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ΑΝ

Universal History,

FROM THE

Earliest Account of Time.

VOL. IV.

BOOK I.

The ASIATIC Hiftory to the Time of ALEXANDER the Great.

CHAP. VII. SECT. VIII.

The Hiftory of the Jews under the Judges; or, from the Death of Joshua to Saul their firft King.

HIS degenerated epoch is prefaced by the facred hiftorian, in more places than one, with words to this effect; In those days there was no king in Ifrael; but every man did what was good in his own eyes; and is indeed filled with little elfe than the moft horrid apoftafies and idolatries on the Ifraelites fide, and with the most severe punishments inflicted on them by GoD on the other; to fay nothing of fome tranfactions mentioned in the five laft chapters of that book, though, in point of time, belonging rather to the beginning of it, during the time of its anarchy

B 2

Judah's

war.

anarchy and confufion; which plainly prove them to have funk into the moft fhameful degree of irreligion and depravity. Who fucceeded Joshua as head of the Ifraelitifh nation, the text no-where informs us; and it is most likely, that they fell into a kind of ariftocracy, in which the heads of every tribe were the governors of them: but, whether thefe chofe one from amongst them to command over the reft, is what cannot be affirmed with any certainty; only Jofephus intimates as if Othniel had been the first judge, though the facred penman feerns to give that honour to his father-in-law Caleb the then chief of the houfe of Judah, from whom it paffed afterwards to that worthy fon-in-law, as the fequel will fhew.

WE have obferved already, that, at the death of Joshua, a great part of Canaan remained ftill unconquered; fo that Year of they could not, without purfuing their conqueft, fecure the flood the poffeffion of what they had. The tribe of Judah was 905. appointed by the oracle to begin the war; Caleb, the fon Bef. Chr. of fephunneb, famous for his bravery and faithfulness in 1443 the report he made of the land of Canaan 2, was head of that tribe, and engaged that of Simeon, with which his own was interwoven, to join forces with him against the king of Bezek b. We have feen elsewhere the fate of that infolent petty prince. As for Caleb, he fet himself immediately about the conqueft of Jerufalem, which had been retaken by the Jebusites from the tribe of Benjamin, and foon after took and burnt it to the ground; the befieged retiring into the fortrefs of Zion d After this, he

turned his forces towards the fouth, against the cities of Hebron, or Kirjath arba, and Debir, called alfo KirjathJepher, which were then inhabited by the gigantic fons of Anak. Thefe had been formerly promifed to him by Mofes, as a reward of his faithfulness, and yielded to him accordingly by fofbua, a little before his death. Caleb, however, who was then above fourfcore and five years of age, tho' still strong and vigorous, thought it prudent not to exhaust his ftrength too far in the fiege of thofe ftrong places, and therefore propofed his daughter Achfah as a reward to the man that took Kirjath-fepher; and it was not long before it was gained by Othniel, a man of valour, and of his own

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family (A), whofe conduct and bravery, upon this occafion, raised him foon after to the dignity of judge.

WHILST Caleb, and his new fon-in-law, were employed in inlarging their inheritance, the other tribes were doing the fame in their several lots; but wholly neglected the exprefs order of their lawgiver, and, inftead of extirpating them, contented themselves with laying them under tribute. This proved the fource of all their misfortunes, and of those many flaveries that enfued; for the oppreffed Canaanites did, at leaft in appearance, fo patiently fubmit to their yoke, that they became lefs cautious, and were, by degrees, fo far enfnared with the beauty of their women, as to contract affinities with them. Thefe unhappy intermarriages foon reconciled them to the worship of Baal,

(A) The text calls him the fon of Kenaz, brother to Caleb (1); fo that it is not eafy to determine, whether he, or his father, was Caleb's brother. The Septuagint and Vulgate have taken it in the first sense; but, it is plain, he was not his brother by the father's fide, because the one is called the fon of Jephunneh, and the other the fon of Kenaz: neither can they be fuppofed to be uterine brothers, because, in such a cafe, the law of Mofes would not have permitted the one to have given his daughter to the other. The disparity of age is another proof of it: Caleb was then above eightyfive years of age; Othniel therefore must be fuppofed much younger to have married his daughter, who was an heirefs: neither could he have married her, if his father Kenaz had been Caleb's brother; because the marriage of an aunt is likewise forbidden by the Mofaic law. It is there

(1) Job. xv. 17. Judges i. 13. fup. vol. ii. p. 486, fub not.

fore more reasonable to fuppofe, that Caleb and Kenaz were firft-coufins, which the original often calls brothers; in which cafe Othniel and Achfab might lawfully marry. St. Austin, and after Vatablus, affirm Othniel to have been, not only a great warrior, but also a learned doctor of the law (2), and fo doubly eager for the conqueft of a place, which was the feat of learning at that time (3). The Ferus tell us wonders of the beauty of Caleb's daughter. However, her husband was not fo well fatiffied with her, and her portion, but he prevailed upon her to fue for an addition to it; which the accordingly did; and, upon her complaining of the drought and barrennefs of the fouth high lands, which her father had given her, fhe obtained thofe of the valleys beneath, which were better watered, and confequently more fertile. This happened in Joshua's time (4).

