege were completed. He was reenacting the siege of Jerusalem. His actions were intended to serve as a visual aid for the people watching. The act of burning the hair reminded the people of the ascending offerings they had been commanded to sacrifice in the temple. It was a reminder that sin is a serious matter and requires complete sacrifice. Sin requires atonement. The burning hair would also be a reminder in their nostrils.

Ezekiel was to take another third of the hair and slash it with a sword all around the city. The sword was a symbol of the armies that would come and put the citizens of Jerusalem to death by the sword. This act of slashing the hair with a sword was meant to visually depict that there would be nowhere to hide. No place was a safe sanctuary.

But those who would be lucky enough to escape the sword in the city would still not be safe. Ezekiel was told to scatter a third of the hair to the wind, and God would unleash a sword behind them. Notice that God said that he was the one doing this. The soldiers wielding swords would be Babylonian, but God is the one sending them. He is sending out soldiers to hunt down and kill even those who thought they had escaped the judgment by fleeing Jerusalem.

Ezekiel is also told to take a few strands of his hair from those he had scattered and tie them to the ends of his robe. These represented the few who would be preserved through this whole ordeal.

Finally, the LORD told Ezekiel totake more of the hair and throw it into the fire to burn it up. He said that from there, a fire will spread to all the house of Israel. The conflict, suffering, and dying would spread across the whole nation, not just the capital.

The LORD’S explanation to Ezekiel (5-8).

The LORD explains the symbols by telling Ezekiel that they begin in Jerusalem: God placed that city at the center of the nations, with countries all around it. Then it defied his regulations and his statutes, becoming more wicked than the nations and the countries around it.

So, because it was more arrogant than the nations around it, God declares that he is against it. He will execute judgment from that city while the nations watch.

Some would die during the siege from starvation or disease. Others would die when the foreign soldiers took the city. Others would find a way to escape and go into exile. But even there, the sword will follow them. Only a very few, a remnant of survivors, will escape this calamity. Ezekiel’s robe would have a few stray hairs attached to its tassels. These would represent the few who escape. They will not escape because they are righteous. They will only escape because God has a plan for that nation, so some must remain.

How should we apply this text?

I know it’s hard to read these Old Testament passages. The symbolism is difficult to figure out. The stories are less familiar. The historical background is more challenging. But God gave us the whole Bible because its message is important.

So, here is something to consider as we mull over the message in today’s text:

God wanted Israel to represent his righteousness. But when they refused to do that, God allowed them to represent his wrath. Those of us who call ourselves Christians have the same option. Matthew chapter 25 is all about those who claim to be saved, and the fact that many will discover that their faith is not real, and Jesus does not know them.

In the parable of the ten virgins. There was going to be a wedding, and they knew that they would have to wait a long time for the bridegroom to show. The intelligent ones prepared themselves for the wait. They brought extra oil for their lamps, so that the bridegroom would recognize them and invite them to the feast. The thoughtless ones did not bring extra oil. When the oil in their lamps ran dry, they had to go to the market to replenish it. That is when the bridegroom came, and they were not allowed into the party.

In the parable of the talents, each servant was praised who took what he had been given and invested it in his master’s service. But the lazy one was thrown out.

The sheep and the goats story reminds us that our genuineness will be proven not by what we profess but by how we treat others. He did not say that our good works will save us. He said that how we treat others will demonstrate whether or not our profession is real.

The gospel message is that salvation is always by grace. We are all represented in today’s text by the few stray hairs attached to Ezekiel’s robe. When we stand before the judge on Judgment Day, not a one of us will be able say that he should let us in because of how good we were. What can wash away our sin? Nothing but the blood of Jesus.

Ruth 1

Ruth 1

Ruth 1:1 It happened in the days of the judges, there was a famine in the land. A man left Bethlehem in Judah with his wife and two sons to stay in the territory of Moab for a while.

Ruth 1:2 The man’s name was Elimelech, and his wife’s name was Naomi. The names of his two sons were Mahlon and Chilion. They were Ephrathites from Bethlehem in Judah. They came to the fields of Moab and settled there.

Ruth 1:3 Naomi’s husband Elimelech died, and she was left with her two sons.

Ruth 1:4 Her sons took Moabite women as their wives: one was named Orpah and the second was named Ruth. After they lived in Moab about ten years,

Ruth 1:5 both Mahlon and Chilion also died, and Naomi was left without her sons and without her husband.

