Jephthah, the Gileadite, was an
able warrior, but he was the son of a wicked woman, and had fled
from his relatives and lived in the land of Tob. There certain
rascals gathered about him, and they used to go out on raids with
him.
After a time the Ammonites made war against the Israelites. Then the
elders of Gilead went to bring Jephthah from the land of Tob, and
they said to him, "Come and be our commander, that we may fight
against the Ammonites." But Jephthah said to the elders of Gilead,
"Are you not the men who hated me and drove me out of my father's
house? Why then do you come to me now when you are in trouble?" But
the elders of Gilead said to Jephthah, "This is why we have now
turned to you, that you may go with us and fight against the
Ammonites, and you shall be our chief, even over all the people who
live in Gilead." Then Jephthah said to the rulers of Gilead, "If you
take me back to fight against the Ammonites and God gives me the
victory over them, I shall be your chief." The elders of Gilead
replied, "God shall be a witness between us; we swear to do as you
say."
Then Jephthah went with the elders of Gilead, and the people made
him chief and commander over them. Jephthah also made this vow to
God: "If thou wilt deliver the Ammonites into my power, then whoever
comes out of the door of my house to meet me, when I return
victorious from the Ammonites, shall be God's, and I will offer that
one as an offering to be burned with fire."
So Jephthah went out to fight against the Ammonites; and God gave
him the victory over them, and delivered them into his hands. But
when he came home to Mizpah, his daughter was just coming out to
meet him with tambourines and choral dances. She was his only child;
besides this one he had neither son nor daughter. So when he saw
her, he tore his clothes and said, "Oh, my daughter, you have
stricken me! It is you who are the cause of my woe! for I have made
a solemn vow to God and cannot break it." She said to him, "My
father, you have made a solemn vow to God; do to me what you have
promised, since God has punished your enemies the Ammonites. But let
this favor be granted me: spare me two months that I may go out upon
the mountains with those who would have been my bridesmaids and
lament because I will never become a wife and mother." He said,
"Go."
So he sent her away for two months with her friends, and she mourned
on the mountains because she would never become a wife and mother.
At the end of two months she returned to her father, who did what he
had vowed to do, even though she had never been married. So it
became a custom in Israel: each year the women of Israel go out for
four days to bewail the death of the daughter of Jephthah, the
Gileadite.