 

"The scepter shall not depart from Judah, nor a
lawgiver from between his feet until Shiloh comes [or "until he comes to Shiloh"]
and to him shall be the obedience of the peoples" - Genesis
49:10.

The Primacy of the Tribe
of Judah
After Reuben, Simeon
and Levi were deprived of their birthrights, the leadership over the
sons of Jacob fell upon the shoulders of Judah, the fourth son of
Jacob, who became chief among his brothers. He not only became the
spokesman to and for his brothers (Genesis 37:26-27; 43:3-4, 8-9;
44:14,16, 18-34), but he was also made the principal delegate by Jacob
their father (Genesis 46:28). Judah's descendants were first in the
order of the tribes in their tents (Numbers 2:3), and in the march
through the wilderness (Numbers 2:9). The tribe of Judah was the first
to offer the offering on the first day (Numbers 7:11-12), and they led
all the rest of the tribes in the conquest of the land of Canaan
(Judges 1:1-2), and in the battles against the tribe of Benjamin
(Judges 20:18). The first Judge of Israel was Othniel of the tribe of
Judah ( Judges 3:9-11). "Judah is My lawgiver" (Psalm 60:7[9],
108:8[9]) said the Lord, "and the Lord said, 'Judah first' " (Judges
20:18; 1:1-2) until He came to Shiloh.

The
Departing of the Authority of Judah
In saying "the
scepter [SHEBET] shall not depart [SUR] from Judah..." (Genesis
49:10), Jacob prophesied that Judah's sovereignty or leadership would
not cease until certain things came to pass. The Hebrew word SHEBET
means "rod" of authority (Exodus 21:20; Psalms 23:4; 74:2; Jeremiah
10:16; 51:19; Micah 7:14) or correction (Proverbs 10:13; 13:24; 22:15;
23:14; 26:3; 29:15). Thus, when the Lord said in Zechariah 10:11 that
the "scepter [SHEBET] of Egypt shall depart [SUR]," He meant that
Egypt's sovereignty would cease.
When did Judah's
"scepter" of authority start to "depart" and his initial leadership
begin to wane? We shall see that from the time the twelve tribes came
to assemble in Shiloh, Judah's primacy declined and Benjamin's
ascended to gain the ruler's scepter.

Shiloh
Shiloh is located
about nineteen miles north of Jerusalem to the east of the road that
goes up from Jerusalem to Shechem via Bethel. In the Bible it is
described as being situated "on the north side of Bethel on the east
of the highway that goes up from Bethel to Shechem" (Judges
21:19).
Following the subjugation of the land, the Ark of the Covenant
which had been kept at Gilgal 1 during the conflict, was transferred to Shiloh and kept
there from the last days of Joshua to the time of Samuel the seer (1
Samuel 4:3). It was in Shiloh, when at last "the land was subdued
before them" (Joshua 18:10), that the final division for the land for
the children of Israel took place. "Joshua cast lots for them in
Shiloh before the Lord" (Joshua 18:10) and the lot of Benjamin came up
first (Joshua 18:11-28), then the tribes of Simeon, Zebulon, Issachar,
Asher, Naphtali and Dan received their lots and the division of the
land was completed. Also in Shiloh, the tribe of Levi obtained by lot
the forty-two Levitical cities (Joshua 21:1-41[39]) situated among the
twelve tribes. These were to be the habitations of the priests and
other members of the Levite clan whom the Lord scattered among His
people so that every tribe would benefit from the religious guidance
and teachings of His priestly tribe. From these cities the Levites
went to serve in the Tabernacle a part of each year. The remainder of
the time they occupied themselves in agricultural work in the fields
which adjoined their homes among the tribes. According to the
instructions of Moses (Numbers 35:6-28), six cities of refuge (Joshua
20:1-9) were added to the forty-two Levitical cities given to the
priestly tribe at the time of the final division of the land in Shiloh
(Joshua 19:51).
There was something
special about Shiloh because it was while the Tabernacle was in Shiloh
that the Lord gave His people "rest all around according to all that
He had sworn to their fathers. And not a man of all their enemies
stood against them; the Lord delivered all their enemies into their
hand" (Joshua 21:44[42]). This occurred in the place where the Lord
said He was to set His name: Shiloh (Deuteronomy 12:5,11,21; 14:23-24;
16:6,11; 26:2; Jeremiah 7:12), a place designated by Him where He was
to be worshipped by His people Israel. It was while the Ark of the
Covenant was in the Tabernacle at Shiloh that all the tribes were able
to assemble in peace because all the land was subdued before them, and
they finally had rest in Shiloh (Joshua 18:1).

Shiloh and
the Lord of Hosts
Shiloh was the
original place where the Lord was honored in His title: "the Lord of
Hosts" (1 Samuel 1:3,11; 4:4) who is in that designation the "God of
Israel" (1 Samuel 1:11,17; 1 Chronicles 17:24, Psalm 59:5[6]; Isaiah
21:10; 37:16; Jeremiah 7:3,21; 9:15[14]; 16:9; 19:3,15; 25:27: 4,21;
28:2,14; Zephaniah 2:9 etc). Furthermore, it is in His title as "Lord
of Hosts" that the Lord is called "King": "I have seen the King; the
Lord of Hosts"; "the King, whose name is the Lord of Hosts" (Isaiah
6:5; Jeremiah 46:18; 48:15; 51:57; Zechariah 14:16). "O Lord of Hosts,
my King and my G-d" (Psalm 84:3[4]); "The Lord of Hosts, He is the
King of glory (Psalm 24:10). "I am a great King, says the Lord of
Hosts" (Malachi 1:14), and "the Lord of Hosts shall reign" (Isaiah
24:23). The Lord of Hosts did reign over His people in Shiloh although
they did not realize it at the time and asked to be ruled instead by
an earthly king (1 Samuel 8:7,5,22; 10:19; 12:12-13; Hosea
13:9-10).
It was in Shiloh
that "the Lord of Hosts" dwelt enthroned between the two Cherubim of
the Ark of the Covenant (1 Samuel 1:3; 4:4; Psalm 99:1; Isaiah 37:16).
And while in Shiloh, the Lord "plainly revealed" (1 Samuel 2:27,
Literal Translation) Himself to Eli, something He had not done to the
members of the tribe of Levi while they were still in Egypt subject to
Pharaoh. Then, for a time the Lord of Hosts hid Himself because of the
wickedness of the sons of Eli (1 Samuel 2:12-17, 22) but "the Lord
appeared again in
Shiloh, for the Lord revealed Himself to Samuel in Shiloh" (1 Samuel
3:21), when young Samuel came to maturity. And while the Tabernacle
was in Shiloh, the Lord of Hosts revealed to the people what they were
to do, He answered them through the use of the oracular stones found
in the breastplate of the high priest: "the Demonstration and Truth
(i.e., the Urim and
Thummim)
revealed all things in Shiloh" (Ps.Philo. Biblical Antiquities 22.9). For
Shiloh was the place of "the Lord of Hosts, the G-d of Israel" who is
the Revealer of all things (2 Samuel 7:27, Isaiah 21:10; 22:14; Amos
4:13), and who revealed Himself through His Word in Shiloh (1 Samuel
3:21).
From the time of
Moses and the Exodus, when G-d tabernacled with His people in the
wilderness (Leviticus 26:11), the specific place where the
Shekhinah (the Divine
Presence) rested and where it presided, was in the "mercy seat"
[KAPPORETH = "covering" or "top"], the pure gold lid of the Ark of the
Covenant. The Lord had said to Moses that from "there I will meet with
you, and I will speak with you from above the mercy seat, from between
the two cherubim which are on the Ark of the Testimony, of all the
things which I will give you in commandments to the children of
Israel" (Exodus 25:22, see also Exodus 29:42-43; 30:6,36; Numbers
7:89).
Ever since the Lord
overwhelmed the Egyptian army at the parting of the Red Sea (Exodus
14:21-31; 15:3-11), and all through the wanderings in the wilderness
and the conquest of the promised land, "the Lord G-d of Israel fought
for Israel" (Joshua 10:42). "The Lord your G-d is He who fought for
you"; "the Lord your G-d He is the One who fights for you as He has
promised," said Joshua to His people Israel (Joshua 23:3,10, see also
v.9; 10:14; Exodus 14:13-14; 23:27-30; 34:11; Deuteronomy 3:22;
11:23).