Ruth 1:6 She and her daughters-in-law set out to return from the country of Moab, because she had heard in Moab that Yahveh[1] had paid attention to his people’s need by providing them food.

Ruth 1:7 She left the place where she had been living, accompanied by her two daughters-in-law, and traveled along the road leading back to the land of Judah.

Ruth 1:8 Naomi said to them, “Each of you go back to your mother’s home. May Yahveh show kindness to you as you have shown to the dead and to me.

Ruth 1:9 May Yahveh grant each of you rest in the house of a new husband.” She kissed them, and they wept loudly.

Ruth 1:10 They said to her, “We plan on returning with you to your people.”

Ruth 1:11 But Naomi replied, “Return home, my daughters. Why do you want to go with me? Am I able to have any more sons who could become your husbands?

Ruth 1:12 Return home, my daughters. Go on, because I am too old to have another husband. Even if I thought there was still hope for me to have a husband tonight and to bear sons,

Ruth 1:13 would you be willing to wait for them to grow up? Would you restrain yourselves from remarrying? No, my daughters, it is much too bitter for you to share, because Yahveh’s hand has turned against me.”

Ruth 1:14 Again they wept loudly, and Orpah kissed her mother-in-law, but Ruth clung to her.

Ruth 1:15 Naomi said, “Look, your sister-in-law has gone back to her people and to her gods. Follow your sister-in-law.”

Ruth 1:16 But Ruth replied: Don’t plead with me to abandon you or to return and not follow you, because wherever you go, I will go, and wherever you live, I will live; your people will be my people, and your God will be my God.

Ruth 1:17 Where you die, I will die, and there I will be buried. May Yahveh punish me, and do so severely, if anything but death separates you and me.

Ruth 1:18 When Naomi saw that Ruth was determined to go with her, she stopped discussing it with her.

Ruth 1:19 The two of them traveled until they came to Bethlehem. When they entered Bethlehem, the whole town was excited about their arrival and the local women exclaimed, “Can this be Naomi?”

Ruth 1:20 “Don’t call me Naomi. Call me Mara,” she answered, “because the Almighty has made me very bitter.

Ruth 1:21 I went away full, but Yahveh has brought me back empty. Why do you call me Naomi, since the Lord has opposed me, and the Almighty has afflicted me?”

Ruth 1:22 So Naomi came back from the territory of Moab with her daughter-in-law Ruth the Moabitess. They arrived in Bethlehem at the beginning of the barley harvest.


[1] יהוה  = Yahveh. Ruth 1:6, 8-9, 13, 17, 21; 2:4, 12, 20; 3:10, 13; 4:11-14.

a quote:

“Chapter 1 is a story of sorrow. Everything is falling apart, but there is still hope because of Ruth, who has put her faith in the living God. She tells Naomi, “Thy people shall be my people, and thy God, my God” (v. 16).”

Wiersbe Warren W. Put Your Life Together : Studies in the Book of Ruth. Victor Books 1985.p. 10.

Ruth 1 links:

beyond ordinary wisdom
Can this be Naomi?
clinging to Mara
divine coincidence
lost everything
Maranatha Daily Devotional – Friday, April 20, 2018
Maranatha Daily Devotional – Monday, April 4, 2016
Maranatha Daily Devotional – Wednesday, September 4, 2019
would we welcome Ruth?

The RUTH shelf in Jeff’s library

Judges 21

Judges 21 

Judges 21:1 But the men of Israel had sworn an oath at Mizpah: “None of us will give his daughter to a Benjaminite in marriage.”

Judges 21:2 So the people went to Bethel and sat there before God until evening. They wept loudly and long,

Judges 21:3 and cried out, “Why, Lord God of Israel, has it happened that one tribe is missing in Israel today?”

Judges 21:4 The next day, the people got up early, built an altar there, and offered burnt offerings and fellowship offerings.

Judges 21:5 The Israelites asked, “Who of all the tribes of Israel didn’t come to Yahveh in the collection?” Because a great oath had been taken that anyone who had not come to Yahveh at Mizpah would certainly be put to death.

Judges 21:6 But the Israelites had compassion on their brothers, the Benjaminites, and said, “Today a tribe has been removed from Israel.

