The birth of Samson
In the midst of Israel’s judgment, the LORD graciously announces and begins the birth of a specially consecrated deliverer who will start Israel’s rescue from the Philistines. The passage emphasizes divine initiative, holy separation, and the mystery of God’s presence more than Samson’s own ability.
Commentary
13:1 The Israelites again did evil in the Lord’s sight, so the Lord handed them over to the Philistines for forty years.
13:2 There was a man named Manoah from Zorah, from the Danite tribe. His wife was infertile and childless.
13:3 The Lord’s angelic messenger appeared to the woman and said to her, “You are infertile and childless, but you will conceive and have a son.
13:4 Now be careful! Do not drink wine or beer, and do not eat any food that will make you ritually unclean.
13:5 Look, you will conceive and have a son. You must never cut his hair, for the child will be dedicated to God from birth. He will begin to deliver Israel from the power of the Philistines.”
13:6 The woman went and said to her husband, “A man sent from God came to me! He looked like God’s angelic messenger – he was very awesome. I did not ask him where he came from, and he did not tell me his name.
13:7 He said to me, ‘Look, you will conceive and have a son. So now, do not drink wine or beer and do not eat any food that will make you ritually unclean. For the child will be dedicated to God from birth till the day he dies.’”
13:8 Manoah prayed to the Lord, “Please, Lord, allow the man sent from God to visit us again, so he can teach us how we should raise the child who will be born.”
13:9 God answered Manoah’s prayer. God’s angelic messenger visited the woman again while she was sitting in the field. But her husband Manoah was not with her.
13:10 The woman ran at once and told her husband, “Come quickly, the man who visited me the other day has appeared to me!”
13:11 So Manoah got up and followed his wife. When he met the man, he said to him, “Are you the man who spoke to my wife?” He said, “Yes.”
13:12 Manoah said, “Now, when your announcement comes true, how should the child be raised and what should he do?”
13:13 The Lord’s messenger told Manoah, “Your wife should pay attention to everything I told her.
13:14 She should not drink anything that the grapevine produces. She must not drink wine or beer, and she must not eat any food that will make her ritually unclean. She should obey everything I commanded her to do.”
13:15 Manoah said to the Lord’s messenger, “Please stay here awhile, so we can prepare a young goat for you to eat.”
13:16 The Lord’s messenger said to Manoah, “If I stay, I will not eat your food. But if you want to make a burnt sacrifice to the Lord, you should offer it.” (He said this because Manoah did not know that he was the Lord’s messenger.)
13:17 Manoah said to the Lord’s messenger, “Tell us your name, so we can honor you when your announcement comes true.”
13:18 The Lord’s messenger said to him, “You should not ask me my name, because you cannot comprehend it.”
13:19 Manoah took a young goat and a grain offering and offered them on a rock to the Lord. The Lord’s messenger did an amazing thing as Manoah and his wife watched.
13:20 As the flame went up from the altar toward the sky, the Lord’s messenger went up in it while Manoah and his wife watched. They fell facedown to the ground.
13:21 The Lord’s messenger did not appear again to Manoah and his wife. After all this happened Manoah realized that the visitor had been the Lord’s messenger.
13:22 Manoah said to his wife, “We will certainly die, because we have seen a supernatural being!”
13:23 But his wife said to him, “If the Lord wanted to kill us, he would not have accepted the burnt offering and the grain offering from us. He would not have shown us all these things, or have spoken to us like this just now.”
13:24 Manoah’s wife gave birth to a son and named him Samson. The child grew and the Lord empowered him.