Shiloh the
Place of Rest
We know that when
His people crossed the Jordan at the commencement of the conquest of
the promised land, the Ark of the Covenant was borne to the Tabernacle
set up in Gilgal. And while the Ark rested at Gilgal the Lord fought
with His people Israel against the Canaanites. But when at last the
land was subdued before them, the Ark of the Covenant was transported
from Gilgal and set up in the Tabernacle erected in Shiloh. There, in
Shiloh the people reposed at long last with the Lord for "the Lord had
given rest to Israel from all their enemies round about" (Joshua
23:1). Having overcome his enemies in battle, a king returns to sit in
his throne and reign, receiving there the homage of his people. That
was what the Lord desired from Israel when there was peace at last
"and the whole congregation of the children of Israel assembled
together at Shiloh and set up the Tabernacle of the congregation
there" (Joshua 18:1).
Long ago, while His
people were still in the wilderness, Moses prophesied to them that
"when you cross over the Jordan and dwell in the land which the Lord
your G-d is giving you to inherit, and when He gives you rest from all
your enemies round about so that you dwell in safety; then there shall
be a place which the Lord your G-d shall choose to cause His name to
dwell" (Deuteronomy 12:10-11). That place was Shiloh (Jeremiah 7:12;
Joshua 18:1; 23:1), "the place of rest" (Deuteronomy 12:9) from all
the fighting, and the place of peace. "Shiloh...this was the resting
place" said the sages of Mishnah (Zebahim 14:6 and Sifre ad loc.), and
Shiloh was considered a very holy place by them (Megillah 1:11,
Mishnah [Oral Law] ), because it was not only the locality chosen to
be where the Lord's name was to "dwell" [SHAKEN as in Deuteronomy
12:11; 14:23; 16:2,6,11], but also to be "set" [SUM as in Deuteronomy
14:24].

The Ark of
G-d, the Lord of Hosts
We know that on
"the Ark of G-d the Lord, who dwells between the cherubim, whose name
is called on it" (1 Chronicles 13:6), was the "mercy seat" [KAPPORETH]
the holy golden lid of the Ark and actual place where the Divine
Presence [SHEKHINAH] rested. If we desire to know by what name and
title the Lord was called in Shiloh, the place the Lord G-d did
"choose" out of all the tribes "to set [SUM] His name there"
(Deuteronomy 12:5), we search the Holy Scriptures. Thus, we discover
that "the Ark of G-d...the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord" (1 Samuel
3:3; 4:1,5) was for the first time called in Shiloh: "the Ark of the
Covenant of the Lord of Hosts who dwells between the
cherubim" (1 Samuel 4:4) for it is "the Ark of G-d whose name is
called by the Lord of Hosts" (2 Samuel 6:2).

The
Lord of Hosts, the G-d of the Armies of Israel
It is in His title
as the Lord of Hosts that "the Lord G-d of Israel fought for Israel"
(Joshua 10:42,14; 23:3,5,9-10 etc.) and led His people as "the Lord of
Hosts, the G-d of the armies of Israel" (1 Samuel 17:45). Furthermore,
it is as "the Lord of Hosts" that the Lord is particularly "the G-d of
Israel": "O Lord G-d of Hosts, the G-d of Israel" (Psalm 59:5[6]; 2
Samuel 7:26,27; Isaiah 48:2; Jeremiah 28:2; 29:4,25; 46:25; 48:1;
Zephaniah 2:9). Yes, "the Lord of Hosts is the G-d of Israel" (1
Chronicles 17:24), just as the Almighty is "the G-d of Jacob" (Psalm
81:1[2]; 94:7): "The Mighty One of Jacob" (Genesis 49:24; Psalm
132:2,5; Isaiah 49:26; 60:16; see also Genesis 48:3; Isaiah 10:21;
Book of Jubilees 27:11). Concomitantly, "the Lord of Hosts [is], the
Mighty One of Israel" (Isaiah 1:24).

The Lord of
Hosts, the King of Israel
The Lord G-d of
Israel who fought for Israel is also "the Lord, the King of
Israel...the Lord of Hosts" (Isaiah 44:6) who is Israel's
"Redeemer" (ibid. 44:6; 43:14-15). The Lord of Hosts is not only the
King of Israel but "the King, the Lord of Hosts" (Isaiah 6:5;
Zechariah 14:16), shall also be "King over all the earth" (Zechariah
14:9). Thus, the prophet Isaiah saw "the Lord sitting upon a throne
high and lifted up," and heard the seraphim cry out to one another:
"Holy, Holy, Holy is the Lord of Hosts, the whole earth is full of His
glory!" (Isaiah 6:1,5).
Regarding the
forces of the inhabitants of the promised land who were led by their
kings, it was the Lord of Hosts, the King of Israel who "routed them
before Israel and killed them with a great slaughter...and struck them
down...because the Lord fought for Israel" (Joshua 10:10,14), as a
"Man of war" (Exodus 15:3). Before the conquest of the land, did not
Moses tell the people: "Hear, O Israel...on the verge of battle with
your enemies, do not let your heart faint, do not be afraid, and do
not tremble or be terrified because of them, for the Lord your G-d is
He who goes with you to fight for you against your enemies, to save
you" (Deuteronomy 20:3,4; 31:3-6; Joshua 23:10). When there was peace
at last and the land was subdued before them, the place the Lord
chose (Deuteronomy 12:11) to be at rest with His
people was Shiloh. It was in Shiloh that "the Lord of Hosts" who is in
that designation the "King of Israel" (Isaiah 44:6; 6:5; Zechariah
14:16) chose to reign as King over His people Israel and receive
homage and worship from them as "the Lord, the King of Israel...the
Lord of Hosts" (Isaiah 44:6). Moses foresaw that the Lord was to be
"King in Jeshurun 2 (a poetic name for Israel), when
the heads of the people and the tribes were gathered together"
(Deuteronomy 33:5), as they were in Shiloh (Joshua 18:1).

