Lite commentary
Judges 15 continues the conflict that began with Samson’s troubled marriage in chapter 14. Samson returns during the wheat harvest with a young goat, apparently expecting to enter the marriage relationship, but the woman’s father has given her to Samson’s companion. In that setting of honor and family obligation, this is a serious insult. Samson says, “This time I am justified in doing the Philistines harm.” The narrator reports Samson’s claim, but this does not mean every motive and action of Samson is morally approved. His words are the language of vengeance, and the chapter shows how personal retaliation can grow into wider violence.
Samson’s attack on the Philistines’ crops is carefully timed and deeply destructive. The Hebrew word for the animals can mean foxes or jackals; either way, Samson uses paired animals with torches to burn standing grain, grain heaps, vineyards, and olive groves. At harvest time, this strikes at the Philistines’ food supply and economic strength. The Philistines respond with brutal retaliation by burning the woman and her father. The story is not presenting a clean model of justice. It is showing a violent cycle in a dark period when Israel is oppressed and covenant life is badly disordered.
Samson then strikes the Philistines and withdraws to the cave at Etam. The Philistines come against Judah, but Judah’s leaders do not rally around Samson as a deliverer. Instead, three thousand men go to arrest him and hand him over. Their question, “Do you not know that the Philistines rule over us?” reveals how deeply they have accepted Philistine domination. Judah fears disruption more than oppression. Samson’s answer, “I have only done to them what they have done to me,” again exposes the pattern of payback that drives much of the chapter.
When Samson is bound and delivered to the Philistines, the true source of deliverance becomes clear. The Spirit of the LORD comes powerfully upon him. The new ropes fall away like burned flax, and Samson uses the jawbone of a donkey to strike down a thousand men. The weapon is weak and improvised, but the victory is real because God gives it. Samson’s boastful song celebrates what he has done, yet the next moment exposes his need. He is exhausted and thirsty, and he cries to the LORD. God answers by providing water at Lehi, and the place is remembered as En Hakkore, “the spring of the caller,” because Samson called and God answered.
The chapter ends by saying that Samson judged Israel twenty years during the days of Philistine dominance. This summary matters. Samson’s victories were real, but they were partial. Israel was not fully free, Judah was fearful, and Samson himself was a deeply flawed deliverer. The passage displays both God’s faithfulness to preserve and deliver his people and the desperate need for a better, righteous ruler.
Key truths
- God can use a flawed and morally mixed servant without approving all his motives or actions.
- The Spirit of the LORD, not Samson’s natural strength, is the decisive reason for the victory.
- Personal vengeance can imitate justice outwardly while still being driven by sinful retaliation.
- Judah’s willingness to hand Samson over shows how oppression can train God’s people to accept bondage as normal.
- The LORD who gives victory also sustains life; Samson survives because God answers his cry.
- Samson’s judgeship gives real but incomplete deliverance, showing the weakness of Israel in the days before the king.
Warnings, promises, and commands
- Do not mistake Samson’s revenge for a pattern to imitate.
- Do not accommodate oppression as though bondage were normal or harmless.
- Depend on the LORD after victory as much as in danger.
- God answered Samson’s cry and provided water to preserve his life.
- The Spirit of the LORD empowered Samson to defeat the Philistines in this battle.
Biblical theology
This passage belongs to the time of the judges, after Israel entered the land but before the monarchy. Under the Mosaic covenant, Israel’s unfaithfulness led to oppression, and the LORD raised judges to bring partial rescue. Samson is not an ideal king or final savior; he is a Spirit-empowered but unstable deliverer. His story points forward within the Old Testament to the need for a faithful king from David’s line and, in the full biblical story, to the greater Deliverer whose victory is complete and whose obedience is pure.
Reflection and application
- We should read this story as a record of God’s deliverance in a corrupt age, not as permission to copy Samson’s violent methods or vengeful spirit.
- When we feel wronged, we must beware of dressing up personal retaliation as righteousness.
- God’s ability to use weak and flawed people should humble us, not excuse our sin.
- Like Samson after the battle, we remain dependent on God for life, strength, and mercy even after moments of success.
- God’s people should not become so comfortable under ungodly pressure that they resist deliverance more than bondage.