Tola, Jair, and Israel's distress
After a brief period of relative stability under Tola and Jair, Israel once again abandons the Lord for widespread idolatry and falls under severe oppression. When the people finally confess their sin, remove their foreign gods, and submit themselves to God’s judgment, the Lord answers with covenant
Commentary
10:1 After Abimelech’s death, Tola son of Puah, grandson of Dodo, from the tribe of Issachar, rose up to deliver Israel. He lived in Shamir in the Ephraimite hill country.
10:2 He led Israel for twenty-three years, then died and was buried in Shamir.
10:3 Jair the Gileadite rose up after him; he led Israel for twenty-two years.
10:4 He had thirty sons who rode on thirty donkeys and possessed thirty cities. To this day these towns are called Havvoth Jair – they are in the land of Gilead.
10:5 Jair died and was buried in Kamon. The Lord’s Patience Runs Short
10:6 The Israelites again did evil in the Lord’s sight. They worshiped the Baals and the Ashtars, as well as the gods of Syria, Sidon, Moab, the Ammonites, and the Philistines. They abandoned the Lord and did not worship him.
10:7 The Lord was furious with Israel and turned them over to the Philistines and Ammonites.
10:8 They ruthlessly oppressed the Israelites that eighteenth year – that is, all the Israelites living east of the Jordan in Amorite country in Gilead.
10:9 The Ammonites crossed the Jordan to fight with Judah, Benjamin, and Ephraim. Israel suffered greatly.
10:10 The Israelites cried out for help to the Lord: “We have sinned against you. We abandoned our God and worshiped the Baals.”
10:11 The Lord said to the Israelites, “Did I not deliver you from Egypt, the Amorites, the Ammonites, the Philistines,
10:12 the Sidonians, Amalek, and Midian when they oppressed you? You cried out for help to me, and I delivered you from their power.
10:13 But since you abandoned me and worshiped other gods, I will not deliver you again.
10:14 Go and cry for help to the gods you have chosen! Let them deliver you from trouble!”
10:15 But the Israelites said to the Lord, “We have sinned. You do to us as you see fit, but deliver us today!”
10:16 They threw away the foreign gods they owned and worshiped the Lord. Finally the Lord grew tired of seeing Israel suffer so much.
10:17 The Ammonites assembled and camped in Gilead; the Israelites gathered together and camped in Mizpah.
10:18 The leaders of Gilead said to one another, “Who is willing to lead the charge against the Ammonites? He will become the leader of all who live in Gilead!”
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
This passage sits after Abimelech’s violent rule and before Jephthah’s rise, in the period when Israel lacked a stable central monarchy and local tribal leadership carried the burden of defense and administration. Tola and Jair appear to have been regional deliverers/judges whose long terms suggest a measure of stability rather than dramatic conquest. Jair’s thirty sons, thirty donkeys, and thirty cities reflect clan-based power and local status in Gilead, while the later Ammonite pressure shows how exposed the Transjordan tribes were to eastern aggression. The list of foreign gods reflects widespread syncretism, not merely isolated paganism, and the oppression by Philistines and Ammonites fits the covenant pattern of disciplined judgment on a rebellious people.
Central idea
After a brief period of relative stability under Tola and Jair, Israel once again abandons the Lord for widespread idolatry and falls under severe oppression. When the people finally confess their sin, remove their foreign gods, and submit themselves to God’s judgment, the Lord answers with covenantal severity but also with mercy, preparing the way for deliverance. The passage shows that Israel’s repeated apostasy is the root problem, and that God’s rescue is never a mechanical entitlement.
Context and flow
Judges 10 begins with two brief notices about minor judges, then turns sharply to the familiar but intensifying cycle of rebellion, oppression, confession, and deliverance-preparation. The unit follows the aftermath of Abimelech and functions as the bridge into Jephthah’s story in chapter 11. The divine speech in verses 11–14 is the interpretive center of the chapter: it explains Israel’s suffering as covenant judgment and exposes the emptiness of idolatry. The closing scene in Gilead and Mizpah sets the stage for the search for a military leader.
Exegetical analysis
Verses 1–5 are intentionally brief and function as a transition. Tola and Jair are described with little narrative detail, which suggests that their significance lies less in memorable exploits and more in the fact that the Lord preserved Israel through regional leadership for several decades. Tola is said to have “arisen to deliver Israel,” which may indicate real military or civic leadership, but the text does not highlight dramatic conflict. Jair’s thirty sons, thirty donkeys, and thirty cities point to a well-established clan network in Gilead; the donkey imagery likely reflects dignified, settled status rather than warlike power. The repeated notices of burial underscore the ordinary mortality of judges and the transience of their rule.
Verses 6–9 are the theological center of the unit. Israel “again” does evil, showing the deep pattern of covenant unfaithfulness that has marked the book. The list of gods is expansive: Baals and Ashtars, plus the deities associated with surrounding peoples. The point is not mere religious variety but wholesale syncretism and abandonment of Yahweh. The Lord’s anger leads to real historical judgment: he “turns them over” to oppressors. The oppression falls especially on the eastern tribes in Gilead, though the Ammonite threat spreads westward as well. The geography matters: Transjordan Israel is vulnerable and isolated, and the Ammonite crossing of the Jordan signals broader national crisis.
