Ehud
Because Israel again did evil, the Lord disciplined them under Moabite oppression, but when they cried out he raised up Ehud to deliver them. Through an unexpected and violent act, God overturned the oppressor and gave Israel rest. The passage emphasizes both divine judgment on sin and divine mercy
Commentary
3:12 The Israelites again did evil in the Lord’s sight. The Lord gave King Eglon of Moab control over Israel because they had done evil in the Lord’s sight.
3:13 Eglon formed alliances with the Ammonites and Amalekites. He came and defeated Israel, and they seized the City of Date Palm Trees.
3:14 The Israelites were subject to King Eglon of Moab for eighteen years.
3:15 When the Israelites cried out for help to the Lord, he raised up a deliverer for them. His name was Ehud son of Gera the Benjaminite, a left- handed man. The Israelites sent him to King Eglon of Moab with their tribute payment.
3:16 Ehud made himself a sword – it had two edges and was eighteen inches long. He strapped it under his coat on his right thigh.
3:17 He brought the tribute payment to King Eglon of Moab. (Now Eglon was a very fat man.)
3:18 After Ehud brought the tribute payment, he dismissed the people who had carried it.
3:19 But he went back once he reached the carved images at Gilgal. He said to Eglon, “I have a secret message for you, O king.” Eglon said, “Be quiet!” All his attendants left.
3:20 When Ehud approached him, he was sitting in his well-ventilated upper room all by himself. Ehud said, “I have a message from God for you.” When Eglon rose up from his seat,
3:21 Ehud reached with his left hand, pulled the sword from his right thigh, and drove it into Eglon’s belly.
3:22 The handle went in after the blade, and the fat closed around the blade, for Ehud did not pull the sword out of his belly.
3:23 As Ehud went out into the vestibule, he closed the doors of the upper room behind him and locked them.
3:24 When Ehud had left, Eglon’s servants came and saw the locked doors of the upper room. They said, “He must be relieving himself in the well- ventilated inner room.”
3:25 They waited so long they were embarrassed, but he still did not open the doors of the upper room. Finally they took the key and opened the doors. Right before their eyes was their master, sprawled out dead on the floor!
3:26 Now Ehud had escaped while they were delaying. When he passed the carved images, he escaped to Seirah.
3:27 When he reached Seirah, he blew a trumpet in the Ephraimite hill country. The Israelites went down with him from the hill country, with Ehud in the lead.
3:28 He said to them, “Follow me, for the Lord is about to defeat your enemies, the Moabites!” They followed him, captured the fords of the Jordan River opposite Moab, and did not let anyone cross.
3:29 That day they killed about ten thousand Moabites – all strong, capable warriors; not one escaped.
3:30 Israel humiliated Moab that day, and the land had rest for eighty years.
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Historical setting and dynamics
The passage reflects a period when Israel lacked stable centralized leadership and was vulnerable to neighboring powers east of the Jordan. Moab, aided by Ammonites and Amalekites, imposed tribute and control, likely through domination of key routes and fords. The seizure of the City of Date Palm Trees indicates strategic occupation of a significant site, commonly understood as Jericho or its vicinity. The tribute language and court setting show a subject people under foreign overlordship, while the capture of the Jordan fords later reverses Moab’s mobility and supply lines. The narrative is cast as theological history: Israel’s oppression is not random, but covenantally ordered judgment followed by merciful deliverance.
Central idea
Because Israel again did evil, the Lord disciplined them under Moabite oppression, but when they cried out he raised up Ehud to deliver them. Through an unexpected and violent act, God overturned the oppressor and gave Israel rest. The passage emphasizes both divine judgment on sin and divine mercy in raising a savior for his people.
Context and flow
Judges 3 opens the cycle of the early judges after the introductory theology of Judges 1–2. This unit follows the Othniel summary and expands the judge pattern with a more detailed deliverance narrative. It ends with Moab humbled and the land at rest, preparing for the next cycle of recurring apostasy and rescue that structures the book.
Exegetical analysis
The unit is carefully structured around oppression, hidden preparation, assassination, escape, counterattack, and rest. Verses 12–14 summarize the situation: Israel’s repeated evil leads to YHWH’s handing them over to Eglon of Moab, who dominates them for eighteen years. The text is explicit that the oppression is under God’s sovereign judgment, not merely Moabite military success.
Verse 15 introduces the theological reversal: when Israel cries out, YHWH raises up a deliverer. Ehud is identified as a Benjaminite and as left-handed, a detail that is narratively crucial because it enables concealment of the weapon on the right thigh and a sudden strike with the left hand. The report that Israel sends him with tribute reinforces both the humiliation of the nation and Ehud’s access to the king. The passage does not present the assassination as a general moral pattern to imitate; it narrates God’s use of an unconventional and morally mixed means in a unique redemptive-historical crisis.
The middle scene (vv. 16–26) is built on irony and suspense. Ehud prepares a double-edged sword, approaches the king under the cover of tribute, and then returns with a claim of a “secret message from God.” That phrase is doubly ironic: Eglon hears of secrecy and divinity, but the “message” is judgment. The narrator slows the account with physical detail—the king’s private upper room, the servants’ misunderstanding, and the locked doors—to heighten the reversal. The repeated emphasis on Eglon’s body and the servants’ delay serves the literary purpose of exposing the king’s helplessness and the foolishness of his security. The narrative is blunt and even grotesque, but the point is clear: the oppressor who appeared secure is suddenly, decisively defeated.