13:25 The Lord’s spirit began to control him in Mahaneh Dan between Zorah and Eshtaol. Samson’s Unconsummated Marriage
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 chapter belongs to the late judges period, when Israel was fragmented, repeatedly unfaithful, and vulnerable to surrounding peoples. The Philistines’ forty-year domination signals a long season of covenant discipline and military weakness. Manoah’s family lives in Danite territory near the Philistine frontier, so the oppression is not abstract but local and immediate. The wife’s infertility intensifies the scene by placing human impossibility alongside divine initiative: the child is not merely wanted, but sovereignly given and set apart for a deliverer’s role. The messenger’s appearance and the later sacrifice fit the narrative’s claim that Israel’s rescue will come only by God’s direct intervention.
Central idea
In the midst of Israel’s judgment, the LORD graciously announces and begins the birth of a specially consecrated deliverer who will start Israel’s rescue from the Philistines. The passage emphasizes divine initiative, holy separation, and the mystery of God’s presence more than Samson’s own ability.
Context and flow
This unit begins the Samson account in Judges 13 after the book’s repeated cycles of apostasy and oppression. It serves as the annunciation and birth report that prepares for Samson’s adult actions in chapters 14–16. The movement runs from national distress, to miraculous promise, to divine confirmation, to birth and Spirit-empowerment.
Exegetical analysis
The chapter opens with the standard judges formula: Israel again does evil, and the LORD hands them over to Philistine rule for forty years. That introductory sentence matters because it frames everything that follows as both judgment and mercy. The deliverance does not begin with Israel’s repentance or a military cry for help, but with God’s initiative in raising a child who will begin to save Israel.
The announcement to Manoah’s barren wife mirrors earlier miraculous birth patterns in Scripture and deliberately highlights divine grace. The child’s prenatal restrictions are given to the mother, not because she is the deliverer, but because the child’s consecration begins before birth. The command to avoid wine, strong drink, and uncleanness, along with the prohibition on cutting the hair, marks Samson as set apart for God. The text does not merely predict unusual strength; it defines the child’s whole life as consecrated service. Significantly, the messenger says he will only "begin" to deliver Israel, which prepares readers for a partial and incomplete rescue rather than a final victory.
Manoah’s response is reverent but somewhat indirect. He prays for the messenger to return so he can be taught how to raise the child, which is a sensible request, but the narrative again centers the wife as the first recipient of revelation. When the messenger reappears, he repeats the instructions and insists that the wife must heed what was already said. This repetition confirms the certainty of the message while also showing that the revelation is not hidden mystery requiring special technique; it is a divine command requiring obedient reception.
The hospitality scene in verses 15–18 turns the encounter toward worship. Manoah wants to honor the visitor with a meal, but the messenger redirects him toward sacrifice to the LORD. The refusal to give his name is not evasiveness for its own sake; it is a boundary marker. The divine messenger cannot be controlled, honored on human terms, or reduced to a useful patron. Manoah’s altar gift is accepted, and the astonishing ascent of the messenger in the flame authenticates the encounter as a theophanic event. Only after this sign does Manoah realize the visitor’s identity, and only then does fear overwhelm him.
The wife’s reply is one of the most perceptive statements in the chapter. She reasons from God’s actions: if the LORD intended death, He would not have accepted the offering or given the promise. Her discernment contrasts with Manoah’s panic and shows the proper theological conclusion from gracious revelation. The chapter ends with the birth of Samson, his growth, and the LORD’s blessing through the Spirit. The closing line that the Spirit began to move him at Mahaneh Dan signals that the real power in the story is divine empowerment, not human potential. Samson’s later failures are not endorsed here; they are simply not yet in view.
Covenantal and redemptive location
Judges 13 stands in the Mosaic covenant era, after Israel has received the land but before the rise of the monarchy. The forty years of Philistine oppression display covenant discipline in the land, while the birth announcement shows that the LORD has not abandoned His people. Samson is a tribal deliverer raised up from within Israel, not a king or priestly reformer, so his story exposes the need for deeper and more stable leadership than the judges can provide. In the larger redemptive line, the passage keeps alive the hope of deliverance under God’s covenant mercy while also pointing beyond temporary judges toward a more faithful ruler and rescuer.