The Reigning
of the Lord of Hosts in Shiloh
It was after the
land was subdued by the help of the Lord that "the Ark of the Covenant
of the Lord of Hosts, who dwells between the cherubim" (1 Samuel 4:4),
was borne by the Levite priests to the newly erected Tabernacle in
Shiloh. It was there in "the place of rest" that the Lord of Hosts,
the victorious King of Israel, desired to sit enthroned among His
people. For we should not forget that "the Lord reigns" when "He sits
between the cherubim" (Psalm 99:1), and that He came to Shiloh to sit
and reign and be acclaimed King by His people Israel in the time of
peace. For, He is the same "Lord of Hosts...[who] makes wars to cease
even unto the ends of the earth" (Psalm
46:7[8],8[9]).
During the period
of the Judges of Israel, when there was renewed conflict with the
inhabitants of the land, Gideon the victorious deliverer and fifth
Judge of Israel, was opportuned by "the men of Israel" to "rule over
us" as a king. Gideon refused and said to them,"I will not rule over
you" for it is "the Lord who shall rule over you" (Judges 8:22,23) as
He indeed was doing from the time that the Ark of the Covenant of the
Lord of Hosts tabernacled in Shiloh. And Samuel the seer - just after
the people had hailed Saul ben Kish as their king - reminded the
Israelites "the Lord your G-d, was your King" (1Samuel 2:12, 8:7).
Nevertheless, they had demanded an earthly king to rule over them
instead of the Lord of Hosts, the G-d and King of
Israel.
When the Ark of the
Covenant crossed the Jordan River with the Israelites at the
commencement of the campaign for the possession of the promised land,
the first place the Tabernacle was set up was in Gilgal. There, it
remained as the central camp of the people during their seven year war
of the conquest against the forces of the thirty-one kings, which were
overcome by them with the help of the Lord (Joshua 12:24; Deuteronomy
7:23-24). It was when the hostilities had ceased and the land was
subdued before them that the Ark of the Covenant was transferred from
Gilgal to the Tabernacle set up in Shiloh: "the place of rest." For
just as Gilgal was the headquarters during the military campaign,
Shiloh was the place chosen by "the King, the Lord of Hosts" as a
resting place in the time of peace, and where He was to reign and
receive the homage and acclamation of His people. It was in Shiloh
that the Israelites came to know the very fitting name and title of
the Lord who fought for them, and helped them overcome the forces of
their enemies. And that name was "the Lord of Hosts," the G-d of
Israel and Marshal of all the myriads of His heavenly hosts ( Psalm
68:17[18]; 2 Kings 6:17; Habakuk 3:8; Daniel 7:10) - the Lord and King
of Israel.

The
Ceasing of the Authority of Judah when the Lord of Hosts Reigned in
Shiloh
Not until "the Ark
of the Covenant of the Lord of Hosts, who dwells between the cherubim"
(1 Samuel 4:4), came to Shiloh did the prominence and leadership of
the tribe of Judah cease. For while the Ark was yet in Gilgal, the
tribe of Judah still remained in the lead, as we read in the narrative
of the first division of the land among the tribes. Because it was in
Gilgal that Caleb of the tribe of Judah went to Joshua to claim and
receive his promised portion (Joshua 14:6-15; Numbers 14:24,30:
Deuteronomy 1:36), before the rest. And shortly after, when the land
was divided by lot, the first lot fell in favor of the tribe of Judah
(Joshua 15:1-63). But we no longer hear about Judah's tribe when the
Lord came to reign and be acclaimed and served by His people in
Shiloh, the place where He had set His name.

The
Resurgence of the Tribe of Judah in an Evil and Rebellious Time
"Now it came to
pass, a long time after the Lord had given rest to Israel (in Shiloh)
from all their enemies round about, that Joshua was old, and advanced
in age: (Joshua 23:1), and "Joshua died when he was one hundred and
ten years old" (Joshua 24:29; Judges 2:8). Having been exhorted by
Joshua (see Joshua chapters 23 and 24), His people remained faithful
and "Israel served the Lord all the days of Joshua and all the days of
the elders who outlived Joshua, and who had known all the works of the
Lord which He had done for Israel" (Joshua 24:31; Judges 2:7). But sad
to say, "another generation arose after them who did not know the Lord
nor the work which He had done for Israel. And the children of Israel
did evil in the sight of the Lord, and served the Baals and they
forsook the Lord G-d of their fathers who had brought them out of the
land of Egypt" (Judges 2:10-12). No longer did His people pay homage
to Him as "the King, whose name is the Lord of Hosts" (Jeremiah 46:18;
48:15; 51:57; Zechariah 14:16), and who had set His name in
Shiloh.
In that evil time
the tribe of Judah came to the fore again (Judges 1:1-18) "and the
Lord was with Judah" (Judges 1:19). And because the people were
oppressed once more and were sold into the hand of the king of
Mesopotamia, "the children of Israel cried to the Lord, and the Lord
raised up a deliverer for the children of Israel, who delivered them:
Othniel, the son of Kenaz, Caleb's younger brother" (Judges 3:9).
Thus, the first Judge of Israel was a member of the tribe of Judah,
and that tribe was again "first" (Judges 1:1-2; 20:18) as they were
before, and remained so, until certain things occurred anew involving
coming to Shiloh.

