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JEPHTHAH , one of the See also: judges of Israel, in the See also: Bible, was an illegitimate son of Gilead, and, being expelled from his See also: father's See also: house by his lawful brethren, took See also: refuge in the Syrian See also: land of Tob, where he gathered around him a powerful See also: band of homeless men like himself
.
The See also: Ammonites pressing hard on his country-men, the elders of Gilead called for his help, which he consented to give on condition that in the event of victory he should be made their See also: head (Judg. xi
.
1-xii
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7)
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His name is best known in See also: history and literature in connexion with his vow, which led to the sacrifice of his daughter on his successful return
.
The reluctance shown by many writers in accepting the plain sense of the narrative on this point proceeds to a large extent on unwarranted assumptions as to the stage of ethical development which had been reached in Israel in the See also: period of the judges, or at the See also: time when the narrative took shape
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The See also: annual lamentation of the See also: women for her See also: death suggests a mythical origin (see See also: ADONIS)
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Attached to the narrative is an account of a See also: quarrel between Jephthah and the Ephraimites
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The latter were defeated, and their retreat was cut off by the Gileadites, who had seized the fords of the See also: Jordan
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As the fugitives attempted to See also: cross they were bidden to say " See also: shibboleth " (" See also: flood" or " ear of corn "), and those who said " sibboleth " (the Ephraimites apparently being unused to sh), were at once put to death
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In this way 42,000 of the tribe were killed.'
The loose connexion between this and the See also: main narrative, as also the lengthy speech to the See also: children of Ammon (xi
.
14-27), which really relates to See also: Moab, has led some writers to infer that two distinct heroes and situations have been combined
.
See further the commentaries on the See also: Book of Judges (q.v.), and See also: Cheyne, Ency
.
Bib., See also: art
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Jephthah." (S
.
A
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