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Judges - The Bible, #7

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This is the seventh book of the Christian Bible.

The key people in this book are: Othniel, Ehud, Deborah, Gideon, Abimelech, Jephthah, Samson, and Delilah.

Unknown Binding

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Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Cassie.
53 reviews
January 7, 2026
Man what an absolutely crazy book. So much pain and sin, choosing to walk away from the love of God. It truly is such a sad book, with so many amazing testimonies of God’s goodness. That battle with Gideon? God giving the wins to those that otherwise wouldn’t? The Lord rewriting the narrative for the people He loves? What a wonderful God we serve that seeks relationship with us even when we live in the darkness of the world.
Profile Image for Renae | Redhair_and_Books.
153 reviews8 followers
Read
May 21, 2023
This book is hardcore. I always tell people it’s the Game of Thrones of the Bible with the type of content you’ll find- battles, intrigue, some really sketchy characters, some really heroic characters, and no shortage of s3x. Some of the stories are really freaking wild. Some of them frankly deserve trigger warnings. If you ever wanna read an exciting and storybookish tale, flip open the book of Judges!
Profile Image for Lloyd Earickson.
269 reviews9 followers
September 6, 2025
While there is general consensus regarding the historical provenance of the previous Biblical books I’ve reviewed, my brief research for this review reveals there is significantly more debate around Judges, with some arguing for it being entirely a latter-day product (like Deuteronomywritten long after the events it purportedly depicts and for a political purpose), others claiming it is primarily the written version of oral traditions with a contemporaneous origin, and still others positing a mixture between the two, with some elements tracing back to the historical period depicted, and others introduced at a later date.  Reading it, I am inclined to agree with the compromise interpretation, as it reads overall like an interpretation and ritualizing of legends and oral histories compiled into something attempting to be cogent.



We began this review with a discussion of historicity because it seems more diplomatic than beginning with the main thought I had throughout most of Judges, which is that the Israelites of this time were kind of idiots, or are at least depicted that way.  Again, and again, and again, and again they start worshipping other gods or failing to follow the Commandments, with predictable consequences: Jehovah removes His protections from them, they are enslaved and diminished by other peoples in the region, they turn back to Jehovah, and He leads them to safety and success once more, only for the cycle to repeat.  This repetitious cycle constitutes most of the story of Judges, with various permutations and distinguishing details.  Historians consider the titular judges to be equivalent to war-chiefs, an intermediate stage between the tribal existence of earlier times and the coming Israelite monarchy.





This is a pretty brutal book.  A lot of ancient texts contain plenty of references to heinous deeds – the burning of cities, mass subjugation, hostage taking, normalized sexual violence – but they are usually either not very detailed, or references to events that are not the main focus.  Many mythic-type stories are also more focused on individuals and their heroic exploits than on the large-scale doings of armies and proto-states.  Even knowing the “way the world was” working in the background at this time period, amongst most peoples and places, it can be more or less set aside when reading mythical works.  Judges brings it to the forefront in the form of both proto-state level violence, and intensely interpersonal violence and offense, capped by the serial gang rape in the final sequence – made more horrible, in my mind, for the way the victim is chosen.





Perhaps it is some small comfort that this could not have been commonplace in other cities at the time, else it would not have been so notable as to result in the reckoning which then occurs, and being written of in a way that comes down to us thousands of years later.  The selectivity of ancient sources always makes it difficult to infer precisely what was “normal” behavior for people and peoples during this time period, although it is fair to say that respect for property and respect for persons was almost nonexistent as we understand it today – and that goes for everyone, not just for what we might call “marginalized” groups today.  We can get glimpses through pieces like Judges, but limited and not necessarily of what we are most interested in understanding.





The characteristics and “physics” of the ancient battlefield are another notable area which we struggle to understand from a modern perspective, and here Judges does provide us some intriguing insight into how forces moved, how they interacted, the characteristics of routs, the tendency for casualties to be lopsided, and even insight into comparative military technologies.  Numbers are considered largely meaningless in works like this, but we catch a glimpse of an army possessing “iron chariots” which is depicted a bit like we might today depict a fully modern military menacing a third-world militia.





