Biblical judges (Hebrew: shôphatîm or shoftim שופטים) were leaders of the Israelites, which included the judicial and military roles. The office of judge differed from that of king only in the absence of hereditary succession (xii, 7-15). The position was filled by following the selection criteria stated in the Torah Exodus 18:20-22.
"And thou shalt teach them the statutes and the laws, and shalt show them the way wherein they must walk, and the work that they must do. Moreover thou shalt provide out of all the people able men, such as fear God, men of truth, hating unjust gain; and place such over them, to be rulers of thousands, rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers of tens. And let them judge the people at all seasons; and it shall be, that every great matter they shall bring unto thee, but every small matter they shall judge themselves; so shall they make it easier for thee and bear the burden with thee."[1]
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The Hebrew name of the book of Judges was transliterated by Origen Safateím and by St. Jerome Sophtim; it was translated into Greek by Melito and Origen Kritaí, by the Septuagint ì tôn kritôn bíblos or tôn kritôn, so too by the Greek Fathers; the Latins translated liber Judicum (or for short Judicum).
The Hebrew verb meant originally "to act in judgement", and was applied to God (Genesis 18:25), and to the prophet Moses acting as the specially inspired lawgiver and judge of Israel (Exodus 18:13, 16). In the same chapter Moses appointed leaders to act as judges on advice of his father in law Japhet. After Jehoshua's period of leadership, the elders of the Israelite tribes became the judges. In the book of Judges (2:16) the term judges (shôphitîm) is applied to the leaders of Israel, and is indicated that their right was from Divine apointment. The office of judge differed from that of king only in the absence of hereditary succession (xii, 7-15).
According to the introduction to the Book of Judges (2:10-3:6), after the death of Joshua[2], a new generation of Israelites grew up and rather than worshipping HaShem, instead worshipped the pagan Baal and the Asherah, provoking God to anger. These were led for a seventeen year period rule by elders that include Kalev, Pinchas and Eldad. God appointed judges, however on many occasions the people did not listen to the judges and refused to obey God's commands. Even though God raised up judges for them several times, each time the judge died and they went back to their old ways. Finally (Judges 2:20-23) it is revealed that it was part of God's plan for the Israelites to be unable to drive out the remnant Canaanite tribes which were left to test whether the people would "keep the way of the Lord and walk in it as their forefathers did".
The extreme repentance and outcry to God that came from the tribes of Israel resulted in God appointing the first judge as saviour (Moshiah) (Judges 3:9) of the people
| Judges in the Bible |
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| In the Book of Joshua |
| Joshua |
| In the Book of Judges |
| Othniel |
| Ehud |
| Shamgar |
| Deborah and Barak |
| Gideon |
| Abimelech |
| Tola |
| Jair |
| Jephthah |
| Ibzan |
| Elon |
| Abdon |
| Samson |
| In the Book of Samuel |
| Samuel |
The following (in order) are identified as Judges in the Book of Judges (Hebrew: ספר שופטים)[3]
It is worth noting that the Phoenicians, according to the Roman historian Livy, called their city states' chief magistrates suffetes (XXVIII, xxxvii), apparently a cognate title, and gave to the two suffetes of Carthage a power analogous to that of the Roman consuls (XXX, vii; XXXIV, lxi).
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