The structure of this section is:
Sisera came to
Jael's tent (4:17) :A Jael entreats Sisera to come into her tent (4:18a) ::B Sisera enters asking for aid (4:18b–20) :::C Jael kills Sisera (4:21) Barak came to Jael's tent (4:22a) :A' Jael entreats Barak to come into her tent (4:22a) ::B' Barak responds by entering (4:22b) :::C' Jael presents the slain Sisera to Barak (4:22b) In this section,
Sisera was looking for a place to hide from Israelite pursuers and by chance came to
Jael's tent. Jael intentionally went out to meet Sisera and tricked him into thinking that she could provide service (cf.
Ehud to Eglon in
Judges 3). Sisear asked for water, but Jael demonstrated ancient Near Eastern hospitality by instead giving him milk ("Jael" (
Yāʿēl) means "mountain goat" ("
ibex"); perhaps she gave Sisear goat's milk) and covering him up to sleep, whereupon Jael struck him dead with a tent-peg and hammer. The action was sung with some detail and nuance in the ancient poem of
Judges 5 verse 22, as the fulfilment of Deborah's prediction (4:9). The last two verses (23–24) contain a reminder that YHWH controls the battle and gives relief from Israel's oppressors.
Verse 20 :''And he said to her, "Stand at the door of the tent, and if any man comes and inquires of you, and says, 'Is there any man here?' you shall say, 'No.' "'' The last words of Sisera to Jael (before Sisera was killed by Jael) contain an irony, with the play of the word "any man" (Hebrew
ʼiš): the first use refers to the one coming to the tent, which was
Barak, whereas the second use refers to the one in the tent, which was
Sisera, and the answer should be "No", because Sisera would no longer be alive by the time Barak came. ==Archaeology==