Verses 26–30 complete the deliverance. Ehud escapes, summons Israel with a trumpet, and leads the attack while explicitly attributing victory to the Lord: “the Lord is about to defeat your enemies.” Israel seizes the Jordan fords, a strategic move that isolates the Moabites and prevents retreat or reinforcement. The slaughter of about ten thousand Moabite warriors marks a comprehensive military collapse. The final clause, “the land had rest for eighty years,” is the theological outcome the book values most: God gives rest after judgment and deliverance. The narrator’s interest is not in celebrating violence for its own sake, but in showing that YHWH can break foreign domination and grant peace to his covenant people.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands squarely under the Mosaic covenant pattern of blessing and curse: Israel’s covenant infidelity brings oppression, and their cry for mercy leads to divine deliverance. The unit belongs to the period before kingship, when the Lord raised judges as temporary deliverers for a fractious nation in the land. It therefore highlights the need for stable righteous rule, but it does so without yet introducing the Davidic covenant. In the larger biblical storyline, it is one of many episodes showing that Israel’s problem is deeper than foreign domination; the nation needs ongoing covenant faithfulness and, ultimately, a better and final deliverer.
Theological significance
The passage reveals YHWH as both judge and rescuer. He is holy enough to discipline his people for evil, yet merciful enough to hear their cry and raise a deliverer. It also shows the humiliation of idolatrous power: earthly kings may appear secure, but they are no match for the Lord’s judgment. Human deliverance is real, but it is always subordinate to God’s sovereign action. The ending rest is a gift, not an entitlement.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No major prophecy, typology, or symbol requires special comment in this unit. The deliverer pattern in Judges contributes to later expectation, but this passage is not itself a direct prophecy. The sword, the locked doors, the fords of the Jordan, and the eighty years of rest function primarily as narrative instruments of reversal and deliverance, not as symbols requiring speculative decoding.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
Several features depend on the ancient honor/shame and court setting. Tribute payment is the language of vassalage; Israel is treated as a subject people. The private upper room, the locked doors, and the servants’ embarrassment exploit household and court protocol in a way modern readers may miss. The narrative also uses strong bodily and spatial irony: a fat king, a concealed weapon, a false assumption about privacy, and the capture of river crossings all intensify the humiliation of Moab. The mention of Benjamin and left-handedness is culturally significant because it sets up an unexpected advantage in battle and assassination.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
Within Judges, Ehud is a temporary and imperfect deliverer whose victory brings real but limited rest. The book’s cycle demonstrates that Israel repeatedly needs rescue because the people themselves remain unstable under covenant obligation. Later Scripture will press beyond such partial deliverers toward a righteous king and final savior who can truly defeat evil and secure lasting peace. In that sense, Ehud contributes to the biblical expectation that salvation must come from the Lord through a chosen representative, while also showing the inadequacy of every merely human rescuer.
Practical and doctrinal implications
The passage teaches that sin is never spiritually neutral; it brings real covenant discipline. It also encourages prayerful dependence, because God hears the cry of the afflicted and is able to raise help in unexpected ways. Leaders and teachers should note that deliverance in Scripture is God-centered before it is human-centered. At the same time, the text must not be used to sanctify deceit, assassination, or violence as ordinary Christian conduct; this is a unique narrative within Israel’s redemptive history, not a general ethical template.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive issue is the moral and literary role of Ehud’s deception and assassination. The narrative clearly presents Ehud as God’s chosen deliverer, but it does not thereby make every tactic normative or morally uncomplicated. The other minor crux is the force of “left-handed” language, which likely serves both as a physical description and as a narrative clue for surprise.
Application boundary note
Readers should not flatten this judge narrative into a direct model for Christian behavior or political action. The passage belongs to Israel’s theocratic and covenantal history, where God judges oppressive powers in a unique way. Its enduring lesson is about God’s sovereignty, Israel’s need for deliverance, and the seriousness of sin, not about licensing vigilantism or assuming all narrative details are prescriptive.
Key Hebrew terms
vayyôsîp̄û laʿăśôt hāraʿ
Gloss: they again did evil
This repeated formula marks the covenant pattern in Judges: Israel’s renewed unfaithfulness is the cause of oppression and frames the whole judge cycle.
vayyitsʿăqû
Gloss: they cried for help
The cry is the turning point in the cycle. It signals distress and appeal for divine mercy, not mere emotional pain.
môshîaʿ
Gloss: one who saves
Ehud is explicitly raised by the Lord as a deliverer, showing that rescue is God’s act through chosen human agency.
ʾiṭṭēr yad-yəmînô
Gloss: bound or hindered in his right hand
This description explains Ehud’s unexpected advantage. The narrative exploits the surprise of a left-handed Benjaminite using his left hand from the right side.
minḥāh
Gloss: offering, tribute
The tribute payment underscores Israel’s subjugation. The same word can denote a gift or offering, but here it is the political payment of a conquered people.
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