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The Concubine of Shechem
The mother of Abimelech whose presence in Shechem indicates Gideon's localized influence outside his primary family. Her lineage among the Hivites or local Shechemites became the ethnic pivot for the subsequent political rebellion in the Shechem region.
Gideon's Ephod
An elaborate religious garment fashioned from Midianite gold by Gideon. Though perhaps intended as a commemorative religious item, it became a snare to Israel and a source of cultic idolatry that eventually contributed to the spiritual decline of Gideon’s household.
Saharim (Crescent Ornaments)
Moon-shaped pendants (Saharim) worn by Midianite kings and their camels, symbolizing astral worship and lunar deities common among desert nomads. Their removal and inclusion in Gideon’s spoils represented the humiliation of foreign gods.
Jether (Son of Gideon)
The eldest son of Gideon who was commanded to execute the Midianite kings but was unable to do so because of his youth and fear, illustrating the weight of generational war and the lack of military maturity in the nascent Israeli leaders.
Zalmunna
Zalmunna was a Midianite monarch who, alongside Zebah, led the remnant of the eastern invaders before being captured at Karkor. His name is etymologically linked to 'protection refused' or 'shadow,' symbolizing the removal of Midian's covering before the God of Israel.
Zebah
One of the two primary kings of Midian pursued and executed by Gideon. His name, likely meaning 'sacrifice' or 'slaughter,' highlights the themes of divine justice and the total defeat of Midianite oppression.
Karkor
A strategic location east of the Jordan where Gideon's three hundred men surprised and routed the final Midianite host of fifteen thousand men, ending the long-standing threat to Israel's harvests.
The Thorns of the Wilderness
A unique historical incident of public torture and corporal discipline where Gideon 'taught' the elders of Succoth using wilderness thorns and briars. This serves as a grim narrative transition from warfare against external enemies to civil internal judgment.
Refusal of the Monarchy
When the people of Israel invited Gideon to rule over them dynastically, he provided a seminal defense of pure Theocracy, declaring 'I will not rule over you... the Lord shall rule over you.' This theological boundary is foundational for understanding the biblical tension between divine and human authority.
Baal-Berith
A specific manifestation of Baal worshipped in Shechem following Gideon’s death. The title literally means 'Lord of the Covenant,' indicating an attempt to merge Israelite covenantal concepts with Canaanite paganism (syncretism), creating a localized religious-political alliance.