In my unscholarly opinion, Judges reads like a return to the style of the earlier Biblical books, which is why I align with the scholars who argue for at least a historical core to the text, even if elements are later additions or much of it was transcribed from older oral traditions at a later date.  Its real interest, though, lies to me in how it depicts the interactions of this early form of Judaism and its practitioners with other faiths and their practitioners.  Baal in particular emerges as an apparently potent rival, a religion which must have been capable of offering something to the Israelites, considering how often then turn away from Jehovah to follow Baal instead.  It is the beginning of a trend that will become much more important to history a few thousand years later – the exclusive nature of the Abrahamic faiths.  Where other faiths, like the variety of practices which might fall under the Odinic pantheon, might readily accept the addition of foreign gods and related religious imports, the Abrahamic faiths contain in their foundation – “thou shalt have no other gods before me” – a exclusivity rendering them less capable of integration (note that I do not say incapable, as there are plenty of instances throughout history where various elements of the Abrahamic faiths made practical compromises, especially after Christianity became a dominant, state-sponsored religion).





I wrote in my review for Joshua that it felt like an ending to the first Biblical “sequence.”  That would make Judges the start of a new sequence in the overall Bible “series,” and it rather reads that way at times.  From the victories and conclusions of the previous book, we find ourselves going through a protracted low period of indulgence and failure in various forms: physical, moral, spiritual.  In a few weeks, we’ll see how Ruth confronts this new state of affairs.

2 reviews
April 10, 2022
pretty dry if you aren't into the whole -yhwh is a jealous god, fear him or he'll get the his israelites to give you the ol' genocide, and if u israelites dont commit the genocide well, then boy oh boy, better hide your silver effigies, cause ur about to get enslaved to some caaninites- vibe. Samson and Delilah is somewhat interesting; and im imagining it sets up samuel and kings; or at least im hoping it has; then at least ill have some recompense.
and i imagine if you are into the whole -fear Elohim-vibe, then you may get more out of this.
Overall not my cup of tea, but glad it's over
Profile Image for Alex.
11 reviews
May 13, 2024
This is one of the more interesting books in the Bible, as I see it compare to a lot of epic stories that are popular like Game of Thorns. This book has so many intriguing stories on how God delivered Israel, and how to this day they have no king. From stories about heroes like Samson, Deborah and Barak, Othniel, Gideon, and Jephthah about how they rescued the Israelites from their captors. While it can get repetitive in writing, overall it's a very good book in the Bible that I highly recommend if you are seeking Christ.
Profile Image for Faith Judkins.
5 reviews
October 1, 2025
In those days Israel had no king! All the people did whatever they thought was right in their own eyes!!

And boy did they. Israel was drama freakin city.
Deborah, Jael, proud of you ladies! Very badass!
Gideon, why did you make the ephod? Baal, defend yourself! Ammonites count your days. Jephthah, criminally underrated judge. Samson kindof a simp and that was your downfall. Tribe of Benjamin, you live another day.
Profile Image for Karen.
513 reviews6 followers
October 7, 2021
In Judges, we get more combinations of narrative and historical summary. It's not a happy book to read because so few of the judges were people I'd like to know, but it does have its moments
14 reviews
June 12, 2024
Spätestens ab Kapitel 17 spannend wie ein Krimi. Sowas kann man sich nicht ausdenken.
Profile Image for Ariel Wolf.
86 reviews1 follower
October 23, 2024
Very graphic and brutal, shows the depravity of humans as they drift from God.
Profile Image for Andy Zach.
Author 10 books97 followers
April 11, 2019
Wow! Violence, assassination, sex, civil war, materialism, hypocrisy, decadence: you name it, it's in here.

For years, I considered this the most depressing book in the Bible, but after my latest re-read, I've decided it's more like a book of fulfilled prophecy. Israel sadly fulfills every negative prophecy about them in Deuteronomy and receives the promised punishment.

One new thing I learned was Israel eerily echoed Sodom and Gomorrah's behavior of mass gang rapes at night. Another was that Israel in its first civil war copied the strategy it used against the Canaanite city Ai.

This book is NOT for the squeamish and probably would be rated R if it were a movie. If you want your children to read it, be sure to accompany them.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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