Difference between revisions of "Devorah and Barak's Battle in Prose and Poetry/0/en"

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<li><b>Location</b> – It is natural that only Kishon, the site of the main battle, is mentioned in the narrow scoped prose account, while Ta'anakh and Megiddo, the sites of the other skirmishes,<fn>It is likely that these are just two examples of such battles, and that really Devorah's forces fought against most of the remaining Canaanite strongholds that are mentioned in Shofetim 1.</fn> are mentioned in the more sweeping poetic account.</li>
 
<li><b>Location</b> – It is natural that only Kishon, the site of the main battle, is mentioned in the narrow scoped prose account, while Ta'anakh and Megiddo, the sites of the other skirmishes,<fn>It is likely that these are just two examples of such battles, and that really Devorah's forces fought against most of the remaining Canaanite strongholds that are mentioned in Shofetim 1.</fn> are mentioned in the more sweeping poetic account.</li>
 
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<p><b>Local Harmonization</b> – Many exegetes give local answers to each of these discrepancies:</p>
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<p><b>II. Local Harmonization</b> – Many exegetes give local explanations to each of the discrepancies:</p>
 
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<li><b>Number of soldiers&#160;</b>– Targum Pseudo Jonathon and <multilink><a href="RashiShofetim5-8" data-aht="source">Rashi</a><a href="RashiShofetim5-8" data-aht="source">Shofetim 5:8</a><a href="R. Shelomo Yitzchaki (Rashi)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Shelomo Yitzchaki</a></multilink> claims that this refers to the number of enemy soldiers,<fn>This is a difficult reading and requires Rashi to both invert the order and add words into the original verse so that it reads "מָגֵן אִם יֵרָאֶה וָרֹמַח בְּיִשְׂרָאֵל [שנחלמים] בְּאַרְבָּעִים אֶלֶף".</fn> while <multilink><a href="RadakShofetim5-8" data-aht="source">Radak </a><a href="RadakShofetim5-8" data-aht="source">Shofetim 5:8</a><a href="R. David Kimchi (Radak)" data-aht="parshan">About R. David Kimchi</a></multilink>suggests that the verse is contrasting the present conflict with Yehoshua's Conquest and so the number refers not to Barak's men but to the amount of front line soldiers from Gad and Reuven.<fn>He suggests that the verse is contrasting the fate of the people who worship idols who find themselves in war, with those loyal to Hashem who did not even need weapons when at war since Hashem fought for them.</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Number of soldiers&#160;</b>– Targum Pseudo Jonathon and <multilink><a href="RashiShofetim5-8" data-aht="source">Rashi</a><a href="RashiShofetim5-8" data-aht="source">Shofetim 5:8</a><a href="R. Shelomo Yitzchaki (Rashi)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Shelomo Yitzchaki</a></multilink> claims that this refers to the number of enemy soldiers,<fn>This is a difficult reading and requires Rashi to both invert the order and add words into the original verse so that it reads "מָגֵן אִם יֵרָאֶה וָרֹמַח בְּיִשְׂרָאֵל [שנחלמים] בְּאַרְבָּעִים אֶלֶף".</fn> while <multilink><a href="RadakShofetim5-8" data-aht="source">Radak </a><a href="RadakShofetim5-8" data-aht="source">Shofetim 5:8</a><a href="R. David Kimchi (Radak)" data-aht="parshan">About R. David Kimchi</a></multilink>suggests that the verse is contrasting the present conflict with Yehoshua's Conquest and so the number refers not to Barak's men but to the amount of front line soldiers from Gad and Reuven.<fn>He suggests that the verse is contrasting the fate of the people who worship idols who find themselves in war, with those loyal to Hashem who did not even need weapons when at war since Hashem fought for them.</fn></li>

Version as of 06:18, 3 August 2016

Devorah's Battle in Prose and Poetry

This topic has not yet undergone editorial review

Introduction

The tale of Devorah and Barak's clash with the Canaanite forces bears the distinction of being the only battle in the entire book of Judges described in both prose (Shofetim 4) and poetry (Shofetim 5).  Despite the difference in genre, the two accounts share much in common and clearly tell the same overall story.  In several instances the chapters supplement each other, each providing details lacking in the other.  In other cases, however, the lyrical retelling diverges significantly from the original narrative, even appearing to contradict its version of events.   