Judges 21:7 What should we do about wives for the survivors? We’ve sworn to Yahveh not to give them any of our daughters as wives.”

Judges 21:8 They asked, “Which city among the tribes of Israel didn’t come to Yahveh at Mizpah?” It turned out that no one from Jabesh-Gilead had come to the camp and the collection.

Judges 21:9 For when the roll was called, no men were there from the inhabitants of Jabesh-Gilead.

Judges 21:10 The congregation sent twelve thousand capable sons there and commanded them: “Go and strike the inhabitants of Jabesh-Gilead down with the sword, including women and dependents.

Judges 21:11 This is what you should do: Exterminate every male, as well as every woman who has had sex with a man.”

Judges 21:12 They found among the inhabitants of Jabesh-Gilead four hundred young virgins who had not had sex with a man, and they brought them to the camp at Shiloh in the land of Canaan.

Judges 21:13 The whole congregation sent a message of peace to the Benjaminites who were at Rimmon Rock.

Judges 21:14 Benjamin returned at that time, and Israel gave them the women they had kept alive from Jabesh-Gilead. But there were not enough for them.

Judges 21:15 The people had compassion on Benjamin, because Yahveh had made this gap in the tribes of Israel.

Judges 21:16 The elders of the congregation said, “What should we do about wives for those who are left since the women of Benjamin have been destroyed?”

Judges 21:17 They said, “There must be heirs for the survivors of Benjamin, so that a tribe of Israel will not be wiped out.

Judges 21:18 But we can’t give them our daughters as wives” because the Israelites had sworn, “Anyone who gives a wife to a Benjaminite is cursed.”

Judges 21:19 They also said, “Notice, there’s an annual festival to Yahveh in Shiloh, which is north of Bethel, east of the highway that goes up from Bethel to Shechem, and south of Lebonah.”

Judges 21:20 Then they commanded the Benjaminites: “Go and hide in the vineyards.

Judges 21:21 Watch, and notice when you see the young women of Shiloh come out to perform the dances, each of you leave the vineyards and catch a wife for yourself from the young women of Shiloh, and go to the land of Benjamin.

Judges 21:22 When their fathers or brothers come to us and protest, we will tell them, ‘Show favor to them, since we did not get enough wives for each of them in the battle. You didn’t actually give the women to them, so you are not guilty of breaking your oath.'”

Judges 21:23 The Benjaminites did this and took the number of women they needed from the dancers they caught. They went back to their own inheritance, rebuilt their cities, and lived in them.

Judges 21:24 At that time, each of the Israelites returned from there to his own tribe and family. Each returned from there to his own inheritance.

Judges 21:25 In those days there was no king in Israel; everyone did whatever looked right to his own eyes.

Judges 21 quotes:

“The men of Benjamin are told that if the girls’ fathers object, the Israelites will try to convince them of the wisdom of not opposing the seizure of their daughters. No one will have broken the oath (21:1); no blood will have been shed in Shiloh. Why not aid in the process of reconciliation? Like the tale of Jephthah’s daughter, the tale of the women of Shiloh may well be an etiology for customs involving marriage, key passages in the lives of young women. In this case, the story describes a yearly “wife-stealing” ritual in which matches are made between men of Benjamin and daughters of Shiloh. Such rituals are common in other cultures (see Gaster 1981: 2:444-46).”

Niditch Susan. Judges: A Commentary. 1st ed. Westminster John Knox Press 2008. p. 210.

Judges 21 links:

deeper to go
imperfect solutions
look up, not within
Maranatha Daily Devotional – Wednesday, July 12, 2023

The JUDGES shelf in Jeff’s library

Judges 20

Judges 20 

Judges 20:1 All the Israelites from Dan to Beer-sheba and from the land of Gilead came out, and the community gathered as one body to Yahveh at Mizpah.

Judges 20:2 The cornerstones of all the people and all the tribes of Israel presented themselves in the collection of God’s people: four hundred thousand armed foot soldiers.

Judges 20:3 The Benjaminites heard that the Israelites had gone up to Mizpah. The Israelites asked, “Tell us, how did this wrong thing happen?”

Judges 20:4 The Levite, the husband of the murdered woman, answered: “I went to Gibeah in Benjamin with my concubine to spend the night.

Judges 20:5 Landowners of Gibeah came to attack me and surrounded the house at night. They intended to kill me, but they raped my concubine, and she died.