The
Emergence of the Primacy of the Tribe of Benjamin
In the marvelous
wisdom of G-d, it all began with the death of "a concubine from
Bethlehem in Judah", who "played the harlot" (Judges 19:1,2) against
her Levite husband who lived in the territory of the tribe of Ephraim.
After his concubine left him and went to live at her father's house in
Bethlehem-Judah for four months, the husband went to search for her,
having determined to win her back through tender persuasion. After he
had gained her affection, the Levite tarried at her father's house
until the evening of the fifth day. Then, contrary to the
father-in-law's admonition that they should remain that night and
leave early in the morning, the Levite abruptly left that evening with
his concubine on the journey back to their home near Mount Ephraim. By
the time that the sun had set, they were in Gibeah, a city in the
territory of the tribe of Benjamin, and there they sat down in the
open square of the city because no one offered to take them into their
house for a night's rest. Just then an old man came in from his work
in the field that evening (he was also from the area of Mount Ephraim
and a stranger too among the Benjamites of Gibeah); he brought them to
his house and provided them with shelter, food and
drink.
Now, as they were
enjoying themselves, certain men of the city, perverted men,
surrounded the old man's house beating on the door and saying to the
host: "Bring out the man who came to your house, that we may know him
carnally" (Judges 19:22). But the old man refused to do so and offered
them instead, his own virgin daughter along with the concubine of the
Levite for them to do as they wished. When the evil men did not listen
to him, the Levite then suddenly took his concubine and brought her
out to them. They proceeded to rape and abuse her all night letting
her go at daybreak. The woman then dragged herself to the old man's
house where her master was, and fell down by the outside door. When
the Levite arose in the morning and was getting ready to return to his
village, he found her fallen at the door with her hands in the
threshold. She made no response to his call, so he lifted her up and
placed her upon his donkey and returned to his dwelling place.
Entering his house, he took a knife, laid hold of his concubine, and
dismembered her limb by limb into twelve pieces. He then sent her
flesh to all the tribes in the territory of Israel, to incite them
against the Benjamite men of Gibeah responsible for the outrage done
to his concubine.
And so it was, that
all who saw it said: "No deed like this has been done or seen from the
day that the children of Israel came up from the land of Egypt until
this day" (Judges 19:30). Then, all the people were aroused when they
found out from the Levite, that the ones responsible for the vile deed
done to his concubine were certain men from the Benjamite city of
Gibeah. When all the men of Israel gathered together as one man
against that city, they first sent envoys throughout the territory of
the tribe of Benjamin demanding that they deliver up for punishment
and death, the wicked men of Gibeah responsible for the crime. But the
members of the tribe of Benjamin refused; instead, they gathered
themselves together throughout all their cities to go to battle
against the rest of the tribes of
Israel.
Four hundred
thousand men from all the other tribes, gathered together and encamped
against the twenty-six thousand seven hundred men of the tribe of
Benjamin who had barricaded themselves in the city of Gibeah. Then,
unexpectedly, the Benjamites came out of the city gates and fought
bravely against the massed army of Israel, and they cut to the ground
twenty-two thousand men of the other tribes before returning to
Gibeah. The following day, the men of Benjamin sallied forth once more
against the massed army of the rest of the tribes, killing eighteen
thousand of their men. But on the third day, with the help of the Lord
who promised the men of the rest of the tribes victory: "the Lord
defeated Benjamin before Israel, and the children of Israel destroyed
twenty-five thousand one hundred Benjamite combatants that day"
(Judges 30:35). Then, the armed men of Israel massacred all the rest
of the men, women and children of the tribe of Benjamin, setting fire
to all their cities and slaughtering their animals as well. The only
survivors of all the carnage and the sole remnant of the entire tribe
of Benjamin, were six hundred soldiers who had hidden themselves by
the rock of Rimmon, following the defeat of their forces (Judges
20:45-47).
When the rest of
the tribes saw that all that remained of the tribe of Benjamin were
those six hundred men, they were overwhelmed with grief and wept and
went to the house of G-d and cried out to Him: "O Lord G-d of Israel,
why has this come to pass in Israel that today there should be one
tribe missing in Israel?" (Judges 21:3). They had reason to be
distressed because women were no longer available to the men of
Benjamin from their own tribe nor from the daughters of the rest of
the tribes, because in the assembly of the tribes they had solemnly
sworn not to give any of their daughters in marriage to the men of
Benjamin (Judges 21:1,7).
While they were
debating among themselves what to do, some of the leaders of the
tribes noted that the inhabitants of the city of Jabesh-gilead 3
had not participated in the war against the tribe of Benjamin, and had
not come into the assembly to take the vow of all the tribes against
the tribe of Benjamin. In reprisal, "twelve thousand of the bravest
men" (Judges 21:10) from the rest of the tribes stormed the city of
Jabesh-gilead and slew all the people in it except "four hundred young
virgins" which they spared and "brought them to the camp at
Shiloh" (Judges 21:12). At Shiloh they gave these
four hundred young virgins of Jabesh-gilead as wives to the six
hundred men who were the sole remnants of the exterminated tribe of
Benjamin (Judges 21:9-14). But these young virgins were not sufficient
to provide a mate for each of the six hundred men of the remnant of
Benjamin. And as the men of the rest of the tribes had sworn an oath
that none of them would give his daughter to Benjamin as a wife
(Judges 21:1,7), the elders of the congregation devised a plan whereby
wives could be acquired by the men of Benjamin among their daughters,
without their breaking the solemn oath they had sworn by the Lord not
to give them any of their daughters as wives.

The
Tribe of Benjamin as the True Israel
The elders knew that every year
as prescribed by Moses, all the men of the tribes with their wives and
families had to convene at Shiloh, the place where the Lord was to set
His name (Deuteronomy 12:5,10-12, 21). They also knew that it was
customary, at the yearly festival, for the young daughters of all the
tribes to take part in the maiden dances held in the fields by the
vineyards of Shiloh. So when the time of the yearly festival came
around, the elders of the congregation gathered together the as yet
unwedded men of the tribe of Benjamin and commanded them to "go and
lie in wait in the vineyards and watch; and when the daughters of
Shiloh come out to dance in the dances, then come out of the vineyards
and seize each man his wife from the daughters of
Shiloh, and go to the land of Benjamin...and the men of Benjamin did
so; they took themselves enough wives for their number from those who
danced whom they caught. Then they went and returned to their
inheritance and they rebuilt the cities and dwelt in them" (Judges
21:20-21, 23). Thus, the tribe of Benjamin was not only preserved for
posterity by acquiring wives when they came to Shiloh,but through the
resulting intermarriages with the daughters of all the tribes,the
tribe of Benjamin became in itself a true congregation of
Israel by coming to
Shiloh. Is it any wonder that tradition says that the flag of Benjamin
is a veritable rainbow containing all the colors of the rest of the
tribes? (Midrash Genesis Rabbah 2.7; see also Baba Bathra 116a ;
Taanith 30b, Babylonian Talmud re the intimation that the tribe of
Benjamin married into all the rest of the tribes). Regarding the
commemoration of the fifteenth day of Ab as a day of rejoicing and of
open courtship between the youths and damsels of all the tribes, see
Gemara to Taanith IV.9,10, Jerusalem Talmud ; Baba Bathra 121a,
Babylonian Talmud. The celebrations of the fifteenth day of Ab, while
the Temple still stood in Jerusalem, commemorated "the day when the
tribe of Benjamin was allowed to reenter the community of Israel" at
Shiloh-(Midrash Lamentations Rabbah, Proem X X X I I ).

The Coming of Benjamin to
Shiloh
Portentous things did happen when the
tribe of Benjamin came to Shiloh. First of all, it was in Shiloh that
the rest of the tribes gathered together to inquire before the Lord as
to which tribe of their army was to lead the attack against the tribe
of Benjamin (Judges 20:18, Latin Vulgate Text 4). Then, after their
defeat, it was to Shiloh that the men of "Benjamin came again" (Judges
21:14) to receive the four hundred captive young virgins of
Jabesh-gilead given to them as wives by the rest of the tribes. And
once more, the remnant of the tribe of Benjamin came again to Shiloh
having been told by the elders of the other tribes to go and lie in
wait in the vineyards of Shiloh where the maidens of the rest of the
tribes went to dance at the yearly festival. Then, at the opportune
time they were to come out from where they were hiding, by the
vineyards of Shiloh, and every man was to seize for himself a mate
from the daughters of the rest of the tribes. Thus, through the
resultant intermarriages the tribe of Benjamin 5 became in itself a
composite of all the rest of the tribes, and a true Israel, as it were
- by coming to Shiloh.

"The scepter shall not
depart from Judah...until he [Benjamin] comes to
Shiloh" - Genesis 49:10
Now we know that in the mysterious wisdom
of G-d, it was by "coming to Shiloh" that the tribe of Benjamin was
able to bring to pass the resulting intermarriages that made Benjamin
a composite of all the rest of the tribes. As the true "Israel", the
tribe of Benjamin also incorporated into itself all the bloodrights
and birthrights to kingship. Which is why, when the tribes demanded
from Samuel a king (1 Samuel 8:5-6,10,19-20), and the Lord acquiesced
(1 Samuel 8:6-7,9,22), He sent Samuel a man from the tribe of
Benjamin: Saul ben Kish, whom the Lord chose (1 Samuel 9:15-17;
10:1,24; 15:17) to have Samuel anoint as the first King of Israel,
according to the demands 6 of His
people.
It may also be, that the
idea behind the desire of all the tribes to have their own king (1
Samuel 8:19-20), came about at the time when "a man of
Benjamin ran from the battle line, and came
to Shiloh" (1 Samuel 4:12) to let Eli (the high priest and
Judge of Israel who presided over the Tabernacle of the Lord in
Shiloh), know that the Ark of the Covenant, which the wicked sons of
Eli had brought to the battlefield, had been captured by the
Philistines, who then also killed the two sons of Eli, Hophni and
Phinehas, in the rout of the forces of
Israel.
The evil sons of Eli presumed
that because the Ark of the Covenant was the place where "the Lord of
Hosts, the G-d of the armies of Israel" (1 Samuel 17:45), who fought
for Israel (Joshua 23:3,5,9-10), was enthroned (1 Samuel 4:4), then
all they had to do was to carry the Ark to battle and the Lord would
scatter their enemies before them. But they had forgotten that the
Lord's aid was contingent upon their living righteously "or else...the
Lord your G-d will no longer drive out these nations from before you"
(Joshua 23:12,13). And so they were killed "and the Ark of G-d was
taken" (1 Samuel 4:11) by their enemies as a punishment because of
their corrupt ways (1 Samuel 2:12-17,27-34).
If we search the Holy Scriptures
we may find the hidden wisdom of G-d . Such as how something to do
with "Shiloh" results in a loss of leadership concerning the tribes of
Judah. In the time of King Saul, King David and King Solomon, who was
David's son, the kingdom of Israel was made up of all the twelve
tribes and their territories. King Solomon of the tribe of Judah
"reigned in Jerusalem over all Israel" (1 Chronicles 11;42). And when
"Solomon sat on the throne as King...all Israel obeyed him" (1
Chronicles 29:23) because he sat "on the throne of Israel" (1 Kings
10:9) and he "reigned in Jerusalem over all Israel" (1 Chronicles
11:42). There was a time when "Solomon loved the Lord and walked in
the statutes of his father David" (1 Kings 3:3), for as a young man he
pleased the Lord, and the Lord gave him great wisdom (1 Kings 3:12).
But contrary to the exhortations of Moses and the Torah (Deuteronomy
7:3,4) his many foreign "wives turned his heart after other gods, and
his heart was not loyal to the Lord his G-d as was the heart of his
father David...and Solomon did evil in the sight of the Lord" (1 Kings
11:4,6). "So the Lord became angry with Solomon, because his heart had
turned from the Lord G-d of Israel" (1 Kings 11:9) and as a punishment
He told Solomon that He would tear the kingdom away from him but for
the sake of Solomon's father David He would cause this to happen in
the reign of Solomon's son, King Rehoboam. Sure enough, this came to
pass, the kingdom of Solomon of the tribe of Judah, was torn in half
and ten tribes given to King Solomon's servant Jeroboam who became
their king and ruler by the agency of the Lord's prophet "Ahijah the
Shilonite" (see 1 Kings 11:29-37), the man from
Shiloh.

"The scepter shall not
depart from Judah...until Shiloh comes and to him shall be the
obedience of the peoples" - Genesis 49:10
Genesis 49:10 may be
rendered as in the previous section: "The scepter shall not depart
from Judah until he comes to Shiloh, etc." or it may be rendered as
above: "The scepter shall not depart from Judah...until Shiloh comes
and to him shall be the obedience of the peoples." In this rendering
"Shiloh," who shall come is considered to be a very important person
for "to him shall be the obedience of the peoples."
"Thus says the Lord G-d:
"Remove the mitre, and take off the crown...it shall be no more until
he comes whose right it is, and I will give it to
him"7
(Ezekiel 21:26[31], 27[32]. Ancient Jewish
tradition identified this mysterious person called "Shiloh" in Genesis
49:10, as being the Messiah:
"Until Shiloh comes": this alludes to the King
Messiah" - Midrash Genesis Rabbah 98.8, ibid 99.9
"The Messiah's name is Shiloh" - Midrash Lamentations
Rabbah I.16.51
The Targums [Ancient Aramaic
translations and paraphrases of the Hebrew Bible] are almost unanimous
in giving "Shiloh" a Messianic interpretation for they rendered
Genesis 49:10:
"Until the Messiah comes whose is the Kingdom" -
Targum Onkelos
"Until the time King Messiah shall come, whose is
the kingdom" - Targum Jerusalem
"Until the time King Messiah shall come whose is the
kingship" - Targum Neofiti I
"Until King Messiah shall come, the youngest of his
sons" - Targum Ps. Jonathan or Jerusalem I
There is great insight in
the extensive Targumic and rabbinic tradition (see Rashi ad loc.,
Sanhedrin 98b B.T.; Midrash Genesis Rabbah 98.8; 99.8; Tanchumah
Vayehi 10; Midrash haGadol I.735-739; Journal of Philology Vol. XIV
[1885] pp.4-22), that ascribes a Messianic interpretation to the
verse: "The scepter shall not depart from Judah...until Shiloh comes
and to him shall be the obedience of the peoples." They knew that
the ancestral right to kingly leadership, resting in the Davidic
line of the tribe of Judah, would cease at the coming of the
"Messiah, the son of David" (a common appellation of King Messiah
found in rabbinic writings). For the Messiah was the culmination of
the royal line originating from David, the first king of the tribe
of Judah. And just as King David was "the youngest" (1 Samuel 16:11;
17:14) of Jesse's sons, so the Messiah at the end of the line of
David's "sons" may be said to be "King Messiah...the youngest
8
of his [King David's] sons" -
Genesis 49:10. Targum Ps. Jonathan or Jerusalem Targum I.
The Septuagint [the
ancient Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible] had rendered it:
"Until he comes whose it is" - Genesis 49:10,
Septuagint
The scribes knew that what
belonged to him (the King Messiah) "whose it is," was the scepter,
the kingdom and the obedience of the peoples. Furthermore they also
knew that this mysterious personage was to have a very precious
heritage in store for him at his coming, which is why the later
redactors of the Septuagint rendered Genesis 49:10 in their
revisions:
"Until the things in store for him shall come" -
Theodotion, Septuagint Version
"Until for whom it is in store shall come" - Aquila
and Symmachus, Septuagint Versions.
What are the things that
are in store for the King Messiah as a treasure? They are the
precious things of G-d's wisdom, understanding and knowledge which
are his heritage because they shall all be fully understood by him.
From ancient times it was known that the Messiah was to be a great
teacher and revealer of "all the treasures of that which is hidden"
(Enoch 46:3), and from "his mouth is to pour forth all the secrets
of wisdom and counsel" (Enoch 51:3). For "in him dwells the spirit
of wisdom, and the spirit which gives insight, and the spirit of
understanding and of might" (Enoch 49:3; Isaiah 11:1-2). And these
gifts are given to make him "mighty [i.e., "mighty in the power of
understanding" - Job 36:5] in all the secrets of righteousness"
(Enoch 49:2) so that he may lead the people towards righteousness
and peace: "the peace of righteousness" (Baruch 5:4, see also Isaiah
32:17; 48:18; 60:17; Psalms 72:3; 85:8[9]; 119:165). Thus, His
people knew that "through the Messiah's teaching peace shall be
greatly increased upon us" (Targum on Isaiah 53:5; ibid. 54:13). And
along with that peace which the Messiah shall bring by making the
many righteous, will be their wonder and astonishment at the
marvelous wisdom, understanding and knowledge found in the precious
hidden things reserved by G-d for him. The scribes knew that "the
Torah which a man learnt in this world is vanity compared to the
Torah of the Messiah" (Midrash Ecclesiastes Rabbah 11.1). For "in
the days of the Messiah, the Torah shall return to its renewal"
(Pesikta Rabbati, fol.75a), because "the Messiah will make clear for
them the words of the Torah" (Midrash Genesis Rabbah 98.9, Sanhedrin
97a, Babylonian Talmud), and "the things which are concealed from
you, you will see" (Midrash Numbers Rabbah 19.6) -- in the days the
Messiah shall be revealed.

