Related Topics
Timnah (Judea)
Timnah was an ancient town where Judah traveled to shear his sheep following the period of mourning for his wife. It serves as the geographical setting for the critical encounter between the disguised Tamar and Judah, acting as a crossroads of decision and destiny.
The Woman of Timnah
The unnamed Philistine woman who serves as the divine catalyst for Samson’s campaign against the Philistines. Her narrative is defined by the tension between her loyalty to her people and her marriage to Israel's judge.
The Lion of Timnah
An adversarial beast encountered by Samson, used as a physical demonstration of the Spirit of the Lord empowering a man to conquer a predator with bare hands, setting the stage for a historic riddle.
Thirty Changes of Clothes
Luxurious clothing used as a wager in the high-stakes game of riddles. In the ancient world, multiple changes of festive garments represented significant wealth and were used in treaties and honor-exchanges.
Thirty Companions of the Groom
Representing the 'friends of the bridegroom,' these thirty Philistines were assigned to Samson for the seven-day wedding feast, eventually becoming the targets of his first major riddle and ensuing wrath.
Samson’s Burning Anger
Examines the emotional drive behind Samson's actions in Ashkelon. This first mention of his 'burning' anger sets the template for his subsequent interactions with Philistia, blending personal pique with divine judgment.
The Father of the Timnite
The patriarch of the Philistine household in Timnah whose family is threatened with death by the 30 companions, leading to the ultimate betrayal of Samson and the violent conclusion of the marriage.
Ashkelon
One of the five major Philistine cities (Pentapolis), located on the Mediterranean coast. It was the site of Samson’s retaliation, where he killed thirty men to pay his wager debts, highlighting the urban scale of the conflict.
Vineyards of Timnah
The specific rural locale where Samson encountered the young lion. In biblical symbolism, vineyards represent prosperity, yet here they become the setting for a supernatural test of strength and a subsequent violation of the Nazarite vow.
Khidah (The Biblical Riddle)
The first explicit occurrence of a formal riddle (Khidah) in the Bible. It signifies not just social entertainment but a high-stakes intellectual and spiritual battle between Samson and the Philistine culture.