Judges 20:6 Then I took my concubine and cut her in pieces, and sent her throughout Israel’s territory because they have committed a wicked outrage in Israel.

Judges 20:7 Notice, all of you are Israelites. Give your judgment and verdict here and now.”

Judges 20:8 Then all the people stood united and said, “None of us will go to his tent or return to his house.

Judges 20:9 Now this is what we will do to Gibeah: we will attack it. By lot

Judges 20:10 we will select ten men out of every hundred from all the tribes of Israel, and one hundred out of every thousand, and one thousand out of every ten thousand to get provisions for the troops when they go to Gibeah in Benjamin to punish them for all the outrage they committed in Israel.”

Judges 20:11 So all the men of Israel gathered united against the city.

Judges 20:12 Then the tribes of Israel sent men throughout the tribe of Benjamin, saying, “What is this wrong thing that has happened among you?

Judges 20:13 Hand over those worthless men in Gibeah so we can put them to death and eradicate evil from Israel.” However, the Benjaminites would not listen to their fellow Israelites.

Judges 20:14 Instead, the Benjaminites gathered together from their cities to Gibeah to fight against the Israelites.

Judges 20:15 On that day the Benjaminites mobilized twenty-six thousand armed men from their cities, besides seven hundred tested young men rallied by the inhabitants of Gibeah.

Judges 20:16 There were seven hundred tested young men who were left-handed among all these troops; all could sling a stone at a hair and not fail.

Judges 20:17 The Israelites, apart from Benjamin, mobilized four hundred thousand armed men, every one an experienced warrior.

Judges 20:18 They set out, went to Bethel and inquired of God. The Israelites asked, “Who is to be leading the tribe to fight for us against the Benjaminites?” And Yahveh answered, “Judah will be first.”

Judges 20:19 In the morning, the Israelites set out and camped near Gibeah.

Judges 20:20 The men of Israel went out to fight against Benjamin and took their battle positions against Gibeah.

Judges 20:21 The Benjaminites came out of Gibeah and devastated twenty-two thousand men of Israel on the land that day.

Judges 20:22 But the Israelite troops rallied and again took their battle positions in the same place where they positioned themselves on the first day.

Judges 20:23 They went up, wept before Yahveh until evening, and inquired of him: “Should we again attack our brothers the Benjaminites?” And Yahveh answered: “Fight against them.”

Judges 20:24 On the second day the Israelites advanced against the Benjaminites.

Judges 20:25 That same day the Benjaminites came out from Gibeah to meet them and devastated an additional eighteen thousand Israelites on the land; all were armed.

Judges 20:26 The whole Israelite army went to Bethel where they wept and sat before Yahveh. They fasted that day until evening and offered burnt offerings and fellowship offerings to Yahveh.

Judges 20:27 Then the Israelites inquired of Yahveh. In those days, the ark of the covenant of God was there,

Judges 20:28 and Phinehas son of Eleazar, son of Aaron, was serving before it. The Israelites asked: “Should we again fight against our brothers, the Benjaminites, or should we stop?” Yahveh answered: “Fight because I will hand them over to you tomorrow.”

Judges 20:29 So Israel set up an ambush around Gibeah.

Judges 20:30 On the third day, the Israelites fought against the Benjaminites and took their battle positions against Gibeah as before.

Judges 20:31 Then the Benjaminites came out against the troops and were drawn away from the city. They began to attack the troops as before, striking down about thirty men of Israel on the highways, one of which goes up to Bethel and the other to Gibeah through the open country.

Judges 20:32 The Benjaminites said, “We are defeating them as before.” But the Israelites said, “Let’s run and draw them away from the city to the highways.”

Judges 20:33 So all the men of Israel got up from their places and took their battle positions at Baal-tamar, while the Israelites in ambush charged out of their places west of Geba.

Judges 20:34 Then ten thousand tested young men from all Israel made a frontal assault against Gibeah, and the battle was fierce, but the Benjaminites did not know that disaster was about to strike them.

Judges 20:35 Yahveh defeated Benjamin in the presence of Israel, and on that day the Israelites devastated 25,100 men of Benjamin; all were armed.

Judges 20:36 Then the Benjaminites realized they had been defeated. The men of Israel had retreated before Benjamin because they were confident in the ambush they had set against Gibeah.