(2) Vide Vatabl in loc. (4) Vide Job. Jud, ubi sup, B 3

(3) Vide

Astaroth,

Aftaroth, and other gods of Canaan, and provoked God to forfake them; which gave their enemies an opportunity to regain their liberties, and to opprefs them in their turns.

It was during this time of apoftafy and confufion, that Micah, a wealthy man, of the tribe of Ephraim, is supposed to have erected that idol in his houfe, which was foon after taken from him by the Danites, and fet up at Dan (A). The ftory, giving us a lively idea of the monstrous abfurdities of the religion of those times, and of the degeneracy of the Ifraelites, who could fo foon give into them, cannot well be omitted.

The flory MICAH felt a remorfe for having wronged a covetous of Micah. and fuperftitious mother of eleven hundred pieces of filver, Year of for which fhe had beftowed fome fevere curfes upon him. the flood She conceived fuch joy at his reftoring them to her, that 936. fhe refolved to confecrate the greatest part of it to what she Bef. Chr. called a religious ufe, fuch as might prove an equivalent 1412. bleffing to him for the curfes he had extorted from her.

Accordingly, with part of that filver, fhe and her fon purchafed two idols, one molten, and the other carved; and, with the reft, built a chapel to fet them up in, together with fome teraphim, which they had, in all likelihood, already in the house h. To this they added an ephod, or priestly garment, with which Micah inftalled his fon to the priestly office of his new gods. Soon after, a young indigent Levite, wandering that way, was hired, as a more proper perfon for that office than his own fon.

MICAH thought himself highly bleffed, and that nothing could hinder him from the favour of GOD i, when the Danites, who found themfelves too ftreightened in

De his vid. vol. iii. p. 282, (B). 1 Jud. xvii. paff.

(A) The ftory of it is indeed related at the end of the book of Judges; from whence fome have concluded, that it happened after Samfon's death (1); whilft others place it about the latter end of Joshua's life (2); but the far greater part between Caleb's death,and Othniel's being chofen judge (3). Till that time, the idolatrous

Ifraelites feem to have contented themselves with the idols of the Canaanites, without fetting up any of their own. Micab was the first we read of that took it into his head to outdo them, not only by erecting this, but by confecrating an apart ment of his houfe to it, and procuring a wandering Levite to officiate.

(1) Vide Seder Holam, Serar, & al. in loc. (2) Mafius de Lyr, Riber. & al. (3) Vide Corn, a Lapid, Grot, Uffer. Munft. Calmet. & al.

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their own tribe, fent out fome fpies to seek for a new ha-
bitation. These chanced to come that way; and, having
confulted the Levite about the fuccefs of their journey, and
received a favourable anfwer, went directly to Laish, a
confiderable town, whose rich inhabitants, like those of
Zidon, lived in a carelefs fecurity, without magiftrates,
foldiery, or strength. They returned, and acquainted their
tribe with the joyful news: upon which the Danites of
Zorah and Efhtaol armed fix hundred of their men; and
thefe, with their five fpies at their head, marched imme-
diately towards Laifh. In their way, the fpies acquainted
them with Micah's having a young Levite there, named
Jonathan, the fon of Gerbom, from whofe mouth they
had received a promife of fuccefs in this expedition. The
Danites therefore, inftead of reproving Micah for his apo-
ftafy, entered by main force, took away the idols, teraphim,
and ephod, and forced the young prieft to go along with
them to Laih. Micah followed them, and made loud
complaints, that they had robbed him of all that was valu-
able in life k. All the answer they gave him was, That his
outcries might coft him his life; and that it was his safest
way to go home quietly. They foon arrived at Laish, took
and deftroyed it, with its inhabitants; and, having built a
new city, and called it Dan, after the name of their pro-
genitor 1, they fet up their idols there, and retained young
Jonathan and his fons to be their priests. The Septuagint,
Vulgate, and fome Jewish rabbies, call him the grandfon
of Mofes; but the original, the grandson of Manaffeh m.
As for the idol, the text fays, that it continued there till
the captivity of the land; and what that means, we have
fhewn in a former note ".

the flood

DURING thefe years of anarchy, the inhabitants of Gi- A bloody` beah in the tribe of Benjamin were guilty of fo horrid a war breach of hofpitality towards a wandering Levite, as proved against the cause of much bloodfhed, and was like to have occa- Benjamin. fioned the ruin of that whole tribe. The Levite was bring- Year of ing his eloped concubine home, and was come to that place towards fun-fet. After he had waited fome time in vain for fomebody to lodge him that night, an old man, coming from his work, who was a fojourner there, at laft, 1406. invited him to his houfe. They had scarce refreshed themselves, when a band of profligate young fellows furrounded the house, and, in a tumultuous manner, demanded the

* Judg. xviii. 24.
Judg. xxiii. 30.

1 De hoc vide vol. ii, p. 457, & (T). n Vol. iii. p. 239, & feq. & (Q).

942.

Bef. Chr.

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