Shiloh has come
Shiloh is also the time
when the Lord shall reveal Himself in His word as He once did when
"the Lord revealed Himself to Samuel in Shiloh by the word of the
Lord." - 1 Samuel 3:21

1 Gilgal was the place, west of the Jordan,
where the Ark of the Covenant and all the tribes of Israel led by
Joshua encamped after they crossed the river into the land of
Canaan.Gilgal was situated "in the east border of Jericho"(Joshua
4:19).
In that
first crossing, the waters of the Jordan miraculously parted leaving
the whole channel dry so that the priests bearing the Ark, and all
the people behind them were able to pass over, to the other
side.Joshua told the people that this occurred "because the Lord
your G-d dried up the waters of the Jordan before you, until you had
passed over as the Lord your G-d did to the Red Sea (Exodus 14:21)
which he dried up before us until we had crossed over" (Joshua
4:23). "On that day the Lord magnified Joshua in the sight of all
Israel, and they held him in awe as they did Moses all the days of
his life" (Joshua 4:14).
It was when
all the tribes had completely crossed over the Jordan that the Lord
told Joshua to take twelve men, one from each tribe, and command
them to go to the middle of the Jordan where the Ark still stood.
There, each one of them was to take a large stone from the river bed
to Gilgal where all the stones were to be set up together as a
memorial (Joshua 4:1-10). "Then, the Ark of the Lord and the priests
crossed over in the presence of the people" (Joshua 4:11) to set up
the Tabernacle in Gilgal. It was then that "the waters of the Jordan
returned to their place, and flowed over its banks as before"
(Joshua 4:18).
Two
significant acts were done in Gilgal shortly after the crossing of
the Jordan by the tribes of Israel: all the males who were born in
the years spent in the wilderness were circumcised (Joshua 5:2-9),
and the Passover was celebrated in Gilgal as well because there, for
the first time, the people were able to make and eat unleavened
bread made from the grain of the land of Canaan. That year the
people no longer received manna but ate the food of the land (Joshua
5:10-11).
Gilgal was
the first place where the Ark of the Covenant was set up when the
people of Israel entered the promised land. It was their
headquarters during the years of the conquest,and the bivouac where
the Ark of the Lord of Hosts encamped, all through the years of the
conflict entailed in the conquest of the land. Thus, it was the
temporary tenting place of the Lord of Hosts; the King and G-d of
Israel during the time He led His people to vanquish their
enemies.
Then, when
at last the land was subdued and there was peace, the Ark of the
Covenant and the Tabernacle were transferred from Gilgal to be set
up in Shiloh, the place of rest. There, the Lord of Hosts, the King
of Israel chose to dwell and reign over His people Israel. And thus
the Lord was with His people in Gilgal when they were gathered
together in the time of war, but He was in Shiloh, when they were
gathered together in the time of peace.

2 Jeshurun, a term of
endearment used by the Lord for "Israel" (Deuteronomy 32:15;
33:5,26; Isaiah 44:2), is a Hebrew word related to the root YASHAR
which means "upright." Jeshurun would express the diminutive of
YASHAR i.e., "Israel" as the Lord's "little upright one." Thus, the
Greek (Septuagint) translation of the Hebrew bible rendered it
EGAPEMENOS = "beloved one" or "darling." The later redactors
(Aquila, Symmachus and Theodotion) of the Septuagint, render it
EUTHUS or EUTHUTATOS which means "straight" or "upright." The
Targums and Peshitta (Syriac) render Jeshurun: "Israel" (See also
Midrash Genesis Rabbah 77.1; Midrash Psalms 1.2, and Rashi and Ibn
Ezra ad loc.). We may say that Jeshurun is an endearing term for
Israel under its ideal character of being an upright "kingdom of
priests and a holy nation" (Exodus 19:6, see also Deuteronomy
14:2).
Thus, it is
written in Deuteronomy 33:5: "the Lord...He was King in Jeshurun
[i.e., "Israel" when it was an upright nation under Joshua and the
elders at Shiloh, see Joshua 18:1; 24:31]. We should remember that
the Lord of Hosts reigned in Shiloh then (1 Samuel 12:12,17,19;
8:17), but the people asked for an earthly king
instead.

3 Jabesh-gilead was a
central town in Gilead, a highland region east of the river Jordan
consisting of a ridge of mountains and hills stretching from Mt.
Hermon to Moab in the south. Gilead receives an abundant rainfall in
the winter and was in the days of the Judges heavily forested with
oaks and pines and rich pastureland. It was settled by the tribes of
Reuben, Gad and Manasseh. Jabesh-gilead was in the portion of Gilead
belonging to Manasseh ("half Manasseh" as the tribe also settled in
the territory directly across Jabesh-gilead in the western side of
the river Jordan). Reuben, Gad and Manasseh were pastoral tribes
with extensive herds of cattle. They were attracted to the rich
verdant and well watered pasturelands of Gilead and Bashan, the area
given by Moses to be shared by them (Numbers 32:1-4,29,33;
Deuteronomy 32:40; Joshua 17:5; 13:31-32 etc.). Jabesh-gilead was
principally a city of the tribe of Manasseh, but it was open to the
other two tribes. Such was the close relationship between the land
of Gilead and the tribe of Manasseh, that we see Manasseh's son
Machir referred to as "the father of Gilead" (1 Chronicles 7:14)
just as Salma the son of Caleb was called "the father of Bethlehem"
(1 Chronicles 2:51). Even King David in his Psalm associated
"Gilead" with "Manasseh" (Psalm 108:8[9]). If we would like to know
why the inhabitants of the city of Jabesh-gilead had not
participated in the war against the tribe of Benjamin nor taken the
vow of all the rest of the tribes against the tribe of Benjamin, it
was because there was a close relationship between the Manassites
(of Jabesh-gilead and Gilead) and the tribe of Benjamin. Long ago,
Machir (the son of Manasseh and his Aramitess concubine) married
Maachah, the granddaughter of Benjamin (1 Chronicles 7:14,15). We
should also note here that from Machir's blood-sister Hammokeleth,
was born Abiezer, the father of Joash who was the father of Gideon
(1 Chronicles 7:18; Judges 6:11).
And if we
would like to know why in the wisdom of G-d it was important for the
male remnant of the tribe of Benjamin to marry into the tribe of
Manasseh we have to go back to Reuben the firstborn of Jacob and
possessor of the putative right to kingship. We know that Reuben
lost his birthright as the eldest son when he lay with his father's
concubine Bilhah (Genesis 35:21-22), "and because he defiled his
father's bed, his birthright was given to the sons of Joseph, the
son of [Jacob-] Israel" (1 Chronicles
5:1).
Joseph had
two sons by his Egyptian wife, Asenath, the daughter of Poti-pherah,
priest of On (Genesis 41:50-52). Joseph's firstborn was Manasseh,
and Ephraim was his second son. When Jacob blessed the sons of
Joseph he gave the greater blessing to Ephraim (Genesis 48:19-20),
from whom sprung forth Joshua, the successor of Moses (Numbers
13:8,16). Nevertheless, as the acknowledged (Genesis 48:18)
firstborn of Joseph, Manasseh still retained the
birthright.
This may
explain why it was, first of all, to Gideon the Manassite fifth
Judge of Israel that the men of Israel said, "Rule over us [as King]
both you and your son and your grandson also" (Judges 8:22), to
which the loyal Gideon replied, "I will not rule over you, nor shall
my son rule over you, the Lord shall rule over you" (ibid. v.23).
Nevertheless, being a descendant of Manasseh, Gideon knew that his
tribe had the birthright to the kingship. Gideon now had his own
house (Judges 8:29), no doubt a large one, for in the manner of
kings he had a harem of many wives by whom he had seventy sons
(Judges 8:30); he also had a son by his concubine from Shechem (the
principal city of the territory allotted to the tribe of Ephraim).
And Gideon named that son Abimelech (literally, "my father is
King"), a common name of the kings of the land of Canaan (Genesis
20:2; Psalm 34 Title, compare 1 Samuel 21:10[11]-15[16]). Thus,
Abimelech was the offspring of a Manassite father [Gideon] and an
Ephraimite mother [Gideon's concubine from
Shechem].
By a
dastardly act (Judges 9:5), Abimelech became the first King of
Israel and it was "all the men [Ephraimites] of Shechem...[who] made
Abimelech King beside the terebinth tree that was in Shechem"
(Judges 9:6). "Abimelech reigned over Israel three years" (Judges
9:22).
We can see
how the two tribes of Manasseh and Ephraim came into play in the
reigning of the first King of Israel, for was it not said the
Reuben's birthright would be given "to the sons of Joseph" (1
Chronicles 5:1)? We see the same pattern in the reign of Jeroboam,
the first King of the ten tribes of Israel. Although commonly held
to be an Ephraimite, Jeroboam (1 Kings 11:26), was in reality a
Manassite, "son of Nebat an Ephrathite [not
Ephraimite] of Zereda" (a city in the territory of
the tribe of Manasseh), and he also reigned from Shechem (the
Ephraimite city) which he made the capital of the northern tribes
during his reign. We also have Jehu, another Manassite (see Midrash
Genesis Rabbah 82.4; Tanchumah, Buber, I.176; Pesikta Rabbati 3,
12b, Midrash Tadshe 8; Horayoth 3, 47c, Jerusalem Talmud), who in
consequence of a command given to Elijah (1 Kings 19:16; 2 Kings 9
and 10), was anointed King of Israel to replace Ahab. Jehu reigned
from Samaria (in the territory of Ephraim), the capital of the ten
tribes of Israel at that time.
Again, we
can see the wisdom of G-d in providing the remnant 600 men of the
tribe of Benjamin with 400 wives from Jabesh-gilead (a city of the
tribe of Manasseh) and 200 wives from the young women of all the
rest of the tribes who went to dance in the vineyards of Shiloh (a
city of the tribe of Ephraim).
Many years
later, when the Lord chose the tall, stalwart and handsome Saul ben
Kish of the tribe of Benjamin (1 Samuel 9:2,15-17; 10:1,23-24;
15:17), to be anointed King over His people Israel; the first act
that King Saul did was to raise an army of three-hundred and thirty
thousand men and come to the aid of the besieged city of
Jabesh-gilead freeing it, and slaying the forces of Nahash, the king
of the Ammonites who had laid siege to it. King Saul's rescue of the
people of Jabesh-gilead from certain slaughter at the hands of the
Ammonites, was always gratefully remembered by the inhabitants of
that city. For when later on in his life King Saul and his three
sons were slain by the Philistines in Mount Gilboa (1 Samuel
31:6,8), the valiant men of Jabesh-gilead came by night and took
down their bodies from the walls of Beth-shan where they had been
ignominiously nailed as trophies, these brave men then took their
remains and buried them under a tree at Jabesh, and fasted seven
days in mourning (1 Samuel 31:11-13). This honorable act of the men
of Jabesh-gilead was acknowledged and praised by King David (2
Samuel 2:4-7).

4 Judges 20:18,
Latin Vulgate. Eusebius Hieronymus better known as S.Jerome
(c.341-420) was the one who translated the Hebrew Bible into Latin
direct from ancient Hebrew scrolls that he had access to, that were
older than those of his time. He knew Hebrew and consulted rabbis of
the School of Tiberias in the Holy Land during the translation. The
Latin Vulgate of Judges 20:18 reads that the children of Israel
"arose and came to the house of G-d, that is, to Shiloh, and they
consulted G-d". For "the house of G-d was in Shiloh" (Judges
18:31, Hebrew Text) at the time.
It was in
"Shiloh," where the "house of G-d"
was, that the Lord was "consulted" as when "the children of Israel
arose and went up to the house of G-d and asked counsel of G-d"
(Judges 20:18, Hebrew Text), who dwelt in theTabernacle in Shiloh.
For it was there that "the whole congregation of Israel assembled
together at Shiloh, and set up the Tabernacle of the congregation
there" (Joshua 18:1). It was in the same place that they used to
consult the Lord (see Judges 1:1-2; 20:18,23,26-27), because Shiloh
was truly the place for receiving the good counsel and guidance of
the Lord because "the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord was there in
those days" (Judges 20:27; 1 Samuel 4:4-5). And the Ark of the
Covenant was the throne of the Lord of Hosts (Psalm 99:1; Isaiah
37:16), who is the Revealer of all things (2 Samuel 7:27; Isaiah
21:10; 22:14; Amos 4:13). Shiloh was also the holy place where the
high priest presided before the Tabernacle, and in whose breastplate
were the oracular stones known as the "Urim and Thummim" which
"revealed all things in Shiloh" (Ps. Philo, Biblical Antiquities
22.9). And again, it was also in Shiloh that the Lord "clearly
revealed" (1 Samuel 2:27) Himself to Eli, the high priest and Judge,
and to his successor "for the Lord revealed Himself to Samuel in
Shiloh" (1 Samuel 3:21).

5 Benjamin. It was very
appropriate that the tribe of Benjamin became in itself an "Israel"
composite of all the rest of the tribes. Because Benjamin, the
youngest of the twelve sons of Jacob- Israel, and patriarch of the
tribe of Benjamin, was the only one born in Israel among all his
brothers (they were born in Aram). Benjamin was also the only one
among them who was conceived after Jacob received his new name :
Israel (Genesis 32:27[28]-28[29]; 35:16-18). Thus, figuratively,
Benjamin could be rightly called later on,"Israel ben Israel."
Among the
sons of Jacob-Israel, Benjamin was the only one named by his father,
and he was innocent of the sale of his brother Joseph to the
Ishmaelites as a slave. And just as Jacob's chief son was Judah, so
was Israel's chief and only son: Benjamin. Jacob and all his sons
bowed before Esau but Benjamin did not because he was not yet
conceived. It is Benjamin who is called "the beloved of the Lord"
(Deuteronomy 33:12) in the Blessing of Moses, and our Jewish
tradition holds him to be sinless (Baba Bathra 17a; Shabbath 55b,
Babylonian Talmud; Targum on Ruth [end]; Zohar I.57b; Targum on Ruth
[end]; Maaseh Torah 94; see also Tanchumah, Buber I.198; Tanchumah
Mikkez 10; Aggadat Bereshith 74,146). Thus, the Ark of the Lord, for
the most part, rested in the territory of the tribe of Benjamin. And
even when the temple of Solomon was built in Jerusalem, the Holy of
Holies with the Ark inside was also situated in the portion of the
tribe of Benjamin. Yes, "Benjamin in whose possession the Sanctuary
shall stand in this world as well as in the time of the Messiah, and
in the future world" - Sifre to Deuteronomy 352; Midrash Tannaim
216-217; Megillah I.72d, Jerusalem Talmud; Zebaim 118b; Yoma 12a,
Babylonian Talmud; Mechilta Bachodesh 4.65b; Midrash Genesis Rabbah
99.1

