A.B.D
Arabic Bible Dictionary
DEBORAH
DEBORAH a bee. (1.) Rebekah’s nurse. She accompanied her mistress
when she left her father’s house in Padan-aram to become the wife of Isaac
(Genesis 24=>59). Many years afterwards she died at Bethel, and was
buried under the “oak of weeping”, Allon-bachuth (35=>8).
(2.) A prophetess, “wife” (woman?) of Lapidoth. Jabin, the king of Hazor,
had for twenty years held Israel in degrading subjection. The spirit of
patriotism seemed crushed out of the nation. In this emergency Deborah
roused the people from their lethargy. Her fame spread far and wide. She
became a “mother in Israel” (Judges 4=>6, 14; 5=>7), and “the children of
Israel came up to her for judgment” as she sat in her tent under the palm
tree “between Ramah and Bethel.” Preparations were everywhere made by
her direction for the great effort to throw off the yoke of bondage. She
summoned Barak from Kadesh to take the command of 10,000 men of
Zebulun and Naphtali, and lead them to Mount Tabor on the plain of
Esdraelon at its north-east end. With his aid she organized this army. She
gave the signal for attack, and the Hebrew host rushed down impetuously
upon the army of Jabin, which was commanded by Sisera, and gained a
great and decisive victory. The Canaanitish army almost wholly perished.
That was a great and ever-memorable day in Israel. In Judges 5 is given the
grand triumphal ode, the “song of Deborah,” which she wrote in grateful
commemoration of that great deliverance. (See LAPIDOTH, JABIN [2].)