Points of Contrast

There are several points of contrast between the stories.  A summary chart can be found below.

  • Praise of Hashem – Devorah's song opens with praise to Hashem and a description of the revelation at Sinai, all of which is lacking from the original account of the battle in Chapter 4.
  • Israelite leadership – While Chapter 4 emphasizes the military leadership of Barak,1  leaving Devorah to fade into the background,2 Chapter 5 features Devorah more prominently.3
  • Participating tribes – In the prose account, only the tribes of Zevulun and Naftali are mentioned as participating in the battle (4:10). The poetic account, in contrast, speaks also of Ephraim, Binyamin, Menasseh, and Yissakhar (4:14-18).
  • Number of soldiers – According to Chapter 4, Barak's army consisted of 10,000 soldiers (4:6,10,14), yet Chapter 5 speaks of 40,000 men (5:8).
  • Enemy forces – The only enemies mentioned in the prose version are Yavin, the king of Canaan, and Sisera, his general (4:2-3, 23-24). The song, however, includes also the "kings of Canaan" (5:19).
  • Location of the battle – Chapter 4 sets Mt. Tavor and Nachal Kishon as the site of the battle (4:13), while Chapter 5 mentions Ta'anakh and Megiddo as well (5:19,21).
  • Hashem's role – While the prose account has Hashem causing pandemonium in Sisera's camp ("וַיָּהׇם י"י אֶת סִיסְרָא"), the poem speaks of the stars fighting and the Kishon River sweeping away the enemy (5:20-21).
  • Sisera's mother – Devorah's song ends with an image of Sisera's mother worrying about her son's delay home.  No equivalent is found in Chapter 4.

Analysis

Several of the differences listed above can be easily explained via the different genre and purpose of the two narratives.  Since Chapter 5 is a song of thanksgiving said after the victory, it is not surprising that it, rather than Chapter 4, contains praise of Hashem.  Similarly, it is fitting that Chapter 4's prosaic mention of facts such as the enemies' confusion or the death of Sisera are replaced in the poem with literary images such as warring stars and the mourning mother of Sisera.4  Many of the other differences, however, are more difficult to explain, as they are not merely poetic flourishes but conflicting facts, incongruous with the description of Chapter 4. Attempts to explain these are discussed below:

I. Different Perspectives   This approach suggests that the war of Devorah and Barak was much broader than originally assumed and included both a main battle against Sisera, and a series of smaller battles against other Canaanite pockets that were left in the land from the time of the Conquest.5 The discrepancies between the two accounts can be explained in light of this double war.  While Chapter Four looks at the battle through a zoom lens, focusing on only the central battle in Kishon, Chapter Five, in contrast, looks through a wide angle lens, taking in the scope of the entire war:

  • Enemy forces – Yavin, the "King of Canaan" ruled over not just one city-state, but rather commanded an entire confederacy of Canaanite armies.6  Thus, his general, Sisera, headed the main battle, described in Chapter 4, while the other kings participated in the rest of the war, depicted in the broader poetic account of Chapter 5.
  • Israelite Leadership  – Barak knew that his local army was not strong enough to face an entire confederation of Canaanite kings, so he asked Devorah to help him form a counter coalition.7  While Barak, from the oppressed tribe of Naftali, led the battle against Sisera in his own territory,8 Devorah, from Ephraim,9 garnered support from the other central tribes to fight the rest of the Canaanites in their home-region.10 Chapter 4, which focuses on the main battle, naturally highlights Barak's role, while Chapter 5 which looks at the whole war, vacillates between mention of the two leaders.
  • Participating tribes – Chapter 4 mentions only the tribes of Naphtali and Zevulun since it depicts only the Battle of Kishon in the North, which was fought exclusively by these subjugated tribes.  Chapter 5, instead, praises also those tribes who participated in the battles with Devorah in the center of the country.11 
  • Number of soldiers - Though there were only 10,000 soldiers in Barak's army,12 Devorah praises all the soldiers in the entire coalition, which numbered 40,000.
  • Location – It is natural that only Kishon, the site of the main battle, is mentioned in the narrow scoped prose account, while Ta'anakh and Megiddo, the sites of the other skirmishes,13 are mentioned in the more sweeping poetic account.

II. Local Harmonization – Many exegetes give local explanations to each of the discrepancies: