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She said to her father, Let this thing be done for me: let me alone two months, that I may depart and go down on the mountains, and bewail my virginity, I and my companions.

Verse Takeaways

1

The Sorrow of Childlessness

Commentators unanimously explain that the daughter's request to 'bewail her virginity' reflects a deep cultural sorrow. For an Israelite woman, dying unmarried and childless was a profound tragedy, as it meant the end of her family line and cut her off from the hope of being an ancestor of the promised Messiah. Her grief was less about death itself and more about this unfulfilled purpose.

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4

Albert Barnes

Albert Barnes

On Judges 11:37

18th Century

Theologian

Bewail my virginity - To become a wife and a mother was the ultimate purpose of life to an Israelite maiden. The premature death of…

Charles Ellicott

Charles Ellicott

On Judges 11:37

19th Century

Bishop

Let me alone two months. —There was nothing that forbade this postponement for a definite purpose and period of the fulfillment of…

John Gill

John Gill

On Judges 11:37

17th Century

Pastor

And she said to her father, let this thing be done for me ,
&c.] She has but one favour to ask of him, which she tho…

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Matthew Henry

Matthew Henry

On Judges 11:29–40

17th Century

Minister

Several important lessons are to be learned from Jephthah's vow.

  1. There may be remnants of distrust and doubt, even in the hearts of tr…