Judges 20:37 The men in the ambush had rushed quickly against Gibeah; they advanced and struck down the whole city with the sword.

Judges 20:38 The men of Israel had a prearranged signal with the men in ambush: when they sent up a great cloud of smoke from the city,

Judges 20:39 the men of Israel would return to the battle. When Benjamin had begun to strike them down, struck down about thirty men of Israel, they said, “They’re defeated before us, just as they were in the first battle.”

Judges 20:40 But when the column of smoke began to go up from the city, Benjamin looked behind them and noticed the whole town was going up in smoke.

Judges 20:41 Then the men of Israel returned, and the men of Benjamin were terrified when they realized that disaster had struck them.

Judges 20:42 They retreated before the men of Israel toward the wilderness, but the battle overtook them, and those who came out of the cities devastated those between them.

Judges 20:43 They surrounded the Benjaminites, chased them and quickly overtook them near Gibeah toward the east.

Judges 20:44 There were eighteen thousand men who died from Benjamin; all capable men.

Judges 20:45 Then Benjamin turned and ran toward the wilderness to Rimmon Rock, and Israel struck down five thousand men on the highways. They overtook them at Gidom and struck two thousand more dead.

Judges 20:46 All the Benjaminites who died that day were twenty-five thousand armed men; all were capable men.

Judges 20:47 But six hundred men escaped into the wilderness to Rimmon Rock and stayed there four months.

Judges 20:48 The men of Israel turned back against the other Benjaminites and struck them down with their swords – the entire city, the animals, and everything that remained. They also burned all the towns that remained

Judges 20 quotes:

“Chapter 20 describes Israel’s descent into civil war as the bonds of kinship trump the community of statehood. Benjamin refuses to join the rest of Israel in rooting out the evil in their midst, siding instead with its closer kin in Gibeah. The narrative thus offers a test of Israel’s unity, as the events described challenge the very notion of peoplehood under the covenant. This interest in the forms of polity and the tensions between them is typical of the humanist voice of Judges.

Niditch Susan. Judges: A Commentary. 1st ed. Westminster John Knox Press 2008. p. 201.

Judges 20 links:

civil war
defending the indefensible
devastated
Maranatha Daily Devotional – Wednesday, July 10, 2019

The JUDGES shelf in Jeff’s library

Judges 19

Judges 19 

Judges 19:1 In those days, and without a king in Israel, a Levite happened to be staying in a remote part of the hill country of Ephraim. He acquired a woman from Bethlehem in Judah as his concubine.

Judges 19:2 But she was repulsed at him and left him for her father’s house in Bethlehem, Judah. She was there for four months.

Judges 19:3 Then her husband got up and followed her to persuade her to come back. He had his servant with him and a pair of donkeys. So she brought him to her father’s house, and when the girl’s father saw him, he gladly welcomed him.

Judges 19:4 His father-in-law, the girl’s father, detained him, and he stayed with him for three days. They ate, drank, and spent the nights there.

Judges 19:5 On the fourth day, they got up early in the morning and prepared to go, but the girl’s father said to his son-in-law, “Have something to eat to keep up your strength, and then you can go.”

Judges 19:6 So they sat down and the two of them ate and drank together. Then the girl’s father said to the man, “Please agree to stay overnight and enjoy yourself.”

Judges 19:7 The man got up to go, but his father-in-law persuaded him to stay and spend another night there.

Judges 19:8 He got up early in the morning of the fifth day to leave, but the girl’s father said to him, “Please keep up your strength.” So they waited until late afternoon, and the two of them ate.

Judges 19:9 The man got up to go with his concubine and his servant when his father-in-law, the girl’s father, said to him, “Notice, night is coming. Please spend the night. See, the day is almost over. Spend the night here, enjoy yourself, then you can get up early tomorrow for your journey and go home.”

Judges 19:10 But the man was unwilling to spend the night. He got up, departed, and arrived opposite Jebus (also known as Jerusalem). The man had his two saddled donkeys and his concubine with him.

Judges 19:11 When they were near Jebus and the day was almost gone, the servant said to his master, “Please, why not let us stop at this Jebusite city and spend the night here?”

Judges 19:12 But his master told him, “We should not stop at a foreign city where there are no Israelites. Let’s move on to Gibeah.”

