Authors: Inc. Tyndale House Publishers
Tags: #BIBLES / Other Translations / Text
Then Deborah and Barak sang this song about the wonderful victory:
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“Praise the Lord!
Israel’s leaders bravely led;
The people gladly followed!
Yes, bless the Lord!
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Listen, O you kings and princes,
For I shall sing about the Lord,
The God of Israel.
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When you led us out from Seir,
Out across the fields of Edom,
The earth trembled
And the sky poured down its rain.
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Yes, even Mount Sinai quaked
At the presence of the God of Israel!
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In the days of Shamgar and of Jael,
The main roads were deserted.
Travelers used the narrow, crooked side paths.
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Israel’s population dwindled,
Until Deborah became a mother to Israel.
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When Israel chose new gods,
Everything collapsed.
Our masters would not let us have
A shield or spear.
Among forty thousand men of Israel,
Not a weapon could be found!
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How I rejoice
In the leaders of Israel
Who offered themselves so willingly!
Praise the Lord!
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Let all Israel, rich and poor,
Join in his praises—
Those who ride on white donkeys
And sit on rich carpets,
And those who are poor and must walk.
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The village musicians
Gather at the village well
To sing of the triumphs of the Lord.
Again and again they sing the ballad
Of how the Lord saved Israel
With an army of peasants!
The people of the Lord
Marched through the gates!
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Awake, O Deborah, and sing!
Arise, O Barak!
O son of Abinoam, lead away your captives!
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Down from Mount Tabor marched the noble remnant.
The people of the Lord
Marched down against great odds.
They came from Ephraim and Benjamin,
From Machir and from Zebulun.
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Down into the valley
Went the princes of Issachar
With Deborah and Barak.
At God’s command they rushed into the valley.
(But the tribe of Reuben didn’t go.
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Why did you sit at home among the sheepfolds,
Playing your shepherd pipes?
Yes, the tribe of Reuben has an uneasy conscience.
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Why did Gilead remain across the Jordan,
And why did Dan remain with his ships?
And why did Asher sit unmoved
Upon the seashore,
At ease beside his harbors?)
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But the tribes of Zebulun and Naphtali
Dared to die upon the fields of battle.
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The kings of Canaan fought in Taanach
By Megiddo’s springs,
But did not win the victory.
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The very stars of heaven
Fought Sisera.
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The rushing Kishon River
Swept them away.
March on, my soul, with strength!
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Hear the stamping
Of the horsehoofs of the enemy!
See the prancing of his steeds!
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But the Angel of Jehovah
Put a curse on Meroz.
‘Curse them bitterly,’ he said,
‘Because they did not come to help the Lord
Against his enemies.’
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Blessed be Jael,
The wife of Heber the Kenite—
Yes, may she be blessed
Above all women who live in tents.
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He asked for water
And she gave him milk in a beautiful cup!
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Then she took a tent pin and a workman’s hammer
And pierced Sisera’s temples,
Crushing his head.
She pounded the tent pin through his head.
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He sank, he fell, he lay dead at her feet.
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The mother of Sisera watched through the window
For his return.
‘Why is his chariot so long in coming?
Why don’t we hear the sound of the wheels?’
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But her ladies-in-waiting—and she herself—replied,
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‘There is much loot to be divided,
And it takes time.
Each man receives a girl or two;
And Sisera will get gorgeous robes,
And he will bring home
Many gifts for me.’
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O Lord, may all your enemies
Perish as Sisera did,
But may those who love the Lord
Shine as the sun!”
After that there was peace in the land for forty years.
Then the people of Israel began once again to worship other gods, and once again the Lord let their enemies harass them. This time it was by the people of Midian, for seven years.
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The Midianites were so cruel that the Israelis took to the mountains, living in caves and dens.
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When they planted their seed, marauders from Midian, Amalek, and other neighboring nations came and destroyed their crops and plundered the countryside as far away as Gaza, leaving nothing to eat and taking away all their sheep, oxen, and donkeys.
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These enemy hordes arrived on droves of camels too numerous to count and stayed until the land was completely stripped and devastated.
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So Israel was reduced to abject poverty because of the Midianites. Then at last the people of Israel began to cry out to the Lord for help.
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However, the Lord’s reply through the prophet he sent to them was this: “The Lord God of Israel brought you out of slavery in Egypt,
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and rescued you from the Egyptians and from all who were cruel to you, and drove out your enemies before you, and gave you their land.
