4-6. the men of Gilead smote
Ephraim, because they said, Ye Gileadites are fugitives of
Ephraim—The remonstrances of Jephthah, though reasonable and
temperate, were not only ineffectual, but followed by insulting
sneers that the Gileadites were reckoned both by the western
Manassites and Ephraimites as outcasts—the scum and refuse of their
common stock. This was addressed to a peculiarly sensitive people. A
feud immediately ensued. The Gileadites, determined to chastise this
public affront, gave them battle; and having defeated the
Ephraimites, they chased their foul-mouthed but cowardly assailants
out of the territory. Then rushing to the fords of the Jordan, they
intercepted and slew every fugitive. The method adopted for
discovering an Ephraimite was by the pronunciation of a word
naturally suggested by the place where they stood. Shibboleth,
means "a stream"; Sibboleth, "a burden."
The Eastern tribe had, it seems, a dialectical provincialism in the
sound of Shibboleth; and the Ephraimites could not bring their
organs to pronounce it.