Theological significance
The passage teaches that God is sovereign over barrenness, oppression, and the timing of deliverance. It emphasizes that holiness and consecration matter from the beginning of life, that prayer for instruction is fitting, and that divine presence cannot be domesticated or manipulated. It also shows that the LORD can begin redemptive work through weak and ordinary family life, and that His Spirit—not human strength—is the source of effective deliverance.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No direct prophecy is given, but the chapter uses a recognizable pattern of miraculous birth to a barren woman and special divine consecration. That pattern contributes to the Bible’s broader deliverance motif, though Samson is only a partial and morally mixed deliverer, not a straightforward messianic type. The uncut hair functions as a sign of set-apart status, not as a magical source of power. Any typological reading should stay limited and text-governed.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The shame of infertility, the importance of a name, the seriousness of hospitality, and the fear of dying after seeing a divine messenger all fit the ancient honor/shame world of the text. Manoah’s desire to honor the visitor through a meal or gift reflects normal Near Eastern courtesy, but the narrative redirects honor to worship. The wife’s reasoning also reflects a concrete, cause-and-effect mode of thought: accepted sacrifice and spoken promise are evidence of divine favor.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
Within Judges, Samson’s birth shows that Israel’s deliverer must come by God’s Spirit and not by human merit. The larger biblical pattern of miraculous births to barren women strengthens the expectation that God Himself provides the agents of redemption. Samson, however, remains an incomplete and compromised judge, so his story increases the longing for a greater deliverer and king. In the full canon, that longing is answered ultimately in Christ, whose saving work is not limited by moral failure or partial obedience.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God’s rescue begins with grace, not human initiative. Parents and teachers should take seriously the responsibility of raising children under God’s call, but they must do so by receiving God’s instruction rather than relying on instinct alone. The passage also teaches that divine gifting and empowerment come from the Spirit, not from natural ability. Finally, believers should distinguish between being chosen for a task and being morally exemplary in every respect; Samson’s calling does not make all of Samson’s conduct a model.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive question is the strength of the Nazirite connection: the text strongly presents Samson as set apart from birth, even though it does not use the later language in a fully technical way throughout the narrative. The messenger’s statement that his name is too wonderful or beyond comprehension stresses transcendence rather than secrecy for its own sake.
Application boundary note
Do not turn Samson’s special birth into a general promise that every barren couple will receive a child or that every consecrated person will receive extraordinary power. Do not read his Spirit-empowerment as approval of his later moral failures. Also, do not flatten the passage into a generic lesson about personal destiny; it is first about God preserving Israel under covenant judgment.
Key Hebrew terms
ʿăqārâ
Gloss: barren, infertile
The wife’s barrenness highlights human inability and sets up the child’s birth as an act of divine grace rather than natural expectation.
nāzîr
Gloss: one set apart
Samson is marked as dedicated to God from birth; the passage strongly aligns him with Nazirite-like consecration, even though his later life will not display perfect obedience to that calling.
malʾakh YHWH
Gloss: messenger of the LORD
The messenger speaks with divine authority and then disappears in a theophanic sign, showing that the encounter is more than an ordinary angelic visit.
pālîʾ / peleʾ
Gloss: too wonderful, beyond understanding
The messenger’s refusal to disclose his name stresses transcendence; Manoah cannot master or fully comprehend the divine identity he is encountering.
rûaḥ YHWH
Gloss: Spirit of the LORD
The chapter ends by locating Samson’s emerging strength in the LORD’s Spirit, not in natural ability or heroic self-assertion.
Related Bible Maps
These external map and atlas resources may help locate the places mentioned in this page. External resources open in a separate browser context and are not copied, embedded, altered, hotlinked, or rehosted by AI Bible Commentary.
Related BibleHub Atlas Links
These links open BibleHub Atlas pages in a small external reference window. AI Bible Commentary does not copy, embed, alter, hotlink, or rehost BibleHub map images or atlas content.