Judges 19:13 “Come on,” he said, “let’s try to reach one of these places and spend the night in Gibeah or Ramah.”

Judges 19:14 So they continued on their journey, and the sun set as they neared Gibeah in Benjamin.

Judges 19:15 They stopped to spend the night in Gibeah. The Levites went in and sat down in the city square, but no one took them into their home to spend the night.

Judges 19:16 In the evening, notice an older man came in from his work in the field. He was from the hill country of Ephraim, but he was residing in Gibeah where the people were Benjaminites.

Judges 19:17 When he looked up and saw the traveler in the city square, the old man asked, “Where are you going, and where do you come from?”

Judges 19:18 He answered him, “We’re traveling from Bethlehem in Judah to the remote hill country of Ephraim, where I am from. I went to Bethlehem in Judah, and now I’m going to the house of Yahveh. No one has taken me into his home,

Judges 19:19 although there’s straw and feed for the donkeys, and I have bread and wine for me, my concubine, and the servant with us. There is nothing we lack.”

Judges 19:20 “Welcome!” said the old man. I’ll take care of everything you need. The only rule is that you don’t spend the night in the square.”

Judges 19:21 So he brought him to his house and fed the donkeys. Then they washed their feet and ate and drank.

Judges 19:22 While they were enjoying themselves, they noticed that worthless men of the city surrounded the house and beat on the door. They said to the old man who was the owner of the house, “Bring out the man who came to your house so we can have sex with him!”

Judges 19:23 The house owner went out and said to them, “Please don’t do this evil, my brothers. After all, this man has come into my house. Don’t commit this horrible outrage.

Judges 19:24 Here, let me bring out my virgin daughter and the man’s concubine now. Abuse them and do whatever you want to them. But don’t commit this outrageous thing against this man.”

Judges 19:25 But the men would not listen to him, so the man seized his concubine and took her outside to them. They raped her and abused her all night until morning. At daybreak they let her go.

Judges 19:26 Early that morning, the woman made her way back, and as it was getting light, she collapsed at the doorway of the man’s house where her master was.

Judges 19:27 When her master got up in the morning, opened the doors of the house, and went out to leave on his journey, he noticed the woman, his concubine, collapsed near the doorway of the house with her hands on the threshold.

Judges 19:28 “Get up,” he told her. Let’s go.” But there was no response, so the man put her on his donkey and set out for home.

Judges 19:29 When he entered his house, he picked up a knife, took hold of his concubine, cut her into twelve pieces, limb by limb, and then sent her throughout the territory of Israel.

Judges 19:30 Everyone who saw it said, “Nothing like this has ever happened or has been seen since the day the Israelites came out of the land of Egypt until now. Take note of this, discuss it, and speak up!”

Judges 19 quotes:

“As in Genesis 19, the aggressive and violent demands of the mob involve homosexual rape (Judg 19:22). As discussed in connection with Ehud, Samson, and the the death of Sisera in 5:27, the man who defeats his enemy has metaphorically raped his enemy; he is empowered, his enemy a “mere” woman (see Vermeule 1979: 101-2; Niditch 1989; and Yee 1995: 164). By the same token, the man who is actually raped is made into the woman, the quintessential defeated enemy. Issues of shame and honor are at play. The worthless men seek to assert their power over against the outsider, whom they seek to humiliate. Also at play is an abusive sexual ethic in which the rape of women in battle and other contexts (e.g., Gen 34) is applied to the subduing of men. This passage is perhaps less about views of homosexuality, which priestly writers do condemn (Lev 18:22), than about a larger theme in sexual ethics in which one partner subdues, owns, and holds unequal power over the other (see Trible 1978: 105-39). A most troubling feature of the Israelite version of the tale type is the apparent willingness of the men to hand over their women to violent miscreants, Implicit is a worldview in which women are regarded as disposable and replaceable. On the other hand, the narration that follows implies that the author does not condone the men’s behavior. They emerge as cowardly, and their complicity in the rape and murder of the woman is a clear and reprehensible violation of covenant. The tale as told also emphasizes the ways in which women, the mediating gender, provide doorways in and out of war.”

Niditch Susan. Judges: A Commentary. 1st ed. Westminster John Knox Press 2008. p. 193.

Judges 19 links:

a rape and murder
an eye-opener
don’t spend the night in the square

The JUDGES shelf in Jeff’s library