Judges
Roger Ryan
Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2007-10-30 - 221 pages
In
this new contribution to the Readings series of commentaries, Roger
Ryan offers a challenge to the fashionable disdain for the heroes of the
Book of Judges. As against the current consensus majoring on the
supposed flaws in the characters of the judges, and denigrating them as
participants in Israel's moral and religious decline, he paints a
positive portrait of each of the book's judge-deliverers. The key
element in all the stories of the judges is that each of them wins
independence for oppressed Israelites against great odds-an element that
should predispose readers to a favourable evaluation of the heroes.
Ehud slaughters an enemy king when the only weapon he has is a homemade
dagger. Barak resolutely charges downhill against enemy chariots
reinforced with iron. Jael slaughters an enemy commander by improvising
with a hammer and a tent peg. Gideon defeats hordes of nomadic invaders
with a small token army. The lone hero Samson slaughters the Philistine
foe in great numbers. The Book of Judges presents in this reading a dark
story-world in which its characters take heroic risks as they resolve
conflicts by violent means. Their stories are jubilantly told and
readers are expected to be neither squeamish nor censorious.
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