Verses 10–16 are structured as a confrontation between Israel’s confession and the Lord’s covenant indictment. The people’s first cry acknowledges sin, but the Lord answers by recalling previous acts of rescue and by refusing to treat their cry as a demand he must satisfy. His command to appeal to the gods they chose is rhetorical judgment: the false gods are impotent, and Israel’s own choices have consequences. The second response from Israel is more substantial. They do not argue, and they submit themselves to divine judgment: “You do to us as you see fit.” They also throw away the foreign gods, which shows repentance taking visible form. The final line does not mean God was emotionally exhausted in a crude sense; it is a vivid way of saying that his covenant compassion moved him to act despite Israel’s deserved suffering. The text does not yet narrate the deliverance itself, but it shows that mercy is beginning to break in.
Verses 17–18 function as the launch point for Jephthah’s story. The Ammonites gather; Israel gathers; and the leaders of Gilead look for someone to take command. The question of leadership is now urgent because Israel’s own unfaithfulness has left her weak and fragmented. The passage therefore moves from long-lived but unimpressive judges, to apostasy and judgment, to penitence, and finally to the search for a savior-like leader.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This unit stands squarely within the Mosaic covenant history of Israel in the land. Israel has received covenant privilege, but her persistent idolatry brings covenant curses rather than blessing. The Lord’s pattern of oppression, cry, rebuke, and mercy reflects the sanctions and mercy provisions already embedded in the covenant storyline, while the repeated need for judges exposes the inadequacy of temporary deliverers. The passage thereby intensifies the biblical need for a more faithful, enduring ruler and deliverer, without collapsing the original historical meaning into later fulfillment.
Theological significance
The passage reveals that idolatry is not a small lapse but covenant abandonment. It also shows that God’s anger against sin is real and historically acted out in discipline. At the same time, the Lord remains merciful and responsive to genuine repentance, especially when repentance includes the rejection of false gods and submission to his judgment. The text teaches that confession without change is shallow, but also that divine mercy is not earned; it flows from God’s own covenant compassion. It further underscores the limits of human leadership: even stable judges cannot solve Israel’s deeper spiritual problem.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No major prophecy, typology, or symbol requires special comment in this unit, though the recurring judge cycle does heighten the expectation for a better, more faithful deliverer than the temporary judges of Israel.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The passage reflects strong clan and household thinking. Jair’s sons and cities indicate a family network exercising local authority, and riding donkeys likely signals rank and settled administration rather than military display. The scene also reflects covenantal honor-shame logic: Israel has dishonored the Lord by choosing other gods, and the Lord’s response publicly exposes the futility of those choices. The leaders of Gilead seeking a commander shows a tribal confederation under pressure rather than a centralized state.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
Within Judges, this episode deepens the need for a ruler who is both faithful to the Lord and able to secure lasting deliverance. The temporary judges can preserve order for a time, but they cannot cure the nation’s covenant rebellion. Later Scripture will move toward kingship, especially the Davidic line, as a more stable form of leadership; yet even that remains incomplete and points beyond itself to the need for the final, truly righteous deliverer. Christ fulfills that trajectory as the obedient, authoritative Savior who rescues not only from enemies but from sin itself, while the original passage remains rooted in Israel’s historical covenant life.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God takes idolatry seriously, including religious compromise that mixes his worship with rival loyalties. Repentance should include honest confession, rejection of false gods, and humble submission to God’s justice. The passage warns against treating past experiences of deliverance as a guarantee of future rescue apart from faithfulness. It also reminds leaders that stable administration is not enough when a people’s deepest need is covenant loyalty to the Lord. Finally, it encourages reverence for God’s patience: he may delay judgment and yet still act mercifully when his people turn back to him.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive issue is the force of the Lord’s statement in verses 13–14 and the final line in verse 16. The divine refusal is rhetorical and covenantal, not a denial that mercy can ever be shown to repentant Israel; verse 16 indicates that the Lord does in fact move toward relief. The closing statement about the Lord growing tired of Israel’s suffering should be read as vivid anthropopathic language expressing divine compassion rather than a claim of literal fatigue.
Application boundary note
Do not flatten this passage into a generic promise that any cry for help produces immediate deliverance. Its logic is covenantal and Israel-specific, and it must not be used to erase Israel’s historical role or to collapse Old Testament judges into direct church analogies. Also, do not over-symbolize the details of Jair’s sons, donkeys, and cities; the text is making a historical and social point, not hiding a secret allegory.
Key Hebrew terms
hāraʿ
Gloss: evil, badness, wickedness
This covenantal term describes Israel’s moral rebellion, not merely a mistake or misfortune. It frames the repeated judges cycle as true covenant infidelity.
ʿāzəvû
Gloss: forsook, left, abandoned
Israel’s core sin is not only idolatry but abandoning Yahweh himself. The word highlights relational and covenantal breach.
zāʿaq
Gloss: cry for help
The cry signals distress and appeal, but in Judges it does not automatically guarantee divine rescue apart from genuine repentance and covenant alignment.
yāšaʿ
Gloss: save, deliver
Deliverance is a recurring judges theme and belongs ultimately to the Lord. Human judges are instruments, not the final source of salvation.
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