6 Demands of His people.
When the Lord chose Saul ben Kish of the tribe of Benjamin to be the
Lord's first anointed king over His people, He did
so because they had demanded from Samuel a king according to their
expectations. His people had cried out to Samuel: "Make us a
king...give us a king...we want a king over us...to go out before
us, and fight our battles" (1 Samuel 8:5,6,19,20). They wanted a
strong and stalwart warrior king as their leader. And the Lord said
to Samuel, "Hear their voice and make them a king" (1 Samuel 8:22).
It was then that the Lord sent Saul to Samuel,and he was "a choice
and handsome young man. There was not a more handsome person than he
among the children of Israel. From his shoulders upward he was
taller than any of the people" (1 Samuel 9:2). For the Lord had told
Samuel: "I will send you a man from the land of Benjamin, and you
shall anoint him to be head over My people Israel that he my save My
people from the hand of the Philistines...and he shall reign over My
people" (1 Samuel 9:16,17). And although it was Samuel who poured
the vial of oil upon the head of Saul and kissed him, it was the
Lord who chose King Saul (1 Samuel 10:24) and anointed him (1 Samuel
10:1; 24:6[7],10[11]; 26:9,11,16,23) for them. Thus, according to
their expectations, and taking into consideration their knowledge of
the tribal rights to kingship, the Lord gave His people: Saul, a
tall and strong young man from the tribe of Benjamin which had
become itself a composite of all the rest of the tribes, a veritable
living "Israel" to lead His people Israel. Saul did truly meet all
their hopes of having a really kingly king. As Samuel said to all
the people when he presented Saul to them: "Look at him whom the
Lord has chosen. There is no one like him among all the people!" And
all the people shouted and said, "Long live the King!" (1 Samuel
10:24).
King Saul
was in reality the people's choice whom the Lord had provided
according to their desire. After Samuel had presented Saul to the
people as their leader, "all the people went to Gilgal, and there
they made Saul King before the Lord in Gilgal" (1 Samuel 11:15).
Gilgal was the place [see Reference 1], where all the people of
Israel had gathered and made their headquarters in the time of
Joshua, during the campaign of the conquest of the holy land. It was
the right place for His people to crown Saul, because under King
Saul's leadership they were again to wage war on the Philistines. In
Gilgal, Samuel said to all Israel..."now therefore behold the King
whom you have chosen, and whom you have desired! See, the Lord has
set a King over you...your King" (1 Samuel
12:1,13,25).
Now, when
the time came for the Lord to provide for Himself
(1 Samuel 16:7) a king, He did not choose someone because
of his outward appearance, good looks, height and prowess, but
because of what the Lord saw within him. For the Lord looks at the
heart (1 Samuel 16:7; 1 Kings 8:39; 1 Chronicles 28:9; Psalm
7:9[10]; 44:21[22]; Proverbs 15:11 Jeremiah 17:10; 20:12 etc.). And
what the Lord looked for and found in young David of the tribe of
Judah was "a man after His own heart" (1 Samuel 13:14) who kept His
commandments and who followed Him with all his heart and did what
was right before the eyes of the Lord (1 Kings 14:8). Thus, the Lord
"forsook the Tabernacle of Shiloh, the tent which He had placed
among men...He rejected the tent of Joseph, and did not choose the
tribe of Ephraim, but chose the tribe of Judah, Mount Zion which He
loved" (Psalm 78:60, 67-68).

7 "Remove the mitre,
and take off the crown...it shall be no
more until he comes whose right it is, and I will
give it to him" - Ezekiel 21:26[31], 27[32].
Thus, did "the Lord G-d" (Ezekiel 21:24[29], speak through
the prophet Ezekiel concerning the coming of the one, whose right it
would be to wear both mitre and crown. The promise made here plainly
refers to the priestly and royal prerogatives that would be given to
him, because he would have a right to them.
"Until he
comes whose right it is," has been generally acknowledged as a
reference to the verse "until Shiloh comes," found in Genesis 49:10.
The coming of this great and mysterious person, we are told in the
book of the prophet Ezekiel, is presaged by the exaltation of the
lowly and the abasement of the high (21:26[31]). This very important
person referred to as "Shiloh," to whom would be "the obedience of
the peoples" (Genesis 49:10), is alluded to as the one coming "whose
right it is": to wear both mitre and crown, to rule as priest and
king. In this great personage there would be the union
of both priestly and royal prerogatives.
The same
promise is made by "the word of the Lord" in the book of the prophet
Zechariah, concerning this person who would sit on the throne of
Israel both as king and priest:
"Behold the man whose
name is the Branch...he shall bear the glory, and
shall sit and rule [as king] upon his throne, and
he shall be a priest upon his throne" - Zechariah
6:12, 13
As in
"Shiloh," "who is to come," Jewish tradition identified this King
and Priest as the Messiah:
"Behold the man whose
name is the Messiah etc.," - Targum to Zechariah
6:12.
And we
shall see that as a descendant of King David the Messiah would have
the right to wear both crown and mitre [see The Hidden
Wisdom of Bethlehem article].

8 Youngest of his sons. The one who wrote
the paraphrase in the Targum now known as Targum
Jerusalem I (formely Targum Pseudo Jonathan), rendered Genesis
49:10: "Until King Messiah shall come, the youngest of his sons."
Throughout the Holy Scriptures we find the Lord's protective
predilection for the youngest. It is from Benjamin, the "youngest"
(see Genesis 42:13,15,20; 43:29; 44:2,12,23,26) of Jacob's sons that
Saul ben Kish, Israel's first anointed king, sprung forth. Just as
it was David the "youngest" (1 Samuel 16:11; 17:14) of Jesse's sons
whom the Lord chose to be His own anointed King over His people
Israel.
Reminiscent
of the word Shiloh is Shelah, the youngest of Judah's sons by his
wife Bath-shuah, a Canaanitess. It was because Judah did not want to
give Tamar (his widowed daughter-in-law), in marriage to Shelah, his
youngest son, that Tamar disguised herself as a harlot and got
herself pregnant by Judah himself (see Genesis 38:2-11, 13-30). It
is from Pharez, one of the twins fathered by Judah and Tamar, that
the Judah genealogical line leading to King David commenced (Ruth
4:18-22). It was an auspicious commencement indeed, because Jewish
tradition says of Tamar that she was a descendant of Aram (Genesis
10:22), son of Shem (Book of Jubilees 41:1; Testament of Judah 10:1;
Book of Yashar, ad loc.; Targum Jerusalem re Genesis 38:6; Midrash
Genesis Rabbah 85.10; Tanchumah [Buber] I.187; Aggadat Bereshith
63,129; Midrash Ruth Rabbah 8.1 end). Thus, Judah's failure to give
his widowed daughter-in-law Tamar in marriage to his youngest son
Shelah, resulted in Tamar's 'playing the harlot' and conceiving the
twins Zerah and Pharez from Judah. Was not Judah the son of Jacob
who was the son of Isaac who was the son of Abraham? Both Judah and
Tamar had Shem as their forefather because Shem, the son of Noah,
had six sons among whom were Arphaxad the ancestor of Abraham
(Genesis 10:1,21; 11:13-26), and Aram, from whom Tamar descended
according to
tradition.
 
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