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He told you he is the Lord your God, and you must not worship the gods of the Amorites who live around you on every side. But you have not listened to him.”
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But one day the Angel of the Lord came and sat beneath the oak tree at Ophrah, on the farm of Joash the Abiezrite. Joash’s son, Gideon, had been threshing wheat by hand in the bottom of a grape press—a pit where grapes were pressed to make wine—for he was hiding from the Midianites.
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The Angel of the Lord appeared to him and said, “Mighty soldier, the Lord is with you!”
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“Stranger,” Gideon replied, “if the Lord is with us, why has all this happened to us? And where are all the miracles our ancestors have told us about—such as when God brought them out of Egypt? Now the Lord has thrown us away and has let the Midianites completely ruin us.”
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Then the Lord turned to him and said, “I will make you strong! Go and save Israel from the Midianites! I am sending you!”
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But Gideon replied, “Sir, how can
I
save Israel? My family is the poorest in the whole tribe of Manasseh, and I am the least thought of in the entire family!”
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Whereupon the Lord said to him, “But I, Jehovah,
*
will be with you! And you shall quickly destroy the Midianite hordes!”
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Gideon replied, “If it is really true that you are going to help me like that, then do some miracle to prove it! Prove that it is really Jehovah who is talking to me!
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But stay here until I go and get a present for you.”
“All right,” the Angel agreed. “I’ll stay here until you return.”
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Gideon hurried home and roasted a young goat and baked some unleavened bread from a bushel of flour. Then, carrying the meat in a basket and broth in a pot, he took it out to the Angel, who was beneath the oak tree, and presented it to him.
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The Angel said to him, “Place the meat and the bread upon that rock over there, and pour the broth over it.”
When Gideon had followed these instructions,
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the Angel touched the meat and bread with his staff, and fire flamed up from the rock and consumed them! And suddenly the Angel was gone!
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When Gideon realized that it had indeed been the Angel of the Lord, he cried out, “Alas, O Lord God, for I have seen the Angel of the Lord face-to-face!”
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“It’s all right,” the Lord replied. “Don’t be afraid! You shall not die.”
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And Gideon built an altar there and named it “The Altar of Peace with Jehovah.” (The altar is still there in Ophrah in the land of the Abiezrites.)
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That night the Lord told Gideon to hitch his father’s best ox to the family altar of Baal and pull it down, and to cut down the wooden idol of the goddess Asherah that stood nearby.
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“Replace it with an altar for the Lord your God, built here on this hill, laying the stones carefully. Then sacrifice the ox as a burnt offering to the Lord, using the wooden idol as wood for the fire on the altar.”
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So Gideon took ten of his servants and did as the Lord had commanded. But he did it at night for fear of the other members of his father’s household, and for fear of the men of the city; for he knew what would happen if they found out who did it!
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Early the next morning, as the city began to stir, someone discovered that the altar of Baal was knocked apart, the idol beside it was gone, and a new altar had been built instead, with the remains of a sacrifice on it.
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“Who did this?” everyone demanded. Finally they learned that it was Gideon, the son of Joash.
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“Bring out your son,” they shouted to Joash. “He must die for insulting the altar of Baal and for cutting down the Asherah idol.”
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But Joash retorted to the whole mob, “Does Baal need
your
help? What an insult to a god! You are the ones who should die for insulting Baal! If Baal is really a god, let him take care of himself and destroy the one who broke apart his altar!”
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From then on Gideon was called “Jerubbaal,” a nickname meaning “Let Baal take care of himself!”
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Soon afterward the armies of Midian, Amalek, and other neighboring nations united in one vast alliance against Israel. They crossed the Jordan and camped in the valley of Jezreel.
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Then the Spirit of the Lord came upon Gideon, and he blew a trumpet as a call to arms, and the men of Abiezer came to him.
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He also sent messengers throughout Manasseh, Asher, Zebulun, and Naphtali, summoning their fighting forces, and all of them responded.
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Then Gideon said to God, “If you are really going to use me to save Israel as you promised,
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prove it to me in this way: I’ll put some wool on the threshing floor tonight, and if, in the morning, the fleece is wet and the ground is dry, I will know you are going to help me!”
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And it happened just that way! When he got up the next morning, he pressed the fleece together and wrung out a whole bowlful of water!
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Then Gideon said to the Lord, “Please don’t be angry with me, but let me make one more test: this time let the fleece remain dry while the ground around it is wet!”
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So the Lord did as he asked; that night the fleece stayed dry, but the ground was covered with dew!